Tho Weathtr THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn* Edition iis&teab PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER fl. I960 —38 PAGES Rattle on Our Spying 2 U.S. Defectors inSoviet‘to Stay Sen. John F. Kennedy, ripping into the Eisenhower administration, told a cheering crowd of 15,000 persons at the Oakland County AFL-CIO picnic yesterday that Democrats will fight for a medical care bUl for the aged "which is not based-Orth pauper's oath.*1—““ ■ The Democratic presidential hopeful highlighted the Labor Day rally in Poptiac’s Oakland Park as he stumped through Michigan, addressing and waring* to crowds at Detroit, Pontiac, Flint and Muskegon.----—— “NO one is satisfied with what is happening to this MOSCOW MR—Two young code clerks from the supersecret U.8. National Security Agency turned up in Moscow today with tales that the United States is spying even dh lts allies under a policy they feel will lead to World War in. Bernon F. Mitchell, 31, of Eureka, Calif., and William H. Martin, 29, of Ellensburg, Wash., announced Soviet Union and intend to became Soviet citisens;_________ “We would attempt to crawl to the moon 11 we thought it would lessen .the . threat of an atomic war," they said in a statement. country,” Kennedy de- Ike, Nixon Are Targets of Reuther his country. His Pontiac audience, uproariously and opeifly partisan, yelled hi approval of Kennedy's slashing attack on Republican rule. “We are sat trying to tear Soviet ’ Trawler Said to Have Taken Them from Cuba to Russia Sen. John F. Kennedy was welcomed into labor's Frans par News Wires WASHINGTON -. The Wl House lum today that Tresi3eBf Eisenhower regards the two young mathematicians for the National Security .Agency who defected to Russia as “Self-confessed traitors." Press Secretary J a m e s C Hagyty was asked whether the’ government had any advance knowledge of the plans of Bernon camp yesterday in Pontile broken the code of friendly tions and even planted a sp; a friendly embassy. second to any other power. "We are not satisfied that all who want jobs cannot find them. "We will not be satisfied until by Mr. Labor*htma«lf--tifc United Auto Workers’ Wal- ter P. Reuther, in a blister- Rep. - John W. McCormack, t>-Mass., said recently that dm pair, who were bachelors and close friendl, had taken with them “valuable cryptographic informa- ing 25-minute attack on Republican leaders and their economic policies. * Although the Democratic providential nominee was under n gentleman's agreement net to mention Vice President Nixon by name while the latter waa immobilized Cie Massachusetts senator is James Kellis, candidate for the 18th District seat in Congress. The other candidate Is incumbent (Senator Patrick V. McNamara. OUEBT OF HONOR — Two Democratic candidates flank Sen. John F. Kennedy, their party's standard bearer, at the Oakland AFL-CIO Labor. Day picnic in Pontiac yesterday. To the left of Kennedy charged that .while Moves to Avert Civil War Donna Ungers Hagerty said ft would net be appropriate for him in his White Howe fait to have any statement at all on any statements made by aodi aattconfessed traitors. by w knee infection, the shtrt- Danger Ahead? MIAMI, Fla. (ft — An ominous slowdown in thq forward movement of hurricane Donna, a killer storm ili- "I'm not satisfied that If million Americana receive Social Security IT- A«fla of only 178 a month." he added. LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (API-The United Nations took inet uesetoo said, "We are going before the parliament. We are ly critical Of the volatile premier's ir OaMwtoer of Arleene. 1 Speaking ahead of Sen. Kennedy, - Reuther had this dig for golf-enthusiast Eisenhower: 'TV American people don't begrudge the President his endless hours behind the golf ball, but -• they do say when he puts the . American people behind the eight , ball that we are going to do some-r thing about i,t in November." !ftse in a somewhat official silence. vubu also summoned cabinet members to his residence. DOUBT BACKING Neutral observers in the Congo -MOMwiMMM-gad Martin got to the Soviet Union-said government agencies knew about the voyage shortly after the trawler left Cuba. Additional Rally L Photos on Page 17 to believe that U. S. policy may the Miami Weather Bureau, lend to World War m. They com- *• * * plained chteflyof American re- Earlier, the 125-mile-an-hour hu ricane had edged Slightly toward Mercury to Flirt peniatlon checks impossible to territory and the rim of Red this gradual northward for laundrywomen in this country is only 65 cents an hour." Kennedy said "the nation must For Nixon there was the epithet "tricky “Did?? and a charge of "political doubletalk" during the current presidential campaign. Although giving Ilp-nrrvtce te federal aid to education, Nixon Temperatnree -are expected to be in the high 60s during the next lew days. The low Untight is expected to be 68 end the high tomorrow about 88, the weatherman says/ Precipitation for the period will total ahoat one-tenth of aa for power with President Joseph Ex*Convict Caught in Attempt on Gas Station in Bloomfield Twp. Hie Massachusetts senator said ail citizens must be provided “decent homes, decent schools—and a decent hope tor the future. "That is what we are fighting for," he asserted. Turning to foreign policy. Ken* nedydeclared: "Three years ago the Amer- tbc tie-brooking vote against aa aid bill Inst session of Congree% Reuther charged. Reuther quoted Thruaton Morton, Republican national chairman, as having said, on a television show that Sen. Goldwater, a conservative, was the ‘'most popular" man at the GOP convention that nominated Nixon. 'SAME OLD LINE’ He said Morton's remark rap" ing to escape Bloomfield Township police when he was caught burglarizing a service station. Killed with a single shot while running from police was Thomas Wright- Jr. of 275 Rockwell St., a former Jackson Prison inmate. Wright was discovered la the countered by taking over the network and announcing he had fired Kasavubu as chief of state. DETERMINED Claiming they have the support of the Congolese army, Lumumba's supporters issued the call to both bouses after an all-night Cab- and Willie May, forged ahead, but the Pontiac boy saved third place for the United States by n tremendous dash into the tape after clearing the last hurdle. Martin Laser, world record end again about Saturday. Morning southwesterly winds at two miles per hour will become ‘ to 15 miles tonight ROME — Pontiac’s Hayes Jones finished a gallant third in toe finals of the Olympic high hurdles here yesterday. Two teammates, Lea Calhoun southerly at _ . _ and southwesterly Wednesday . Fifty-seven was the lowest ra» cording in downtown Pontiac pre- ■ ending 8 a.m. At 2 p.m. the read- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Weaver' radioed for help, and jst as othC" Officers arrived For Additional Details - Pago 22 Wright lumped through a large the station and ran, thwardf tot back of the building. Kiwanis Club's 50-yard-dash and who also took the broad Jump and high Jump at Eastern Junior High. Shouts to haft from Weaver end Bloomficl l To nship Police LL Newton Tubtir. tailed to stop Wright. Two shots in the air a’so failed, thep’ said. Both Weaver' and Tubbs then hitting him and dropping him immediately. Wright died two hours later in St. Joseph Mercy Hoe-' Kentucky Car Mishap A Pontiac man, Wyman E. Nelson. 48, and his wife tone, 43. of 151 W. Princeton Avq., were killed instantly Monday in n two-car collision near Sprtiigfleld.'Ky. There’s malt-msg* magic hi standing on the Olympic victory platform and knowing that one of those three American flags they’re have been with Wright to help cart away the stolen goods. The couple waa returning from visiting relatives in London, Ky. Mrs. Nelson’s father, Harrison Taylor of London, alee waa killed. There were fire persons in each eas,-police said. ’-The other seven are in critical , The Nelsons had nine -am pa i g« in rebuild the country to which we beflsve." "Every politician in Washington who apposed this should be forced to live on 11.25 an hour until he changes his mind." Charging the Eisenhower administration with "seven lean years," Reuther won more cheers when he .introduced the name of Franklin D. Roosevelt and th; words be used in 1932; INTRODUCED RY WILLIAMS Introducing the party standard-iirer was file man who * the state into his political empire |—Gov. G. Mennen Williams. popularity undimmed—at least in the ranks of labor—Williams was loudly applauded as he said: “It's time to bring the capital back from Wall Street te Wash-lngton." With big business as an economic advisor, Reuther continued, the administration "has been helping the rich to get richer while the people are being exploited by a group of selfish economic interests that have taken over the country." Reuther charged the nation has failed to grow economically as H wild juwe since }^"I| He dml unemployment figures, the fart mat the steel industry is running at only about half parity, and losses, in farm income while retail food prices have risen. ■Seeds up to 95 miles an hour Monday, a state police trooper shot and seriously wounded • fleeing Jackson Prison Farm convict from Wfeke Lake Township. The prisoner had escaped two hours earlier panic salt week after setvtog nearly It imrths at a l-to-15-year sentence for brpnktag nnd entering, 9te-phen L. Winchester, M, was shot to the right ride after Ignoring Two warning abate. * Goth Winchester and his companion. Jack J. Horton, 24, who was sentenced from Shiawassee Ouwy 10 1 to. 15,years for ai faeturiag Jsbe have been teat aader Elsenhower — 1S0.M0 at them la the aatemoHve industry In the last five years. Pointing to the Pontiac Motor Division plant across Montcalm Street from wham he was standing, Reuther said employment there has been trimmed almost half in the past ftve years. The UAW leader called tor-new administration in Washington that would work for full employment and full production. He urged an end to "drift and stagnation" under the Republicans and said the nation needed 'inspired, affirmative, adequate" leadership to answer “the call to greatness.” "Only an America fully mobilized with fun employment and fun production can provide leadership for peace and freedom 1 Leoni, four miles south dKhe prison. firmed with a crude steel knife, the two men stole a tor and $15 from a fisherman after walking three miles from the prison farm to make their escape. Winchester had lived at 3225 Ormond Road. Defectors in Soviet; Tattle on U.S. Spying Soviet Union gave Francis Gary} "" t» a 19-year sentence. The Weather >, ImtsM ul ( if aaO UM l At S tjs: Wind mtoclty I u. DimeUM—Smith. Mhu Tmadsr atlas •4®.'"“^^“ i a fa t I N ran *aa ....ft if sat.... -4a.w ....a* , tin.... n lias.... If Slilu ta .firiw » .« m IHMnn*' * ** * •«»*« N “»sSS3B£5^; - SteW *4^ m : * tstest tasmuMtan "CxWes: T frimw«a^WswtTwwitsrs. ifm is S ** paateMhi M • ssEsSrsii bsmII as n rmSwsh it H f sfHLs s SI s s- mM'WpShm 5 ft i S ;e if (Continued From Page One» route to PMtiac, BBMP It was accompanied torji while ^ cariplKttetod Nixon, and Lodge stickers. A line of similarly decorated can was of ~ “ Park. rt all the people in the state." Williams said that the GOP fought Social Security in 1935 and .'tried to repeal what the New Deal brought" in 1980. And, the governor said, the Republicans passed the Taft-Hartley Act lit 1947. "And this year, they tried to make It worse.” HITS AT NIXON Williams strung hard at Kennedy's Republican rival, Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Kqfriedy drew squeals of delight from tom-age, girls who threatened to swoon st the sight of fin candidate. From Pontiac the Kennedy motorcade headed for Flint. The senator caused a minor traffic Jam at a Waterford Township gas station. The motorcade, which Included M cars and low press busts, was oa the road when the candidate derided he wasted a bottle «l soda pop. mt to Attack Nixdif directly while the vice president is hospitalized with a knee infection.) The whole caravan cams to a halt and nearly everyone in the cars and buses got put to stretch their legs and Join Kennedy in cold drink. During the stop Kennedy took off his suit jacket and told reporters "hopeful" at M#Mini'tilt November. ‘There’s a good chance in Michigan," he said. In Flint’s Atwood Stadium — as In Pontiac — large numbers of children turned out tor Kennedy. A high-school type cheering section shouted for Kennedy. Ntxaa vrtad aad-tabor 14 to II Is that the type of president . i want?" Williams-shouted to the crowd. The response was a loud “I "i khew yuu’d toy that," Williams said. ’Our stand is — No Nixon, No Republicans!” Williams said that Kennedy had voted "right" on 33 labor-management issues. He la trusted the min from Massachusetts as "a groat Amer- i Continued From Page One) Kennedy, introduced himaelf as at home in Pontiac.' "f drive a Pontiajf car." he plained, and added: "Fli bet some of you make tolRI^ipi^ Before launching his attack on the Republicans’ national policies, Kennedy threw a barb at Oakland County GOP Chairman Arthur G Elliott Jr. who had complained because Republicans hadn't been j tiled to speak at the picnic. CHARGE PERSECUTION They said one of the reasons they left the United States was *f-Y' persecution there of Prisms who do not believe to God They et-tacked what they called harassment of those with unpopular political views. Talents of women an encouraged and utilized to a much 'grater extent in the Soviet Un-fcm than in the United States,” they said in a statement. “W# feel enriches Soviet society and reskps Soviet women more desirable as ntates. “R is a difficult and painful experience te leave our native coun-*nd friend*. Yet we that, the United States gov-carrying out policies erotic state candidates in Mlchi-partietdariy gubernatorial nominee John B. Swainson Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, both if whom were with him in Pontiac. not be altowad to rely on these emotional attachments to guar toe the loyalty of its citfxens. Jewish Welfare Board Executive Is Dead at 53 NEW-ROCHELLE, N. Y. « Samuel D. Gershovttz, S3, executive vice president of toy National Jewfch Welfare Board, died Mon day after a brief ilhWM. He had been edit in youth agencies and bad directed Jewish community centers hi several 'cities.baton Joining the welfare 'Mart to 1936. "1 understand he's been invited ere." Kemdy said, gets the message and and Trwnaa tamest la 1 At the State Fair #ofiee tried to beep Kennedy from mingling in the crowd and shaking hands, but be did anyway. As the senator’s motorcade trav-rled from the fair up Woodward Avenue to Pontiac, crowds gathered along the road to catch glimpse of the man who hopes occupy fiw White House next Jan- Homemade signs popped up on ill sides, bearing messages "Jack’s Our Man," "All The Way With Jack" or "Vbte for Kennedy.”< I A Mg one ported in a, truck perked along the road read ''Keutedy Is the Remedy-" The DemocratieTaravan also *n- 5 Drowning*, 4 Othar Fatal Accidents Mar lobdr Day LEOPOLDVILLE. (APfr-ri dosen CUngnlssr soldiers tried to board a U.S. Embassy plane sent to Lrtaabomg Monday to lly but the body of Henry NoMe Taylor. V.' The fnugiiinar were held off by an Amirimn aergoant wife a sfcrt-«“"* gun. When the plane took .off ball ,eMt an hour later for Leopoldville the afifitfria UN as i guard of honor. The Associated Prose Labor Day Kasai province, where _____Mid Taylor Spaday. The 32- year-old reporter tor Scrippe-How-* aid newmepora had come to the rvmgrt from Aria to (Wk man died yesterday aboard an ah*-finer white on ter way to visit J Mrs. Ctam Weiss, «, dtoi rt a heart attack while flying from ter Maw ink Mate to Itafrrtl te ristt ter am PhiUp Wetes rt M The mw ot ptem ahawaa rid- Surviving besides Ms mother to Js wife Janet, three children,. Frank, David and Julia and a ate- Efforts at Labor Day Picnic Hailod by County Chairman Elliott Elliott had ordered a 11-ear ear*van fo roll late the rally. County GOP candidates were tnong the shock troops, with Re-publican state treasure* canrtdate David R. Calhoun of Hunttogton Woods in the forefront. A platoon of uniformed women called Oakland Gfats slipped among the crowl. dIririhrtlng Nbmi button* and GOP pamphlets. Their rttorts were aimed at apreadtag the RepsNtom gaepdl among thn top heavy Pemaeratie "Our recaption deariy todiest* a new rapport between Oakland County labor organizations and the n thank-you note tel .___________ president of the Oakland County AFL-CIO, who hud welcomed Republicans te the picnic but not to the speakers platform. ‘Our reception was no stefrite. We’ve known nil nteng oonsUarable Republican support comas from the ranks of Inter.” Eveai Kennedy acknowledged El-Botfs weO-timed ntpFW par-mission for GOP nominees to spenk at the ndy. Ha Jokingly iavited BBMt > ' A fete other, minor h . . Mt the Democratic camaif, , On ite way to Foufiaq from De- ’ trott, the nmteroadt was bussed in > Bloomfield Hills by two can bear ‘ tog Republican signs. Scattered “Nlxofi" signs ap- . peered along DAmocwitc prtai- > dential candidate s route ki Wayne County and Detroit. Burglars Get$3.75p From Sme, i wam in-^ Pontiac Mate pofioe w vtstigatiag a $3,7fl sail b at a Union Late • flay. 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INFANTS' WEAR — SECOND FLOOR * -■• ..............- , ..........’ ^ •I Voice of the People THE PONTIAC PRESS Quotes Senatoir Kennedy’s Demand*for Hungarian Labor Laxity Brings Speedup Drive Seems There Were Two Traveling Salesmen TiM»Tm4 Rough Going in Senate for Roles Change Plan __When the new Congress meets in January, Sen. Joman Clark, D-Pa., will offer a aerial of rule changes in the upper house ufeich. would ex* padtta Hi work. Wot at all radical, nevertheless tjjjf would have far-reachlng efforts on 8enate debate and, byextenkkxvoit national affairs, a % 1. it it i One provision would permit a majority of the Senate to take acttanoa any matterbitng du-cuaaed after 15 or more hours of debate by voting to "move the previous question.” This is an .attaflk on the* filibuster. The Sentidg declares that m his opinion "the Senate can no longer afford the luxury of unlimited debate if we are to attend to tiie legislative business of the country.” • it it it ^ Another Important change would allow a member of the Senate to raise the question ofpertinence^Axthlngs are, a legislator can discuss (and have It pr lnAi4-ln the CongTSSSlreasl Record at -the taxpayers’ expense) anything he can think of to keep the debate going. * la support of this Sea. Clark ^pointed out that duriag two sue- jewaive days of debate oa the ' minimum wage bill, only 15 per w*- . « M local ntw» prlDtod in StsYSSSS." *•“ Wi ss if as&xii t.o.w SSui It Vptias » tSelSSf&,aJaJ.*W’ The PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER ft I960 SEVEN’ 'Employer Should Giro HouscPlayg 2nd Fiddle to Herd DR. HENRY A, MILLER Older Workan a Try* EAST LANSING. Mich. •(UPIl-l I Older workers can compete In the! labor market If employers wlllj five them a chance, a Michigan j State University professor says. * * * Dr Daniel Kruger savs that contrary to popular belief, many] older workers, can learn new] skill*, meet production and al> tendance standards and pass phy-r 'Sacred Cows' Horn In on Legislation Optometrist 7 North Soginow Street Phono FE 4-6842 Contact Leasts ately needed legislation — the House Rules Committee cannot Opon Frl. Evenings—Closed Wed Afternoons not coot employers more than! younger workers tor pensions and; Before we examine Thothp- insurancc, Kruger says. herd shares with the conservative Republican-Sou t hem coalition the responsibility for hokl- I* chairman of die *HouaeJfUiles Committee. But there m^i be a few Americans—who, haven't, heard about his corollary feats Noe »tCo« sumiSTj HUNTSVILLE, Toe tUPH gossip 'columnist ior the State! Prison's monthly newspaper, The! Echo, has picked up a popular feature from a Broadway Coluirt-nistr But instead of warning of-ficials not to invite two prisoners to the same party, he warns, "Don't put in the same ceil." | It is estimated that in three generations about 80 per cent of the! total U. S. population win be direct I descendants of persons living on farms or/who have lived on farms. I 30%^ MORE TREAD 1 1 F|j * ■ ' SHU B11B wm i§ih EPpfsi j/Ufz ni - MM* B* -• • A ar ruMu A LOVING CUP --Henry Cabot Lodge, left. Republican vice eoWtidMr UugdiHe. InrT^ToflriTrovrT^ ■hare a soft drink Monday during a political lour of New York’s crowded beaches. Lodge traveled to famed Coney Island and two cither beadles by helicopter. He perspired profusely, doffed his coat and shook hands by the hundreds. He-also ate hot dogs and kissed one baby. In ted, he proved to be a Labor Day hit. Says NLRB Packed With Foes to Labor YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI) Democratic National Chairman Henry Jackson Monday charged that the National Labor Relations Board is "packed" with men uiv friendly to labor. He ateo accueed the Repubheam administration with failure to map out a long-range plan tor economic growth.' ‘Urey fasti later force*) couldn't step labor from organizing." Jackson told a Labor Day gathering here. “They couldn't •top union* (ram growing. But Crowd Kicks In as Prize Money IsrBtewn Away FORT WORTH, Tex. —A ■mall whirlwind Monday knocked over a cigar box containing nearly $2,900 meant for prize money in a roping contest at the Tad lock Brothers' Ranch. with men unfriendly to fabor.” , He called on labor to sacrifice and work harder in this decade "so we'll be stronger in the URDs.” Jackson paid that a Democratic president would again "start telling people what is right with labor and would strive "to reach indus-trial harmony." 14______’if' _____ Farmers have twice as much invested in machinery as does the entire steel industry and five times Bills and checks scattered over the countryside. One check for $270 was found two miles away. Some of the 3.000 spectatdrs helped pick up fofHt; They donated $1,000 to make up for money that couldn’t be found—and th$ show went on. Pants Plant Head Resigns, Feels OK Is Bit Terse AfjiELES (UPI) - D. ier, jotcs Toward the end of each con-gi'etakmal session, mRai e ■ Committee invariably has on its shelf several bUta which are highly prized by some House members but highly distasteful to Smith. . Supporters of these measures put a lot of pressure on Smith to dafl a committee iheettng for a vote on whether to tend them to the House float*. At such times, Smith has been,known to disappear for a few days, explaining upon his return that he had been tending to something down on the farm. On one occasion, he blandly told a search party he had been absent because his barn had burned down. Since then, the closing days , of Congress have been referred to in some quarters as “barn-burning time.” One of the congressmen who have been left to fiddle around while Smith’s bant burned is Thompson, a New Jersey Democrat. In a statement lamed today1 bemoaning the chairman's legislation of the past several Congresses including the present j Nth Congress which has fust 1 adjourned after being almost ~t completely .frustrated.I Thompson Mid that whflh“T thMdiqf gf l»wibte way ttr j keep Smith in the capital he had hit upon the idea of moving j the cattle to Washington. He J ■aid suitable pasturage could be j found on the grounds of St. Elisabeth hospital, a government-owned mental institution located near the Capitol. This, he said, would enable j Smith “to look after his cows I Most Member f ederal Deposit Insurance Corporation Fletcher JoSbs gradually has been turning control" of his pants manufacturing plant in Wamambool, Australia over to his employes. Several days ago he wired his oil iWfrnsNta te SlfliNt — He received, the Immediate reply: "accepted." 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Forty Street Rarest**! *f Satisfaction guaranteed, or your money back 7 SEARS 91 NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED 154 North Saginaw Street 35 Plan Fed. tax Phone FE 54171 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER d, IMP EIGHT FOR 2 WEEKS ONLY Long of Louisiana, by dying Monday, ended ft volatile, energetic era in that Wale's political history. From left he is shown: taking But Huey's Brother Just a Country Boy Earl's Secret-r-He Was FOR Things BUT YOU CAN! JOIN SEPTTW ever go further than the Senate, jbigger Germany, a richer German or that. he would remain there life, he said. * long after his crusade simmered TAMMY KNEW down. Nobody knew the political magic McCarthy wasn't for something, better than the old Tammany Han He was against something—Com* politicians. They were for some* stepped in With Social Security, public assistance, unemployment By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON tAP> - Earl /as a country bumpkin compared with Huey but the two Long brothers who died 25 yean apart, almost to the day, had the secret of paHtical magic. They were for something—Just being against isn't good enough— and' they gnve those who voted them in distress, providing food, they guvf jin a Mnu of )b« longing, particularly the children of Immigrants. ' The edge was knocked off Tam* JDa Near Deal was so broad it was easy for the millions who reelected him time and again to identify Ms success with their own The StoreWhere Quality Counts Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry State When Sen. Huey Long died Sept. 10, 1935, after being shot, he had become bigger man Louisiana politics. He was a national figure, getting bigger and. from the long-range view, perhaps more danger* Ammlwri Iwpeet foMm TOILET TANK BALL mST$Sm iftSSTe**w. The efficient, mtented Water Master tank 'bell ieeta^r^jtajc^Hje y»C AT HARDWARE WOUtl FE 2-7257 Harold McSween, defeated for re-nomination by Long, Aug. 27,’ would be mentioned. FLOCK TO PARLOR In Alexandria Monday, crowds ot supporters who had stuck with BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Earl Kemp Long return* today to the state Capitol ha alternately dominated or tried to dominate for almost 30 years. His seemingly boundless energy stilled 'forever by a- third heart attack Monday, the 65-yeaiMAd patriarch of the state's first political family was to be borne from Alexandria, where ha died, to the Capitol he ruled durin^ three terms as This writer never believed that Sen. ‘ Joseph McCarthy, despite such support as he had. would ". bonier. > The mam of French-speaking Cajuns in the Acadian country in the south and foe red-necked An* , glo-Saxons in, the north had a , right to feel neglected and un-I wanted. The comforts of the rich , were something they didn’t have Famous Frigidaire Appliances AT FAMOUS PRICES, TOO! DR. JEROME S. KRAUS FOOT SPECIALIST crazy, flocked to see his body in the bade room of a funend parlor. The man they came to tee had had a remarkable political career, even by Louisiana standards. governor. Big 13 cu. ft 2-DOOR In and out of the executive mansion and several mental hospitals, he had capped his long yeirs in the limelight just 10 day! ago, when he defeated McSween by 4,000 votes in a Democratic runoff In the 8th District. Death came Just when he seemed to be getting batter. Mrs. Long- aakl she had been told he had spent a good night Sunday. Then at 7:30 am Monday Long I hours, until noon Wednesday. Funeral service was set for 2 p.m. Wednesday at the First Baptist Church. Automatic Defrost I Burial plfns were tentatively nnwnimjl fpr his Wlnnfield home but members of the Long family dung to the hope they would be able to satisfy one of his last wishes. That was to be buried on the Capitol grounds alongside his brother, Huey P. Long, felled by an assassin's bullet 25 years ago this Thursday.--------——- PALLBEARERS There will be eight pallbearers • Large Crfopert 9 Big Freezer 9 Big Door Shelves Ole Earl seemed to have had a premonition his end was near. He told friends more than a wegk before his death: "That*! it. Tm going to die. ni never get up.” Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 2 Sets of Triplets Pose Problems o/ Identification BAKER & HANSEN ■ Although most of the folk throughout the state was of disbelief at the sudden death of Ole Earl, a note ot realism crept in among 8th District political lead-era. They must select a successor to Long as Democratic candidate for Congress by Sept. 30. Donald E. Hansen Res. FE. t-lill Richard H. DcWitt Res. n MM Budget Priced It CUBIC FOOT, DELUXE MODEL • 5-Shelf Storage o Full Width Hydrator • Magnetic Door Want a voice in the people's choice? ‘ MEMPHIS, Tenn. JV«nOe» art p*di* their el-den in •coeptin* the ruUOm of he predicted. ‘ Currently, it ikn the Usher the level of teeming end the older the student the ' tkn will be seriously hampered _ - fostltutkms are better A» a lecturer lad part-time . pr^Whn age juutbahsve « "tre-mendous interest in aekatific and •tediMbgieal carpers” bat are I hi pursuing th& ambi-■ because "teachers no kn*er in the driver’s seat." laboratory-wise to cope with the Ehrieke.whe t» director of the Vega and Centaur tipper - stage rocket programs for Ornvabr (Astronautics i Division of General Dynamics Corp., is working cm a 1 first two volumes are e manals at the kids’ grams Ibfajs sikwMnt e unrealistic or fictional ap-ob to space Ehricke foria A more fa adults than young* i dhjwhrold BH*. jflWd. The ...................HE scheduled for publication this year. Centaur is a high-performance upper - otaffrrocket, the tree MMKSfi first heavy-dfety. general Purpose spare vehicle. Vega, also a general ptapose apace vehicle, is a powerful spare tfareeatage cream hi somOasut in college ed* • But fa i jeneration the interest ttnwn fa scientific endeavors by today's primary and eecond->’ary school children will mow up in Mtfinr fasRufidne of learning,’ nESOMPTIONS P BISCBIPTIONS ROFESSIONALLY ana ROPEKIY PERRY DRUGS M9 L MwL 12S1 Baldwin >1 r»rry at YsriUaU P| Mill PE 24359 KEN DALE'S 1| K Issiaaw fa. HHs ItiinhiH Shed 1945 LOWEST PRICES— PRES ESTIMATES if 2-2471 aiTaw Ml 44I4B manned and unmanned into mbit around the earth, and of sending Instrumented probes to the moon and planets. esndnots private research and teaches space gattea at Sea Diego State Callage. Now an American citizen, the German-bom Ehricke heped develop the V-2 ballistic missile during World War D. He has been associated with Convair ■: Atlas missile program Since 1254. ★ dr * When asked about reaction in his own household to space research, the affabk scientist sakl that it is a “living thing" to Ms eldest daughter. Krista, J3. "For her it is very real.’ continued. “She follows news rents of steps forward, discussing tem with casual delight.” His other daughters are Astrid, 5, anf Doris, 3. As for the. chances of Krista and other young girls finding "place in foe sun" in thetkHs of science and technology, her father * that there is "a definite place for women In these finds,” The next genera tl an k in far Mg things, according te Ehr-‘ ‘ »’a space exportation*. He GET THE STANDARD COMPLETE COMPORT PLAN Now your Standard Oil Man brings you brand WITH IMPROVED Stfl ClPMl There’s no question about it! New American Brand Heating Oil is a big dollar's worth! 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I would like more information about the benefits of new Aiunucam Brand Heating Oil and Standard’s Complete Comfort £ Plan for my family. Please have your representative phone ms. No obligation of course! ^ NAME. THE rONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY*, ■ SEPTEMBER 6, 1960 BiM VtdMy Only Ideological that Red U-known foF The Cabinet has approved •worthy quail- note demanding the extradition of Give* Bees a Hot Time j — and Hi* Home as Wall GREAT NECK. N.Y. (APi — Bernard Kaplan wag bothered byr a swarm of bees that had htvedj! on the side of his two-story stucco I j house in this suburban commun-' The Perfect School Dress The perfect school dress! Fine drip-dry cotton ity, ,So Monday he aoeiked a'fagj check with roll-up sleeve in shirtwaist styling. i gasoline, stuck it into the hive nd lit the whole contraption. Firemen arrived in time to con- Button detail front and back. Blue and beige check. Sizes 7 to .14. * ■* ■ *r n»uf»i MOLOTOV ARRIVES Vyacheslav M. Molotov, former Soviet foreign minister, and his wife Paulina arrived in Vienna Monday where he will assume new duties as Russia's permanent representative with the International Atomic Energy Agency^ Molotov has been Soviet ambassador to Outer Mongolia since 1*67. the house was heavily damaged. At last report Kaplan said the hive was gone, but that \he bees Hud* Puppies Daylight Blue” Picture ■ Whiter. ■ Brighter ■ Sharper back-to-school OTHER STYLES ^T $8.9} boatnecks TUy bretthp with svsty step, weigh just 9 ouneueieh. Bouncy crepe tote, steel slunk support Resists dirt, rsptls water. Brushing cleens, restores leather. Available in sins 10 to 2, 2Vi to from Robert Bruce Use a lion Chargf for Your Shoe Purchases A superb blend of 75% luxury lamb's wool and 25% Orion Acrylic fiber gives this Tivoli pullover the bold, dashing took every boy wants. This flattering crossover boatneck comes in ten Fall colors. Console Power Performance-More “putt-iri1 power...better long-range reception m wash including Wiralaec Remote Central M’S FINEST PICTURE EVER! • New, power-packed “Super M-6” console chassis ...convection cooling ... full power transformer . ...assured dependability • Up-front console sound • Choice of bright, decorator colors and styles COMPARE...“the PROOF is in the Picture” Boys’ Sport' Shirts by Tom Sawyer tod Rob Roy. Active boys will like the smarts colors and Ivy- or Continental styling. Moms will like the sensible prices. Sizes 6 to 20. Poll-Parrot HAMPTON’S ELECTRIC COMPANY MIRACLE MILE NOW WITH WIRELESS REMOTE CONTROL ELECTRIC ««ler RMtHtHHNI 4* THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER a, 1*60 ELEVEW NIEtfH KV FUNfiCI CLCUtSI OOGGBTOUT5 H in a jiffy l M Security Force Numberi200 Men Guarding U, N. Envoys Is Big Job Tottaf Plunger rrsra With “Teil»fl*x”, dcrifned for watareaa neape. Tin patentgl. upered tail form «■ «*m m ihwiii pim throufh the obrtmtioe and ' ‘mm it down. Can t nuati ■ IS MX IT MV mu AT MOST HARDWARE STORES AP nawu MAGNATE DIES-WIIIIam F. OTfaU, U. rtoiwrter aad board fhalmaa of General Tire and Kabbrr Oo., Atf at Ma home la taearaffrritig with-aheart a meat far about. a year. Little Babies Like Red Better Thpn Pink, Blue - SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UP!) -If babies had tMir way they’d be wearing red instead of the traditional blue and- pink, according to Lt Col. Vincent I. Hack of Brooke Army Medical Center. Hack said he baaed his findings on recent tests with babies of to six months that show the infants invariable prefer red. Bee- Sam Rayburn, D-Tex., has!Rep been speaker of the U. 8. Noon of 120 y ■ fer IS of the last ter doc ruigg NEW YORK (OP!)—Yon think you’ve got tmuhiesT Qasstder the case of Prank Begley. He's ratxm&ae I* The petsuial se-curity of people—including heads of atate-ta the United Naltoaa headquarters. ■ at # The question was put to him directly. Could he envision the possibility that during the General Assembly session late this mooth the Untied Nations might be vial lad by Eisenhower. Khruschrv, Castro and Trujillo— all at the .same time? “I c t I c particularly want to," he said, without even shuddering at the Ebjiiy la a Mg’. iqddy facnd, affable type who his bossed the U, N. security setup since the place opened for buehteee here If,i years age. At the start, he uea| (1.8. Marines, borrowing a detachment of Ml whs arrived la the Hudson Enter" la a landtag mail-------......... It wasn’t long before he had his own “United Nations security force." It now numbers around 200 and Is beefed up to 290 during Assembly time. At (hesent Its manpower is from England. Ireland, France, Belgium. Norway. Sweden. Denmark. Canada. Brazil, ,Nationalist China and the United States. The U.S. members comprise IS to 90 per cent of the force. LAND Or ITS OWN Visitors laave U.S. territory when they enter the U. N. en-Ms II pens local, state.1 and federal laws technically do not apply. However, if a Manhattan policeman is in hot pursuit of a criminal wbo he have to be invited? You might think the U.N; guard density is pretty thick— 290 for if acres as compared with the .New Yark average of two policemen per 11 acres of the city area. However, the U.N. denrity shoots up higher when a head of state enters the « SETS or GUARDS Up has four sets of protectors around him—his own bodyguards, State Department special agents assigned to the party, tha city police, who have their own responsibility, and the U. N. force. “What wo do Is funnel them *y is ota-tlon them so there won’t be more sonority than delegates," Begley said. "When Abroach ehev was hen before. If wis 1 little awkward becaooe of tha ■ambers of aeourtty; I think it was i little harder to handle security than M sms to handle Khrushchev. He bad a good crew of hia own MVD boys and they wanted to be gloaeot to him; the State Department was worried, and* they wanted to bo dooe; the city was worried; we wanted our boy* to be doao—you had to wade through 90 guys even to toft to Ida. . / 'The state visits pass miy problems because you cant make one mistake. Durthg the years since the U. N. opened In 19ft we’ve had good hick. We’ve had Incidents hare, but wo caugbt them ad in time, "We hnd Mm Puerto Ricans here a week before they want and shot up Blair House. (This was the assassination attempt in Machinist Mate Does Solo Flight; Now in Trouble NORFOLK. Va. (AP)-A Navy enlisted man Who singlehanded flew a four-engine patrol bomber halfway across the country was back home today, mum, confined, and facing what the Navy called administrative action *S- Washlngton on Praatdant Tra-maqJ They made tbair attempt here, but we gat them. Two of them wore armed. IN tonal' them over to tha local police." TIM U.N. tone wears biue- _ tha U.N. to-stgnta. Except in times of crista -ouch aa the upcoming one "OUr trend is to emphasise service and courtesy rather than entoroemant."" Swedish Co-Ops See Members, Sales Up STOCKHOLM - Sweden's con tumor cooperatives, which consfl. the country’s largest retail (AdvHUMlBtat) A Navy crew Monday flew Aviation Machinist Mate l.C. Robert Swain, here from Shreveport, La.. M, where Swain's bold flight ended Saturday. . ‘ . # . ;W * Swain said the rest of the crew was late tor departure from San Diego, Calif., .so he took off tn the P3VS Navy patrol bomber by himself. • * W ■ * ,/• Ho never’ had flown a plane before and- the Air Force- called his lint attempt "a very remarkable bership by nearly 20,000 last year, to 1,130,000. Since most members represent a whole family, Marly half the population la affiliated with movement. * The coops' sales last year totaled 1000.000.000, a rise of more than 5 per'cent over 1931. OMjpe seH if per cent of the country’s retail goods and one fourth of the bsamd NSW WHITE Cewtof Machines Aatonatlc ZIG-ZAG Ctuli at tatii Qpiril • OmmUmN • Smu fw*u< • tern. Sn4> tfWIN ! • Sewtlimm PI 5-4049 With Cabinet •INI Accessories CURTS APPLIANCES factory 1077 W. HURON Wkttt Dealer AFTER HOURS OR 1-9762 and Friday ------—~ City Buys Green Bolt OTTAWA — A green belt completely surrounding Ottawa It being bought up by the city. The 3H mile-wide atrip will coat the Canadian capital S30,000.000 and covar M square miles. ORRIEDOVER DEBTS BWwSoVn cbkdit1*JSinilYoIVTJJ'*1 •fwrs mitrim *f mo Mil at Hf mi nay hi afi'ii re t MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSILORS Rambler Policy Statement Made At Press .. What Next In The Great Compact Car Revolution? engineers, road builden, and others can devote more time to. catching up with basic traffic needs and km time trying to keep up with growth in car sia and power. Greater usefulness to the user will result in long-range stimulation of the total automobile market; encourage increased multiple car ownership, more personal car usage. Beyond all this there is e factor of basic importance. The excesses of the automobile industry, perhaps the world’s leading example of the working of a free economy, seriously weakened confidence in our system, not only in the eyes of our own people but in the eyes of a world torn between conflicting |jff The most important and most can-J spicuous product of our economy grew in almost unbelievable waste and ostentation, at a time when intensely serious unmet problems were hi’ with deep end widespread could this help but cast validity of our approach! I wonder how many tag to work in a tail-__________ felt a wave of embarrassment, listening to' the car radio Newt of the defeat of a school bond issue? The a sym STOCK UP NOW! 80-SQUARE COTTON PERCALE IN 4 YARD DRESS LENGTHS Man wtaMw aid greater caa-toeeer choice live given the haver a new influence. The accent has shifted from frills to ftmdtea aad btoefldal Hundreds of delightful new prints in hi-count cotton percale . . . the fabric that experts and beginners all like to woric on! It’* machfM writable, easy to cot *n sew! It’s perfect for mother-and-daughter fashions, school fashions, sportswear! It’e perfect for csfeel Pick now from ,Penney*s peak selection! Save! I durability will be Ike watchwords of the todartry la Ike 1960’s. - ii 4 paid length »of Ike pack* aad wefo com-to every effort le stay there. ®To such advantages as the attitude and enftamaimhip of our enmtogwes, the ooiapict concept, Staple-Unit construction, the anti-corrosion body-dip, we aw adding the fhtatole Anftred muffler and tail-pipe and other contrtoutions to basic excellence. The new car designs are saving materials and itaMram and relieving probkaa related to the car. Traffic As a nation, we are by no means back on the right track. We are still taking srime wrong roads that could spell /disaster for the hopes o£ a free worid. But the car industry has made a .start. It provides some encouragement that the turnaround toward greater functionalism and durability to our major consumer product mean* that the national psychology is bending toward* reason end realism. Defining the Compact Car la the heaRloag reft to capitalize on the compact tread, ft* word wpect has beea stretched M Iks paint of coahaka as to Jatf what a compact carte. . One of die most dramatic results was gasoline economy, which led to high identification between the designation “compact” and economy. Hut tends to limit the concept—it is much broader than that, and includes performance as well as economy. Originally the inquiry of American Motor*' founder, George Mason, into automobile concepts led him first to a study of basic transportation. He said, “Let’s not try to miniaturire or shrink the present car, but let’s start with the essence of the automobile and work up from there. Let's build on whet if beete.*' He thought of basic in two ways; on the one hand, the physical minimum*, and on the other, the psychological minimum*. In thnRHmer, you face inch facto as the mtofamun distance between wheel housings that permit fall comfort for each passenger, as well as adequate luggage end engine spam. After the first studies, the conclusion was that you could not go much below 100 inches in wheelbase and still have the space desired by Americans for five or six passengers, and That you need not go above 117 inches. It was also essential to consider, tha psychological baafeein the owner's mind. Every way this was looked at suggested “Basic" aad “balance" became key terms in developing the compact concept. They remote so, in oar view, today.---.-J. ,, However, “bask" and “balance" go beyond mere size. Compact means “a katoMsi combination of basic automobile values." Thk includes thorn proport lone of pemregtr aad stflity space, riding comfort, handling ease, ptoforemare, economy, dependability, durability, attractiveness and safety that predece the opttamm prodftt rejig, r ’ ' [;■—■ RAMBLER OFFERS 3 DISTINCT SIZES OF COMPACT CARS Widest Choice of Models iimpiiMMi)- ■mssui in v-i-sm AII-RwnS CompKt C»r IS».yiM|.l?7«l»Hr Sti. 200 w 215 NO V-l Rmm IsmUiow. sirestsseoi v » if 0SM01 El - lh, only Com NdUinC*. IM.VIm|. MO or 270 HP Hi|h p*r This balance can now be achieved in can ranging between 170 inches and 200 inchm in kngth. Today, to a car designed frir general-purpose family use, it is impractical to go below 170 inches be-cauae passenger comfort, trunk, and engine space ditip below reasonable standards. Above 200 inchm you begin to suffer serious losses in sconomy or performance and handling ease. This h why we define compact as “a balanced combination of basic automobile values." American Motors Styling ' Philosophy Oar attitude toward atythf b that boaafy tea baric Ingredient of product „7utee uud b fundumeutolly related to the purpose of the product. Our competitors mode appearauce change for change** sake the primary Such forced obsolescence narked the greatest depredation of the car owner** tevsetmiul, end her ami one of the tenet expensive factors hi manufacturing cast and product qmBty. Our objectives are: 1. Reduction of depredation and tha hnnerfeetten that result from capricious chaage. 2. Lengthening trouble-free operation through building greater life and durability into the cur itself. 3. Improving the car’s function as a means of tnmeportation. We intond to follow a policy of styling stability and continuity, we are going to take two related approaches and let buyer response lead us. In the care of the ioccearitri Rambler American, up will offer styling stability. We will net chaage the appearance of-ihtea. modeb annually. Our chnagea In thte car wM is goreraed amantklly by two factors; (l)chmmM that achieve fanettenei or darabHty improvement, and (2) boric appearance chaagm that prevent ootdattegm the nnrit of long-range , aad fandn-mentaftrende in castomer taste. This will protect the owner's investment in the product. lathe case of tha RemMw 4 and V4 (108-inch wheelbase modeb). we niff follow a modified program of ■tyting continuity, staying dooe to tha mainstream of appearance popularity bat without abrupt or whimsical chaage from year to year. In the case of the Ambamador we will abefoltow the panne of Modified etyiteg conttenity, but with hcreaateg an# the other Ramhiers, to enlarge the margin el choice. Industry Outlook The compacts are gping to continue their assumption of dominance in the market Before 1961 b out, compacts will be taking half of total new car sales and by the qnd of 1963, compacts will be taking two out of every three oW, It b just u question of ttem before compact can take ever industry leadership. At aa early date the top voteae makes will be compact can. 4 TIMES AS MANY RAMBLERS BOUGHT IN JUST 3 YEARS ..ll 1957 1958 1959 ^JM0B won umu mi,ix7 4*a.cee Our plea of action b to sustain our leadership in modem —to farovr the heaviest imteHtir wnphmW — functional balance aad hasicimprove-ment—and dedicate ourselves whole- heartedly to building even greater s faedrae fife in our product Oar purpose Jk to keep Rambler the symbol of baric, excellence. jRCt’ttlhlBf*- fHE NEW WORLD STANDARD OF BASIC Hope to Add 7,000 Voters CEILING TILE 16x32 BOB BINDER ;£vr branch manager, who « always ready to help you with any of your financial needs. He Invites you to drop In and get acquainted. our modem AUBURN HEIGHTS office Complete banking services including DRIVE-IN WINDOW SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES Till OUTLKT 0 TOO Dan't lay Tm Tih From VS. WaSOTtt Um Mrnay 1055 W. HURON _ FE 8-3717 11 w ' \ Hffilty of Parking t leers; Me., Than., |ri. M 9 — Tees., Wed., Sal. *HT f HE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960 ANYONE CAN AFFORD ARTHUR MURRAY DANCE LESSONS sfkui $07 gs.« M " the business outlook. An increase would have helped to boost toe economy. PornM Youth Killed Report Reds Willing to Fey Double He for British Shipping JACKSON (UPIf - David Parley, ll, Parma, suffered fatal to-Jurles early today when Me car went art at oortrol on a wad aear, LONDON (AP)—Shipping dee reported today that two deals hove been concluded for the ship, meat of Soviet oil in Britirtr took- Germany Readies Sub inn., Germany (DPI) — H largest U-boat ever The companies reported volved are Cambridge and 1 don and Overseas Freighters. These would be the first large Western shipping agreements many was recommissioned Into the Soviet Union since the announcement In July by Standard CU of New Jersey that it would to Be Discussed Waterford Board Will Rule Tonight if Project to Be'Private or Public chartering tankers whether owners had contracted to carry Soviet (A. The announcement was made after tits Fidel Castro government of Cube seized foreign oil teflneries.— ~ No detail! of the Cambridge deal have leaked out I^nttnn and Overseas has a fleet of IS tankers—most of them under 20,000 tons. Reports In tor Baltic exchange —the London market place where shipping deals are transacted said the company has contracted Wisconsin relatives said Rick-urn, 35, his wife, Helen, 34, end their four children, Richard Jr., 7, Robert, g, Catherine, 4, and Patricia, 3, left Wisconsin Rapids, Wb„ late Monday with plans to fly’non stop to Detroit. Authorities waited toe arrival to- Whether or not to continue operation of the controversial rubbish dump on Cooley Lake Road as a private or public project will -be one of the main subjects for dis-at tonight’s Waterford Tbwnshlp Board meeting. West Bloomfield and Waterford Township'residents had filed protests with the board for discontinuance at the dump operation because of smoldering fires end loose debris in the area. Rickman’s sister, Mw. Elvira Pluke, and her husband Nolan before definitely identifying the little girl whose body was recovered. The Rickmans rise had visited Mrs. Rickman1! parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Anderson o! Drummond, Wis. Near seburhen Evanston, HI., Rickraaa checked by radio later he radioed mayday, the to- Plan Subpoena to Get Data on 2 Defectors I WASHINGTON (UPl! IsioAsl Investigators said today they were preparing a subpoena in an effort to gain information about toe two American mathematicians who have defected to Russia. The House Committee’ on Un-American Activities, which last week launched a probe Into the disappearance of William H. Martin and Bemon F. Mitchell, said the National Security Agency l(NSA) had refused to give tbs committee the files on the two was deatfl fee ttosifij land lag at downtown Meigs Field, n few. Macks from CMeage’a leap. Labor Day bathers crowding the Lake Michigan beach saw the craft, Its engines trailing sparks, suddenly veer away from the field and circle out over the water. Smoke engulfed the engine end'the plane suddenly dove, hit the water and exploded, witnesses said. Traffic along wide Lake Shore Drive, already jammed with turning Labor Day vacationers, slowed to a near standstill as an estimated 2,500 persons observed rescue boats and pleasure craft hurrying to -the seem. Other spectators watched from windows of expensive lakeShore apartments that gave the curving strip its gold coast tag. see willing to pay Labor Holiday Takes 79 Canadian lives service Sept 1* -Wert G naval sfflcials revealed today. The commissioning ceremony look place with no publicity. TORONTO (AP>—Fifty-five per- A survey from C p. m. Friday to midnight Monday showed at least TP persons died to car accidents, drowning* and from other ecd-causes. The MBS Labor Day totality toll whs 74. The highway death toD equalled the ll55 court of SB and .tor exceeded tort year?* 43. It alao topped the'pre-holiday forecart of 50 by the Canadian Highway Safety OWIfR ^ ^ • SPECIAL NO J ICE TO All... •RUPTURED WEARERS J .. ANAZINC HEW .v. .* ---HOLDS BPPTUBE WITHOUT IELJS-• BUCKLES OR STRAPS -• This discovery ,»*• made eftoc years of rtseareh * end approved by many deqtows- ^ ••• - •.•gy Tar Free rads Folder Scad tor SYKKS HMtWA CONTtOl WRV1CI r. Pcttnkars U, FtoriSs North Winding to prevMo four Into of hie hurt ss s township rubbish dump. IMa will also be A hearing date will be reel for rezoaing from residential to commercial two tots on Lochavcn Rood near Elizabeth Lake Road and four additional tots to,the Stiver Beach Subdivision. Tlse board wil) discuss toe ap-pointment of one man from the township board to the newly authorized Fireman’s Civil Sendee Commission for a period of six One man also wifi be selected from the Township firefighters Association andthese two wU ae-toet a third meutoar to make up Developers of the Vista ViUs Subdivision on Crtacent Lake Road near Tubbs Road will present a land Net for Jthe board’s approval. The WatMns Hills plat No. 4, located in Drayton Plains,-will again be presented and recommended improvements discussed. The plat had been rejected at last week’* meeting due to minor adjustments. Pontiac Dealer for Berne Better Built Furniture Since 1937 I -urge, Comfortable Sofa and Matching Chftif New shipments of lamps for Fell selling just received. New'Styles! New.Values! New Savings! Table Lattms or Floor, Bridge, Pole and Tree lamps, Desk lamps, Bed lamps. Choose from Rembrandt, Sandel, Westwood and, other makes of good lamps. Buy now for the long evenings just ahead, at Special Savings. hand tailored to perfection by expert Swiss Craftsmen. Better construc-tion by Berne, for years and years of family use. Available In your choice of covers and colors, with spring or foam rubber cushions. ' Now as low as $189M r«r s*fa or Chair at $104.00 Come in and ste our sofas and chairs In matching acts or separate. Now offered lr^ suites as lew as fl24.Se up. Wa Sail 17 Nationally Advertised Unas at Mama Furnishings. “Our Location and Lower Overhead Save$ You Money’ CAREFUL FREE DELIVERY £ AMPLE FREE PARKING NEIGHBORHOOD BANKING AT ITS BESTI Boy Wins Race Over Mackinac Bridge in Walk 3300 Auburn Rood Ul 2-2500 School Aid Attured Open Monday and Friday Evening FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND AYE. UHDMM LILIES TASKER'S- a W. Ism ' Ri-od Karen Ann and Gail Marie Samra, niece* of the bride,, wore white silk organza over taffeta, with avocado green bow*. They carried, basket* of hr the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mulopulos of Toledo, Ohio. the hipline on each aide of the bouffant skirt which was styled with chapel train. Alencon lace, tifembroldered with ctyatal and seed pearl*, edged the ecoop neckline and throe-quarter length sleeve*. IVeach illusion veiling was caught by a crown of beaded fabric and lace. A drop pearl and earrings, gift of the bride* groom, were also worn. Cyril* bidium orchids centered the bridal cascade of Fuji chrysanthemums and croton leaves. rite newlyweds win make The Rev. Arvtd E. Anderson officiated at the marriage of Barbara Kay Miller and Ronnie L. Koon, Saturday evening, in Christ Lutheran Church. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Richard P. Kitts of Warrtaghaid—Drive. Drayton Plains, and C^ jT mBw oT Anders Road, Waterford Township. - Min. James Pemberton of Wdhamaker Street, Water* ford ^Township, and William Jfopft of Putnam Avenue are parents of the bridegroom. r French illusion veiling caught of Waterford Township, on leave from Honolulu, was best man. Ushers were Michael Ewer of Waterford Township and James Deworken of Royal Oak. f Pick Washable Toy Depending ot) public demand, a claaa in music appreciation or in playing the recorder, a forerunner of the flute, will be taught by*Dr. William Casey, music, director at Brookside School, Crenbrook. W. Robert UaelMs, instructor at Crsn-brook School, win-conduct the literature class. by a rhinestone tiara feS to the basque., waistline of the blade's gown of white French Chantilly lace over satin. The bodice was styled with Sabrina neckline and long tapered. FEATURES PEPLUM A bouffant skirt featured’a handkerchief peplum of lace, above* pleated tulle rifffles cascading into a chapel train. White roees and stepanotis comprised the bride’s cascade bouquet. . Attending the bride ware Vicky June Ryden honor maid, with Gail Schmitser of Pontiac and Claudia Kelly of Drayton Plains, bridesmaids. Newlyweds Motor to New Orleans Classes Scheduled for Adults Koon-MUlei in Christ Lutheran Rite' each designed for fun and en-’ joyment as well as education, said Thomas E. Jonas, director of night school. Cfe&n for Comfort Cleanliness is Important to comfort as well as th health! Dirt, perspiration, and other bodily eecreafiens can Jrritate - vouf «khf|, ffy MhiM "often. and washing hands and face .during the day, you will remove these sources of possfoe ’ Irritation - and help prevent dermatitis. Th* Phillip Cohens of Detroit announce the Wedding Is Solemnized 1 . White gladioli banked the altar in St. Michael Church Saturday morning for the^wp- mwbunda of frosty i featured back panel with rosebuds at tbs i caught hlpUne. GAIL MARILYNN COHE.X engagement. of her daughter Susan Meredith to Air Force Lt. Schalm, son Scholms of Wilkes-Barre, Miss Cummins’ fattier is Manion M. Cummins of Bloomfield • Hills. I CNPWUMt ^ Mtehi#l Thomas, soiem-I of their nited by the Rev. Francis J. Marilynn and Mrs. juries F. English n meld's bouquet. The bridegroom had James j Downing lor best man. Gary Hartsman et Pontiac and Wfl- [ Ham Downing of Auburn Heights ushered. ha I". Franklin I). sorTlrf Mrs* Mrs, Mary McMiUan opened I 6rule son. ion Robert Thomas of Melbourne . ^ Place and the late- Mr. Ben Gmlesons The princeu-Une bridal godn ‘ . . . ft wrote silk organza over taf-Of Voorheu feta featured a bodice ef Chan- j —- KfUfJ tllly-type lace. Lice applique i —iVr— wroe acattwed on the bouffant j heV home on North Andsftion Street for the afternoon recep- Uon following hei grsndieugh- ter's wedding. . it “ Mr ■ Black patent accessorise accented the Mack linen Hmath | Muse downed by. Bm new kite. The wedding skirt which swept into a chapel ^ ** Fingertip veiling of silk illtt- j August 1961. sion fell from a crown of pearls - anil rhinestones. The bride ] wore small pearl and diamond Thomas for traveling to Nmth-l era Michigan. The couple still |— live In Pontiac. ,* TIm LrliU vlu --—J- »»-i . -i 1 allS VIIUB wno veralty of Detroit, la sffllieted I with Alpha Sigma Tau Soror- prayer hook topped with a purple-throated whlta orchid 3R- sJtfiMM ] i ,■ . * * df* Mrs. English appeared la a ——»-¥- - wttii Ivy foliage. * Mrs. Blanche Joan Wiegandt served as - « SM- Jacketed sheath dreaa of beige silk organza over taffeta, with H Cummins rn*dd of honor with Mrs. a. l.UmmillS i,—.. mUA Mm Tnlm brown accessories and eorssge * ,, James Miggaiu sna Mrs. jonn Of Commerce Howells, brideunalds. Their Lake turquoise taffeta princess-line pinned white rotas to her tight green sheath dross of silk or- announces the ^ "ft cnuhe6 ^ MRS. MICHAEL THOMAS ganza over taffeta. Eleanor McClure Marries SUSAN Mi CUMMINS An arch of white' gladioli flanked by caadelabra decorated (he altar of the Apostolic Church of Christ for Saturday Gara McClure and Leonard F. Gay. The bridegroom’s grandfather and namesake the Rev. L. A.-Parent officiated at the double-ring ceremony before some 300 guests. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. McClure of Birmingham, approached the altar in a full-length gown of silk taffeta'with lace ap-pUqued bodice and long ta-pered sleeves. The bouffant Skin which extended to form . a train featured scatfewd lace blue accessories Sod a white -appliques embroidered in se- orchid corsage, quins. A halo crown St pearl- A coral silk dress, designed lied orange blossoms secured, and sewn by the bride, was Quit Mothering Her; Abby Divorcee Out on Town By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD ■ Publisher, The Pontiac Press • ROME — Girls play a big part in this great Olympiad and it’s time they had a column of their own. k k k Ingrid Kramer, the German diver who won the spring board and the high platform titles, holds another Olympic record. She received the most flowers. After she defeated - our heavily favored Paula Jean-Pope for her first crown, an enthusiastic homeland ahpw&ed her with bouquets. Then, following her second victory, the German lass had more posies than a florist. Ingrid is only 17rbut she’s the greatest diver In the World. She’s a classic Teutonic blonde, :★ dr ★ When Mrs. Pope lost the first diving title, she sat right down and exercised woman’s time-honored privilege of having a good, old-fashioned cry. Still, her three youngsters at home can know that mama won two second places for ti\e United States. dr .dr it Beauty operators* In the Olympic viflhge say all the girls are frequent customers. They never appear for their events without a previous appointment. Borne of the lasses are letting the Italian#, give them the Roman halr-drf of the moment. “They don’t complain, these athletes,” say the Italian operators, "and they tip well—especially the Americans.” .■fT I, ” W w*. ke ' / Romance has lifted Its lovely hntf smiling head. Bef Kamerbeck, grand-looking decathlon hope from Turkey, and Mary Blgnal are ‘‘that vray." Mary's s brood Jumper and sprinter from Britain, this has ail the earmarks of another Olympic wedding. | k k ks. Borne of the several hundred “Olympic hostesses” have taken their job# too seriously. Their personal Interpretation of “fratembdng” was at variance with the- official definition. Half a dozen were bounced after the first few days. | k k dr ' • • - - All the girl athletes coriiport themselves on the highest plane. They err never smarty, and they're never forward or thrusting^ themselves into the limelight. They dreaa suitably and-hahdle themselves like ladles. : •- 1 1 ■ ■ •' || k k k* '..., Lillian gfttwI kwWjny wife pf the iports < of The Chicago Tribune took A hundred lira off me on one of the diving events. But don’t get alarmed. One hundred of these Italian 'things doesn’t require a cable home for more money. By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: Please tell me what to do about our daughter. She is 27, divorced and has a 5-year-old child. Abe and the ~ child have been living home since her marriage . break-up. She sleeps all day* reads love magazines and watches T V. She wen’thunt-for a job. I cere for her child and do* all the cooking, housework and laundry. She won’t even rinse oul her own stockings. She get* alimony but spends it all on ClotMs. I never saw a penny from her. She goes with men and stays out until It's light ofctaide. Please, tell me what to do with her. Our pastor gave up. TIRED OUT MOTHER1 1 DEAR TIRED: You may think you are helping your daughter, but you are only hewing her to be lasy, immoral and irresponsible. - Tell her the free ride la over. If she had to get a' Job and raise her.owlf child, perhaps -she weuld-do-Jt.--------,_____ * * ft * If she is spoiled beyond re--covery, try to salvage her child and raise U properly. A 27-year-old "child” Is past the training stage. 1f dr* ★ For amt's pamphlet, "What Teen-agers Want, to Know ■end 25 cents sad a large, Self-addressed, stamped envelope in care at The Pontiac Press. gertip veil. White glamellias and pompom centered with yelldw roses and Ivy streamers comprised the bridal bouquet. Maid of honor Wanda Gay at Ferndale won a coral satin street length gown with matching hat and shoes and held an arrangement of coral glamel-lias with h touch of wheat. Bridesmaids Delane Fields, Audrey Knlghten and Donelda Archer appeared in royal blue -gowns knd accessories Identical to those of th* honor maid. Their cascade bouquets of butterscotch and bronze chrysanthemums were enhanced by tiny cattails. - Two-year-old Karen McClure, the bride's niece, wgs flower maid in a bouffant * gown pf I white Organdy. Karen's Mother David was ringbearer.. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Gay of Ferndale, (he bridegroom naked Calvin Ringle of Clawson to be his best man. Ralph Gay of Ferndale, Roy Parent of Rochester end Allen Parent Jr. served as attendants. Ushering were Steven Ringle of Royal Oak and Kenneth Gay af Ferndale. At a reception In the church parlor, Mrs. McClure greeted guests In a violet shantung arose widi white accessories. Her corsage was of pink glp-mellias and pink rosebuds. Mrs. Gay worn a candlelight brocade ensemble with royal ■hoes and handbag and small Mack feather hat to. begin a trip to Northern Michigan. The bridegroom attended Lawrence Institute of Tech-nology. Sylvan Lake Branch of the Women’s National l sponsor af lower_ show Thursday at the Oakland County Root Club. Se-1 lecting flowers of various sues and shapes for colorful arrangement displays are, from left, Mrs, A. E. Kohn of Garland Street, presidentf Mrs. George Kieffer of Woodland Street, house plant chairman; and Mrs. Raymond Dombrowski of Garland Street> general chairman. - *.’* MRS. LEONARD F. OAT AnimalWorks to Open Se&son lor Art Unit - "Animals In All” is the theme chosen for the Bloomfield Art Association’s opening ■how. The premiere of the invitational #11 - professional public exhibit is set for Sunday afternoon at the Woodward avenue galleries. - L. . The endless possibilities of executing (fie strength and grict of me animal kingdom in atone, pefinsd a multitude of arts media will be viewed by ari lovers Sept. 12 through Oct; S. Chairmen of the show Karyl Hill and Rocco DiMarco have. persuaded artists Betty Conn, Svca Kline, Alfred VaaLoen. Het LaMore. Milton Avery end Arthur Dante to display their work. > Also to be seen are bronzes if a horse and hippopotamus / by Tex Shevitz, and boars by / Carl Milles and Paul Suttman/ Suttman, on the faculty of the -University of Michigan, la the winner of the top aculptaring award at the Saliburg/Inter-national Art Academy/Exhibition end is presently studying with Italian Sculptor7Mansion . a Rackham Foundation grant Terra cotta works include Betty Devenport Ford's ant-eater, • rhinoceros by Thomas Brim and a seel by Gwen Lux. Marshall Frederics wfll show a stone nm end a raccoon to ceramic scripture by Rosemary Z wick will be seen. Water color, drewlngs and woodcuts will be exhibited by Carolyn and Frederick Simper, Ray De Francisco, Charles /Culver, Marino Marini. Steven Davidec, Joseph Dorajan and— Clifford B. West Gallery hours are from 2 to 5 p. a. end 7 to 9 p. m. on Saturdays and Sundays. ArraagemeBla for teachers. m W————I . .... tour th| show' at ether^Bbims may be made through Mis.-. George C. Hill of Peaiotone* Street, Birmingham.' R THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 6, i860 / WHISK AWAY k per 100th birthday is on Sept. T, but the chief celebration was held NOW OPEN THE BONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, I960 Her Rule: ‘Keep Busy and Keep Laughing* Peppy &rbtidma Moses 100Years Ydung Wednesday t • Duties shod! be a cm, no! household chore* • Set • tans for yawr return a try aet to sreinaj it. ■SascM sad safMriafcs *pc lyprifiili it. if you return I to her boa* safety. ~ Oandniw* for wi babies, lbs new Garber Baby Paata are, just the thiaf to keep baby socially aoccjptt* Me. Made frost i satin-soft, poly--vinyl film that's waterproof, acid-proof, Itakproef aad udiatin lest of m. a woat stiffen, will stay soft for the Nil af the peats. Garber Baby Paata are generously ctd to allow for MteUm. tar* aad extra-Urge. Tba triefc Is lo 1st baby aat taateiJ al nakiag bias aat (2) It pays to f ^ treat temporary ** • baby's right Forcing never made a baby a bigger or better eater. ()) Rotating colors and kinds of food does wooden for tbe bright appetite department. EAGLE BRIDGE, NX W-Your first impression Of Grandma Moaes is that ahe:*~ver& fragile. She's sitting In the living room, looking small at one end of a bigl sight and hearing in admirable sole, wearing a blue print dress repair. You lycQnie"aware that aad pink sweater, with a black her seemingly frail i0>*pojHnd is realty rise *s sad Junior Dinners. combine 'vegetables, mast and cereal for ex-illy intar-estiog flavor. 10 tempting varieties, with everything from Chicken Noodle Dinner to Macaroni, Tomato, Beef and Beoon. Serve any one with a Gerber Meet or green vegetable aad treat baby to tbe tastiest time of Ms Ufa. Gerber Baby Foods, Fremont, Michigai Enjoy Modern Comfort ^ While You Have Your S Hair Done , • . Permanent* $10-S12.50-$15 ^ 4U The Latest Beauty ■ W vj CALL for Appt. TODAY PPM Fartrtn* 1 Front oaiReor MARY’S W 2407 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FE 8-3701 _ PERMANENTS pMe with Hnlreat and Set Mm Appeiabeeal Macawory FE 5-M00 LOUIS ^ (Uttar's Nate: aravsja list eat far jwumu.i By dOY MILLER SHE INVITES TALK a chair baaMt her, you're swtad la it nod As she chats about this aad that, the character of a remarkable woman emerges: Klndty.btaoir-ous, unaffected, indomitable, with where dm Http now. One ad 10 mm, rbnaat, a truck t wile Mary. ■AS A BOY FRIEND Later, in an •tally dresses, _ M-left-over house patot, making rudimentary education farm girts got la theas days aad left bout at 12 la become a hired girl la the depicting eventa to her life will *ann Grandma Moses STS mSVSeE r iBp York City Sept. 12. Last month Aha enjoyed herself bttgdyat a preMrtixky obaervaace at the southern Vehognt^irt center to Maadwter, where herder-trait by painter Dean Fausett was unveiled. Yea ask Brae torn Moses who’s At 2T she married a young farm- went to ttve ia the ~ Valley in-VlrgtaU, "a _ earth.” dm calls it. There five of her 10 children died la infancy. Tbe family returned to upstate . New York in 1905 and bought the “ stti t ‘ Her husband died to 1927. Until 10 yean ago, she stayed on the home-piace, but flatBy was persuaded to move to the ranch bourn across the rand. Most of herdeacendants, including ii grandchildren and 30 AT IWMh Grandma ,Moses, who mil celebrate her lOOth birthday Wednesday, shares with her many admirers her recioe tor a long life, “Keep busy 'keep laugh* ing.r’ She still paints daily ut her small fatepen studio. her to say Ronweae or Edward primitive, aad ehe retorts promptly: “Dean Tallin” Then, with a ladylike chuckle: “He’s wy bey Wend. I have e let ef bey Wends. That's the way to stay ysang.M.—.. .... She likes to keep up with whet's going on in the world, and religiously reeds the daily Troy Record aad three weekly newspapers. * . * a Her view on a man traveling in ■pace is to the point: r (■HI a domed fool. The Lord put ua on -earth aad ws should Stay here until He cones after us. They're spending money for those ofrtce things while lots of people Forrest Mooes, a young-looking 87, comments: "Some people think my mother’s painting sprang up out of the ground like a mushroom. paint myself, primitive tax Aad Washable Fabrics Meet No Bounds Though we're inclined to think that tMn-made.washabie fabrics arc as altAmerican as a hot dog. that is ooiy a partial truth. Sudaabie synthetics are bellies o4» tbe fashion ball both sides of the Atlantic. Evidence of this fact was dramatically displayed at the MUaa Seavie Flair. The nine-largest Italian imduoera of ' synthetics occupied the major portion af. the fair's textile pavilion,” exhibiting washable fabrics lor home furnishing* as well as (UPD — Nonfat’dry I can be stored at room l perature for oeverol months. Display. of Crest Is Vulgar - By EMILY N8f Dear Ml*. Post: Tito family ef a Mori of mine leoaatty had their family tret trooad and have discovered a "coat ef anno which until now they dH not know existed. They has* had embtoma to cotar mad* of it god have aewn theee onto various articles of clothing, such as mods jackets and blazers, similar to those worn by students. I was Always under the tn# presslorthat the family crest or boat of arms was reserved for seal rings, diver, stationery and related matters, but I have never seen it displayed in this way on clothing. Am I comet inkelievtng that this is an Improper uae of a crest? * .* * Answer: You are right, to display one’s crest or coat of anas op clothing is improper sad to very bad taste. Dear Mrs. Post; A friend of ♦ " ★ ♦ • mine always uses rod ink when writing letters, b ngt the use the use of red ink incorrect lor social correspondence? -—Aaswsri Excepting at Christmas time for greetings, rod Ink Is to very bed taste. DOMT RUN OUT OF MIL* ribbon around her throat. Her arthritic ■ fingers are curled together in her lap. Yoe advance hesitantly. How do you address America’s best of that mooey. It’s a foolish piece of business.. ! may be old-fashioned, but that’s the way l feel about tt" be 100 this week aad atm pa evkry gay? Is it too forward to call her ‘Grandma,” or will die expect 1C Do you have to about? But she has sighted company, Her lace lights up in a gamin grin, Her nazel eyes sparkle behind their spectacles, she quickly .pats her white hair in place. Her welcoming frame supports a spirit that’s at once robust aad ageless. She admits she’s never been up in an airplane, and she’s not going to go either. But as aa after-*£• never met: Florida soa- ,»* says with a glint in sbeBt aha keeps an too fireplace her eyes: ‘‘Unleas it would be out- than, Browsviile, Neb., that came la the day’s mail along with a pair of shoes. 'They fit nicely, bat I don’t need them. People keep HERE IT IS • •• “six nightgowns at a time, » dresses, bedding of aH description.” There’s a bust of Albert Schweit-tor oh the grand piano, the Heritage Foundation's 1988 ''Reverence 1 for Life Award.” : With the sagacity of experience she gives her rules for not growing old: Keep busy, keep >in young company, keep laughing. "Don’ worry if it's a dirty joke, just laugh.” “Grandma!" chides hec daughter-in-law. tkwndRnrjust 'winks. She explains: “When my brothers oaad to eBmb up te the roof, rd.ge ap to the peek. Ne-body’s going to beet me la anything. 'Except swimming. My father tried to toaoh me, holding me aa the palm of his heed end thee taking tt away., Dews I’d ge. He finally gave up. I never She odds, reflectively: “1 see no necessity of tt now;” Another point, about which she feels strongly is that children--whom she loves—ere given too much today. 1 When she was a child, she says, and she wanted to make a pi< she had to use harry jutosa and the red paint for branding sheep. “As a child, everything had to be rad. The redder it was the prettier, I thought. I wanted n red dram so bad, but I never had When I waa 90 years old, someone sent me the reddest percale I ever Hk 1 ‘ ilfe For Your Wedding QUALITY At Ericas Too Can Afford and Quantity Ie M VUatoa to SmT SWow o Tmtif -Has ■ • A wsStlftf (Mat k*ak e a am Mrf wi aii ito . e a ■aVtm auMm Mrttnwte •S995 I C. R. HASKILL STUDIO II Mt. Clement li. FB 4-S881 100% Du Pont nylon carpet 12, IS foot widths . ONLY $7.95 »q. yd. Corpoting you've always wanted . . , yours now in SEABREEZE — a carpet 1 that will wdor and wear and wear... give you lasting beauty — at a price you con't afford to miss. Made of 100% 15 Denier DuPont nylon, this new Cut pile twin broadloom resists crushing and matting : . . is easy to clean i . resists stains... is non-allergenic. Comes in a wide range af colors and Is completely mothproof, In addition SEABREEZE, with Calloway's exclusive Bonded Woven Back insures maximum stability and wear. For the greatest carpet wear at the lowest price, see SEABREEZE today! Molls OPEN FRIDAY and * MONDAY EVENINGS / . Park Free at the Front Door! Mr. THOMAS9. THIS WEEKEND! NYE DAIRY SIS Oakland Are. FI 2-6718 Meet Yen Friends 7utm$ RIKER FOUNTAIN N-1I81 RUST REMOVER Stains Vonisk ie 15 S#ce«ds bingt Haadarl.Ne.toF-toto rke*' TRY WHISK AWAY TODAY! New Hendy 4 ex. Bottle Sbeuat 4.00 Special M.UU 1 iwVim'nwdr IT TOUR FOOD STORE Band Instrument Repair FACTORY TRAINED EXPERTS Have your lnatrument chocked before school atarta! All Work Guaranteed CaM Music Open Friday Nights 119 N. Saginaw FE 5-8222 . Park Free in Rear Distinctive drapery makes an unusual accent on a dress by Brtgance. The border of the wide boat neckline it draped, aa are the cuffs on tbf % sleeves, and the belt. The skirt la slightly gathered in front. A very simple ' can be made from the basic pattern without the drapery. Tty el or silk), silk, rayon, shantung or novelty cottons. From size chart select the one best for you. Our measurements are comparable to ready-to-wear size*. ■ * *f HAIR FASHIONS Size 12 requires 3 yards of 45” material for dress and % yard of I 39” material for lining. To order Pattern No. N-11M, I state size, send tl- For first dam I mail, add 5c. For air mail ban-1 dling, add 25c. > New book No. 18 now available I at 91 each. Tbe following pattern I books are available at fl cadi— 1 or any 2 for 91.58. any 3 for 1?, i any 4 for 12.50, all 5 for |S—No. j 12-13x, B-C, NO. 15, No. 18, fto. it. I If paid hy check, add 5c for I Address 9>A^A, B G.P.O., Dept. P-6, New York 1,1] N. Y. Call Notv for an Appointment ' /- FE 44382 2521 Elizabeth Lake Road Ifoim: Mor^ Thurs^ Fri. 9-9; Tues^ Wed., Sat. E-6 GRAND CDENING PONTIAC BOOK & CARD SHOP 9 W. LAWRENCE FB 8-1046 (Formerly Old Profs Book Shop} Most Complete Selection - Adult and Children's Boob and Greeting Cards Special Grand Opening Offer! A FREE BOOK With Every Purchaae of $3 or More • Come in and Browse Around! THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, I960 FIFTEEN Assure Safety of Small Pry for a complete selection of fin ' mod fireplace equipment . . You may be oble to get t# sleep right knee slightly and lift your foot if you nlos from heod to toe. Stori up from the bod. Let it flop bock Jo with the toes by wiggling them and then the bed in e limp feshion. let them feel limp. Next.Aend your donees are very good that you’ve Hmit-tots~ef Owediggingyour Ain into your coat collar, looking down as you walk and generally building up a store of lines for yourself. Custom-fitted you r flmpioco ALL SIZES IN STOCK! 48“H0UR' DELIVERY! FLEXSCREEN Cuitom-Fitted for Flreploca Up to 48“ Wldo Stitched tie. Whet e pretty twist-to-trim two feet. Wear it ertly wMh everything you Easy Hollanddise-Sauce Will Not Separate HOODED FLEX. SCREEN Delivery For Fireplaces Up *n BO** Wldt ond High Skirts and Sweaters DYED TO MATCH a firestool Sweater FREE .. . to teen-agers A Brand New FLEXTONG TEEN-AGE NEWSPAPER Block Wrought Iron and Brass The sweater is a blending of lamb's wool and fur fiber ... soft, yet practical. The skirt is of a matching doeskin flannel. They belong together. irbe pgW«d by Cooper* storting in September loot! If you've ever wrestled e balky log . . , end lost. Flex- « / tong is the Go-Together / Featuring ★ PRIZES FOR TEEN-AGE READERS ★ TEEN-AGE FASHION NEWS ★ “HOW TO DO IF ARTICLES FLEXTONG arid Shovel in Stood $24.95 FLEXTONG 3-Pc. Hanging Sot $21.00 ★ AN OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU TO SKIRT WRITE JACKET *11 To enhance the appeal once BLOUSE "Old Reliable" Rooster WEAJHERVANE A wonderful jacquard wool twoed in o combination of separates to compliment one. another. The blouse is made of dacron pimo. JEWELERS . i ' HURON at TELEGRAPH Thun., Fri. 10 to ftl-Tuet., Wed, Sot. 10 to 6\ 24 WEST HURON ST. Open Tonight and Friday, 'til 9 ; *:■' y % ■ . * lA Pants Look Alike own weJNris fc an toe loose and Italy’s eu the curve. on divergent tracks. And yet in both the French and the Italian Collections a similarity exists. A look shared is the pants picture far almost any- STAY ALIVE LONGER vminUTiroMs mleSnUueenoVf^ That atone up the European fashion alnry tar autumn. I960. The silhouetted find themselves where at say time, worn under matching suttf, skirts and coats. m Munm yam in I suppose there ftp nothing mote ■damans than beiug tired and BoOmt »hl» la is fa mmp at ahht Jpdgtag by the pM-mdA each year, then mum Delibarately relax flit. aMUdm In ymarhp. Neat raise your right atm ap ptohfftohad In a Ihap Hi nnl let it flop back to the bad. Do the Ml thing srtth your bit alto. Continue k) s lazy maimer, altar- your haad backward aa hr as 1 ootnfmtahia. Retura haad la mm 1 mal position. Continue WuULhsm ms haad sn De had—1 aa yaa aaava II hem dds Is mda I steady, tor a while. tneat 1 he a ht nr people stoe heat this prahlsni Soma friha lie awake for hours before going to rfeep while others nating. TOW HUD How ht your head rest on the If you wouM like la hen my 1 leaflet. "Ihutan” which gives yaa 1 many sleep inducing hints, send a | experiemn a very poor brand at side, aa far aa yua can, ahsriy. srtth your request tor Into! No. 1 34 lb jooapMne Lowsnan in can | mjw m*- *— . • " DatUaJor asshBa. maehMi au k jv'k «L. THE frONTIAC PRESS, SEPTEMBER IttW Convenient The fuel oil you will use throughout the year isi pre-determined and you ore billed on equall amount each month. No Jorge fuel bills in colder months. There is more New Mobilheat sold than, any other leading fuel oil qnd there is a reason . . . New Mobilheat is so refined Thqt it actually cleans as it Ixims eliminating costly furnace repairs. New Mobilheat keeps your burner running smoothly at full capacity giving on abundance of warmth and comfort, in coider weather, maintaining an even slow heat on warmer days and evenings giving the maximum of heating satisfaction at a minimum of cost. New Mobilheat Is Cleanly Delivered by Gee’s Conpetent, • Courteous, Efficient Drivers NEW WNLNEAT OOLD-PROOF HEATING OIL FLOWS FREELY IN THE You'll be rhore thon pleased with the competent; efficient manner in which New Mobilheat is delivered to yopr home-in GEE'S New, Modern GMC Trucks (meter- equipped far accuracy) by thoroughiy trained drivers whose first consideration is clebhliness and wfftctem delivery service ~~ ClARKSTON CRAYTON PLAINS PONTIAC PET QUALITY... PET CLEANLINESS... PET PUAIANTEED AUTOMATIC DEUTEBT PLUS HOLDEN RED STAMPS Yes! Why not got Holden Red Stamps! They coot you nothind extra and ore redeemable for valuable premiums. Gee gives Red Stamps with oil fuel orders . . ; Get more for youf money . . ...Get New Mobilheat from GEE . . Get Holden Red Stomps, too. 1 * —FOR OVER 35 YEARS ONE OF FONT)AC'S LEADING FUEL DEALERS— ■HI f % THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1990 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SEVENTEEN presidential nominee Me moat enthusiastic reception so far in Michigan. The Oakland County AfL-CIO Council, which eponaored the Labor Day rally and picnic, estimated the crowd at t5JM6. Then were speeches by the Democratic nominee tor governor; Walter P. Reuther, United Auto Workers president: August Scholle, president of the Michigan AFL-CIO; James K&M, SUET) FOR JACK — Mrs. Daisy Johnson, 538 Linda Vista was a Mg Kennedy booster, sporting campaign ribbons and a blue and white straw hat. administrative board members gave election year salutes to the crowd and Justice Theodore Souris of the State Supreme Court gave a non-partisan wave. Democratic nominee for Congress; Mayor lie was nominated'V the Democrats. YOUNG CAMPAIGNERS — Six potential voters' show political leanings early. From left are Pat Scully, 8 Alfred Court; Sharron 567 Howell 9t.; Sally 8mith, 138 W. Lawrence St.; Patsy's sister Kathy; and Cathleen Kenny, 189 Preston St, Merithcw, 427 Montcalm St;; Patsy Hartworth, HIT WITH CROWD — Big Thunder drew loud noise from the ‘crowd of 13,000 persons at Oakland Park yesterday when he presented an Indian headpiece to Sen. John F. Kennedy. The «mii)ne Democratic presidential nominee smiled and shook Hands with the Vent ttudson;88 Seneca 9t.; Barney Young; 168 Wolfe St.; and Arnold Franklin, 2M Nelson. in Pontiac IT was a red. white and blue M Labor Day in Pontiac. , FIREMEN DEMONSTRATE — They’re not * ★ * cooling off a political squabble—the firemen are The Kennedy Girls, 100 strong, Puttin6 on a water demonstration for the Labor were there in white and blue costumes, promoting their favorite. „ * , * * The Oakland Girls, Republican campaigners, arrivecL-in red and white outfits, distributing GOP ... pins, balloons and pamphlets. . Everyone smiled and laughed. 7 The girts all looked pretty from either side of the political fence. Day crowd. There were also contorts for children, an Indian pow-wow, free co'ffee and a free barbecue. FIPTEEN TWO, FOUR, SIT — Two Femdale score a quiet men, Jolui W. Shopp (left) and E H. Thompson, the festivities. MlGHTEBN the Pontiac press, Tuesday, September r, iw Deaths in Pontiac and Suburban Localities I BuW-ta boats arc subject to tbelinstalled on iaboard craft. ■atm. *nt»»ony Service will be b*d at .*'’*«A Wednesday at the Pint Method* Church lor Bervei Anthony. 66, of m a Paddock St Burial vtl ha in Whits Chap*' Memorial Cent* tery. His body b at the Purriey Funeral Heme. A member of the utOd* board at VM Method* Church, he was a retired inject engineer at Pontiac Motor Division. with hartal hi Elmwood Cemetery, Yale. her of Central Method* Church, die died Monthly after a tee. She was a member .of the Better Homes and Gardsa |il)';,. ^—* ■ *i!y#* Surviving era her husband, and a stater, Mrs Howard Bhenafrit. of Owoaao _____JC, Ray of Drayton Plahw and a **er. Mre. Thomas Nlchrt at Brow* GRy. Mr. Anlhoay died Sunday at St. illnaas of several days. MRS. DAVID L. BROWN Service lor Ida. David L. (Una C.) Brown, 1%, tin Thorpe St.. am ha hid at lalB^. m. Thurs-day at the SpartmGrtffin Chapel. of n rnm ML. will ha held at Wednesday at Voorhaaa Siple Chapel with hartal toUcwing in 0«k HUI Cemetery. dr '* #■' , A retired farmer, ha to eur- rived ly twa denfhN......._ __ Peart Doyle of Baatlae aad Mrs. Stewart Haft of Claw grandchildren; and M great-grand-children. Mr. Contea died unexpectedly of a heart attack * his home Saturday. aaoe mi/u Service for Sam Falca, TO, of AN Whtttcmore St., am held this! morning * the William Vasu Fa-asral Home, On N. Woodward Ave. Bart* was In Ferry Mount Park Cemetery Ml caretaker * The De-| troit Zoological Park, he Is Survived by his wife, E3isab*b; two daughters, Mrs. Helen Ztan of Pontiac aai Mia. Marie Scorbbet of Dotrott; and three grande tdtoran. Mr. Thta suffered a heart attack Friday and was deed ea er-rtv* at St Joseph Mercy Hbepttel. Mbs. orval grimes -Jtontoa for Mre. Orval (Ruby E.) Grimes, 52. ef WTST^OapBI St., will be bald at 1;» p. a. Wednesday at the PNgrhn Holiness Church, with burial by the] Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home la Ottawa Perk Cemetery. She died Sunday after a long Plntes Mrs. Grimes was a member of Pilgrim Holiness Church. Surviving ere her husbeod, her undkmei Um Annin IP Pmo •« nf Carl Of. Qkmboa 3kml) 3t Jakm Hospitality and the Homelike Quality • . « The fine qualities of the Donaleon-lohne Funeral Home are apparent at atvoe. Homelike and hoapitable, our funeral home and oUr staff operate to have all at ease. Your family and friends are the object of our efforts and our kind* ly way of oonductlna tha services. With dignity and oar* always aH are kinHtv received.__________ Pontiac, Sve children, Mr*. Wtl-letta Terry. Mrs. Betty Jean Cm| eon, Mrs. Joan Shetby, Orval J. Grimes Jr., and Bobby C. Grimes, all ef Pentiac, and 14 grandchildren. Also surviving are two brothers, Leslie Parsons of Pontiac aad Out nw In Mtaeouri, a staters, Mrs. Nina Thrower ef Pontiac. Mre. Lily Frusta ef runt, end Mrs. Vera Dodd of Missouri. WILLIAM R. HAHN Service for William R. Hahn, 89. Of 4389 Steffens St., Waterford Township, will be held at 2 p- m. Wednesday at St. Andrew Episcopal Church, 5301 Hatchery rood, Drayton Plains. Hie body is at the Cbnta Funeral Home. ■urveyor. Mr. Hahn leaves Me wife, 43an M.; a eon, Robert ef Wenan; two daughters, Mrs. Harold Meaten ef Drayton JHione ‘ -- FEDERAL \PoaJcuui 4-4^11 Q* Oar pram . Qonelson-Johns „ W WIST HURON ST. PONTIAC VERY ADEQUATE A iMtlng tapuUly fur ovar 200 pnopla and parking focflitiai for 70 core. Wa ora centrally located, and offdr facilities that will be sufficant for most any funeral rite. Tha avarogt attendance of a funerql today is approximately 60 psopla. 46 Williams St. 3530 Auburn Road Pontiac FE 2-5841^ Auburn HotgMt UL 2-181 Farmer-Snover | FUNERAL HOME " WW Huron St. FE 2-9171 PARKING ON PREMISES Surviviagare i mother, Mrs. Chaxtoa Betyille ef iMartaa, Ind.; twa asta Paul Jr, at Warren and John of Ponttog; four daughters. tat.' Richard Grtf-fea at Park Ridge, BL, Mre. Thomas McAndrew of Fort Lee, Va., Mrs. Merle Han* end Mre. Floyd Stanton, beOi of PaaBec; 21 grand-illdren; a brother aad twi teatocu. lire. Nerd died Sunday at Henry Fort Hoapttal. Detroit, after a long Sullivan A Son rial wfil be in Ridgelawn Cemetery, Oxford. ardeon-Btrd Funeral Home. Mil-lord, with burial iiii Highland an illnons ef three days. wee a Ufe member of Ox-Lodge No. Si FAAM, 0* Kntghta ef Pythias at Oxford, a privileged number ef the Roy* Qnk Khranta and a member * the North Woodward Baaed * Rentas Church ef Roy* Oak. Surviving heertae Me wife Jean Former Pontiac resident Goon* are a d—forr, Mrs. Margaret MBS. LOCH N. KING WAL2JCD LAKE- Serria Mr*. Loots M. (Eva) King. 11, of Til Wrivartas Drive, will be held at 1p.m. Wednesday at the Rkh- J. Pope, %, died yeeterdey at tee ' * -------1 I—ajq Upson at New York; a eon, Robert H. ef Madison Holghta; a brother. Dr. Arthur S- at Le>eer; and twa _.j,hewa# a e bar at flta St George I Church aad the Modtad Roman Society. Surviving are teres daughters, Mrs. Eleanor Chi ravels, Mrs. Victoria Sdadi end Mre. Lana Rosso, all at Dearborn; two eons, Lea at Pontiac and Semuri of Integer; 10 grandchildren and four great-Igrandchildren. Mr. Papa's body 1s at the Pure-Funeral Home. HAROLD V. TABJBFLL Service for farmer Pontiac resident Harold V. Tarbetl, 71. of Grand Rapids will be hdd * 2 p.m. Wednesday at Alta Funeral Home, Grand Rapids. Burt* will be in the Falrplalns Cemetery. Mr. Taibei! died Sunday morning at ButterworU Grand Rapids after Surviving are a daughter. Mre. Hflhert Ritzema of La Grunge. OL} three sene, Harold E.. Marvin V. and Jack B., afl * Grand Rapids; six grandchildren; a stater, Mre. Eva O. Kellogg of Pontiac; and two brothers, Paul at Pontiac and David of Oread Rapida MBS. THOMAS A. BELL TROY—Service lor Mrs. Thom-A. Bril, 85. of 3KB FUD L. C UNEft ROMEO - Service it* Fred L. C. Hines. 10. of 7420 W. 32-MDe B be haM at 1 |ol tomorrow at Roth’s Home for to Mate, Burial w« ho In the KB-tridge Cemetery, Bhydervflls. A retired farmer, Mr. Htaes died Sunday after a prolonged illness. Surviving are a daughter, Mre. Esther Brown of Detroit; two grandchildren; one great-grand-lifld; a brother and three statero. Mr. Hatet died Surety * his home alter an illness of several EDGAB L. JOHNSTON Service for Edgar L. Johnston. I, of C5 Sterling St., will be held * 1:98 p.m. Wednesday at the Voorhees-Sipte Chapel, with burl* in Perry lit Park Cemetery. Mr. Johnston died Sunday, after two-month illness. He was a retired Pontiac Motor Division employe. Surviving are two eons, Robert of Martinez, Calif, and Arnold, of Brooklyn, N.Y., four sisters and three brothers. HIGHLAND — Service for Mn. Erne* (LaVona L> Jones, 51, * Motorist Drive, was to be held aULp-m^today * the Rich- burial in Winom Cemetery. A Veteran of Foreign Wan.Amt-Jvy memorial service wte ha held at t tonight at the funeral Surviving are her hnabsnd and n children, Mre. Helen Anderson of Etotot, Mre. Elizabeth West-brook of Marino City, Mrs. Virginia Flemming of Marine CMy, tin. Elna Hemenway of ABen Park, Mrs. Louise Johnson of Da-troit, Robert Duncan at Detroit Louis and Clarence King at Aloe. Byron' King of Eporse, Elmer King, Mribora Beach, lk.j and Ranald King of El Paso, Tex. Also surviving are a'brother and ^— PONTIAC USMESS INSTITUTE FALL TEH OPENS THIS WEEK Good totartas and attaacH— working condteom await young rm and girts who dadda this Ml to prepare ** Meltina potations A teteams nfftrre - .-_ TIwm practical courma hod directly to dtsNMa poohieds: ....;...........4 tomm— .....t tomm .......tomm ...........I tem .... .,,il term* U loom man akaal Sow • bariaote cooiso *ta Toll con lociooao yoog faloro hspptetos. wiHo at pfcoao _) .....tea Achate today far am Hit Tollado ^ Pontiac Business Institute 7 W. Lawrancn — FE 2-3551 MBA. FLOYD MATTOON Sendee- tor Mrs. Ttoyd (Mildred L.) Mattson, 55. ot 1182 Edison St., West Bloomfield Township, was held this aftertioon at the First Free Methodist Church. Burial'was in Pony Mount Park Cemetery. Arrangements were by the Donel-•on-Johns Funeral Home. A former Pontiac resident, zhe leaves her husband; her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frsd Van Alstlne of Pontiac; three daughters, Mrs. John De Meyer ot Compton, Calif., Mre. William McCord and Mm. Jack Hartsoe, both of Pontiac; a son, Floyd K. of Pontiac; eight grandchildren;—and one grandchild. Other survivor* include a brother, Dwight * Pontiac: and three testers, Mre. William Mclndoe, Mrs. Donald Oman* and Mrs. Donald Kelly, ill ot Pontiac. Mr*. Mattoon suffered a heart attack and was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital Saturday. She had been ill two months. MBS. PAUL NORD The Third Order of Franciscan Rotary will be recited at 7:15 Wednesday evening at .the Donel-aon-Johns Funeral Home for Mrs. Paul--(Helen) Non! * 285 Ferry Ave. The Pariah Rotary will fol-1am at 8:15 a. p.m. at the Price Funeral Home. Burl* wffl be In White Chapel Mrinorl* Cemetery. Mrs. Bdl died Sunday at boms after several months’ iUmmi. ■ a # a' i _" She is survived by her husband Thomas, three daughters, Mrs. Eldrick Chartier of Pontiac, Mrs. William Hogancamp of Troy, Mrs. Rom Lockhart of California; and a ton, Tech. Sgt Edward T. Tyack of USAF, Victorville, Calif. FoW statero, Mrs. Carl Anderson of Trpy. Mrs. Joseph Metro of Rochester, Mrs. William George of Detroit and Mrs. Elizabeth Beach of Indiana, two brothere and 16 grandchildren alto survive. JAMES E. CLACK OXFORD—Service for Jamea E. Clack, C, of 4SPtpntlae St . will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at the Fhim-erfelt Funeral Home. Burl* will te> in Ridgelawn Cemetery. A retired farmer and member of Oxford Congregation* Church, Mr. Clack died Saturday after a I lnees. Surviving are a daughter, Mrk Donald Awrey, Oxford postmaster, om grandchild, four great-grandchildren. five statere. Mrs. Emma Torrance, of ML Petersburg, Fla., Mrs. Mbitee Elwell of Dryden, Mre. Jennie Cowand, Mtaa Miuy C and Mrs. Balls Blow, all of Oxford, rad two brothers, Geoifs and Lee H. Clack, both of Oxford. Lee, H. dak is Oxford Town- Service wIB be held at 10 a. Thursday at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church with hurt* in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mn. Non! was a member of the of Catholic Women, First f League, Immaculate of Mary, the Franciscan Third Order and the Altar Society * St. Vlnoent de Paul Church at which she was a member. GLENN L. CUBBY ROMEO — Service for Glenn L. Curry, $4. of 880 38-MUe Rota, was to be 2 p,m, today at Rett's Home for Funeralo with burl* in the Romeo Oemetooy. Owner of the Cloverieaf Market, Mr. Curry died Friday morning In Deaconess Hospital, Detroit, after a brief illness. He was formerly paymaster for Motor Products Corp. Detroit, for, to years. Mr. Curry was a member of the City * Straits Bide Lodge and Moslem Shrine and was a 32nd de-gree Mason. : Surviving are his wife Doris; a daughter, Mrs. Sharon Croft of Phoenix,/Ms.; a sister, a brother; and one granddaughter. - GEORGE H. HARRISON ROYAL OAK Service tot George H. Harrison of 405 W. Harrison. formerly. * Oxford, win be 2 p.m. Thursday at the WiDiam BANK* Why Settle For Less? Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Just think of ibe things you con do with BAHT 14-FL Additional Ram Sab ROUGH ADDITION B0 MONET DBWN! $19.60 Par Month First Payment Naif Yanr FREE BONUS AM DrywsN Needed for Yea t* Finite H Tea lay Newt Prices on USE IT FOR FINISHID ADDITION COMPLETE BUILDING DEPARTMENT O Parch ladowm • Attic and Barmen • Baerettiea Roams • Carafe aad Breezcwey D Bed root • Family Room • Kitchen . • Utility Room • Dining Room • Extra Steitoge NO NONET DOWN! $28.95 Par Month Pirat Payment Nat Year FREE BONUS You Order New! ttU- JW" mmi BK BEAR D, Bmemaats O Alan. Siding aad Stem FREE ESTIMATES Operaten an Rely 14- Rn. Estimates Given I AJL to If PJL i 1N% GUARANTEE ON ALL i I LABOR ANR MATWAL I TUa Oaarnatao b Backed by f I • YEARS OP DIPINDABILITY J ! • FINANCIAL STRINCTH j • HONKT BUSINISS PRACTICE j CONSTRUCTION CO. 92 West Huron St., Pontiac RCA WHIRLPOOL Automatic WASHER With the New Automatic Dispenser Filter-Big 10-lb. capacity—Full range water temperature selector. Fully auto-matic— Fills, washes, rinses, spin drigs and shuts off automatically. NO MONEY DOWN INCLUDES FREE ' NORMAL INSTALLATION 95 General Electric, FANS CLOSE-OUT! 3-SPEED REVERSIBLE UNITED QUANTITT H0tl5EKEEPIN< 51 Weet Huron Stnet of ^PONTIAC RCA WHIRLPOOL DEHUMIDIFIER- Soaks op exceas moisture like a sponge. Illxninxte* ru*t, mold, mildew Shop by Phone ONLY |5 DOWN! *88 FE 4-1565 ESS in- nineteen Campaign Trains Briny Out Odd Traits Wishes to Sell Church, Clutch'Shot Is Historic “^i^*** |1W T«*»> OHhintcr "World * tau» CHICAGO (UPlt — Lew Wor-Jn«me,, .: *" «oU W*ory ^tJr^SJTSf air^dW?*! I* holed ®u* • 110-yard approach aurtace oI the earth ttdc out more *•** for an eagle two on the final1 qutckly than lew-pHched aounda. Including CongrOgation Jack, Dick to Whistle-Stop This Week VOORHHS *■3m Silence on Suits Tells Chrysler Exed ' Not to Discuss Probe or Legal Action • WASHINGTON (API — Whistle- beat Franklin D. Roosevelt. It t> DETROIT (UPIi-A curtain at silence haa been dropped on Chrysler Corp.’s ‘‘conflict of to-terest" investigation. The first candidate to hire a train for purely political purposes was Stephen Douglas, Abraham Lincoln's opponent in the great debates. During an 1858 senatorial campaign, Douglas included in his train a flat car hearing a cannon which wat Shot oft at stops to tn- The Investigations follow the ouster of Chrysler President William C. Newberg of Bloomfield Hills, who had reaped $450,000 profits from Ms interests in two firms supplying Chrysler with sc- PBOPLfc WHO HAVE YOU WILL TOO! THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, I960 A series of lawsuits involving the nation’s third largest auto manufacturer followed—several by agroup of dissident stockholders headed by Detroit attorney Sol AJ Dann charging further irregularities in the firm and asking that the • corporation be placed in receiver-‘ahip. Chrysler also filed two lawsuits— one against Newberg’s former partner Ben Stone of Bloomfield RUls, to reclaim his profits, and a libel suit against Dam. ' * *. * “I am sure that any fair-minded "person would agree,'* Colbert said in his fetter, “flirt the best way for the sir to be deated l the management to defer comment until the investigators are ready to express them-•elves with certainty and finality.'* Marilyn Feels Better; to Go Back to Work HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Marilyn Monroe, back in the pink of health following a week’s hospital rest for exhaustion, prepared today to return to Work on a movie being —Aimed on the Nevada deseit near Reno. Miss Monroe, released from Vestside Hospital Monday night, S*id she and her husband, playwright Arthur Miller, would fly to the Nevada city tonight where she would resume her role in “The Mis-fits.” . f 'Tm Itslrfog torwsri to getting hack to week,” Miss Manrae sail. r She interrupted filming of the million dollar movie co-starring Clark Gable on AuBr-8B when she became ill. Dr. Hyman Engleberg diagnosed her ailment at that time as overwork and exhaustion. ' The physician allowed her to go home last night to spend a quiet evening with Miller at the Beverly Hills hotel. *Tm ft Hie cast of the film had i . Uwottog in MMetree heat when Miss Monroe got sick. During her eboence filming of scenes in which she doesn’t appear continued. Hacking Cough in Dogs Yields to Strict Hygiene BURLINGTON, Vt. (UPI) - A University of Vermont gnina pathologist says that like their ipasters, dogs can develop hacking coughs. • dt - W -Ht, — —• nr Jmiim ft WaH«w»rHi ulri all ages and breeds of dogs are subject to hacking coughs. He said K can be remedied by Strict hy-giene, good nursing, rest and a balanced diet. 3Ehe3Baron ftomBerlin Cant.... iBUT YOU CAN! J JOIN SEPTV16 Mr. James T. Agar, royal OAK, MICHIGAN Says; *T am vary pleased with Gas heat. I especially like the convenience of not having \y tp order fuel or bother with deliveries.” Mrs. Ronald Jacqmain, SAGINAW, MICHIGAN Says: ”Ga* heat has met my expectations in every instance. It's clean, economical, dependable and gives a good constant heat.” So/S; ”We had never been completely satisfied with any heating system until we converted to natural Gas. Gas heating haa been satisfactory in every way.” . IT’S CUSTOMER SATISFACTION LIKE THIS THAT ACCOUNTS FOR 7 OUT OF 10 OF TODAYS NEW HOMES HAVIH6 0A$ HEATING Any type of frnace con easily be convened to Gas No matter what, type of fuel you now use. your furnace can be converted to clean, quiet, fully automatic . .. GAS.. . in just a few hours time. It’s thrifty too! Get all the facts and you'll discover why 7 out of 10 new homes built today select dependable, modem GAS HEAT. CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY BOOKLET wars no OBLIGATION Gvntlemvrn PLEASE SEND AAE A COPY OP YOUR INFORMATIVE, FREE BOOKLET "GAS THE WONDER-FUEL" • ’ / * ■ ■ > Jf V C»V—; CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY OIL AND COAL USERS: MUCH TO CAS HEAT NOW! SAVE UP 10 V, AND END FURNACE TENDING FOREVER! GAS HEAT to ACRFS ' H JBbrtM n B BUY DIRECT FROM FACTORY AND SAVE GAS FURNACES-BOILERS-CONVERSIONS mOHTTHE FALL RUSH! Git Immediate Installat If carta Ian to convert fa gaa kart now tbaa la fha Fill! Call Rodman, whara you gat 53 yeara of ralia-fcttUf ptflif the fimat lelectton in Michigan. Wa maka If . . . tell if . . . install if t . . aarvica |f ... all ' it ana nsf! Udmrufi 53rd Birthday Spodoil for Your OIL BURNERS, STOKER, BOILER or FURNACE! -rtgardltss of ago or condition! CIASC0 OMvursiM Burner AGA Approved, Mado Only by Inf-man. Draafkalfy Raducad During Our Slid Birthday Ski.! ■urm. tMt iron haraar haada it Mwnt •• tMtl Mad* way by ludm.nl FACTORY T0-Y0U PLUS INSTAL- LATION NO CASH NltDtD! DON'T PAY A DIME TIL 1961 FREEGIFTS Attractive 12-Piece SET OF DISHES AU-Wbtte, Oven Flro-Elag Ware Starter Sat by Aaeherglaae. PHONE TODAY! * PI 5-9500, Today! FE 5-9500 If no‘answer, ENterpriss 6767, 'HI 9 p. nt. daily and 6 p. m. Saturday and Sunday. Call LA 7-3600 colloct after Hits# hours, 24 hour service. A Budman man will call at your homo daily until 9 j». m., Saturday and Sunday until 6 p. m. far frto homo demonstration with no Oar Factory is located in Consumers "•at foil Territory 239 VOORHEIS ROAD, FONT!AC, MICHIGAN the Rev. John A. McMillan officiating at the Nuptial High Mast. The bride is the daughter of Mr. aadHIrs. John T. Gallagher of 316 E. St. Clair St The bridegroom'* parent* are Mr. and Mr*. Cecil Neil of Pontine. Theme of the parade was "Babes in Toyland". and entries were ui i ujricuiu t cuiu hium www uirougn ocpi. oy. |judged originality, yvorkman-'* * * vii 'Ship and appropriatness to the Approximately 55 women are jthefnO. members of the league. President . * * * i i* Mr*. David Milne of 1301 Hattie :.Judgea were Mrs. Janies Itobb)y y s7., Rochester. ' of Imlay, City. Norman Lurch of The organization will hold its (Utica and Miss Evelyn Wilson ofifirnt fall meeting at 9:30 a.m. , Ahnsnt. ------------—;-----------Iffrpt. % It’*. Pad Methodist Queen Jo Ellen and her IS at* chunA Rom*0-. tend ants rode In the place of IJjC — The residencelaetting recently for the wedding of i d Mrs, Clarence Cihsirdn tighter Alice Marie mdl - >rnond Ka woski. . Omropine apparently stepped off the Russians are building a dou-ladge Into deep water while ble-hulled, 100-foot long tanker, wllng la New River about 15 made ot fib^rrias reinforced plashes from ’Hinton; according to tic. The U S S R. now. has glass-he Hinton Fire Department. fiber production facilities, as well HIrbody has not been recovered |as polyester i—rfw plants___________________ /Graves at 111 Church St. was thelDqnald R Officiating at the rites was the Rev. I. R. McPhee of the Orton-i vtile Methodist Church. A recep-j tiottlor about 300 guests was held at the Groveland Grange Hall fid-lowing the ceremony. • EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING - STARTS - To-morrow ' choae a gown of white LAST TIMES TONIGHT * LAST PAYS OF FOMFEII"- "YOUNG AT HEART' Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ifnrrr THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 0, IMP Big Crowds for Romeo Floral Para 93. BMW Mm* mtiffc Utica Chib Wins Best Float Nod Will MapSouth Drain Agreement 125 Youngttore March Tn 'Bobos in Td^and/ an Earjior Event ROMEO — AU roads led to Romeo yeeterday — DED "EDGE of ETERNTIT COLOR S THE TOXTIAG PRSSS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER TWEXTY-OXE 'Mystery Youths Tell Joan Davis House Is on Fire HOLLYWOOD (AP) £ Movie comedienne Joan Davta said to» day she’d like to thank two w- -Hwk« aaemplaymfWt If It I A Tiger shark of 0^ pound*. I were «X f«r mo* 1M fUmcd TV raugh, n^ndy oft JUn*oi*S( in k l> -a—*a— .1 mnlfir L.^«f . . . * -J • ... "1 Veteran Director Alfred Green Dies Hollywood Loses Him Capital Title Was Buck Sheepish? TOPER LAKE, N. Y. (UP1) — A load deer hunter bagged a spike-bora buck whose wooly longhaired to Hollywood in 1912 and directed silent films before his wwctacuiar hit, "Disraeli,” starring George Arils*. By YUKON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPIF-Hollywood Liquid Chloride - Rood Ott SPEE-DEE OIL SERVICE MA 4-4521 EM 3400 In tartar yean Green directed 'The John Story,” 1’The Jackie RoUaan, Story." end ‘Ttap Banana." Recently he had worked With "The Millionaire’' 'tdeviaton This week then were .exactly five pictures being shot In Ttnod Town, and none of them an big- MA 4-3135 BOTH IN COLOR Shorllsrtt— at 7:20 , The University dub of New York CHy la believed to ha the oldest organization of its kind functioning In the U.S. It was founded in UBS, I Others are holding forth In outer American cities. ! "The Hoodlum Priaat’’ la filming In St. Louis. “West Side Story" is being made in New York,’and "The Misfits” in Reno. Reasons tor the emigration from Hollywood are numerous, and not particularly accurate. NOW SHOWING Some prod users say they are making Pictures abroad to unfreeze profit a from prevteqz plcturea. Wff. MILTON BIBLE "ELVIS" HU PUST MOVIE SINCE HU DISCHARGE Others e? er in Europe. Another group says on-the-spot locations are more believable than studio backdrops. Whatever the explanation, motion picture workers would be RGhnt Help It QnumaSuoPC is most enjoyable when viewed beginning I realize this is a revolutionary concept but we have discovered that tfflfljM*8 un^* most motion pictures and aoesnot improve when run backwards, therefore, we wilt not allow you to cheat yourself. So do not expect to bo admitted to tho theatre after the etart off each performance off tho picture. HELL BENT FOR ACTION!] \ HELL BENT FOR t J^musr Open et 4:30 - 8:30 first Shew Open at 10:30 -10:45 2nd Show Show Starts 7:45 Salactod Shorts "PSYCHO" at 8:30- 10:45 P.M. SHOW TIMES Lot's Maka Lava J SHOW STARTS 7:30 STARTS WIBKSDAY! FIRST PONTIAC AREA ~ SH0WB6—ITS BlffERBITI THIS EARTH IS MINE' Starts Friday anthony Perkin$« Janefbnda in 'TALL STORY" FIRST SHOWING EXCLUSIVE STARTS ■ ■ : : —■ EXCLUSIVE ...— First Showing in Oekland Counl YOU-will sn sights to stiair your imagination! YOU —are there in the undergroind cities 2024 a.o ! From the boldest ADAM art EVE if tbryiar 21241 lily thiy cauld npapiliti thi wirli! iMkpaci! of love in and out of marriage! ROBERT CLARKEDARLENE TOMPKINS- aRthur’c!rTrce-Robert clarke Recommended FOR ADULTS! a SPECTACLE of the WORLD of TOMORROW! TiyisyTY-Two ROME » — "Thro*for-fi»rae" yelled United States*boxing coach Jules Menendez as he ushered his Jones, who also brought trade fame to Eastern Michigan University as well as Pontiac, earned a bronze medal for his stirring effort. Calhoun's winning time was lit petltfan. A capacity turnout of 15,000 was on band for the finals Monday night. The show dimaxed a 273-bout tournament, which >eaw 283 fighters In action from a record 54 coun- America's three finahsto-light-middleweight Willie McClure. Toledo. Ohio; middleweight Eddie Crook. Fort Campbell, Ky.; and light-heavyweight Casatas Clay, Louisville; each racked up a ded- DALLAS — Young Johnny Pott won hie first major golf up 25 feet away and putted past by 3 feet to take a bogey. Kroti ahip—d feet from the pin for captured |3J06 tint money in the 225000 Dallas Open. v It waa the first tournament victory for Pott in four years -of Victory for the tall man from Getting only 9 hits in the double- THB PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER fi, i960 Jones 3rd in Olympic Hurdles Hayes Finishes Behind Calhoun and Willie May Pontiac Boy Collects Bronze Modal os U. S. Swoops Event From Our News Wires ROME—Hayes Jones, the first trade roan ever to represent the city of Pontiac in the Olympic Games, gave a magnificent account. nf h.lmsslf Monday in the UO-meter j hunH— ' ' ' ' ITS WILMA AGAIN — Wilma Rudolph of Clariavflle, rasn^ crosses finish line to win finals of 200-meter dash by four yards ad Olympics in Rome Monday. At extreme left* partly is Germany's J. Heine, 2nd. Britain's D. Hymen. 3rd from right, was 3rd. Wilma won the 100-meter dash Friday and is the 1st American woman to win both Olympic sprints. a mm third beMai Lee CaOmm nf Gary, hi, who saeceseftilly def«mM Mb Olympic title, and i May of CMcaga. at na«m - -------------- yesterday. Not rtown in the picture is Pontiac's Jonas’ terrific effort at the wire]****1? Olympic Games boxing gold Hayes Jones, who finished 3rd to give the United enabled Mm to boat out Martin medalist to toe dressing room. States a clean sweep of honors in the hurdles Utter, Germany's ace hurdler, and Meoeaias, from San Jaae, ----------- . ■ -r--—. hihn tea llidtod Hiatts a rhran rallt saw aaeh elMa torea ftosj. Menenrier chirped with pride aa » of honors in the 110-roeter list* rack ap a geld arodal Tigers Fortunate jn Split With Tribe Get Only Four iiilsjriTaking^H Holiday Opener Homors by' Maxwell and Cash Spark Win;) Rocky Socks No. 28 DETROIT UP — It’s much too l«*e hr IhBJtotmil Tig—a In mm» up with anything fresh and original -aa.their dOubieheader experience egainst Cleveland yesterday pro vidsd tile same d-ab results. One vtetory. «n defeat—and at (hat. the Tigers were fortwnte to get a* even break. They won 4-3, then taat 4 3. They are fortunate, too, that these were 22,475 fans who haven't] given up on them—or that many] who came .to see for themselves! what they have been hearing roll) BUI Ftocber wen the apearr, attosagh manager lee Osrdsn need Frank Lary hi the ninth lasing to protect the ewe ran lead. The Tiger* eehertrd only GAIA SHOW ’EM HOW — Brazil's Maria Bueno (left) and Chrote Wright of New York City demonstrate tennis^technkjuea during match in women's division of National Tennis Championships at Forest Hills, N.Y. Maria won, 8-4, Charlie Maxwell hit a two-run homer and Norm Cash got a nolo blast. Al Kaltne drove in other ran with a single as Tigers pinned the defeat on Jim Banned Cager Spivey Appeals to NBA Board CINCINNATI (AP>^~Bm Spivey, banned from playing to the National Basketball Aamciatten. appealed Ma ease fay letter Monday to the NBA Board of Governors. Spivey sent letter* to the board •Three drive double piavs Seeded Players Paciog National Tennis Meet (Mudcat) Chant. Grant tanned 10 asking them to appoint a special wirtfttlly today, "all I need to *» three-man group to hear Ms appeal. . President Maurice Podoloff _ the1 NBA last Thursday rejected With three afternoon events to go-tbe pole vault, javelin and L* 500 meter ran — Johnson had l,2gi points to 8,137 for Yang, who picked up many a pointer from Johnson when both were attending UCLA. Yang had jumped into die toad when he did 14.6 to the sixth decathlon event., the Jib-meter hurdles. to Johnson's mediocre 15J seconds. hnson took over once again when he threw the discus feet, one inch to a mere 130 8 for Yang. Russia’s Vasiliy Kuznetsov, drawing closer with every event, was running third after seven events with 5,784. FOREST HILLS, N. Y. 1 — by taking the first final of the day — the free pistol shooting. The champion was Alexwy Gust* chin, who scored 560 of a possible IX 'point* to break a 24-year-old Olympic record of 559 set by Torsten Oilman of Sweden in 1936. .Wilma Rudolph, the newly, crowned 100-metec Olympic Champs rh—npt—i added the 300 B>C-trrs tor's rare double and she did diis racing into a headwind that preceded a savage rainstorm. In spitfa of the wtnd, she beat out a' brilliant field to 21 seconds, remarkable time Under the dreum-U short of her Olympic mark of :2&2. ' If the 5-foot-U Clarksville. Trim, girl can anchor the U. S. successfully to the .women’s 400 meter reft and she thinks (foe can — it’ll be a third gaM medal and an alMar performance equivalent to the great Fanny Blankett-Koen of Holland a dozen years ago. rauar.: AoSnST1?! ra. yjyfiwsSt. *zi«fci"niv Swltnd ’ " ^ imS.fofos fos l«li ysasniros n ro I. riBB big In the tUrd, af I iL fol T~ pulled It ant.” Middleweight winner Crook, the 31-yeaiM]id Army sergeant, stood impassively on toe dais to receive gold medal for scoring a decision over Tadensz Walasek of Poland. He smiled only when Avery Brundage, International Olympic Committee president placed the award around his neck as fans lustily jeered the 3-3 verdict. “They could have booed ail ight,” said Crook, "and I wouldn’t have cared a bit. ’I had the decision, and the medal was around my neck. "But I thought I had the guy heat alT toe wayi boxing Mm to-side while ha was swtHi a good thing they don’t . t , .fir . fif fir Tea meet many old Meads here. The ether day t lamped late Doag Rely; Deng’s vice president e« this Olympic haslawa. • "fi 1t. ★ Odfty, aunt of thtomafoc you hear Is strictly of Amcri-can origin. /That goes for orchsetras add juke boxes and records. * ’ 1t it ★ Iho petals am mtf poUte here. They wear white amis, white gtevea and teak very Impraarive. Certainly they balM geed win far Bane. ' ■ ■ . ; *+ : Onee^t the Olympic pool aft automobile with con-; tectants passed through an inn«r gate. My driver said "show that badge when I ask you to.” He drove straight to ’ the sacred ported and moke In Italian. The door tender • blinked, ’ffoow him the badge,” said the driver, and It uncovered that Oakland County Deputy's mastertioce.- | The keep of the holy, entrance spoke rapidly and toe ' began to back away. The driver turned to toe. "He said you : can,go In but I eaij’t.” Actually, with Frank Irons’ credentials, i believe Z coaid crush Die gates, demand a srtt tat the lacker room and Mart tat the finals, of the mot’s 400-meter free-Myle. 1 % THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SKFTKM1IKR 6, I960 i? 1; :' _______twewtV-thkbb Parker MacDonald, left drafted from New York th [WITH AIL ACTION TREAD Orioles Lose Game of Lead Over Yankees Birds Divide Pair With Nats, Stay Ahead by I Pirate# Beat Spahn to Hold Lead at 6V» Ex»Cripple Joins Greet# Wilma Track Heroine oi Olympic Gaines Magic Number 17in ROME (API—The track mdtundm International male com* I field heroine of the 17th Olympic'petltora ‘Gome* I* a shy, troll and almost sickly Tennessee girl. who jnevkr {walked until the woo eight year* New Yorkers Rally Twice Handing Botox 3-2 Losses By The toteloht Preoo The Baltimore Orioles, surprise team of the year, win or lose, loot half of their American League lead in the Labor pay firing, and you can blame it on ode of three thing*, or all three together: 1. IHwaaa and injury ___tJL 1 By The Associated Pt*m With the next to laat mile pqat on the pennant path behind them, the Pittaburgh Pirate* still have a 6',-4-game bulge hi the National League race. And they did it the hard way, by beating Warren Spahn. ‘ The Bucs. playing .667 ball GW) against Milwaukee, ended Spaha’i winning streak at six with a seven-run fourth inning for a >•7 first game victory in their Louis defeats totaling 17 dispoaes of the runoers-up. The magic number is 13 against fourth place Lsa Angeies, and 10 against fifth place San FVmncisoo. The other three—CtodmiaH, Chicago’s Cube and Philadelphia— have been eliminated. St. Louis moved into a tie with Milwaukee by winning 2*1 to 10 innings at Chicago before playing a 44, 10-inning tie with toe Cuba. The second game at Wrigtoy With rthird baseman Brooks Robinson ill ancf left fielder Gene Woodling hurtin’, the Birds split their doubleheader at Washington, losing 4-0 before rebounding for a 3-1 victory behind Skinny Brawn's three-hit .pitching, •__________ It oquld have been a let down by the Birds, after, they had swept Braves bounced back, winning 74 in the nightcap, but the split dropped them into a second place tie with St. Louis. Wm That also dropped the Pirates' magic number to 17 to pursuit of three Milwaukee runs is the first inning, took an 64 lead when they shelled Spahn in the fourth. Don Hook's 15th home run, with a man and Dick Stuart's 18th. a three-run shot off reliever Joey Jay. put it away. The last three runs were unearned. Fred Green (741 was the winner, although pitching only the ourth Inning, relief of starter Bob Friend. Spahn, now 174, had won 10 decisions since July 0, Th* Cincinnati walloped -Phlladel- Francisco made it four to a raw over Los Angeles, winning 12-8, before'the Dodgers won the sec- that final mile post—the gamejond game of their twi-night dou-that clinches' their first flag to 33 Mcheader 4-3, wipe out a 34 Card lead with four runs in toe sixth inning of the nightcap against Ray Sadecki. Louis then tied H to the eighth on singles fay Joe Cunningham and Boyer and Walt Moryn's forceout against Glen llobbtr, third Chi cago pitcher. » Field, only major league prfc flues, 0-5 against Spahnie last - - year, are 3-1 against the NL's pre- lefty "for the season at___ the only clt|b he hasn't beaten as starting pitcher. Pittsburgh is 2440 against Spahn lifetime, and . . - „ . . . — ••w-wv nsouioi aiNuiii lucuiiir, tun# pWaJ-2 SffiSTLeHen Rim throe times to one season since *1956. In die nightcap, Chuck Cottier banged toree double* as the Brave* came bari.t behind a seven Cincinnati, eliminated by Pittsburgh's victory, tagged loser Robin Roberts (944i and two relievers for 17 hits, including home ~ ~ by f^rank Robinson (No. 27' As a baby. Wilma Rudolph was stricken with a form of which rendered her limbs helpless. Every week her ' -mother wrapped the whining infant in a blanket and took Iw by bus 45 miles fiom< Clarksville, Tenn., Nashville for treatment. Wilma learned to walk. Then she learned to run. Today she Is the-efaatest woman runner ip the world—acclaimed u line of great Olympic champions which' includes the Babe Didrikson, “ and Billy'Martin and Vada Pin-raCo>>n. and tor his 16th victory although allowing' 13 hits—ail singles, lit now has beaten every dub in the' foaguc: "We don't know how fast she really can go," the coach said. "She never has been really tested, since die cam* into her rani farm" j The Rudolph girl, a 30-year-old junior who ia studying to ha a teacher, grew up as one of 19 children of a poor Negro couple in Clarksville a tobacco center. Her father^ 73, faa* been ill and unatde to wort; Her mother hires M ft mmm SKUVLTS years. - Any combination of Buc} The Pirates, behind when Ed ridorijes and, Milwaukee or, St. I Mathew 32nd home run counted 1rtt~ pitching Job three from New York knocked the -Yankees out of first place. Or- it could have been just aqother round for the fourth place Senator!, only club with an edge (10-7) over Baltimore. Whatever the reason, that first game defeat chopped the. Birds’ winning streak at seven and whittled their edge to one game over the Yankees, who took a pair of 0-2 decisions from Boston. The third place Chicago Sox, four games behind, lost ger, a single by Billy Britton and double by Del Crandall scored two runs, that clinched it in the third inning. The Card* won,-the first game t a walk, George Crowe's pinch double, a hit batsman and a forceout grounder by Stan Musial against reliever Don Elston f8-S» In the MMh. Lindy McDaniel won It in relief of Larry Jackson. St. Louis led, on Ken Boyer'O 29th homer, until the eighth, when two walks and Rldde Aabburn'a single gave the Cubs a M tie. Five walks helped the Cuba The Orioles’ troubles began before they left home for Washington. Robinson stayed behind in a hospital, because of a sore throat and fever. Then Woodling, who like Robinson has swung a big bat for toe Birds, found fae aggravated a grain Injury to Sunday's game with New York. Woodling played against the Nats, .but was Big bata were what toe Orioles needed in the opener. While Harmon Killebrew and Reno Bertola crashed two-run homers for Washington, lefty Chuck Stobba and Hal Woodeshick blanked the Birds on five hits. Stohbs (10-5) allowed only throe hits and struck out seven before giving in to an asthmatic attack in the seventh Inning. Steve Barber (9-5) was the1 loser, giving up Killebrew’r 29th homer to the fim-toninr.___________ 144) and t gold medal- Monday, capturing the 209-meter race in 24 seconds flat an a flow track. The Dodgers had 15 hits,-Bie tad wwi toe Tto dinting four home tuns, to the *? * Phenomenal 11 ■econd*. On opener but also committed four Jhur?^ •*“ «whor* three of errors. Stu MUler (54) won It tof" Nf*r0 ^ -...... ......U - -JBHI relief fbr'the ni»«i« who scored I ”**** * *™ *• College to the hospital, the track doctor decided the first inning, three i*pr^ rp*ay " * Prohable third. U0 s,.„d U>ngden to a nearby ho«-KirtdamTs home ruii, to] Unttl Wilma ^ American pitat for-a more thorough exam- —u*J8P«iTaMS*"rw* (OrSs ai»«h»<4 i&SL >4> l ores* ta—• 1¥ l-TT »,»■«* chieMo imi Mi a kmum car roar- Dramatic Spill blurts longden E-YSm DEL MAR, Calif; (API—Jockey Johnny Longden was thrown In a dramatic apili at Dei Mar track Monday, ’ suffering mita,* bruises ahd a thorough (baking After a checkup in the track beat Stan Williams (1241. V ■ “ ■ Rookie Juan Maiichal then l«stibTcan)h ** «hwble gold med, htr first in the majors, after-win-|a,l,rt. tor United **a,e? ***. ntag four, on a wiM pitch in the mpn *L.,ra?SLi?* ^*^1 since the nightcap, Roger Craig (7-1) won I tot mortal Didrikson won to* hur-h|s sixth in a row. d,« ,nd ^velln to 1932. She la the darling of the Rome game*—surrounded by admiring State Ttam in Finals Ifana and autograph-aeekera. pun sued by the press and adored hy WICHITA. Kan. UP-Grand Rapids, Mich., defeated Ttunpa, Fla.J 5-0 tn a Vmiflnal game of the Na»J Uonal Baseball - Tournament last night and will meet unbeaten Pon-j chatoula. La., tonight in the chant-pkmshlp game. an Italian populace which has equal fascination for a good ath-‘ ’te and a striking woman. Wilma has wowed them all, btft me perhaps more than her coach, big and gruff Edward Temple of Tennessee A. and 1., who 70 Playera on Hand Wings Start s DETROIT IB—Seventy players reported yesterday for the first skating and picture taking session of the Detroit Red Wings this McCarthy, left wing, and right wings Howie Glover and A1 Johnson making an appearance. The forward lines tn the first workout are Murray OUver center-Gordie Howe and Alex mer, was the only uiwccouptadior BclvacchkuNorin Ullman working u ^ p~. w.tph BM.tor.nur* Ro..«>u.mP - absentee. MacDonald is reportedly on his way from Ms Sydney, Nova Scotia, home. Heavier workouts start today, with the players split into three shifts for two-hour sessions each. Twenty players will make up the first shift this morning, with newcomers Dennis Riggin, goalie: Gerry Odrowski. defenseman: Tom between Gary Aidcorn and Glover; Brian Smith and John McKemde flanking renter Len Lunde; and Jerry Meynyk pivoting for McCarthy and Johnson. Defensemen are Warren Godfrey, Marcel Pronovost, Pete Goe-gan, Marc Resume, Lloyd Haddon and Odrowski. JUflgin and Terry Sawchuk will man the goals. Ungdrn was leading to the' nlijlh race when hli mount. Amarillo Speed, ducUed through the; hedge into the Infield. The horse Stepped on an irri-i gallon pipe >n the Infield, sending geyser of water shooting into > air, a* Longden was hurled to the grass. Longden lay curled to a ball un-I a stretcher was hurried out to Mm. His hone got up and galloped away, .apparently uninjured. * men's team. i This girt has limitless potim-ttai," ifys Temple. “Ste has height (5-10), good leg*, natural! ■ptad. a dogged determination and, beat of all, perfect rrtaxa-tion. 'There's not a nerve in (her body, she's almost lazy. She often goes to sleep between semifinal and final runs. She can go to sleep on the rubbing table." Summer Champions vented acceptance of toe time as a. world record. She has done 200 in 22.9, a world record, and has 5.8 seconds for 50 meters and 45,7 for 50 yards. Determined at PYC Three fast races Sunday determined the summer championa st Ponitac Yacht Club. The annual Snow- Ball series started yesterday. Competing to perfect wtaid, Clarence Holmhc took title honors with 47 points as Boh Flack had 4014 and Claude Bennett 40. Commodore honors _ Ralph Johnson with 29. He edged! r N STION Af. kHsIfSpkis M. Chicago t , JjvT Ex*Star Athlete 'Critical Les Matthews, who starred to totskrihatl and baseball at Pontiac High and later to city leagues, is in critical condition at 41. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Hs has been under dim observation since hurt week when he collapsed at the GM Truck A Coach athletic field. and Carl Marr at 27. Challenge series victors were Marnie Goodwin 34, Jam Gray 30 and Don Van Doren 25. Labor Day winners wore Flack, Temple thinks Wilma is capable! Mack Goodwin and Al. Gray, 3rd.t of 10,8 to the 1Q0 and 22 flat la A club potluck following the holl-j Mj "AteteMput terlday racing. I King £ Edwar ■ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER The Birds backed Brown, who •truck out U and had a two-hit shutout until the ninth timing while winning his lKh, with a clinching pair of runs in the fifth off Pedro Ramos (lfl-14). -Ron AGAINST THE WALL — Fans to the left field comer look down as Stan Musial nf the St, Lmds Cardinals falls against the wall attempting to patch a foul fly ballto 10th toning of 1st game of Monday's Labor Day twin bill with the Cubs at Chicago. Hansn's 20th home run, a. walk and Jackie Brandt's stogie did The Yankees had to come from behind to both games against the Red Sox, They ended their four-game slump and beat Bill Ho» bouquette (13-14) with three runs to fire fifth toning at the first game, scoring on Mickey Man-tie’s double—New York's first extra-base hit to 41 innings—an infield out and Qete Boyer’s single. Jim Coates (114) won it,.shutting out Boston on one hit for five innings in relief of Bob 'Turley. The Kids Are Back In School ARE YOUR Boston took a 2-1 lead in the ' nightcap oq Carroll Hardy's first hrtmm nm of the sesmw swd *w Rfel double by Lu Clinton. • The Yanks tied it m Tony Kubek's home run in the eighth, off Ike Delock, and won it with two out 4n- the ninth when losing reliever Mike Fornieles (94) hit Johnny Blanchard and gave up stogies- fay Gfl McDaugald and JdC DeMaes-Blanchard had home red for the firirt run. Bobby Shantz (54) was the winning pitcher to relief. The A'a banged loser B&b Shaw (12-12) and Dick Donovan, first of five White Sox relievers, for seven runs in the first inntoig on seven hits, tour of them doubles. Ray Herbert (10-14) was thp win- Brakes RiinED GUARANTEED | yea «u.4 Chevrolet Plymouth BRAKES SAFE? | YEAR ar 20,400 ML INCLUDES LABOR ANB MATERIAL la m C«l iw . LIFETIME BRAKE EmrsatoM h Writhg ADJUSTMENT ON OUAIANTlfO WOM ' ^ ■ ■ . Iservfce Tire$tont car safety service mi HERE'S WHAT WE DO: ], Pull all four wheels, insf brake linings and drums. shock ^ tmm ABSORBERS INSTALLED FREE j I rlwi I |i— til ■lmil— cylinders for leakage. *3. Clean, inspect, repack and , adjust front bearings. 4. Add brake fluid if metmuf. 5. Adjtnt brake* to manulecturar’a r LIFE|^RANTEED/j TAIL PIPES »EXHAUSTS STALLED IN 15 MINUTES scoops them aUi Mufflers *Q95 v H^ v drive ini miw v no . V ALLOT a* WAITING l to - T TOM M « - % wmmt mm «-%• CHEVROLET S3i to-to PONTIAC .. SSJB to - to PLTM4 .... SMS U- M DODOE4 ..SB custom-coated i Other Stos 0s Ida Tss *1 L CREDIT CARDS and CHARGE PLATES honor NO CASH NEEDED! Open Drtte 0-7 Opm lit. 10 Osud See. ^ GOLD^CRESTKS L 97S Orchard Laka ltd. Car- Teiaeraah M., FI I-79M A 146 WEST HURON ST. V FE 2-921 HART SCHAFFNKR A MARX stiatiunn tones mix bHflht and dark to burnlaH the world*a linos! worsteds. Then’s a worldly new color look to HSAM suits this fall, a lively, light-through-dark look that sparks our entire collection. Dark and light threads " mingle in these fine worsteds to create colorful over- and under-tones. Not blase-bright, but a quiet tfterglow effect that gleams through browps, jjrays, olives and bluas, patterned or plain. Hart Schaffner k Marx tailors Autumn Tones in the lively, youthfully slimming lines of the worldly new look. Autumn Tons* suits from tit mdcinson’s OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 v __ SAGINAW •» LAWRENCE < BIRMINGHAM—272 W. Maple THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC1 ^" TWENTY»1K>UB THE PONTIAC' PRESS, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 6, 1060 Stirtg Par 55 Points Ahead Pressure on Johnson in decathlon Battle Running Ace Adderley Joins MSU ROME (API—The pres on mu HQt Rater Johnaoo of (he United State* today u the Olympic decathlon field plunged into Ite final half of toe groelltag gram was delayed more by a Oa' Hie Chinese athlete (hand Ugh Jump laurels at I feet, 3% inches baddy, Cbuaa-kmng Yang of Nationalist China, trailed Rater by paints and mm to an esrrBdnt position to beat oat toe touted coveted gold medal. After Monday’s storm-interrupted competition to (he 100-meter dash, bread Jump, shot put, high Jump and 400 meters, Johnson had iM$ potato and Yang, a supple TO-pounder, had 4 The decathlon warfare became a two-man scrap when the Soviet IMon's heralded Vasiiy Kuznetsov faltered to a fifth-place total of Sir w with 4.077 was Germany's Klaus Grogofana fourth with 4081 was Finland's Seppo Suutari. well to the five remaining events ns he did to setting Us current world record of 8.00 in die Olympic tirtals to>t July. Yang may —Paly to the discus does the fitha, Ofrpdnnd Johnson have a dtattaot ’ edge over Yang. In the other four events on the final decathlon program—110 meter hurdles, pole vault. Javelin and 1,900 meters— Yang compares favorably with the Yank from Kingebury. Calif. Yang, If, who will be a sophomore at UCLA fids fall, displayed haws and whipped Johnson to a 000 meter hsat by two meters. Johnson cleared 0 feet, % inch in toe Ugh Jump. Yanfi 000 meter clocking was 041 against 048 for Johnson Of Monday's fhffi events, Joinv » had the superior performance i only one event—the tootpot fib a 51-10% tons. Yang ted toe bread Jump with M40i, compared with Johann's best of MW. Boat time to tbr 100 motors was Yang’s 10.7 against Johnson’s 10.4 America’s Phil Mutiny from Memphis, Tenn., was running 11th with S.7SB points entering the de-i wtodup. Uncle Sam's third contender in toe exhausting competition. Dave Edrtrom of Sherwood, Ore., had to quit after three of-an^oMhlag injury. He bad 8,107 points. Eastern 'Students' Face Huge Task 3 Killed as Race [Car Bumpers Lock YPSILANTI III—Fred Trosko realizes he's throwing hoys nett, so ha doaan’t try hide anything from his Eastern Michigan University football Students, they are. Good football pifyers — a few . are. But there’s ns recruiting id Eastern t of— no. Jobs for players, no tutoring help for the guy who gets behind to his studies. the desmphasls of football I* n matter of school policy, and* Trosko doesn't get . oMMcs. Hr has a nine-game schedule to play, and only 40 football players to chooae from. ♦ * * "They Know ghat they're in for," iu» —id. "We don't tnt to file anything from them. They realize DARLINGTON. S. C -Elliott promised his charges that he would schedule a full-scale gamMype scrimmage as soon his Wolverines snapped through the holiday drill with gusto.' tr ittwu TP FD8 KEAMEE — End Ron Kramer, former University of Michigan iCl-Amertca, grabs a pas* from quarterback Lamar, McHan and steps into the end zone for a Green Bay Packer touchdown covering seven yards to Monday’s National Football league exhibition game with the 8t. Louis Cardinals. St. Unite halfback Bobby Towns misses tbe^tackle. The Packers won fits pro tilt at Green Bay, 36-14. abrbbt abrkl Oraaa u 5 0 0 0 Kukek to 411 firdr W 411 tuSai H *01 Mow lb 4 0 10 MaMla cf 100 ONuMry » ooooskbvron Ik *00 SkMB • 4 0*0 Marta It 4*1 liliyl*1 | aS8i rf » o*' itemsid----------- Daloek p. * 0 0 0 Ittct'm lb (*fl dWtlllama 0 0 0 0 bLong 1000 aWUaoa 0 0 0 0 Detf'atri — r.i. romlolio p 4 4*4 Turn p SAN rBANCISCO ibrhti ____ Bln'ama » 5044 WUlo 00 Rodforo lb it 1 1 OUIlajn! Davenp't lb 14 4 4 Sm I 4 4 0 4 Larker L If 4 0 10 DstU of ( 4 12 0 nod---- it it ------- Mayi « S!SS Imho S iosT 3b 2 0 0 0 Howard rf ofto o crai* p alii Martchai p If If ms----4ooo------------------------; Staanta (W. M> ------------- . 1 9 P9 RIP—By Tarry (CtMaa). By Poralalai [Blanchard>._ jf—Plaktrgr, Hurley. Rice. ktoroaa. T—114 E—Howard. Schmidt, Neal, WUla. PO-A —Dan Praaalaoa *4-1*. Los Isitlst *7-14. DP—Cratf. OUllam sad Larker; Blaaln- fvanclaco 7._________ Cepeda, Kirkland. WUla 2. 8—Craig. Craig (W. 7-1) ....* * 3 1 I 1 HBP—By Craig (Rodgere). WP—Marl-chal. D-Oormait, Smith. Sudd. Bogged T—1:21. A-4U.44S. CINCINNATI abrhbt _ »n JSSSTcf** lit! Traylor'15b** 40 Bell rf 4 I SO CalUaon rf 4 4 BmUimb If till Osnaalea cf lo_ Bailey t 4 12 0 Herrera lb 541 CoBaoi lb 5 11 1 Curry V “— **- * * * 4 Oskar i 0 0 0 / 4 111 SIMM p * 0 44 Green p aD'rymple Nelger p it for Helfar In nr i It, PhlladelBhta U. 2B—Bailer. Bell. Rob-toeon. ~ Ptoeoo. HR-JtoWnaoa, ibitln. — S-mey. W"—Tbyicr. ■J7------------ MaWAVKEE ' __________ abrbbl abrbkt I1S1 Virdon cf 4414 441 1 Oroat at soil toMaor V 4444 Stuart lb ... 4 114 Clamawta rf 4 44 4 4 14 airisSi a—4 OS 110 0 Hoak lb 2*0 4 2 3 1 Baker lb 14 1. SSS& ***• ess.* ■Mr It You Hare Tires to Throw Around LETUSTOBM THEN INTO HONEY! Don't smell up the neighborhood with burning rubber. Coll FE 2-8181 and we'll sell those old tires. One of our representatives will give your ad that professional touch. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS WORK FOR YOU MOTOR INN RfCREATlON 10 8. Parry FE 9-00* THK PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER fl, 1000 TWENTY-FIVE May Someday Replace Initallment Plan ADAM AME8 Appliance Leasing Grows Popular ' By SAM DAWSON A» Bnitims Basra Aaalywt NEW YORK en plagued fay appliance* that seem to break down too soon and jo taka forever to be rapaihtf an borrowing a tip from business-men: leasing inatead of buying. Monthly rental feea an far from replacing monthly payments as the matter of first Importance in latter day households. But when and if leasing charges to general am brot&ht down to the level of monthly payments. annual model changes except tori real innovations. Already consmyerq can lease TV sets, furniture, power tools, and airplanes and cabin cruisers Remington Rand tor long term leasing of typewriters, calculating machine pbd systems dude Piggyback 'Leasing Cbrp. with trailers for use on rail cars, A£F Industries which has long leased rail oars, and Janas A Lamson which leases machine leasing corporatftns. The industry _ __________ about offering a household equipment package one of these days. It would include washer, dryer, refrigerator, dish washer, air conditioner and optional- power, lawn- The trend may have started with apartment dwellers renting a car now and then rather than keeping one in the dty. Now It is ■F***? ^ the suburbs for ap-pliances to'be used all the time, as ppart from the old custom of renting services equipment Just for parties. ----------- When renting by the month wins wide spread acceptance, leaaing corporations say key'll put extra pressure on manufacturers for consumer products that offer letter operation, easier: maintenace and longer life expectancy. COULD BRING CHANGES only in the consumer’s living "Tiibfii but also in industry’s methods of product development and sales. Tim industrial design firm of Lippineott A Margulies predicta that bargaining demands on manufacturers by leasing concerns fnay even bring an end ownership. Leasing and time payment costs aw run about the sam^ in the first two years, Lippineott A Mar-guiles says, if you count in depreciation, service and interest charges. After that, as depreciation ratios decrease, leasing charges mount by 5 to 15 per cent over purchase costs. MANY BENEFITS Listed as extra leasing benefits are freedom from insurance charges and major repair bills, from trtde-in'problems and getting up the down payment, and from loss of appliance use while waiting fay, the repair man to gel parts for machines which deslgn-gi cfiarge tend to be too highly machined and too complicated. With leasing the' corporation contracts to provide service and to' replace appliances when major time-consuming repairs art in Standard financial OBtoHEB sidiary. Car and truck rental firms, «ich as Herts Oorp- and Ryeer System, have branched Into equipment rentals. tools. ; - The list goes on and on, with many companies serving communities in all parts of tnfa nation. EVEN BEER Blllilt Real estate firms like Tishman Realty and Kratter are leasing such specialized items as beer biifs*l ornr aettr and air conditioning. service' corporations, avoid tying up capital in costly equipment, get tools needed for comparathp short term Jobs. For the consumer 4t% largely a matter of convenience and freedom from repairs Sky Particles Will Be Studied Two Chunks Hissed Into Connecticut Yard; May Be From Sputnik HARTFORD, Com. (AP)—Two objects that fell flaming from the sky and plowed into the back yard of an apartment house will be sent to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration jin Washington, police saod. Police said, the small chunks landed with a hissing sound Sun-day nlghtr c Consumer equipment leaaing spilled over from the business i where many companies timed to It after World War II, and markedly so in the USDs. Prominent servicers of industry are UA. Leasing Oorp., Boothe Leasing, and Nationwide Leasing. Nationwide has Just- Joined with Prof. Robert L. Brown of Southern Connecticut State College said: ‘‘There’s a reasonably good ' chance that this particle may be a fragment from an orbiting satellite, possibly Sputnik IV, which broke into many particles after Its launching earlier this year’— A .woman told police she saw a brilliant object passing overhead about file time toe objects came to earth. ff ♦ 1r Brown ruled out the possibility the object* might have been fragments from a meteor or something launched locally. He aaid the particle be examined was apparently some lightweight metal, possibly aiT alloy containing aluminum or magnesium.-------- Finch Takes Stand To Tell Death Story LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Fincb-TVegoff murder trial resumes today with Dr. R. Bernard Finch scheduled to testify about the summer night bis estranged wife was fatally, shot. Finch, 42, and his red-haired mistress, Carole Tregoff, 23, are’ being retried on charges they ambushed the wealthy surgeon’s wife Barbara outside tha tlncTT estate to suburban W«t Covina 14 npnths ago. Their first trial ended in a deadlocked Jury. Finch contends Ws socialite wife, 38, produced a gun and that if discharged accidentally wr be tried to throw it away. The prosecution charges he killed her to prevent her from sharing in Ws j estate through a divorce settle- Ghana Head WIH Lead His Delegation to U. N. ACCRA, Ghana (AP) — President Kwame Nkrumah will lead Ghana’s delegation to toe U.N. General Assembly opening Sept. » in New York, reliable sources said Monday. It is believed be will rail for new action against South Africa's apartheid (segregation) policies and will urge an end Jo South Africa's administration of southwest africa. DONALD DUCK ,'uM,YASkno need to wait for COMPLETION OF TUB RACE WHEN 1 MY STEED HAS A Sltf-LEMOTU lead£-hak-*aff/~my WDMPTrruoj WILL &MB YOU A CHAMCE TO PREPARE MY VflNNIfteS/START WITH TftrfcyTV-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS. TlTK&PAY, SEPTEMBER 6, I960 Deaths in Nearby Areas 11 Continued from Pin II). RICHARD L. KIRBY /" jrado; a mm Robert of Wolverine Al'BURN HEIGHTS - Service Uke; and 12 grandchildren. SJf&SSt gagas Business and Finance twwtw la the Lewie E. WM| HOLLY* Service (or tin. J The toUowtog are top prices [ iitOwrlM ^irie A.) lUdrarrison, wiM be in White Chapel Memorial ^ M linily ».. WWlKHjl Cemetery TWy. at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the DrYBrj Mr. Khtiy died Satunfey alter Ft*«l Home. Burial will be in! nr tong tttoess Lakeside Cemetery covering sales of locally frown Surviving Whiff Me wife Ethel! Mr»- Richardson died Sunday produce brought to the Farmer*! J, are three softs. Nelson L, of ■*8* hom* *fter * *on* illneos. Market by grower* and told by! UmptoRptotne. John W. —I IdeydL Surviving m » *». in wholesale package lots. G .both of Clorkaton; a daughter,| Bradley d Holly, a daughter,1 MARKETS|Stocks Decline [Grain Futures Trade .]. r t j Is Firm to Strong ■ in Easy Trade «m aUaa t mmhomm a Richard d laTiwN aw ttawaf Tm Hundred ««•*• 110.371■ votes. Farrell ■. Rotorru rerrlvod Nineteen rheusand Nine Hundred atvrmjr-Too iis.trii votes Total vote* M.34J REPRBBENTA11VE IN STATS LEGISLATURE HRBT DlOTHlCf < Democratic Party) Tbs what* number ol votes (lt*a DesaecrsUc forty for offloo Of OSMtJ * Twenty-tevea ------- um office dr Beptraraunvs i Legislature HrS Dtatrlet VO-___________ Thoaooua Pin Hradrul Thirty-four ■ItoJti owl they oerr given lor the fol-loving nomad persons ■**“ ~ CWfts received One Then- Mrs, Clifford Edwards of CMcacodMn- Albert Schroder of Lake Quotations are furnished by the n. vuiroro eawbiw oi ^ w______ M hub- Bucinoup. brother; three Haters, Mis. bate P®**: SST~m stepchiiaren. °etroit Btunau of Markets, at off Key atocks declined from frac- Friday. Detroit Produce James of Pontiac; Mrs. Percy Ed- Mr*. Lillian Hutchinson of Davis-wards of Ctauferobt; Mrs. Edward ,nd E«*«* Richaniaoo of Bradterd «t EBmwnh; and UjHoOy- S1”**11*”*-____________________! TBOMA6B. gMEEHY MBS. WILLIAM MAIM J The body of Thomas It Sheehy. NOVI — Service lor Mr». Wil- W* °* *70 Mott 81.. Waterford liam (Susie H.i Matas. 76. of 43034(Township, will be at the Voorhees. a Grand River Ave.. will he hridSP* Funeral Home unUi this eve- g.______, at 1 p. m. Thursday at the Caster-1 "‘htf. when h will be taken tujcoofofuoiy. t line .Funeral Home, NorthvUlejGrrer-Croy k fitch Funeral Home, JESS; tSSI itov55i, bu Burial will be to the Novi Cerae-|PoP*" Blutf, Mo: far services airf {jatow. * “ tery. ... |burial. jp****.' cu Mrs M«W«H.ri vevtawiaj/ after) He died Saturday following^r - 1 NEW YORK ft__________ _____ market was down slightly in moderate trading early this afternoon. i CHICAGO ID —The grain future! j —-s-~-market-was him to strong today i **&£** roe mi- _ j as .traders reinstated long positions «»• «wwwa tasatr-four txitai **?}«*« *»•<* been liquidated tor the nUi mn « to« tong holiday weekend. I tw «ho? mSawr *nL* pm bj indldetet for ___ office Thirty-to* "'"tae'tb* fatiowlnf oomwf personi Chariot A. Sparks rnslvc* Thirty-t ftitn—* Baht Hundred Ninety-two Apples. Ducuees, *u Apples, tony Mclntoih, to —•— Greenings. feu . a six-year illness. She was a mem-,1 He 11th Um market entered the tm-piitaot im-Ubor Bay Wttk little aUtnulation Jrom new* of business ar the economy. A Soybeans led the advance with UgWaipn jrtrm jutyn* gas, ptw .... -I ,,,, __ . ItmOk Ttores Hundred forty-four pins running to well over a cent ,>><*1 Tod u»y van given far me m-a bushel in most contracts during. the first several minutes. A good ■i s expected nmnt. Steel output was 1 to' fall because of rail strikes, Lobar Day cutback* and alag-(tab order*. deal bf the demand also was linked with stronger markets tor soybean oil and soybean meal along with reports that weather over the major producing areas continued hot and dry. Some lections were understood to be to need of mT 1 hire. VKGBTASUn her of the Rebekahs, Novi Chapter i*' 8* «tw»ent at Waterford Town-482, and a past noble grand of th.| *h‘P »i«h School. grew,, rw. to- organization. Surviving besides his parent*. Klnli iU^rC>d.r b Surviving besides her husband iMr *«l Mrs. Thmnas W. Sheehy, »•«* Urn, feu arc a aon, George W. of Novi; « *»' grandparents Mrs. Pearl Rob- a brother, Lucian Dandison ofi«rt*>M PoW,r B,uff- M®- ,nd S ‘ WaMad l^h>: fiv. vr^.ii.ireni Mrs Ha»> gh^V. of Wiilian>g-|, and one great-grandchild "-Vine. Mo;~~ Also sun tvlng a 1 sitter, Mrs. I ■ The grains ihoved up orfy small { Moderate losses ♦ere taken byffrafHons generally. Buying on jsteela,. autos, falls, oils, drop, j commercial accounts appeared to 11 tsj electrical equipments and most be very tiiin. No export bushjess ){•'aircrafts. . |was reported in any of the ~“** I of KcprcMnuttv* I BMP—HPMM tjmi loving BUntd person*: |Jbro I- eitoti 1*11 ’inh'ir - - TMMoad . Hum Hundred forty-four Tarn »■**■ JlT.___________ Tout vote* 4.J44. REPRESim ATIVg IN STATS LEOISLA^UKS toSCOND DISTRICT Tbo vholo numtoor of votn given toy Um OtaouMe forty for caaOMMMj for Um offlc* of aopreMOtaUvo in StaUi Leglvlatui - * — I DMtnct 1 ______ w. . ____iti Three Thou- und fiv* Hundred Ninety-Nine O.MSi Thouwnd Bght Hundred <33.101 end they nr* glv-toSivtaS anew* mtmi'. __________ of VMM given fey the - Democratic Petty Mr- «UN"““ lor to office M Drain Otari! vii Tvanty-nlne Thoueand Six Hi iftq wi jjaw r~ The vfiole number of voter fin... lie Republican Party tar caadMOU* tar too office «f Drain Commlaaloner---- ----- Thoueand Bgl»t Hundred The whole number a Legislature Second District Beets, doe. Ochs. ■com, tapped, bu. Beans, Wee. bu. Cabbage. $sr ^ The market was active at ttoo i wxMtftiest s j«« start then turnover quieted. i.m| Comptometer and telautograph, igrimir 11?.in which trading was halted much' ■ Friday. MB8. WILLIAM McGINNla ^ K Sheehy. both of Pontiac’ ' ■tin! 1 V _ (miu. u________ um ..... _ -------- Cauliflower, dot _______ a,of last week due to pile ups, tint, >l(rf buy orders and next sell or- liaia (Ms M. 104 College neral Home. Burial will be in Lake-i aide Cemetery. ROYAL OAK ■- Service tor V W ,i.1ltom S. Smith. ». of 1821 Boon-;clumber., guu bu p.m. tomorrow at the Dcyer Ftoj^ ^ to he wa SSSSi m. neral Home Rtirial will he in l^len. _ • . . ~ ... Z . Kh sm LTr 3:30 p. m. today at the First Pros- S,Pta«t 1 byterton Church of Royal Oak, [totriaai. 1 1 o.wt-1 in in ruL,.im i Kohlrabi, a Mrs. McGinnis died yesterday at St. Joseph Hospital, Flint, tol- 1 lowing a heart attack suffered Friday night. She was a life memlJer of the tY Pomm Orange and the S Grange. ' it '♦ -A ' Surviving are two daughters. _ Mrs. Ladtoert Hadley of Dearborn and Mn. Arthur Graver of HoUy; nix grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren: and two brothers. Jay Coleman of lmlay City and Stanley Coleman of Holly.' JOHN NlKCHNIEDOWItV. TROY — Requiem Mass tor John Niechniedowicz. 74, of 1063 Kiris St., will be sung at 9:30 -—Thursday otic Church, Clawson. Burial will he in Mount Olivet Cemetery,' Detroit, Mr. Niechniedowicz died yester- etery. il was to be in Oakview Cem-; lmi.' Iio. bch* .... Smith, retired disector of oTiwV. grma,'aJp*MM. safety lor the Ford Motor gSj^toh. died Saturday at Henry Ford Ho* gaftoj. rmc scha. pital, Detroit, after an Ulnem of p".. 31.^, ^' iir'-. . Ififeani i i 1 Peppers, Wmlento, pk . . Hf wu 1 Uft member of thelSNSSr^ ewte*Wbu1, r, 18FA AM of Scotland, a member Badi*h*>. WhHa. dm. s«ha. of the Northwestern Lodge 529 jg?^ aSSwroS' wi F A AM Detroit, the Greater pe-lto—a, nutmtouC' bu.' trait Board «f Commerce, a life SubbSrt*' ■t">u?^" member of the Veterans of Safety, *“* and a former member of the Ad- 1 vtoory. Council of the National v Safety Cbundl, the Presidents Ad- 1 vispry Committee on Safety ERgi- ,c fleering and the Advisory Board c,bbM(. bu — Safety Engineering of the Sitth I eatery cabtiag*.' •• j^jdero, were traded normally. i »| Bath stocks were only slightly gj* delayed in‘ opening, Oompteme- “»r |H| ter with a fractional gala and Jiv, Telautograph with at l point loai. w • ito| Tetnutograph stretched Ua to- a—aw 1 u Mfe tom te about I, then re- I ~—~— ■“! T* “ T"'' R*d Travel-Bon Threat ; l«5rsrt Zjg?£|Worri« W..t Berlin !; n company had sold 2.000 shares of! otrD, tKf _ .. • JJJjhis holdings Thursday. 1 BERLIN — Communist fc • * !! „___ , , _ „ , ; Germany warned today that ito 1l?LPCnnSylVaiMa fUi,I,rpad Contin-1 repent travel ban against inolat. LEOIdLATURS, THIRD DlSTBtCT 1 15**1 - < Democretlc Party! 1 . i i« L The whole number ol votai given b. i jl , the Dtmocftoile P*rty for ggttdklAtw , «e ‘for the office of Stele Representative. Third District wet Three Thouund Sight Hundred forty-eight tt.Sttr Bight U4 I Hundred turnip*, tapped, la bleached. LTrYucv! Bibb, pk.'".' Lettuce. Roe ton. doe. Lettuce, Leaf, feu. Bttvc*: HeaV’tou01 Mustard, bu. ....... Romalne. bu. : Surviving besides his wife Eleanor .arc a daughter, Mrs, Roger F. Smith of Lathnip Village; a day at William R. Beaumont Has- brother; and tour grandchildren, pital. Royal Oak, after a brie! iU-j Funeral arrangements were hrag. -----'handled t§r the Spiller-Spitler Fu- The Rosary will be recited at 8 neral Horn! p. m. tomortow at the Gramer! tmMaMJUL-m aricvrwa Funeral Home, CUwaon. - ««ARLE8 R. 8TKVENS Surviving are six aonx; Joseph' LEONARD—Service tor Charles at home; Bruno and John, both of!R- Severn, «• 7^20 Dcqulndre Oawaon; Walter of Pontiac: Frank^ be held at 1:30 p.m. orraorr 100* of Berkley and Edward of Troy; Wedne,d4y ,l *•»« Muir Brothers! DgritpiTaepi. ijT i» _ iTTrL .1 MI • k____________I. b'lineral Unmi Almnnf Rnrial will to'd per_doten by first meWere ijSlZenith^drapped about 2 and DuLfaat iLcoukL do, and there war 12 ™“ about a point. Ronaon H»urt- a veiled threat to cut off the ified more than a point. [corridora-to Berlin.. “ l«l j. m • ij. *' *- - 72 * . t I The Qsmmunist threats had : ' *• Steel and Jones A Laugh- western officials worried .about . i.bsP” fractional lossea while 1 the coming weeks. t.M other leading steelmakers showed' -J JJi slight change. jJnB.tBS-iSy • 12 rard* down ■boul * point, was . So *he abarpeit laser among tno-tora. The other* were down fracttsM. si»] Naw York Stocks— PUBLIC SALB 1HT ford Convertible, eertal number, DTP04MS4, will f* Mid St pubto ' At MM Woodward Are., Pernaole, 1 Igen. that address being whore vehicle Is stored and m»y be tnapod 1 Hundred. SUtv-fc iwtni honed per-red Two Thousand Poultry and Eggs Wr ... «} Total votet 1.IM iRepubllcan Party 1 Tht whole number t/f votea given the Republican Party for, candidatei the ollice of Stale RepreeenMtlve. 1----- District woe Btetea Thousand Porty-flve 'lioesi and they were given lor thr foliouing named peraont: ... Henry It. Doom received Five Thousand One Hundred Plfty-eeren il.llfj HBI T%lKy two—TSodoonit Twenty-Seven iJl.gJU —. **-y following MOMd per tana: —um,— — —btaln—recelved Th I rt y-1 w 0 Thouaand Bight Huadrad Twoaty-aavto U.gJU votea Total eotaa M.W7. PROBATE rtUOt The whole number mnatafel candidates tar the Judge waa Porly-ntn “-^-vtaur ,w*n. —.. —• ' tollowlng named per- Hundred SUty-fe ________NTATtTl LEGISLATURE POUF ’ (Democratic Party 1 The whole number .of vOtoa s bo Democratic Party fi--■ IRepubllcan forty) ___.le number of votes g| the Republican Party tor eoadta* iFf^TjiI — ------ ^Dtatrlct d Two Thouaand Total vote. J0 »00 * COUNTY SURVEYOR iOemocrntlc forty 1 The whole number of veto the Deanerutle Bowp tar 1 tor the office of County Surveror Twenty-Six Thouaand Eight Hu*--------- One Prices I pound delivered Detrol* *— "■ f —1 Ore pr------- ¥ E|i« 1M Minn P k L $.1 Mont * Werd 31.4 Mot Prod MS Mot |M . 30.0 Motorola 50.3 MSrray CD . -j?S Nat ^SS R ■®*|Thou«»nd Three Hundred el (30.3551 votes. Total vote* 30.340. LIEUTENANT OOVERNOR 'Democratic Pettyi The whole number of rotee given by he Democratic Party for candidate! M.x 'Or the office of Lieutenant Governor 3#.5 was Thirty-three Thouwnd lira Baboo dred Sixty 133.500 and they wore given BfOOPOy. Livestock NY Central .. 15.5 1 Norf * West . *3 Thousand Seven Hundred Two 40,7(3) I Carrier1'Cp ! _ ..Icater Trac . hute" early''supply slaughter steirs and chu.'bvc ' heifers quaUty vary ottraeUra. goedlgrSf EL-‘“d chirtca,grades predomtnatlne. Wlthlevi. itff'y oriSra7' th last weeks strong iioae. or ready)Con ; M« higher than teat Monday: hotter! sens fully steady; cow. steady: tew loads cont nteh choice end mixed high choice end I Cost ........... PhW WHOM Mi. steers 24.00; most Cont Oil 53 % Proct choice steer* 1150 ft. end down 24.75- Copper Rng 114 Pure “ — -—- — ta I1M AaSr BA* 2 s or* a j!'4i Ocone H. Dougherty received Bight Thousand Three Hundred Ninety-two 52 ? (1 3021 votet Owene III Ol . N. 55 rift edi choice* ftdititoolg Palm .. 33 4 pj2jv D« Msngg hellers nftd- colum Oil Ji • ^ •Utri rtronglc^Mir^ ; : mi S!wJ?Reteos . iWHMjSSEi* df reddyje^pSSmr .SSft? llond^f^ heiferi Oontumer Pw 60 6 Pheipe D " “ “ ** ^Ty '•»(: mixed good and choice —A down 34.35-34.75: g steers '32.35-34.35; « 33.35-34; good to 3175-33 00: Utility i - —d cutters 11-15; st choice) Deere ig weight j Dou| C Seag . MRS. RAY REKNLUND WOLVERINE LAKE *_ Service tor Mn. Ray (Mable) Rehnluiul. 62. of 265 Oak Island Drive, willjOiurch. be at 1 p.m. Thursday st St: Maf- Surviving are hit otepmother,;{«[{« thew Lutheran Church, Waited‘Mnu John Westphal: a soji. fUflph leant.______________ Lake. Burial will be in Grand with the Air Force In Okinawa: *-•-) - Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. two grandchildren: two brothers, advance on wm^lts 330* u». and damn! j tut ^Air l! Mrs. Rehnlund died yesterday all Herbert of Lakeville and John of **i**.jjt ib^io'io , Mrs. Margaret King of . Walled (brief- illness. Arrsogements/sere| ai^ehme^ta-'S^uiufty' Lake, Mrx. Shirley Ofar of Utica (by the Melvin A-. Schutt Funeral i*:**- ' anil 'IfeA'-iSijiiy !cholc"Pin^hme'spr“(i*l ------- ---------;--------------J-............ :---;...'-,-—5 .—- M-21; cun to-choice slatig 10 I Phlii Pet | RCA ’ Republ., 15 St Re* Pap . S5 3 ScovlII' Mf i*«rv 7 | Btd Oil Cfel Wall Street Chatter Lodge Calendar Starts in Housing Should %s£ Hit Low Point This Month Areme Chapter No. 503 OE8. egular meeting, Ctept. 7th, 8 am. Roosevelt Temple, 33 State Street. NEW YORK (UPI) — The value! The femer rosy glow 'of the Line Investment Survey reports etortronico leaks a Mt oea-green, that the low point to the season-1 he. says, while forecasting a ally adjusted rate of housing startsf P*»tiMe major dtaaster ahead probably will be passed thi* hr those wba thtak ,tbe stocks quarter. I are gaad long term Investment* * ^ ^ at 5# times earning*. The impravtag' supply of funds! Bathe A Co. reports that Aldens for individual home loans ought has been consolidating for weeks to stimulate both the resale and Die new home markets by fft closing months of 1960, it said. feet* appears fa be a srfldeat By fa* mM-MFs, It said, a mote rapid increase to family formations will probably bring to about 1,500,000 new until*, a year News in Brief Zeno Hen rock, 0040 Flemings Lake Road. Qarkston, reported Pontiac police yesterdiy \hat thief stole his camera valued at 912 from his car parked in a behind 438 Orchard l.ake Ave. Someone uprooted five shrub* at Herrington Elementary School, 541 Bqy St., it was reported tj Pontiac police yesterday. (1.3031 rates. T. John Loslnokl raautrad Eight Thou-•and Nlncty-foar (0.004) VOtasT P. Vander Veen raeolrad Ton Ms 5.107. tRepablleaa Poriyi v ___ —do number of rata* given by the Republican Party for eoaaitato* for th* offloo of Stale Repreaenlellve fifth Dlatrtct wot SU Thouwnd Two RaadgadJaadme ftJUi — Richard I Thoueand 1 (10.173) votaa. Total votaa 31.500. ----— (Wepufehrai) Party) ____________ Tht whole number of rata* givon by th* Republican Party for ekndlaof— *~~ the office of LUtttenAi----- Thirty-four Thousand . fourteen 1*4.0141 and they W( ">r th* foSoarlnc named Hanoi_____ Edward Hutch!neon received fhurtaen Thousand five Hundred Ninety-two |1A. . lOamoeratlc Party) Thlrty-twi ______ Slghly.lhrae—||l,d>H___—it nn tt-i given tor the following nomad perebha Patrick V. McNamara received Thirty two Thouaand Six Hundred Eighty-three office of United States Senator was Thirty-*!* Thousand Bevsn Hundred Two (1X7*3) and they ware given for *»Uowlng named persons: ....in M.'montlsy received Twwnty-four Thouwnd Three Hundred seventy-two REPRESENTATIVE IN STATE : i-ariy ior .canaiast . of State Reprssentatl) ----- District was nv« Thouwnd Ou Hundred Fifty-Seven 15.107) and they • following nomad par- .. -evereaux recelvi One Hundred Blxty-fi Huadrad fourteen (SAM) row rata* ASM. > REPRESENTATIVE IN STATE LEOISLATURI SIXTH DISTRICT The whoia number of vota*^ given by )C Democratic Porte for condMaloa toi ■J* offloo of State Iteprewntatlra jlaMi District vtl tax Thouwnd. five Hundred fourteen <0,514) and they were glv-m r the following named peraons: a C. Hitchcock waolrad Two Thou-____ Seven Hundred Blghty-three (3,- Walter T. McMahon reeelvsd On* houwnd Seven Hundred Seven ^1.“^ Baity ford Pickering received ’Two -----DUtrlct wo* Two Thouwnd Three Bundled Nlnav n.iw) tM owy------------- givon for the following named per. Dorothy M. Rowley received Eight Hundred Ninety-four <■**) - vote*. Robert J. Turner received One Thou-md Pour Hundred Ninety.six (1,00) Total vote* 3,3*9. . . 1 TIRtoiCVTlNU ATTORNEY------------ . tPemeeeatle forty) rv*xr Ttw whole | number of vote* steal by Total rata* *0.7*3. REPRESENTATIVE IN COHOREBi ISTH DISTRICT (Democratic Party) The whole number of ratw given I th* Demoentle Party ter candidates f the offlc* of Representative In Congrawi tath District Ml Thirty-four Ths------ ~ ' ' rw (S4S03) and they were following named persons: —Pi T. Ishnsnn reoelvsd Seven Thousand Two Hundred Ftfty-Oao 3M V.... Joseph Kadans received Two Thousand One Hundred (Altai 'vote James Kellis receive) . , —ra.mon. oua row SVWII Ootall, VI Vllaiu XIran t h Lake Rd.. Turn. Sept. 6. 8:30 pjn rOr , R K. Thurlow of RfiMfete, Cohuj Chartcraft, toe., says tho chart « Stefa* bolfevro that we are in pattern rf Diamond Alltili i».‘‘ex-ti bear market which at beat will trendy bullish" while a rally to tag 19# - 49 type trading |m te May Department a tor* ■ r«y st wont will be not aojondd start fUs stock on a new •°*®> i upmove. now and seems poised tor a short term move. A breakthrough the 52% level would be a buy signal for trading accounts. Botche says.' .. dr ,-p- John A. Stine of Walston k Co. holds that U.S. Borax k Chemical appears attractive, mainly as a capital gains speculation, with above average long-term potential. Net income in/ the fiscal year elided Sept. 30 will fall between fl-50-11.60 ■ share while fiscal 1961 could see earnings in excess of 12.06, Walston says. I 1 _ p/ liege today.\Two persona to-the plane were reported killed and several football players narrowly missed being M by the Wreckage. worm 8D . The Associated Press.. 30 15- It 00 Total vote* 34.003. ladari. Rolls UUI. Stocks (RopubUooa Party) *• —* *-■* • —Al rii* whole amber of vote* it Republican Forty foe Candida oco , 115.5 3(7.4 230.3 I Mil _____ __ -Ml TO .304.0 130.S 3(0.0 ItaJ 100.7 ISj HO WM . 300.0 igi Plane Hits Gridiron / field of Pemisyivania Military Col- , 3 util*. L._ _ __ ■ ta Stocks 000.01 0K%4iL Volume U 3 pm. 1,730.004 DETROIT gTOCK* (C. fiuHstaJ figures aftor d*claml poOhts aft tutu Mien Elec * B*ulp Co. .. 4.3 4 f laid win Rubber Co' r* I Sow Gate Co* ..._____ Jt Lakes OU At <6WF W '' Howell Bloc Mtr Co* . Peninsular Mtl Prod Co* 1 The Prophet Co* .... lAuafariurtag Co* R DISTRICT Total rat** 33.5*4. STATE SENATOR......... (Democratic Party) Th* whole number of votes altan by iuw Domocratto Party fer rsadldatei far Ithe office of Stela Sraatoc 13th District Was. Thirty-on# Thousand Two Hundred Rtariy-ulM i3I.3»*i and they wot* Stern ter. Um tanowted naoMd persons: taWj_(k Jerome WNmw received Plfteou 4 > Thousand Seven Hundrad Seventy-Three M* (15.773) vote*. “ H. Chapin received Seven Six Hundred Seveaty-etx ‘(7,- w ritata llooti C< iTipl ai ... „ Hundred Mir (7.S0 i.l 1*1 10.3 MU*. " l-roto) voles 31.30*. —I offlc* of Pro*eoutlng Attorney Thirty-one Thousand Five Hunt Twenty 13I,520i end they were gl *tt the following named persons: George J. Pulkerton received TW« Thousand Bight Hundred Twotra ( Rapps port rec Oven Hundred to* Total votes 31,030. ^RcpuMtaan Party) Ihp whole number of votes givon by m ROOubUcon Party for oondldato* fra it office of Prosecuting Attomgy ■ Thirty-three Thousand Pour Huadrad •orante-one (33,471) und they wore given for tha foUowin* uomod persons: Ooorgt P. Taylor received Thirty-three Thoueand Pour Hundrad Seventy-one <33.4711 votes. ' Total votaa 33.471. SHBRIPP (Democratic Party) Tha whale number of votaa glv fttaO ---------------- UAal Thousand 35.004) and i allowing name ■soSr mgt. |■ Thourand tax Hundred Ninety-four (30.. ites 31.(04. [Repumteon Party) . Jle number of votes given th* RomtUtoon Party for eoaOlootoi___ the office of Sheriff was Thirty-four ““ HradEpd Twenty-five ______________, won *“ *-* lowing named persons: Prank tram received Thirty-four Thoueand Pear Hundred Twonty-flra (34.430) votaa. Total Mn 04.430. COUNTY CLERK-REOISTER OP DEKta ! Baawi«.- iPomaoroitaTtalwt Th* whak number of rata* rivoa by le Party tor rand too tm for County Clork and Register ■■ Twenty-Nine Thousand I office O nanmd g Utl v ax- David 8. Lots ' received Slxtsen I Thousand Six Hundred (IMtal rata*. rotaTrata* 30,717. > ' Republican party) -The whole number o( votes Hvoa hy< «* Republican Party for eaiuHdatet fer m office .oioonata Ckrk site HonloUr . f Prado raw Thirty Thonaond Nine Hundrad Rtehty-mran (30,0(7) and thoy rraraet th/ Coun. of Oakland. State of Michigan, fo) purposes except tax** for the payment .. Interest and principal •*> oblltr"---Incurred prior to December (. It Increased for * ported of fouroiti rom woo to 1K3. both IncluXlv. /30th of Vi ' 50c per tl.OM OO) of ouoand Nine Hundred Total votes 67,7(3. STATE OP MICHIGAN. County f^obioh^ H __________ We do hereby certify. Uut the for going I* o correct statement of th* Vot givon to th* County of Oakland for tl and for th* offloo designated therein, at Tonortl Primary motion, bald-on By, th* Boeond day of August, Jn roar on* thouwnd nine hundrad ___ _____Circuit Court for .... Count* of Oakland this sixteenth day -* August, In tbo year on* thousand raratopind state. . 1 ! SARAH P. GARRETT, . RUTH KELHN CON8TERDINE CARLOS O. RICHARDSON Board of .Cdunty Canvassers STATE OP MICHIGAN. County of Oakland, ss I hereby certify, that th* foregoing cornet transcript of th* statement he Boord of County Canvassers of I ___ County, of Oakland of the votes (Iren In tuai County tor tbo candidates -----1 in said statement and fer the designated U«rellL_AkthtG*Utjr*i _____,ry Election, held on ito Second day of August, 1SOO. so far a* It relate* ' th* ratea* cast for said office, as tars from the original statement file In the offlc* at tbo County itnoss whereof, w* hart hereunto ’ hand and affixed the mol Circuit Court for the County tend this sixteenth .day of Au- lldste hy tbo Republican „ ._ .... ante* of Ropimontatlve . State Legislature fifth District | That Mhn C. Hitchcock having received the largest1 number of votes Is nominated candidate te tea Democratic Party tor tho offlc* of Ropresontottv* ta State Legtihtura »th District That Mboh J. Turner boring received it, iHfri oumtea of vote* le noml- 1 _aledcffl®8*Woy the Republican Party for the office of Representative to •htalnnlslntte* rah Dtatrlet That Oraine J. Fulkerson horint re-*iv#rf th. largest number of votes la ranitSoto hi) tho Demoorallr for th* office of Prosecuting At- __Ooorge p. Tsylor having received largest number of ratal It nomhwtad -----------------g..£jy,iy That Hootar Right horit .he largest number of vote* it nominated candidate by to Democratic Potty tor the office of Sheriff That Prank Irons haring raeolrad M largest number — i office of County ' That Ray J. Russell haring received be largest number of vote* It nominated andldate by the Democratic Party for he office of Drain Commissioner "That Daniel W. Barry having received he. largest number of votes Is nom-itled candidate by the Republican 'any for Uw office of Drain Cornell , tSsI Btentey P. oupn serafTtinW’ M largest number of vote* Is nominated candidate .. by the Democratic Party for the office of County Surveyor That Ralph A. Main haring received te largest number of votn Is noml-atad candidate by the Republican Party >r tht offlc* of County Surveyor NON-PARTISAN CANDIDATES That Donald E. Adams Hhring received th* largest number of vote* Is nominated candidate for the office of Probate Judgb—Two Year Term. That L. Harvey Lodge having received ..te second largest number of votn Is nominated candidate for the offtet of Probate Judge—Two Year Torn. ?u.fMrdy! „„ _ ______ ____ ___ thousand nine hundred sixty. (Seal) SARAH P GARRETT RUTH HELEN CON8TERDINE — CARLOS G. 3UCHAJUMON -Board of County Convaonri ATTEST: DANIEL T. MURPHY JR. ' of Board of County Canvasser* SARAH P. GARRETT. Chalrnun of Hoard of county . ti ' Canvassers Sopt. S, 'SO. Couuty Canvassers. CRRTIPICAT1 OP DETERMINATION •TATE OP MICHIOAN, County c Oakland n. The Boprd of County Caavasstrs i. •Hand County hiring Ascertained and Ounraasod th* Yota* of th* sovoral Word* and Tewnahipa of nld County, General Primary Boettaa, held/ ■**“ ■* August.!' mid County Tuesday, the Second' day Of'liuc Dp boraby Certify and Determine . That John B. Bwainson rnelvod tbo largest number of rata* by til* Demo-erotic Party for tht offlc* of Governor P.jjPuqwuti Mootaod Um puul l offlc# of C pt-HWmrd P. Vandor- Yoon received — largest Dumber of rates te th* JotnoornUe Party .for,' tbo offloo -* Lieutenant Oovernor ' ThAt Clarence A. Raid received th* largest number of votes Iq/ the — puonora Parte (Mr (ho office of OWL WISE ADVICE—tot th* nsw Um-brslls Homsownsrs Meg far your horn* tfk ssd prop-srty. Thsn A you «••'( lira i hoot whoa R rsira IrouWo ... bsciutt you're covsrod. Cdl Lazollo Agescy, lie. All Forms of Imuranr*_ 504 Pontiac lank Bldg. Pi 5-8172 . FOR INV1STMINT SECURITIES end ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO. FE 2i-9H7 818 CofTHTiunlty Notional Bank Bldg. 7 the Pontiac press,* Tuesday, September «, im TWENTY.SEVgy - Death Notices hlghast bidder lasaactiam thereofmSf » * M *JK>0. .filMit uS »■—* g.’lM*' H Undersigned re-serve* the ri*hl to M. I Hsfr WwM Mak BOYS tt OR OVER MUST —\ apply In ponton only Wl it Drive Jam «¥ sad Pool «| Help Wanted Female 7; DAY 8HIFT DatedAuguat B.tM r _ - UHTVERSAL C I T CREDIT COW 481 FoaUac Stale Bank Bldg _____Ml Bn Mr Brattnta __________________ ferries was htM at ) »■ tedey front um Rlehardsoo Bird “■—-•I Homo. MlMsvd. ~ _ jrtce _ Dlretle _pffl E PERSONABLE LADT BOR BAHT 0 unto clerical and selling poaltion « Hours If noon to < p m Oood handwriting Important A poll' ta own hsadanltSd to Pootiat Pres*. j iiifpiqi mam hit* • wr y Jo*ythaf iti nnar TonjBIB HBIE WHITE WOMAN. FOR OBT: SUNDAY'NI0HT TR| MTU:I AND a im»H boxer mb brovrii Wtto furnlsl__ «h^ ceU*£_aur lalornattoo w BfUttUf TOUNO UOT TO ”J!jr HbTSKSjg Kiitfi mt mjm wuwna. romiftc. public tali of a IMS Pard P MO bearing aortal number CfHIIStt win be held, tori cash to the hlgboat bidder. Inspection Bmraaf mar to made at «» “u.--1 1 |nnw MiMdr-- **^ “— - MSUO. Krleet lor bachelor atm lenU Pvl etil PE 6-2181 Booii APT jMuriii tVn-■tithed. Wait Wllesu, UL *47*2. I ItOOM APT* PiffAT*~EII. ------- “^nnd MS Oemaw CaH Si carries f^^E^aLY*«n POR opd joSTI arSoytagy^ »vnninu vu,n MHW MHfc FTf. W DEBTS ? I • Walled Lab*, by tl Dated August » IMS. UNIVERSAL C I T. Cl ?. *■ HARTLEY j J^>S,ni^-*yT>e»IBXpftllENCSD BUTCHER WANT-j Stead, job W"apable worker ** l,b£ '..Wl. inySTw *HW» prX SLriTnr- to In'SLe! --- Lbti-iSfeT-st ftVK MM j gfegfegKJM At »:00 a m. eo September 12. uh, a INS Dodge Custom Royal Club Coupa, aerial number MISSTtl, will ba told at mMs *•*- St •*——r^— Perndale. _ eOldnUee in- -------In Wtxom Cemetery, Mr* King wffl Ha in state at tM Rlchardsoo-Blrd Until H * me, Walled Lake ■ — ------—” -r--. KIRBY, SEPT. A 1»N. RICHARD ■»wji L- <25 Robert Court. Ankara '• M*>| Eetetite.agsTl; belorad husband ol Ethel J. Kirby ; dear lather or dear brother of Mrs. Dale James, Mrs. Para? Edwards. Mra. Edward Bradlor, Mrs. Mildred “ ' 2 IMS Id a Mlehltaa. tl a wUeb is a PUBLIC BALI »jas s.m on Sept. is. ISSd IM 2-Door Custom, serial usponorn. Mtf n aSH' ‘ at 22SM Wc----Mi * u fnsx POUR MEN OR. WOMEN WITH I — ** »U1 _ raoanalas. Pall SfllT^lT^r'r; YmI -“'f TMIS near US. 10. CUtrkst nord nrc. ■»*», J" T atwid and majr M ‘------ - . - ■ : Bapt. f a IT the lurudictlon of this Recitation Parri iMa_; *S»Maw - ... ot Paid Hard;' baloead daughter I at Mrs. Charles BelvWe: dear . mother ol Paul Nord Rent AptE Fumlshsd 37 PARTLY Rilrt Am Upturn. M •tar 'School HeaL garate Inalwd- • pmVtm mice' ciIIan larqe RdmEi swab eMranM. jjjflfitaa. waife r-- ------- "USSR. ■ PVT fAt* I R60MB AND NATH PR1VAT* “ Tgas. "Ilf par weak. Cr ,™Jna, PE S-1081. Inquire | Sllpslawlh Ate. COLORED HATElt P DOWN T - its PER ' ....... PE 6-0308. , , I WMrfjptsa*. _«~iira»’TNB bath. Eeef0 tUrbor_Pfe ass* ; "'j.'vkl ............. IN E demonstratobE f?a now - tarn ■ ftlMrtfl--------- IMm. fll»f« mid voMtorl—, _ ■ or atwl liMiP LAROB l ROOMS AND SatITW --; 1 ROOMS PRI UTIL COUPIE. IAS \Vfddinp Najikins r i ^ostirANo*iath^upper. — still tune to xlgn un. Eatn un to IS par cant cunt mission. Call the Toy Chest. PE MT21,-----_j waitress wanted, apply assr Dixie Highway. I ROOMS Po^pAliclGPr'lMiffr ‘JjNt wk, Jlilf saslnaw PC insSdMsrwRfT rtdsirwK' daps. ~mt Etas | %ok ac !fM 1ST CLASS ___ ™ I ■- _ PE 2rtSS» _____‘ j 1ST CLASS CARPENTER WOMAN POR COUNTER AND|_! " “ got power sLcering Jo save my arms, a heater to keep tinted glass to rest my eyes, and payments to b«ikjiyJ)»ck!l_ Work Wanted Mak 11 Building Service - ”Tb. .■ ^ IN DfeBff IF SO "LET US" ,a,Give You l Place to FlStO 2 ROOM CAl3ii~»«tt« I Dixie Highway. . "li jtUL Asm-jkdtC^M ton. See esrktaker 3 AMD'd ROOMS. CLOSE IN 4-8NS or PE Mill 1 ROOMS AND BATH. HEAT hot water. Private Couple lace raoNT ‘ por mon&ib ~sm|k—ar lattrad—sanpts -Hw-WUil ;PB MIN. ey r tiJ SSI month Phone PR S-1121 tram S to IS a" * *■ — Pree parkins Oood CORE.. Ml ta ■nunlh PR i-MM P*w"*rTt6oM“A>Ad¥BB*f~» T«s< NEWLT DECORATED - lS^E— *2 Washtni- ^aSTrffl .isad badrwMh. all bit closets. Pine receptiamaatl BulH-ln bathtub. Tllo floors Large -dinette Aim suable kttcheu Osi heated bulldln| Just I stary wAHl- . up. Automatic das hot watar day wr RUM TIUd hallways. High school. , also grade' school within , abort distance — w NEW , it >Nn. Business Service Michigan, s hearing i the Oaf* urt Hous > City « » 20th « *—sarab J Bept. ™. _____— HR cant d< Paul Catholic Church, tntarment In Mt: Hope,Cemetery Mra. Nord will Ue In a tala at that "UiT- ’..FaeTsI Donelson-Johns Funeral Hama . CMI_ra. Ml..-----. ---- -- ---—JP,- -Af ORO^tElT'iEPttrtONrCLYDR: I »TOCE ^TOAYJtiMLEPAM- trmuporUUon CaU OL *T At"Iw6H^ *ro~D5~UQHT^duMr~ tamer, oj lagfaa, »aart' gear I .na mi wife, PS NOTICE OP INTENTION TO CON-Struet sidewalk oa West Kaaaett Street. **“ — hereby MM “** “ * _____ __ Call Sir. Taylor, I rlitan Ham berg. 21 N7TPerr’y. " I work by hquror )o>. PE S-J293 -OR-2WS22. 12 noon to S p,m luBSil' mAitWRh POlC~i«Og£ A-l WALL WASH1NO ~£aR1 TELEPHONE CANVASSERS management training. Sea class!- gphol. Mach, cleaned. PE_ --1 and salesmen for moderpl- l Ilcapon 10. _;__ J_A-l CARPENTER WORK. NEW _____mu pg S-tS«t. _ _fwOMAi» OViN st TOTuBTSlTr and repair. PE 4-4310. salesman .WANTED. NO ex- and do light housework tor 2 a-| dkamlfTBR - «SS^|’KSS«1 SffiVrrS! r NgeraLHame J I “S* SaLSKLl^TSSf I AMBmODs TOUNO“MAN 21 DE- \VE ARE NOT A I.OAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT mi INSIST I .PR 's ____________________ i e! WwSe B lli -----------ADULTS ONLY PE Mill rooms, tmCifiis Idled, buy t ‘------ “■ tiae-PIsber Plai Apply IM St. I Planti, III I ROOMS AND lilOPLl1 1 BEDROOM COST , CLEAN. ELECTRIC MOTOR EERVICE-Rj ■RTCRKA- j Rke'*Vtiona P^'lkisf 211 *L IIAM RMS PVT BATH, W MUROM I nr. high school., util. Inal. Adults. MI «NM. aWar 4 p.m . 1 ROOM APARTMENT PUiUtiMfeD lAfH. ADULTS Wdywwd O’Rourke; ah by five grandchildren great-grandchildren. ______ ____ ke held Thursday. •Ut. S. at 1:28 p.m. from the Donelson-Johns Plural Home, tntarment In WIUow Orere, Armada. Mich- Sir. O'Rourke Wttl lie In slate at the Donelson-Johns deadI WE HAVE OPENING POR A PRO-1 POPA. SEPT S. ISM. OiOROB . 5s; 1 & Call PE 2-3283_____________________ WAITRESS AND COOK WANTED. Apply West Side Recreation, in AlUtO REALTY ylred by IS grandchildren ___ lour great-graodchlldren. Puneral arrangements will ba annauaoad later by Pursley Puneral Home where Mr. Popa will Be in MaSa ____. ----hjrdbtUtad . that kt^* REHNLU14A, SEPTS.' I860, .MAI sfnri a°^ 1 g OnmmUsI^ Ms^y KlngRdWn^eatSfd S? eoSMrurt'•MeVk^*'aS|Tr5ated'jrork | e£pe, sure willing, v* train Otctuua Xkto’.- attw L_.i TOUNO LADIES WANTED FOR *■*—---- work no experience salary phi* commls- essary, salary pbu 1, ml N. Saginaw chl|an Assoc. Credit JDouaeeh LITTLE FURNACE, PARTS! PRiVATK SWIMM1NO LESSONS ------ pe 4-8)43 J Adults Pool proatdad. PES4TI2. ______________ PE 2-4821 ' KNAPP SHOES I ________________________PE S-_____ __________ FEI HEAnNoT^URN aceFcumned E5SP-JS5.S.M.ML________________M±!J« i «>« J!g^*«a BAftfmr. sad serviced. C. L. Nelson PE LOBE WEIOMT SAFELY AND SS2L-? — S USS_________________economically with newly released j ROOM TEAR AROUND LAKE "TWrFSSlEETEkifcDilANINd . tNHU. N *ante at spaytmsnt,. OR_.2dl>4.L ",.XK*E8u 1 imrns. - ■* . . U ROOM FURNISHED "^^m^S^rvue^E i*‘4 °t?lcnd?yR*d^or"'phhnf1PE Wec/ p^V"rea^ wasnar repair aarvua. r*| jJlJI Alter ! pm. er ll aasaa- N SOUTH ST, —-------12-S7J4:------* * -------- , FAY'S- PARTI AND SERVICE -Wholesale and Retail J CARRE'S- •L5*WS5l ‘ -- “--TTNO M [ serviced. ways.' FE 2-SMT jjs Tpwspadt I MAN NEEDS WORK. Help W*ntca . cleaned. PE t-d4N. d by 12 __ _ . Rennett Street I JJ52S.8j};j ymmil’ ■■*>««*>. tam9'JrS!*'V± J ^teMdlTm^ay; SoU. A al *5* •*“..“?*Jil 1 P.m. from st. Matthew Church Itb Ra*. Lawrence Keoste offlcl-N | ' ---- Orand^r- Asaeuor's Plat No taat further weat at SL 441 SO. estimate an. profile a Cemetery. Mra. Rehnlund wtB He IN state at Urn Rlchlrdaon-Blrd PuheraTRome. Wallei Lake, ur "' 11 a.m. , Thursday.’ oept. S, -iaS.-pMi> aid, ^tt^Jand that th,. |N„wdl.bdiUk« cast tbsrspl shall bt datrayad by speclsl pt wri that all ol tha lota, and parcels ot land Iron ting upon the north side of Kennett Street from a point 4*2 west of the pest line of AP 144 point 288 fact fuVthar weat shall c I-S431 tEPTfc TANKS ^LRANED ' PE FK Confidential MIU WE PAY ALL YOUR BILLS bookkeeping, all taxes Ortoavllls rarart umvmwmra: adults. M8. Y MUlar at_ l" ROOM APANTMWf * children welcome. PI > mo , oil p$m.____ front hoax I tbr* I ROOMS AND BATH I Hejes, Waterford dam t PgPROOMB. FULLY ERUIFFED An. u.l.t he * — -ULW---—— ----------- '1 "C" age, pooisuspiss *h Titrn «* WOMEN TO CANVABB „ .... . _ . __ n»Ntt W«IS____________ . and payment ol SSro^.T nMHBH Work Wsfitcd Female 12, Dr«BBn«Rk»nf. Tslloring 17i * - 0 t pAw IRONINO. EXP.. REF, sot I nnrsB»imtm -.nna.un a. L .HOlMKX SERVICES | ..TOrola photocopies at Mlh Help Wanted Female 7 'wnWi WANTED: COOPLE.'cpOE AND general yard rok etc. Idea In. call ELdln (Jill ar write Pontiac Press Box .113. Employment Acendes 9 PE S-43S3 or T*K S-34M s Dress Making -, I EDNA tyARNEfa "men ions r^ "-' Pi1.',,. u/« ROOM modern.partly irnlshbd. MA 6-6000. ___FURNISHED APT 1*2 QO- Hlg Bt PI )-Uit j i i BATH. iS»EIL_ 3 Newberry ' MIMEOORAPHINO TYPINQ. EEC- ' rtUrlal ssnrlce. EM 1-2842 WASftlHOB * UtONINOE - pick * ,’*11 very. OR 3-7478, Garden Piowinf piTVomi Wtd. Children to Board 28 Jur j B ^—:-----------—— ----------ad:' »'— ---------- 18 C?ILP.5AHB J yCENSED NOME, 'LUp j Sashtbew and Maybaa Road area, j rromi and bath ............. ATlYUitWB7li^M». ^UCTLV r, 2(21 Malt Bt., Waterfai defray 1548.6* « age Wjk8*Nt, Mrs. Thomas ^ brother of Mra and George I. expenses thereof and tl TO SO PER CENT OF1 on oi nr. ana r free trip to Florida. Ca__ —- Sheehy: dear! other sales aids available. CALL Edward" Keehn I HOME PARTIES 1NCORPOR he e h y: dear ATED POR APPOINTMENT. WA ------------1 -------PE 4-8387. ; . NOTICE IS IlSItXBY CHVMT" That the r-ftinmUKtfm of the City Of Pontiac, Michigan. wtU_meet_ln the Com- wlll lie in sute et 'the Vorhees-Blple Puneral Home unUI Tuesday evening at which tipie he will be] —taken to Oieer. Cray M Pitch Pu-| nersl Home, Poplar Bind. Mo., for service. Interment in Three I Springs Cemetery, Mo. S Evelyn | Edwards old Jvarner. OR I-SM Building Service rTii^STV rdiisrrl *** . , k-1 hlRIDENTfAt. UdsiiBhtCIAL i COMPLETE FAMILY LAUNDRY UNWANTED ARTICLES PICKED ■ win, oi cneriw. rnrinr ’"THEj •**' VV HELPING HAND STORES." UAL yrrJ FI J-*!™.^^. . S-13.41. U no answer. PE l-T^M. CLEAN 3 RM. t_ Rooms op pornitore and F f-Vw?”* nu^WTO! AND' AP- CLEAN 3~lbOM APARTMENT, It EH Complete hath. I ’ of Peal., wee turn., Very cieao. nouns, small tamUr iejsL.Jhna. em .i-itnin BEDROOM I.AKK FnONT NEAP Pontiac. Walled Lake, school district Well faro MB mon»»< June IS EM fdu BtWf- bone OR . September beOi Lmke.froht h ’til June, S100 Bane., rp e-owu: room house rvionmo Adalts.PES.SS3S NEWLY FURNISHED LAKE trawl horns. Available Sept, la June. MS EM 3.400S. : ni ooMFiEi n towsiiip' i" Red room ranch house. CarpaMB, washer, dryer, t car Mrage. Near shppptnt canter. Bloomfield Hills School District, tin par month Llpaaln S-334T DOhEUION PARK 3 IlEDliOOM si style ham* k «a» aa. OR 1-3838 I W. Capias. MY 3-8101. BAKER |PBX RECEPTIONIST S326 THE FLOOR SANDER PE 6-3132. Ted's has Immediate opening ft In Mcmorium Death Notices ANTHONY. 8KPT 4. 1SM. BKRVKL. 2S1 8. Paddock Bt.; age SS: beloved husbaand of Pearl Anthony; dear lather of Ronald, Raymond, Jamei. Robert and kdwln thony; dear brotnsr ol Thomas Nlehol and Ray Anthony; alao survived by It frsndchtldren and three Mrt.gHBd8lHHrwi. Punetal a a r v l o f _wlfi" be held rroWVlr^^-odlVt Church with Rev. Paul T. Hart offlclat-lng. Interment ha White Chapel CemeWry. Mr. Anthony will Ue in state at tha church Wednesday from 13 noon until I p.m. Arrangement* ware by the Parsley His memory we shall always -Badly mltxed by wile. Ploi son, daughter ml “•*** wife of parts L Brown; dear atstdr of Mrs. HowaM Shanslelt; also survlvad by ■ „ ™d Thursday. Bept. I. L W p.m. tram Bparks-Orlffln Chapel With Dr. Milton Baafc offlctatlng Interment 1n Klmwood Cemetery. Yale. Mich. Mrs. -Brown, will lie M state- at the Bparks-Orlffln epTs ppaaefu? Asp. families ripirlsarsil kager_ person only, p a m to S TCT)’S WOODWARD AT PlOURE CLERK t FLOOR fWM_________ — - IFABULOR - WATERLOX - BRUCE A-l CARPENTRY -lltlons - ' Basements Ittlcs - Oarai Labdscaplng itgraph 'fk CAMf‘POR-PURNITURB Wnmpt courteous • e r 4-H»r 21 - — Garages r BID FXRST - , »215 ADDITIONS" livable.'' Type SO i BEAUTY 18 OUR BUSINESS WHY not mbke tt yours? AVON COSMETICS oilers an excellent earning Opportunity for women who can qualify. Call today. “ * LEGAL STENO AgetLjl to 3S. IBM Type--“*r. Oood sbor*1-—J i Drayton Plains. P. 0. writer. Oood shorthand. OIRL FRIDAY ............ t: Ad Agency needs shard gal. Oood typing and shorthand; Same witting ability. MEN Funeral Dlrectort COATS PUNERAL BOMB DRAYTON PLAINS QB 3-7TST AI 121 West Huron, Thomas Bakery. Auto glas J* CUR* &KU k.M GRILL "'UIRIE'' . Buttercup, 210 Oakland. ~ IMAINTAINENCE ... POLICE TRAINEE . Donelson-Johns Thoughtful Berries Voorhees-Sipk PUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service PE 'Cemetery Lots PERRY MT. PARK CEMETERY. CURB, WAITRESS min in........ BALES * SERVICE ..... S3M INTERIOR DECORATOR SOPER "TED'S WOODWARD AT BO LAKE RD DRAYTON WOMAN WITH OOOD1 FVELVN EDWARDS * VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE 34Vk EAST HURON SUITE < _ , ACE TREE SERVICE STUMP REMOVAL Trad removal, trimming, gel < bid FE 2-1U8 or FE 6-8136 BULl.D07.INa. LANDiC. " Rodd work, and beach - _________ . »M 3-«4H — . 4 REMODEMNO EXPERT TREE SERVICE FREE ^-7-. Lshey d Son estlmatee. FK 5-8582 or OR 3-2080 Finished Cerpeolers ENIBB8 LANDSCAPE TRUCK1NO llaneous I FE ToidS, FE 52048. LANDSCAPING. LAWNS BEEDI sod, planting, rotaUUBE wa trimming and pruqlns. Phi Romeo Plateau 2-21M. LANDSCAPINO, UOHT HAD LINO and plowing, rams. OR 3-8250 LANDSCAPING 8 1 f> I NO AND seeding. Top soil delivery. Ill *" 1. ft _________ ___—,. Avail: Bept. , la Juae. CaU MI 1-14*1 er MI 8-8582 LAKE ORION MODIRM 1 AND 5 bedroom, utilities Included. M0 Height!. Rosil. MY .3-1284 MODERN liAKEFRONT ATTRAC I lively furnished home, near Union 1 and altroimnMutTpreii!~ FE Ik4t. " " _I. MM. Eept to June. EM 3-tlM. s. FI 2-82S1 I DOWKTowlt. I iliD 1 ROOM ERPT. 1 TO JULY L **T AMO. OA 5-3.!°* ■» -Tli™* --------- BMeS'LUe mrllu^J^e" Mjci^y lipSl 1 ® A °otrott‘ ^Ur ------------[ 290 N, Paddock. FE 3-28M. ATTENTION! FE 5-3283 - ' ' ALL KINDS CEMENT WORK Drives, floors, etc. Jensen. FE 2- 2340, -1 BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT work. Also fireplace!..OB 3-8401 ALL TYPES OP MODERNIZATION Complete or partial lobe as desired! Licensed builder. MY. 3- 3303. ________ .OpiTIpHI — MODERNIZATION Remodel any room of your home. DeOroote Bra*, builders. OL I-SWt after I p.m, ’ ADDITIONS. OARAOES AWNINOS Pontiac Horn# servlee. PE 4-U81. BULLDOZING . EXCAVATING , TRENCHING - TRUCKING PE »28iT _________ Wid. Mistellanrous Detroit, IeMall hou«e~por"ren¥~i8~iix- HWe Jim Kiemchak EM 3-8S51 CEMENT WORK OP ALL KINDS Nothtac too large or amanT'Com-merclal or residential. 20 yrs ex-perlence, free estimate. OR 3-8112. COMPLETE REMODEUNO 8ERV-tee. Basements under present homes, additions alterations. — AT7E0W L_ilND« CAR8TEN, SEPT 3. ISM,-CHARLES. 23 Bliss Bt.; n«* lit dear father of lire. Pear! De^U and Mrs. slk grandchildren and^14 great' andehlldren. Punerm^a a r v I c a SWatoesday. Sept 1. nmnelmjr. Mr. Car- ||>I« feneral Home, ; dear father of Mrs Donald Awrey; dear brothar of Mm. Mtn-nle ElwHI. Mra. AghWlM , Mary Oark, Mra. Retta Btow. Mre ■Mia Tarroaea. Oeorg* and Ue Clank; alio Survived by one grandchild and fobr *rent-*m»d-chlldr*»r Punerml eervloe^ ■"'1 Wednesday, “ ORIMES, BEPT. 4. IBM. RUBY B , *5 E. Colgate EL;'ate II; beloved yffa ol Orvol Orfme*. Uloved daughter of Mn. Aaim E. Oreen; An.J —mA. nnr IIm WIllmttH fcXiS ■Mar of _ Vera DMd, Mra. ---aurvlved by 14 grandchlldran. Puj nerai service wUi be heW Wedneit day. Bept. 1. at trail the Pilgrim Holiness Church with Rev. MaMn straight officiating. Inins maul la Ottawa Park Ceme-tery. Jet Orlme* wtUUa tostale at the Bparks-Orlffln nmM Hams katu il n.m- Wqdnaeday. beloved hnqband of ciark M-Hahn; deer father of Rdhlrt W. Hahn Mra Harold (Leila) Meet on end or!— Lola K Hahn; dear brotherof Mrs. Wilfred (Edtthi 64 Is tele. Mrs. Ml JiMjff SdidttE MB Md 140yd H».hn; ribr aarrtvii jf grandchU- ” *3 dn# preat-framdc,-',-‘ aPui1!*.1? u , with Rev. David K. Mills offlcist- at the Costs Puneral Bomt lm Baehabsw Road. Drayton Platas, until i;30 p.m. Tharoday.__,. father at HnMIt and Arnold jphMtw; dear broklwr of ““ . —g | — - — * a Jean Moran. I __________— Uretu Ottteni. Hanter. Mf». itetTfjWKBlla Mirt. At It a.m. Tndny there were repttea at The Prean office Ir the following hexes: _____. No phOSH "IkPERlIWCBJ UEN'IAL ABBTOT aat. Please state ■ qaallfleatler-experlsnce. age. refsrsnees. ai salary expected. Write Pont! Press Box 55. 7, «, K. 14, 15. Id, *», Hi. d*. M, W. IS, 7S, 78, N, M. 101, IM. - The PooUac PlERs FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-R181 Tram S un. to 8 |JR ported . Proas a respon- ______ ... other Orna ta eaneel tha charge* tor that portion of the Rret mseruoo ul the advertisement arekh has beer ron-Sered valueleee through the i be sure la mat adjustmei without R previous to publication fhe deadline tor eaneella- “r* wr w I IS* IR 4.M t ISO I-B5 5.W f kii sM die IP IN 4 54 SIS l|4t EM »M 13.M i additional cbhrge m DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK, over tie '25. permanent, vaoation with pay. very good wages. 32 hours per week. Adams'Pharmacy. It Mile and Woodward, Birmingham FE W11, CONCRE-TE DRIVE rates. FE 6-5441__ CEMENT WORK OP 6 ; Tit t«tUn»U8. OB t4 _ CEMENT AND BLOCK WORK' Kfttto O jiegtr>ri, PE MTU CUSTOM CONCRETE WORK TO a*?‘ ” 2-5443. Moving and Trucking 22 Top Soil nd hesvy trucking. Rub-II dirt, grading, eaaa, grav-I (mat end loading. PE 1-A Reduced Kates MOVING SERVICE ________« Rets* PE EMM DICKS LIOHT HAUL1NO ’ ■ Prompt, .courteous service Rea». prices . PE 44 HAULINO AND RUBBISH NAME yonr pries. Any time.----- HAULING AND RUBBISH, S3 LOAD Anytime PE 4-49S4. _ O’DELL CARTAGF d Ians dletai tone >E 5-S ROOMS, noor, near. Pp new high sch Bit FE 4 4828 R SMALL HOME. MODERN, UTII^ .... ---|Utomat|c |„.nt Highway: Drsyteu Wanted to Rent 32 month FK 4-34^ aft 8 . M70 el-Huron Shopping Center. Mi ratt rent ClU f| 4-6103 A >r Mr Moo re. ____ LANDLORDS RENTAL SERVICE tenants. Wa have Cali homes and apart- R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 _ OR MR. ■MALL APT. on PRIVATE ROOM with shower. On Lake and M-M. Reaaanrtde. OR MMS. THREE ROOMS PLUS KITCHEN oearoom rsa Id# S . .. SLATER APTS. ~—*i h. pun vr; PE MW AFTER 6 AND SUNDAYS. E CARETAKER MR. CARROLL, ’ AROADUCT. .... up'er _ l lloOMB, h*TH. OPEN Share Living Quarters 33 TEACHER WILL SHARE HER ____ home with working girl or woman. 2-1425 OR MIL ........ ............; lgf. FLOOR, _______Wtd. CoHtracts.JHtgE. 8V | COLLEGE GRAD cu«Wm coifcawf -woRE TO j ■T*rucks to Rpnt Iabbolutelv the fastest AC- ilfX i the ages of 25-25.i fit your needs. FE 5-5122, FE | '-4'—JV.O l.vjf 1 IC1U tion on your land contract. Cash! 22*7, obligations fulllllled. 5-44SS. •_____;_______- | 54-Ton Pickups lVs-Ton Stakes buyers waiting. '•*" ? ' with prominent na-.jCUSTOM BUILDING. RESIDBN- TRUCKS - TRACTORS Partridge. PI ............ ........... .ny. to Mara finance! tlal and commercial. Remodeling- and equipment Huron. __._____ experienced WAITRESS FOR and sales 5421 U start Mldwami and insignias FK *-*»*- Onmn Tninkt-------Mai Trailers__________A HI I I slternoap an lit. A^>ly 511 Auburn [ Emplotfmeat._18t. PonUac State I dry wall Taping and finish- I ' FT ,»un.» ant. Near dowutrfwn- tt 8-2142. Rent Apts. Unffurnished 38 tRT FLOOR 3 AND BATH, UTIL- e" bath a "ieMt" Private FE 6HH UPPER NBAR' OMT. [ Plains, TEAR "AROUND MODERN FUR-nlahed 3 room house on Lake available September 8th MV 2-4822.___________ YEAR AROUI©~3 BEDROOM -------- Labs privileges. Call MY 1-A-l RENTALS ^BEDROOM DUPLEX— Automatic Heat — Full Basement ,■ WILL DECORAffTT , r S75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 544 EAST BLVD. H. ATYAMMCTA I BEDROOM. NORTHEAST PON-*‘" *" ear jaran. * carpeting. - ____i 515. PE «i»**W. 3 BEDROOMS, NEAR 'sOHOOCS. odowt it win BEDROOM, NORTHEAST PON- . ilaeTlM, ear. garatm, rorpetlng, large lot, *18. PB 8-W61___ 2 BEDROOM HOMlf tN PONTIAC KSP-' :e neighborhood. 61I. PE Bank Bldg. FE 5-8227. position St tor I Phone I 4-1215. ! EXP. WAlTRlEEi WANTED, AP-—ply tn penen, thTi Oqloa Lfc. Rd, EXPERIENCED BALES WOMAN ■*- woman's Specialty store la Vying t—*4y starting ry Jhi many ether benefit* ly Pontiac Press Box 21. : IROENCED #6MAN WITH s tor al Bbmatf Mai^t. OH 5RH ' EXPERIENCED WAITRESS ONLY Ml"E>raiiaw. MOTEL MANA JERB: MEN. en. couplet, waated — tralnlns to •indy at expertenc* >U» after PULL TIME OPKNINOB FOR TOP sportswear girls. Excellent sal-erles and many other attractive benefits. Apply anytime. •» Al-•tnisi Lemmon or Evelyn Mill ward. Store. Miracle FULL TIME. FULL CHARGE BOOK- keegerfar large dhuroh_te. — 8-2515. loBit wrasiH wp jpglHif- EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WANT-ed. day shift Joe'e Coney island INI 8. Telejrogh Apply >n Nb I Mrs. Taylor, MA OOU. >OR OENKRAL 'SffKt — * Bps pee weefe- Must :ed lo piyroU. typing lookkeeping. Apply M HOUSEKEEPER, UVE IN. WHITl with goed refereacee. Lovely home zj n-yeer-old child. Ill alto 8:38. OL LADY LTVH ». CARE FOR I hop. esU httweea IA2. OR 3-5322 LINEN DEMoSsTRATOtt HOME party plan Aa oppariMWE toll ambitious person to Nun ware time laid cash. No InvaMMBt ro-^mred No delivery er jodUsction*. Sect'y No sbdrlhand required qpMWMq>'-" secretarial Oood typing, able *' j—-IFfto-._»ra4> ratuaai**- I Pontiac Firm and rVJSuSlljYSiS^T^'f»*Sr*‘1 Industrial Tractor Co. j EXCAVATINO AND TRENCHING __ l» B. WOODWARD tor septic tanks, drain fields, PE 4-14*3 footings and light dosing UL . °P«n_Oal"?„Includln»_ Sunday | fqr this | 544S4___________________UOHT HAUUNO AND RUBBISH posit*— * smiuiLl.lL =-r= —-—------I e... — - —— ’ 1 ROOMS AND BATH NICE AND (lean TE 6-2495. 40 Edison Bt. % ROOM UNPUR N IBHlO UPPER list. Clsan. baby welcome On Sanderson. Inquire 161 Norton, bayersI3's ROOMS. ONE OP THE 4-3844 ! Iln««t apt. Mdse., extra To sell your land coot lowest, possible discount servln Ted MrCullough 1 en for years. Also, cash t equity sad mortgages mortgages available. Cash watting. Call any hour. FE 4-3844 ARRO REALTY 1BU-BWTRIC HEAT, inbwlation, . —m _________________*l*2.tfaaa«l>toheth_Road___ ~2tisL* rniye. mens-1 I Painting Ji Dmcomtlnf m. Buyers for Corttracta rEtotits'ifeJHl JS fe%m* .jit surroundings. Salary. $400 ... . CLARK REAL ESTATE ROOMS L BATH ADULTS1 LUri.. Midwest Employment. ^ : 1ST AINTINO A^D DEC-|« CL^E^i 8-5823. BEDROOM RANCH WITH AND without basement 815 month. Phone MApie 3-I6W. ~ BEDROOMS. Ml A R WALLED . Lake Parity furnished or unfar- . 4 ROOM kOUSE MM Blvd.—PE 4-32S4 ----t-rw 4 ROOMS AND BATH LOCATED In Brooklyn Sub. BT 1-4830. BEDROOMS AT 16 E. HOWARD St Phone FE 4-2547 between 5:30 a.m. and 6 38 p.m. weekdays. RboM. GAB HEAT. 560 PER month. 715 E. Tennyson.«PE Ins. 55 Yrs. exp. cSb s pit. PE : W*1t“ ask for ; it monin I J6-1855_ ___ 5 “ROOM HOUSE, 7200 CLEMENT IB. CLARK _ k hath, 558. Oakhlll St. UL 2-3111 Ed. off AndersenvlUe fid. Ortem ,n- . Eves. FE 84«ri --'"y.**1 °G r-y 1 ROOMS ON AUBURN ATE , OA- Motels. Inc. For inter-1 washer repair all make* and | Ooaranteed. Pree eat. PE *4385.j_ABE POR JOE REISZ * a"U,.,bATH._ UWTAIR8. ie giving telephone num-l models. OL 1-4IT1*. 3rMotell'LUM#0ktor* 91 !W^TpJMAOm. CAWMB^DDl- twm I builder PHA - THIS MAN IS ON THE WAY^P «D YOU CAR BE TOO. WITH lOiOnikS Jofio . POLLY. X- ^equipped. FE .44*50. t. A Young —’* -R B FLOOR SERVICE. LAT- ___jandlng. finishing. PE 4-5450. PLASTERiNO A REPAli. REAS. HEW I r, and eonstruetkm ______ wall*. ___________ — commercial Dale Cook Construe- tion Company. OR hWB, PLASTERING. HEW' AMD RE pair. EL 2-1740.’Torn EeUer. part ol the eouatrv. NOW to them. o. SNYDER floor laying.’ time to heoome e specialist . . ., pandlng and finishing. Phan* FE A HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERA-! 54583. TOR. YOU tan 1 Heavv Equipment so Kat to ror lion mint eoostruetlon industry Complete new modern training program far Heavy Equipment pm—klers g now offend. Easy budget terms arranged.. Write today Pontiac, Michigan HOBBIES ARE FUN... ovary mamber of tha family at yea own yrar own home. LADIES II OR OYER. Tl phene wrvey mark. Mradar ‘ Friday 4 hours a, day. li. ■ heat to atari. Small offlea. mn nRRk WRjjttttg condtthms^^For appolnt- MATURE WOMa'n TO ASSIST Plate mother with 4 children. ho«se-i Work and cock tog Private room! and TV, FE X43W, ,, , I Hour* , iOrSBH — RCkOOL ROME 00-|work: -----M work. Ten to 2| boon gamer i ■ — a week. Cnurc] ful. Excellent i LlsaONS PRIVATE 1 ,l reasonable rate*_by qi ROOF REPAIRS ,,HETROUOEINO FE 44. WATERPROOFING Work guaranteed. Pros estimates garden club; er piag Kl-the wee hours: if* an pa your own Roan. EGO i AAA PAINTING it DECORAT1NO 2* years experleaee. Reasonable. . Frov estimates Phone UL 2-pW. EX- PAINTING EXTERIOR AND Intanor. Free eetlmetes. ell work rasteed. PE $4251 er OR guaront 1-7225 - ,, ,,, ,——-.—|— --— - . us nius utilities PE 54842 IMMEDIATE ACTION «~^,&-WiAWesOiBT: m any good land sec tracts Mewl West side. PR 4-735*, or seasoned. Tour cash upon aat* q mcfTROOMS «r RATH, Cl BAN, lsfactory tnapaction of property - and title. Ask for Een Templeton. K. L,. Templeton, Realtor 7 ROOfr* " DOWNSTaKs >LAt' NTE I EXTERIOR PE-44*81 ID CONTRACTS TO BUY^OR ) sell. Earl Gerreli. EM 14511 r_XM_ 3-4**d. ■ LARD CONTRACTS NEEDED. BUY ‘ ROOM BRlCfl^RRACE^I BED-and sen. Cash waiting U wonrs* rooms, gag heat Wl 242M-exp. Harold Pranks/Mi union' arcadia n PArtR HANGING AI^ADrTWO f SS - a F£I. exgrteace. Speck Wanted Real Estate 36 muted, 554 per mooS'^ClOM^te _nttmaa n^rn. ___________-------------—-----------I schcois. ehurchea and downtown FAIRTlNOrntT. R EXT PAPER i-----(ikrcmimir------ 4 Cool In the aummerome. Ample hangln - Maim Thomason. PE NEftPlLU - ' laundry facilities. X O. Hemp- 44QS» I t -l. d._____I stead, in East Huron atreet. nc «WNrTHa@rar*5SidV-lv^ L ^w« r* pn ' ***** w wui aftsr l p!m. -■ — 24)12. LOTS COTTAOHB — YR. RD. H COTTAGE ST. 2 RM . Dm. — Buyers Galore Mr*, see. Apt; b-i. ph 24574. A. TAYLOR, AOENCY CLEAN | BEDROOM. LOWER. EIQRLAWlROADOtot-dlll *“ XTj ALL CASH OI AND PHA rsscli, fenced yard, etorma and ------- —j |(tt Pentlsi Labe Crescent Lk Rd. LI I after i. <151 APCENliON IN CLAIutsTON. I bedroom rand). NA thru traffic. Vacant, TR *4511. AVAILABLE REFT. IS, WE8T SIDE L—\ » rooms. »t baths, 1U gsrsfr. bsm’t. Near Oen-Hospltal. FE 447*1. Ml Rammer Lk. 'Rd. OrtoBi- Televizlon Service CREST TV ■- 1 I djr and night. ’ENSEN'S TV SERVICE, AFTER-noon and evening, call FB 2-8415. Uptiotaterlng EAXLE'S CUSTOM UPHOLSTFB- ?li41,,74 VM>n Uk* Rd EM THOMAS UPHOL8TERINO" tt T deposit. R I WICEKREHAM Till W. Maple MAyfair MIM COLORED tlETOrtiR " I 4-TM1. FB W. R. MIDDLETON FE 4-3*41 Evet. FI 64213 SPECIALIZED REALTY SERVICE ! CaU Lout* Bor St. Roal|or. Lost and Found 26 Rent Aptt Furpished 37 1 LARGE CLEAN 3 ROOM APT. atari looking right bow Um bait ant of Ita. FE 2-8181 ' ' Roads.-Reward PE IS-lgll. itiaFow wHmMymrmz: - ten wrist watch. Reward. PI LAD1 ’ Rath lY'S RED BILLFOLD :!'£ :%si t-irn agHtooti ' LiviNa WWi ell kitchen and both aa Case, ke gapt; 1 to June.11. Adult*. I 6411*. You can always locate the ,patties interested in what you no longer, need. When you use the Poh-tiac Pre#* "For Sale" W*nt Ads I . MODERN I ROOM HOUSE BASIC - LEASE WITH OPTION ~ Modem I bedroom home, acre lot. Only 15* per pepNk.4srai6 4to|-----3 jjt, Tazto. MHIMi nOMBB, SINOLI and duplex, gas n>a4. OgilMll. ROOMS ON AUBURN AYE., oii-ratd. close in. Fg 2421*. I heat, carpeted, dose to UBSSl end hup. lake privileges, /ava5-able aow. IUI P«r mBd, MSI Oar land Avenue. FE *-toU, TWO T Twgarrr»*feHT THE PONTIAC PRESS> TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, i960 l • P>r fcl»«ft fi •& HU ■ MwWi 1 * im?- BARGAINS ttsqjsur?' tff -«l iw>rv» metthly “SEdrooms Urn Mmim, 3- •KSea teas* «|B». JGIROUX GENERAL real estate clean ROOMS, toe RENt TV *3*1 Dtaw Hoj. OR MW sgg EBriMMRl. W MSB-Of tff 9. Ooeday > OENTlSMAN~~CUtAN ROME AKO iT OWNE* IS ACRES bE LAND mod meals. T* 3-4319._ ! Ttt I NNl tHH It DTI IMA- wtfaafc* y, ioaa^wg ioAEP pqr~mpl k*T ft » Mamm -t ■**»* "N —» i bedrooms. *5i 7^21" kmraam ml j out. 135th Oakland AW. «>WK rage. nr*. all fenced in. dag I MftM *0 -AMR—Mr—BOARD: jj«R|l 61.9M Rot Rstaail jj4 * <>01 I«|R Oakkrad. ft 3-egm | fiS * tend wtiut FS | •ELL OR TRADE EQUITY IN ) Mnm ru(k iiii* k«u. For W»-HA wr* ill HIM. Tour fit or oars. Ifeon «m8! q Hauler. EftffrrEM 3-04*3 BATEMAN REALTY MULTIPLE MT1NO SERVICE FAMILY ROOM... Out la -tea perfect *pot la eoouoj ‘‘get togethrrt" or fast' IT fun, This In r-‘~ ” ___R aM Sum It IT N STORE ON AORORN _ A**. NRRJMKb Mt Cab F* MM or M MR . __..l raSTHTj^K^Br hde . ST OWNER olden home. 1 XMOt. UttorM t lots, sHMr 1 I Atir ILM Arts. «55 month. I W HRA , ■ . . ' | I .COLORED WHY PAY RENT? •' SpRCO *L”SS?wS jfss? firh2Rit^?u -*.2 .«*» «*. • rLlSSmSSSB ONLY fJO down w Iteffirad sStVja'to I pm bmnUMM OFFICE STATE 1 OM; • WSVTOWN REALTY so. ft, 2nd floor Huron Theatre, j u j.tj37 After * - - Fro* parking »P»r«- Ffctw f* MODEL- T S-flS LAKF.FRONT ■ 07 It Roman Brick ronch nAl ^ w *Tr aaya, • "SELL." Beautiful Tie*. •»n REE R TODAYI LIST WITH Humphries TELEGRAPH OPEN BYES. FE 3-9236 ; ~ MULTIPLE UST1NO SERVICE f^^MODENN-ONjfiar 11 BEDROOM pSv ! «* *• « «« i g 15.000. 5Mt down. Phone MA RANCH. Ceramic tIU i-MM orUf jdSW. . I f ROOMS,' NEAR ’ ORADE AND Jr High echocte, FE HIM. S ROOM BRICK, 21k BATHS, l UrigT car garage M Nelson. Scram ■ ?T (trsetfrom at. MMhTs Church: i RMf. Ik BATHS. CARPETED. - aaruany furn. - -•* -*• — miles north of Es- MM DOWN FATMERT” "Township. Total1 prim 17250 < ' consider natal with option l C. Schufett, FE 8-0458 Mis DQWH . ,r ~~ l hodramr wwv "WEE Mtesmwd , move tomorrow Pheae OL 1-751 SuflPaSm Realtor I heal, fea MSUO I SELL THIS WK. 2 carpeting, storms and screens. Lake privileges Easy go jugment.. ".50, Kn puce iusf SELL IO SETTLE ESTATE* 24 James 81. Pontiac. I rms. bsmt. garage. Rest cash offer will take. KM 2-MU or OR 3-4310. I O IT H HILL SUBDIVISIONT Rochester. J bedroom brick, 2 years aid. n i M garage. Must sell. Priced right. Phone FE $9,500. WUI bulM 1 bedroom Hack home on your lot Full baeeL.— oak flows, Ule bath, birch cup- RUH MCRAB '* ART METER Np MONEY DOWlT SuburAn — 3 bedroom and all newly dee. Large I tot, Fh FK 2-2M4 WEST SUBURBAN 17M down — Nice ' ' Tin bath, carpeted_ kitchen aad utility rm jmafe. AB for M.2M. RtJSSELte YOUNG REAL ERTATE AND RUILDDIO NEEDS DECORATINO. hflLL sell Tor SU MO ] bedroom brick ranch. “ ----- —* * brdrme.. large closet, bath, kitchen and living room. Yard Alt landscaped, largo shad* trees.-Lake privileges. House situated at MM R. Milford Rd. call MU 4-3848 or inquire K. Gary el, 3827 N. Milford Rd. NORTH SIDE ] BEDROOM HOME, ' iem*nt. will take $1.8ti Hy. buyer ‘ ■ , i Carpeted Bvfag neat, fireplace, all furnace, nice lot. garage. Only M.880, terms. ELWOOD REALTY FE 4-5203 ___ — msngsge Tr e». urvOllt. PE 4-6550. NQR.TH5IDE l~SmDWM WnMg I with oil float, full basement, and I fVP^4*«5 a1,° ,1*11 1 e*r ksragt. AS A OROUP OF BULDBRS WE offer low prices through volume ...gttWheies^m^custom ^Qusmy secure m0rtgase> Re ebHgetten. Builders Exchange F» s-llis or UL UtO NY OWNER, 8 RM. Bods*. LK. , seta, race, da. psymt F* 8-48M »Y OWNER. 2 BEDROOM. FULL pnraegoa. 12.Me down. Fi 5-ilia. Boat Lovers B you want a Mae* to am tmu Sam that yea can afford, then ini ehauld let us show yoo this . wetertrsot two bedroom Living Lakefront Oat When there’s peace . wflot. Home with -3 ligrsJ inti watt-cut toeemtdl with nation ream. 114 bathe, 2 J garage. IN foot of frontage. ' home Is lemlnR 18 years Prtood to mIL May we show ' Small Farm x&y^.^.pa,ru " Mwn’^^l,no^t'<*t^^tt**^* CRAWFORD AGENCY ' Orlonville Here Ig a sound investment In 2 family Income. Lo< to town. Has nice 5 DORRIS T^YrOHDBHPITL FAMIL_ BOMB. A vary exclusive location Brick and irame. full ceramic tUe bath and two baautlful eeramta powder rooms, (o* fireplaces, 3^ large ^bml- • room, carpeted throughout, paneled .recreation room, card room’ and bar. other appointments yod WUI admire. 133.500. 112.500. 82.000 down, sis month. LOVELY t ROOM RANCH, located only th Mack fram Union Lake wtgt f8ft~‘ —I '-J- J. A. TAYLOR REAL ESTATE A INSURANCE 732 Htfltaad Rd. IM-SSI Open Dally t - t Sunday IS - f OR 18808 EXCLUSIVE ARRA: THE OWNER of this tayely homo hat baan ..transferred. I bedrooms, llelng room with fireplace, family slae dining room; Lsree kitchen, attached S ear garage. Well landscaped. Priced at 811,700. Call for Particulars. ONEIDA DRIVE: Custom built home, 8 targe room* end den. Fireplace, All basement, gas best.. 2 oer garage. Immediate possession. Near schools aad bus. Priced at lit,800. - John K. Irwin & Sons Since 1838 Til West Huron Wtraet Phone FR 5-M47 2h ear garage. Lot 6S 500 down - ' St. Fredericks Just across sir not. Large I story. 11 room fames. Ideal for targe family. Can he used at 3 famuy income with privets entrances. Oarage. 1800 down. West Suburban Privileges on Scott Lake, Nice 11. roam bonsetaw or taste perch. 8 bedroom and 'bath. Basement, all furnace, garaga. fenced yard tM * M8. 850 down. Ferry Street taat! 4 room bungalow S bed-rooms, bath, basement, gas furnace. 1 ear garage. INI down. wiLlis m. brewer JOBEPH p. REISZ-SALES MOR IMS E. Huron Rt. ~ FE 44111 After. I:M............. FE 8-8*23 or FE 4-4714 PONTLVG REALTY CLARK MODEL room hoime ti Oakley Park. gtJML MiK d_RPOHP^.^ _ month. Oo^^yopr lot. gl.tM with DIRECTIONS: Off Union Lake Rd. nmu: Rt. Patrick’s Church. PeUbw signs. Follow B. Commerce Rd. te Oakley Fork Rd. aad taltaw signs. STEELE REALTY . (Mtin Office) RANCH HOME. UVk ACRES. SFA-Clovi living Paneled 4km with flreptace. built m TV, flab equer-jam. saa cabtset, bookshelves, targe Mlcheo sod dhfiag. 2 bed- "rlee? at* £!sM,™f :t*nv capable small IHWmiPKEiliMSioa contract. Make mar tame. Must « 800 1 BEDROOM BUILT IN ISM. Uni living room, tart* kitchen. ------------Tfc .d¥ furnace. IpB) work show Located with I It B«U 88.800. Real eleaa t store■ .older homa, large Urinf 4k dlalrn room. Mg SMOOoat front porch, full basement. oil faraaee. Located la very alee neighborhood, mile from court mass. Went. Owners may consider trade for 1 bedroom on 1 level. M.3M. VACANT IN 2 WEEKS. Owner anxious to sell. Bee this aad atfar. Tmmeeumls 2 OM garage, saved dried. Nice landscaped yard with ntee shrnb-bery. raspberries A garden. Low dosra payment, low mootbly pay* 812.tr* ELIZABETH I.AMC Eg. TATRS. Reel nice ltfl story. 8 rooms, fall basement, flea faraaee, upetatat finished beaatlfalhr la haatty pine with loads Of storage A closet specr. rorredtlda room '' flatshed to knotty mm. jm, car - garage, fentod I in. nicely landscaped center Mi. CLARK REAL ESTATE _ rt 3-7108 , 1382 W Huron Rt, Oben * to 8 MULTIPLE LISTINO AERVIC1 .r,r5^ __ Seat, *8lassed*-*to 1 porch, aluminum storms * 2 BEDROOM BUNOALOW. BATH tt Vi. 872.500 on terms, situated on large fenced lot, comparable sarrouadinf home*, gas heat, s kitchen you will , admire, located Drayton area. SOUTH END SPECIAL. Large throughout. 813,877. terms. 784 W. Huron COLORED 1 BEDROOM — 3 STORY HOME. HAS LABOR CARPETED LI VINO ROOM. DINIWO ROOM WITH JAL OU1T WINDOW. PULL BASEMENT AND TIM WRIGHT, Realtor IS °**t‘n Keego Harbor A Me* lriaee fa* a tangta person or couple. 1 bedroom bungalow ataa n I ear garage. Only 87.000 full prtci^ana terms can ba nr- Brick Income Located Inside the city In . n goad rental aaMtast. 9 toon aptnarthT rebenily ........ For Cobred I rooms, 4 bedroom fram* hoota wlth foil baeement. k - ‘ * flamed - to *tt/h eat. 1 . porches, '91,3M 4h trade for emelb GILES REALTY CO, PI Min "921 BALDWIN AYR. OPEN 9 A M. - 9 P.M. MULTIPLE LISTINO BEE VICE HOYT ---r- —j,—n • 2 bates. Built-In kitchen. Large lot. CUI1 for details. 43.919 down wm handle. T7RRJ OF READWO ADR! beautiful kjUtog. Large family room with both. Country style balR-la — places. FuU basement with re-. creation room. Many extra*. Call for details. ' TF PRESTIGE HAD A PRICE TAO you'd pay much mors than tbs asking price for this sgarkllng 4 on a tori* land sc sped lta. Pit- tion. but they do Inelada 1 ear attached tanig). IH hatha.' CaU. for. further Information. HOYT REALTY 254 S. TELEGRAPH PE 3-99M — FB 3-999d GAYLORD BRIriE'B DREAM Nicely furnished 8 room homa. Fireplace, part basemett. Oil furnace, Nlet shade 'rees. Large .let $7,480, 11.000 down. Call A 194191. STRATHMORE gT. s room. Full basement. __ floors, alum, awttngi, storms and screens. Low Sawn payment. CUll FE 94M1. FOUR BpDHOOMg _ nice. Comer let. 3. ear garaga. Reasonable offer on down payment accepted. Call FE 8-9993. WANT AN INCOME? , AU newly decorated. Malt 119 A ith teta 19 room heme. New II furnace. Home hoc been re-1eled. M X M tool thdd. a crib, chicken EM 34493. Alt f COLORED—Only 98M down L — you into tel* 3 he dream modern home. Full-baamaant. fNt )* ~ Ntee back yard. Rasy terms, price only i«M. values fn have almost Priced fui}’baae1 dUianre Mi IWWW sou Cnurch , P O* MU room with < Mi. Ml bawmint, HM iu hut and bat war. looter, hlassteam storms hh Baihte* Praparty W 'Mony tt Laan 61 j Sale Household Gated* 65 2.30# 8Q. FT . NEW BLOO^ FLEN- LOANS $25 TO $500 BUNK BEDS 43*. BIVIIiaB>UYOB 435. electric etove W. Tjtej nee. oU Mot, OK Mara ate. fli pter tlgnater* wr other *e-M. fte oar office er pEwe FB Mia. Located ta grawlac Miracle Mile district, tram terms. gardea tractor wvf* euMvator 150. wriager washer M elec trie dryer / Mims. - , B$itellit. ^ns aid Sunday 1-4. PS 9-04*4. LOANqS! teas, eamatoto Mm al pas sm electric tlMM and up R. fl. Munto Electric Co. IMI WOct , qualified buyer. Look tteay! Going Street " $700 Down NORTH SAGINAW a alary atara buudtnr fint floor It Mod. tilt jor mrnlr Owner yfludllu-St uMk cel*.— SOUTH SAGINAW-V ul M. Tones, Reel Est. I WEBT BOSON ITKEET hm»_________ wriasis eneloeed front additional bath basement. Tm- ! “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 40 Mt. CUxntm St. •—< EEiam After 6 p.m.FE 2-3370 -Por&wlikt Property SI •ta t p.m. AT LOWER STRAITS \-ft Toma. KM llU For Salt orExchiWKs 88 OS IMMEDIATE BALK OB TRADE lovely HSHT to peak r Florida, for Iasi of equal *o? ar&ar 2-inOne ItocomB Property 50 Bute 8Dm aad SDp combined with grocery in 1 building and com-P1*** medera well ftocked haxd- 11 FAIRLY NEW APTS. OIf PON-'uLtoo.iiu * ’ail 11^*“ wore m aiuenites auudiug 12$ connecting doors. Located eo busy Kate hwy.. la gretn*c comma-ntty with ^ poMlblmiM)6unHmtted. FOR INCOME OR LARGE FAM-lly. 2nd floor knotty SKYH, Lincoln Jr Htgh. |12,IM. FE «-92M; ventory tor tee 3 busineues — Term*. WQI lease the 3 madam buildings tor *2M par au. C PANGUS, Realtor ortonwilLk I S. Btffat-- CARNIVAL LOANS- co > B LAWRBMCB FK Ml yiUiDfDLT SERVICE Get C5 to $500 ON TOOK Signature ** PH* FE^ ^06P‘T QAKLAND- Uoiii Comply i. Bank Bl BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE TOO CAR _ BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pontiac — Drayton Fla.nl — Utica MO FREESXR REFRIO. A NICE atora Ul |I* da FE MUR piano ... • w Hit CHROME DINETTE BETS teWe MMS* valuer'*».M,C."»«w I i*i* daalCM, formica M#a. HiaAl. I Fluorracant? Ml Orchard yjttf. IS. A«w pqn USED TT. tare kjjjae FK MWt. CARFET. TWEED. NETBB USED with Joam ,B^ ^ FE CTj40_ CASH FOR FURNITURE AND teak Pil-dm. ■ . - dditw liiui i-tc. be . tional Eac Ml, . R»| > use- CXKANINO PLANT. CALL I details. Pontiac Press. BOO R WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 We vrifl be glad to help ym STATE FINANCE CO. Ul Pontlgi State Bank FE 4-157* DINETTE BARGAIN STORE opened, One ftf the 1ftrfeat 1 i Laka Bd «* «-“** 1 ....... room 81 tabia. FE i-owi ____________ De-Humidifier I Wcstlnghauss deluxe Modal. B< tan. tUl.M. J only. 174.96 Pa aa little ta I1K par weak. Oondvear Service Store. 30 8. Ces, Ponttac ri Mli) ELECTRIC nor Bf Dick Tamer j fer Sate /HtsceWBn—s *; UNO SR fEWM^MACKIHt IjH guaranteed. Muet aacrtflo, at in M total balaaae or moon paymanla af M M par Mali. Capitol, FS 6-8407 SUMP PUMP OE ! MOTOR 17* Ml value. 939.86 marred deep well, shallow well pump,. Mrrtfto buys. Mtelttgan Fluoreatcnl Ml Orchard HNOER 8EWINO MACHINE WITH Madera walaat cabinet la parfaai condition. . Balance *u or pay* maofoIMpar MM. Ualvaraal speciAsR d Clothe, Post..SMI £ FIELD TILE ........ PIPE .. ......... Matty Other Bargain, [• And OeaT Building 1 FREE ESTIMATES FHA TERMS SURPLUS I.IIMRER A |m'mm OR l-MM ______ION A N M T SHIELD KTOBE —. —.,...—-j to meet ytnif v. Clothing Furniture Applti III WEST LAWRENCE TABOtT LUMBER" t jl to* Sand, (ksvsf snd Dirt 76; S«te Houoa TrsMars W AL » BLACK DOIT..,TOP BOO, [tf FT ROLLY, JIM MODEL. EX-lui asi makfidy gla ommmm t jtMjui. pTmnT - a MISw OB TSm7 i —rJv r^VTVIltf **1 .^ptnaawovatl PjgglJBgM BLACK DlNT SROStBN CONCRETE •*£■*’1*21* Rally r3.. bSSt bull-doling. FI Mttl. | _gS, M»U ... - . WftnfHgp; | Oxford Trailer Sties unit twsnitr pokesiwr \mctJKIBHL "pSISJBSP. ORATBL. SAND.1FKl“WBT AND THE SALVATION f WBEB* WaUTT L__ „ U|Vf7 if TT \ * 01 ***' °rt*- 00 ***• WHERE WAL1TY COMES FIRST oravK, "s&NjS,' st6iitr~FiLL * CtUlUllliVv (iTONiE. B|16~3itAV* , ......... „___________________ »1 Earl Howard. EM jean hltchea MfiBiad. Read, IV Me* FONTUC LAKE Ntltf.DERS SUP- JwBSlSSl »-» " * BMJ MP’ft.WP* ...siTajaers-'s and battle aa, car, trtead P* hltchea tuala^lld. Need, aM tp Wood, Coal and Fuel 77 X nUMkr. Baaaonabla nrl Oakland Avc FE 4 4U3 TAKE A LOOK AySB A-0 Orfttfe Shop a DiamBUTORV j Plants, Trots, Shrubs 7S U-l kveroref.ns "andb IIM , u {mi ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR, git. nr mw -«m«aKVn.d ~ HAGSTROM MM Highland Bd. (MM) MO'JLSIH Evei. n HE Day, HAMMOND iADt-lEFT LAKE lot. coveredirith Wuttful treea. Bargain M a beauttful home alte. Topographical curve* tundahed. Call ownVr dayi PE Mill. Nights Qjdft. ’ LAKE .1 jm Ml_ n ranch. Lease (IB n R. _____________. UNIT.. MOTEL, Rastaurdnt A Good corner joea ---—-"l.fOO uuws. NORTHERN RESTAURANT Hera PuU prica of MRUi toeSudaa raid living' quarters. Oroaa Mol year IM.M0. Hurrv on this anal ' U. R. HAGSTROM REALTOR 4000 mOSUHD RD. (MM) PONTIAC 0^ 4-0358 T*AR baths, h. 117.- atora bulldui it and' all ul > roon lar last a> a. Aaklng pi MACBDAY GARDENS SUB. 1M « .ISO ft. aloe lot to good neighbor-! hood only 11.500. | Phone Clark.-Real Estate PE 3-70*0. IM* WV Huron St. Opon Mr_____ CLARKSTON ' 1ST ATI LOTS 7* month. O^o ofllo M oow Chryij bu 0|WW#^ and, * ___i. *15.01 STAtlEWlDE Real Estate Service of Pontiac b d chahles, REALTOR 11 S. Telegraph “LET’S TALK BUSINESS" __ 1 -spn..... Grocery - Lnka-i’arkaa bualeat small, town. Ideal operation tor husband and wife Can be rsw Borrow with Confidmce GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance Corporation M Pontiac lit s. Bdotaaw St . . PE 4-0535 Credit Advlaors 61A ! BPiiDn(5uKN'dryer BUDGET YOUR- DEBTS CONSOLIDATE BILLS—NO LOANS Par Touy SOM bet to *ot out of debt, ooo Financial Advisers, Inc. lib a. SAOIHAW — * “ Floor Models j {^dtSS^ic^Wf^jrma tr«o«fr -SPEED OUKEN DRYIR . , .. *t amil Temgiytur "Well, the-boys 1 know sijr all Alike—brolts!" f Sale Household Goods 65, For Sale Miscellaneous 6^ TRADE OAS RANGE FOR ELEC- 1-— — artfSK?5* cash way — — ---------------- Stanley aluminum windows g»«*—rd...... UN | Ntt ■ is*, 375 North Qaa* j USED DUO THERM TORNACS Call altar 1JSUL l*lA.' 1 WORE BENCHES AMD F1CNIC i tablci shop load, OR 3-ton_| FE 1-70*3 Huron. ___ USED TVS m w akd uf cou I orfd TV. RCA. $275 Sweet* I d»o fttid Appi. 4U W Huron 1 lallgr ......—7, ..-a-— WYMAN’S USED TRADE-IN DEFT Hr .. PLYWOOD 37* North Call usxb oyo" with blower Cull alter 3:» WORE BENCh _tablej. shop h Cameras and Equipm't | TOS.T ♦ * » »«!»*. I . -Z'r BRAND NEW SFACES- PONfii .way roau. Dally w. ritfeifasRvics • ., - FraweotBlIli Pt*-*N For Sale Pets 11 — Hoh 11 tttchinson—>— Mobile Homes Sales \k,ITJvatta.D~Ta «pa»yl mia^KgSFES 1045 North Lapeer Rd.. Oafard OA . 37*3 VACATidN TRAILERS If new Traltar-BMOir. Apache . Campera. flule or rent. Car ha carrtata tuba raaarvatton« am. __F c Mawland, 011 3-14*0 • . Rent Trsilrr Space 90. tV.hith PMSonrR . rB mt*, Plyecore — 11»M» M-ft. Kock 1 Blactrlc, In,tailed OOOD HOUSEKEEPING Sj 11m MefftgBgB Loo— 62 Grt Oiit of the Rut I Consolidate your debts. Lot Ul pay off your delating mortgage or land contract, peraoal debts —i MW.Mif— Swaps Of Ponttac *1 WEBT HURON Pg. 4-155* FREEZER UFRIOHT BRAND new |h antes, t year warranty. — Pay only BKNtti.r'w Furniture, *1 Orch«\. Furniture, a COIL 8PRIN0S ■W\ . m.H JT WOOD ABM DIN CHAIRS $iB9* war wftf ANTTHINO UNDER TEE sun. Furniture, toota, antiques and brlc-a-brac Auction gale, held Burmeister , LUMBER COMPANY 7M0 Cooley Lake Rd EM M171 Open I a m. to I pm. dauy __Sunday 10 a.m. to l p.m. bo you HAVE A FAINT OR daearating problamf Xundradi of colors to choose from. Interior or tstortor. See our wan paper and matching fabric selection. ' Barry Bros. Jelled Magic no-drlp paint, _ OAKLAND FUEL A PAINT 430 Orchard Lak* Are FE 5-0150 DOUBLE SINK. COMPLETE M0.—. with trop A grade ~fTB 5 4711. *50 QALLON OIL TANK. PEEDER pigs. Sell or trade Tor cement mixer or building material. EM 3-3412. BLOND DINING ROOM SUITE FOR good studio couch. .7100 Clement JM. off Anderiooruia Rd. MA 5-4271. cash for Used tvs radios] MR No Money Down - >100 per week LITTLE’S FURNITURE IjWL. nil P*IT**f FREEZERS — NORGE FREEZERS Cheat and Uprights---- models slightly sctatdhed or marred. MedoR at big dli- Sro’ytMi la pay ~L days same a, cash WATHEOABBET----------- HI N SAOIHAW * FE 5-6181 FREEZERS - UPRIGHT FAMOUS name brands, aentabad. Terrlllc value, *140.11 while they Mat. Nc phone orders please, MtehMao Fluorescent. It] Orchard Lake Ty.'.-TK-’-lTT.-- .... ARC >TOWTERED COCKER "PAN ! Sal* Musical' Goods 71 boston stud, ol KitSatjcfiBTlL. —.——v-— ------------— | _u», or 3-*sm______■____Tl AJISPTI9.N J*U?tCIANS pUTB SMALL PUPPIES. I* EACH. YOUR Mnvhee Road I - BRAND new'"spacbs. pdjrflAC Mobile Hama PariTTNf M—i~ OXFORD . M^lTC* lifANOB ! ITOCK EVERYTHING l,. ... US1CAL HEART DESIRES 8LEECT PROM LARGE STOCK AUTHORIZED CIRETCH DEALER LIBERAL TRADE ALLOWANCE LAYAWAY OR PAYMENT PLAN EDWARDS _ __II 8. ipOINAW ACCORUIUN WUItl.IT/.KU, lit ^ i and case. *50 Oood loot. 3-H7S. *4* ADJUSTABLE BONOOS SELL. ■jrc‘ INI Altxander. UL FREE KITTENS TO OOOD HOME i A., bSED TIBBS UM UK. WE . 75 PIBiraa . ^ . buy. tall, Ala# whttewaHa. . LHASA" AWff-^ ' . STATE WBK SAI%____________ Puppies Jor, sale. Bare Tibetan, j W ■ Sngtnap St- r» UNI hrced/ AKC Teglutercd. Mt 0-3471), LOOK' 750x14 BLACK TIRES. ALL NICK PUPPIES. *2 EACH, OR name brands OU nww i l-TiM >>7 R KotpllaT kk—M——H—B—— PARAKEETS OUAR^ *” ^ Jh. *Rqeh»atarrtqin Km PART COLLIE PUPPIES. _ urn slab, **. OAUand S*3H7, POODLES,' LOVELY JET BLACK 1 Jrny -glee. FK 4.Wll. -----------1. SELLINO OUT OP 1RABBITra. ALL pat shop. It WtIHame. FI 4-0411 ! WHITg pOODLi AMD Hr Tan pupptet, afuiaT art. omer ' . ' Ik *-*270 ■ _. Water Softener* ELECTRIC- AUTOMATIC WATER j 1 m ,-----, | Shoe Dept. 42 N. Sag In a« 66A 1 FREE STANDI NO TOILETS 7=^1 Double bowl sink ____ i-ln. hard euppar 20*li) lengths . ....,16o ft. ft o*Mot. - . * i-"A. h^tWjepper - . _ USED WATER PONTENER BAR-U.!l. kM^r-?nnnev ' gate, cm FE MI**,--- ---4-aa-n. con. Me ft. WATER POFTENBR—RENTAL. »pc bulb acM With trim 77. MM5 Sales It Strvlee. R B Munro Elec-1 White or colored . -n- a. •*• Huron, FE I Factory Mi - Irregulars I SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY ----------178 | Saginaw BACH, OR name nranoa. uu now oar fir. rfcSK. WnuaT^mt 4-45(1 or Fk 4-45M. - 1-B372. -STANhxm BRAND HMV nftt QlEDl- 8l*totoM*TOMl? J - KD WILLIAMS _ 0*1 S gaglnaw at Raeburn thriving I 9i Plan... Ilk- nww F* 5 2458 ---- BLOND CONKOUI ojUNN piano Kxc. cond. Call ificr _________^—- _FREE ■ ' Imperial Diakmeatar with new Conn Electric Organ or —, . . Auto Sorvka r_-_ PURCHASE ANY PET j Poodles $U) ix)Wn 1 gM?S-f^SaMb^Ja^t".fAUTOS WHEELED OUT^WAKED, FCMAtaB BRITTANV SPANIEL $ 115 00 inEii--** For Sale Miscellaneous 67 -( 1 USED 00,000 BTU FORCED *« I - Mt 21 s. Telegraph Rd I Aeroftt froin *wr»B»wi, FiNElliLiCTiON^ok RECOND1- _____M100 I for bagtnni 1*7 s ^eb..w""">----FE HIM OUfTAR, LIKE MI 4-8320. r | HOT POINT ELECTRIC RANOE. exactly Uka new. Deepwell, puth- iarg?i^r F^T4W.r‘ue|-‘ PERRY ACRES EVERYTHING YOU COULD WISH FOR IN YOUR NEW HOME HILLSIDE level and wooded —. BLACKTOP BOADS - Conveniently; X^noa 4 aMe" term» to” qualified par- I SACRIFICE. VERY NKAT 3 BBD-ty. room home, 114 car garage, lake ' Hardware , hl. mark-up TRADE TOP tOIL OR TRACTOR S5 Wte'teM Z - _»grA.to .deep .Iraay. ^M82|. ventory down. A real buy. WE BUY - SELL - TRADE Ternary «o- Bateea * Hargravas 741 W. Huron MICHIGAN BUSINESS twaa, take trailer as fart 1 30" wide. Sacrifice_____ , FE g-8232. 14M Rlvona DrlA, Cue. Labe, Ponttac- ____ IRONR1TE IRONER PULL SIZE Deluge modat. *10*. 2 years t* SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LANDMEB8EB. BROKER IJOTllS-^' fARK AT ____ HERE’S YtfUR CHANCE Jr* mSlN WrtVay . Dp. ing good bu sine as. Leaving ateta reaaon for selling. A money mak-er. OB *■—*■ ii ! MAJOR OIL CO. HAS SEVERAL service stations for lanse uood potential buateeaa. Financial aa-1,1._____a .-ailahlp FE 4.1511 aRSI WArtN SOYTENER, i YEARS For Sale Clothing 64 DEMRAiBLE SU1LDIN6 lOT IM x 150. Watcrtord-Drayton Sun. FULL LOT FOB KALE TO-HIOH-eat bidder. Shown Oh appointment, call PE 3-0*40. • to 2:30 p.m. KEEP YOUB EYE ON Cherokee' Hitts! -—watts NMt bf l- Community grow. Discriminating people are aeleotlng sites now . , nr custom quality homes — ’ See for yourself Drive out Elisabeth Lake Rd. to Scott Lake Rd., turn right 3 " Ml n Mlchl- LaKB PIU^.~TlO DN., *• WK.j Schneider. MA 4-1M2. • MUST SELL BKAUTIFDL WELL 1 restricted corner lot. tl* X ML] ! on Bow Lana, overlaoktng Otter , ' Lake. FE 2-1853 after 5 p.m. I . Waterford Hills Estate A taw choice tot* toft. Aierage IM k IM. Oood drainan. Ideal loeattos. —- Herbert C. Davis, Rltr. pi mu............• Partridge IS THE “BIRD” TO SEE _____A Batech Chib OuUtandlag beach club In . can. On main MsAway Pontiac. Ovar 4JT of axcellant beach Hand prime highway frontage. 4 houses. Haw large bate house. Barbecues and 104 pleats tabtoa. Wonderful dock. Income from present operation gives good return on investment and could be expanded. Also wonderful site for motel, co-op, or high elaaa apartments with- ‘ end lake^facMtlei mI) for MdS! Boat'Motor Sales it Houghton Laka; tf 4.000 dn. plus stock i n Sylvan V >e colored lardial. 1 I Coveralls *1.50. Sale Household Goods 65 OWNER LEXVINO STATE 1 NEBCO ROASTER with cabinet. Ilk* new. *25: Wardrobe trunk. *10; 1 dava bed, *40; 1 single ___playrooms, ORINNELL’B 7505 M-5# 71 a Saginaw ‘ W ■ ■ _ LO-3 OIBSON i usen an wan I OA8 8 P AC E H1MTKR. "*0.000 _¥!* __Ww'm used Robek Oordon BTQ’s. MY 3-3863.' ___ __ BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR. SY on burners. M4 each, OA8 PUMP. LOOP OAL. fiSS. ,M,ori,-fftSrt4xnBtc eo ranteed. Act Heating inquire- at, 3722 Orchard- Lk. Rd. _ H9AVSIaJ1UB1C 00 CO .173* ",-Wl“l*y» OAB AND-QI^URNACBpiUM: f 5-5222 TON AIR CONDITIONER A mtrel. Imperial modal 1*1. I in window. Oood eondltton outlet. *75 for quick aale.- 15 I-1M1 trainlna PUPS MaNARY' ----. boardin' Brlttahv m ______■ VroH ...^r irtaTiilM BfitUunr ud ! Poodlt Hunting: Doga SBleMc^/scootef *^vl^ai^tnT^i~fe^h*v*n! NEW * USED CUSHMAN EAOLE*. *6 par wo Eddie Steele Par*. Sc 2705 Orchard Laka Rd.. Kee-I go; Narlier ______ .. - 51 PORTABLE STEAM CLEANINO East af. Auburn' Heights. Hay, Grain and Feed S2 WOOD %lNDbwa. PICTURE WAYNE OABERT 5'x»'»". 5’Xtg’>; OR *-5802 121 N 8AOINAW FE 5-5161 , OOOD SAFES, BEST OFFER IBOItlU'nt IBONEB. PROVE TO I—takes. FE 4-7153 _ youratU that lronIns tlm« «igla_iNcH SOIL PIPE.-A FT. *3J*. be cut In half wltB ease and j Bum„ pump. *l*.l5 comfort. Rent an w save .plumbing SUPPLY pea nits a d»y. rt j-MnCnusp | tvg a sagteaw pea-hm EROEHLER, UaVi^RT-AM) rS*. Pure OU Company, GAEL A. it 6 "A YE NUN FRONT AOB FOR SALE *- LEASE — RENT — W FRONTAGE - WILL LEASE OR R—NT FOR *4* PER MOHTK. TIM WRIGHTi Realtor 2U Oakland A*a. Open ’til IJJ n HOT PK M3M STORE APFR03HMATELY II x Kh located *7 W. Hurto For rent or L*M FEET — FRONT AOE ON Orton Bwboetor Road tneluded *------MM it acres. Right I of aeUab. terrific ___at bomaalte. Priced i now market at *17.(M wtth| irma. Warren Stout Realtor, 77 . Saginaw St. PI MI45. SbIu Land CoiitrBgfN 90 UNO CONTRACTS TO BUY OR to gall.. Earl Oarrela, EM 2-MU or KM MMI ; '_______ GRAYLING , I acres, near Ap Sable, adjoin. **- Metamora Horse Farm Attracttya. rimidalad 7 room eo. aslal home to tea country. Pegged ask floara. tharmopana window*, dream kitchen, automatic ad head. exoaUaat barn. For aulek sale. - tateWmi '' Peterson Real Estate 504 S. Broadway M Y .3*1681 Land Contract 25%- Discount _ A * BED- ROOM HOME WITH FULL BASEMENT. OAS HEAT, EXCELLENT? condition. - LOCATED IN NORTH DM OP fOWflAC. TIM WRIGHT, Realtor Monty to L( •e-ACRE farm. Loon rMjedarxi^ teVmV” Sacrifice. Oood bul'dlngs.i'J'ElAG.UE FINANCE CO, 202 S. MAIN < 40 A(^RES‘ . “ 214 E. ST- CLAIR «a-cawrt r°ch|S“„ romeo JSsu. S3E “‘"MS* Dorothy Spyiier Lavender * Realtor wt. » liar. SAVE ENEKGV. USE WANT ADS t To find a liui--r HouiEHoLb" ooods i^. P»«ce to live or a oSnSSSi teL'Smi ol ttmi ,ol 1X7*1 wood used car, see Claan* *-^SaNDLV MBtY*.*3^ Red NOW I /' A ___________ _ _________Yti, M: up. 7-pe. dinette, *2*. Choice of 2* washert. M2M *a. Chaato. ward rob*,, dressers. M up. Lawn mowers, tobies chairs, rugs, ay-erythlng to used furniture at bargain prices. Ate* new bedrooms, nvmg rms.,- dinette,, mattressea and ruga, factory -econds About half prioe. JE-Z Ter— ”— Vinyl Random Tile 6c ea. “MCA" GENUINE — 20c 8Q FT. Ceiling Tile ... .sq. ft. 9c r “SUYLO" UNCLAIMED TILE OUTLET 102 S. BAOINAW ----FB 8-248* Phooa PE MOHAWK *00L CARPET*; ( x * 15. • x 11 and lined drapes. MA 6-2855, Orchard Lake. MODERNIZATION sale on new and used furniture and appBaaeaa. \ DOUG'S FURNITURE 1*2* Baldwin PE MIN t.'ifttwlwd. (ER 50 USED TV SETS I 114.95 up. TY antennas *M< - WALTON TV 42 IN. CABINET SINK. *35. AD-juatobla pipe die. *20. OL I-4M2 MdiAL^ ELEC . HEATER. to*it. Cab. sinks and* fUtlng, 454 *5 up! Uundry trays and stand nod faucets 411*5 Caeb and carry. ■ - ' SAVE PLUMBINO I7F S, Saginaw__PK *-21M BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND e gas furnaces, hot water A steam bolldr' Automatic water beater. Hardware, elec, supplies, crack A pipe and nttlngs Lowe Brother Paint, Super Keintone and Ruat- HEIOHTS SUPPLY” , »*t Lapeer Rd; FE 4-5431 ' ANCHOR FENCES No money down. FHA Approved. free gyrnATM ri $-t4Ti BULMAN HARDWARE 3845 ELIZABETH LK. FE MT71 OPEN DAILY 'TIL I; SUM. A* BASEBOARD RADIATION AT bargain prices. *1.85 mr-ft. ~ A. Thompson. 7005 MS* Wesi BRAND*NEW EXTENSION ALUM. Lumllto ladder 2* ft. FE *-l«M Wa give estimates o modeling - BERRY DOOR SALKS Open from * to’ 2 Noon on snturdny 371 8^ Paddock__ _FE_2-a283 HOT WATER HEATERS. 30 OAL! Oaa Consumer, approved t*(5C ---- *2*.M — “-------- boot. Seasonable. MI 8-173*. TUNINO AND RiCPAtXINO! }««!? .umrylce mu waaxte xuaran- j ALL TYPEB flp t«T A 2ND CUT-U,d ^CALBf^'iuBlCu’cO ™en US N. Sagtmtw - __PK 5A2M I CORN CUT beef for bale O* B^fLyc C^JFfE TO' 1 HAYMD"rntAW 1-BALE Of • I ■ ' ..—'—"—1------— ------j 1,200 ba!te._FE_t-42l*._ '•' SCHUMAN SPINET PIANO. Beautl-1 _ . . , -m^apiatrinish, tuned »u« **- J Sale Fsrin Produce tit BALDWIN OROANSONIC OTOAN i EAnNO^A^^COC^TO^AFFLEI tohd ATar*alaIat°ll»»***. CUSHMAN EAOLE. OOOD - -VanditlaUi OR 2 Mil. — I* CtiBilMAN EAOLE fiWT *2 seen to m knpraatntai Earn Cond. All acccaaories included, j Ml 4-11*4 - — '' ’ ■— 1(5* CUBHMAN 8 U Pi B BAOLk Qood eand Phone Fk 5-1711.___ For Sate Motorcyclss 95 ■ftl. split saddle tank. FE >*387l. LAVATbRIWP" COMJPLETTC. UTM ,t value $14.16; also fcathtubs. loft- 1 Uf lets, shower stalls MMHOT. Terrific value*. Michigan Fluoree- walaut Spinet Oulbraneen Spinet Piano |( _aed Baldwin Spinet piano In blow* wood, fm* new. Used upright ................ I LUEAIBB LOWBOY OIL FURNACE —105.000 BTU, 1 year old. 5125. 01*7 Ltvcrnols, Troy. TR Y-5373 flf*Attt«- 6U rPftiUcfc"WltH controls. *4.000 MTU. FE 4-5131 after I p.m. * MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY. . I Used 2 Manual organs PEACTUUi NOt^At^i^AELAWD j Ch.c1' mK1" *H* M JjSuoteCt Rd ! RIFE TOMATOES. *1.50 PER II Matorcydi lano Tuning - jprgan B«pnir,|,_jt..***gto’ , , 1-------- BARTLETT PEARS - AND TO- traltot AJS-aitetife. MTihilteute «-.i Wiewind Music Center *•*. ct-mar Rd. rs m*,al toicb^^mju *" Mtehtgan Ftuocaseent, 5*3 t BAEAAR^AREA^^MIllACL* MILE pg£^itjjg NOW AT .OAKLAND I ROY’S MflAL^8 ------------m—mm OMh;ai “ *'**r‘’ Al“ ,v diXmiob iKuwt bwmw TRlUMPll MOTORCYCLits! PK 1-860*. TOMATOES. PICK THE CREAM I of' the crop for earlv tannine ! *1.50 buiihel 330 I Pikf Sate Office Equipment 72 TOMATOEB. A Okra left *52 1 , TOMATOES. I2.M Brto* baaketa. 1 UL i-nu, -TOMATOES! PICK YOUR 14*0- orchard Laka Rd. Northwaatam. | ,Fer Sate Bicycles 96 la. ION j gQYi |4 w EXCELLENT COMDI-aI Mon, 204 B. Rundell. FB 2-4*2*. JOJML 4154- ui’ED BICYCLES, tt A 0F. NEW mmereon______ I • nikea 124II S up. Over 100 to A BUSNE-t: ]—choose from. BcarletVg Blko awl -231 N. Squirrel Hobb] “ Irina baake TtMiir FE lift* - Wt." Site Farm Equipment 87; i. The Bar- ____ ____IF AND PORK - HALF. AND M2W I quartan Opdyke_Mkl. FEJ^TMl REFRIOERATOR ! BAY LfFTFOR 8 A LB USED VERY **: Exc. r“ *™1 ..... **|-- — " OIL WALTyHRl^ACt'AND TANK. J? 070. MY 3-40*1. ______j Writer file dnwef^o JCyscqre CASH * CARRY JUVTKA g| J>E_M$0I- fA ,L OOOD SEL2ECTM3N OF [BROWN WESTERN SADDLE. Cl.KARANCE .SALE ' USED EQUIPMENT Small ridini and walking tract® 1 PIECE LtTINO ROOM SUTTE. cblng ..._________________;mt^r Pearson's Furniture, 41 Orchard take Av* * X 12 REVERSIBLE RUOS, 010.2*; ■ Faam iwkwag-gtepiE iwt*i fiate* Tweed rugs, 12*.*5; Axmlnster. 50 95: Rug pads. 1515 Pearson Furntturn, 42 Orchard Lake Ave.-SH W. COMBINATION. 224 »*. 17 . 3*30 I EFRIOERATOR IN OOOD COND. I “ m'iuhlng"*toow"‘bridle' ~U ”irt'.fj l5H_?»‘awln-^?—-u P*—~ , SiP l"™?1'. •* Winding. I Roadmaster bicycle. 3 months aid ROOF'LEAKS? Ellaabetly Lake estates. ,. I Remington Rand ■ adding '. ma-.j . .. f Adv)sor (or a tree ea-1 REFRIGERATOR. -STUDIO COUCH j chine, latest model OR j3*70 urngu Lv. ^ M th. cost FE llffi^rB^m»t‘S?d“w. mu*; BARGAINS IJttl cellaneom. FC MIFF.______"i 4x$,'« in. V-frooved mah. $4,$9- < — SELLING OtrT—— T&ifjiSncSfnm vSmt^aie xq tt^ 1*^**^*1 ^sAil^TilKni ENTIRE STOCK , J* tal hat WtUrhetUr. I47 M WARWICK *. a*7> qfc,<«A>D . 1 _ or MERCHANDISE l yeer warranty _ RANGE HOOD AND FAN. COFFER- WILL BE SOLD Free set Toilet *16*5 with traoe. tone 534 5*! Rotnax wire it 3c IKOW COST Open Btul. 10-2 per ft. Heater cable 21c. O. A. SYBR'S PAINT It LINOLEUM ... „ _ Thompaon.-toe*^*** Weat II W. HURON ......, FK 4-3004 WOLVERINE LUMBER ! REWteDI^ONED-TYFEWRnXR*• SINGER PORTABLE FORWARD [ JM S. Paddock FE 24704! m M' and IIP New portable,. .--And-Tejerse..jtttch,-t2fcM.,:Curt'i ----i,.{gjjofc- — — - —— ”— ' Appl. SPECIAL IxU RUOS. 224.15. Me-* “irpet Woodward at Square ___ I below Tad'a. FE 2-7741 SEARS WASHER. LIKE NEW! TAM*. Bif tor recreation room. FE 1-1242. ~ A BEAUTIFUL BUY 2-Flaja Living Rrn. Suite ONLY $99.50 Choice at 1 Colors With Foam Cushions. Drayton Plaint. 3 Dixie. LUTOMATIC Ki MAYTAO WASHER lata model, balance APARTMENT SIZE OAS RANGE. 21-Ul. TV. Phlleo refrigerator, electric di7tr, Maytag wajher. Living room and dining room autta. Mlsc. furniture. F. Clark. About anything you want FOB THE HOME CAN BE FOUND ITltl SALES. A BUM out ix the way but * lot ISL^k^^U^ visit tar trad* dept. Tor tool bargain*. _ We buy. tell or trad*. Com* out and took around. 2 aerex of (to* parking. Fhore FE * *141, OPEN MON. BAT. » TO * * FBI. 2 TO I 24 MOIltBf TO FAT i miles E. ol Pontiac " * “** JThr— BATHINETTI. CAB ‘$Kt tStor** pTm*** BRAND HEW WROUOHT IRON bank beds complete frith spring* and (m,mv,. *3* |g. Pexraon't _ Orchard Lake AV'. TTS9ricTqH"TBf rifflBi „ holtture. i igs per anlian. I _OR«wf“ i up.; photoeopv xchinet good condition. MA ‘5-131*. Boats ft Accessorial 97 Bargain Clearance , ' BCOTT MOTORS AND SERVICE CftU^E-OUT ——BOAT SALES g* I Wxlton Open »•» >1 *-*4*1 BOAT INiuBARCl ONLY tm Pjf *104 Hemwn Ins. Agency. FE _idNl,j2 5-4*7*. , , ■ ItoraUk. AND COM- wlnlcrijn* of engines. Re-rarnunlng on* rwfIntoning. Call lor further information. Inland Lake Bales. MU' W Huron St.. ; io;! — SELLING OUT — ENTIRE STOCK , OF MERCHANDISE . KILL BE BOt& BELOW COST TWO (MXlg TIRES. CHEAP SINGER SEW1NO MACHINE, CAB-toot modal with dsxxraltog xritok-Ing slf-sag design. Yours tor balance qf giS tr ials on payment iTNN par Sm. Guaranteed til perfect condition. Ualvaraal Cb. FE 4-0*05 School Plan Ranges We bat* tost replaced 20 man Roper aid Magic Chef gas rentes In the boat* loanimk clasees of the Pontina School District. TO*s* are like saw and come to IT’, at*’ IF’ and 4*" Ham. semiautomatic or automatic modal*. Onattr roduoad to aau: Electric rang** all stoat, is Wr^'uinmmt, both washers and dryers, 131 up. N*w_ gas water beaters reduced. Consumers Power Co. ■ JS, ■ TABS OVER PAYMENTS. WRING-Or washer with timer, tli* per weak. tUatrte dryer AM ■■'.mat week. Electric dusunat, comb. ft remote oentiuts, SI M par *■ FIRESTONE STORE 14* N. ggsfc FB "Blacktop Driveway • Head repairs) save %i oa the i cost. Call your Advisor. FE M*« ftoftbOM UflRT FIXTURES, IR-regtlars *4.15 values. 4125 Clr-Soy fixtures child—to _____ Michigan Fluorci Orchard Lk. Ave. - 28 branch offices In ■ Oakland _ Macomb County where you can buy new or factory rebuilt cosh registers. The National Cash Resistor O*. 542 W. Hu-on. Pontiac FE 3-(2M, 22 S. Oratlot. Mt. Clement, Howard 3-4222. _ a^mrm^______________ IBM lypftWrlUr in xood condition Executive type only. FE 2-4221, AL’COA ALUMINUM Combination DOORS GUARANTEED 1 FULL "INCH THICK Aluminum comb, doors. Regularly priced *3915, you pay only SALES TAX INCLUDED $23.95 PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED OH issmssf FEDERAL. Modernization Plenty *of Free Parking On Our Lot CBA>TBkAH it IN- *Kt> SAW. mlnshsm. Ml S-StlO around tor'} ner from Turner .Ford Bales Our m CU. I. Drayton Plains store carries sew refrtoeral and uaad typewriters and nddtog ----------- machines. Hast to PanUae State (11 1 'Fjpj'sr^ I September Sale | Sate Sporting Qotob 74! Mowers. tlltoM. scyte* bars IS i- . r . . • _ 7”- iief deep fry- j tf ltfTOB EM 1 3S 5. Pror mowers'. 51* up. Several iraaian and aqulpmant. Will accept any r,M wansequipment MOT Dixie Hwy. . MAple 8-7*78 OR 2-7*2* SEVERAL USED OAS FORCED air mraaoamtef "*****• agg I controls, fully I Lak* Rote at MM. OR Special Paneling Offer V-groove. D grade ; ti.M each 4M pMMla, */»’■ mahogany V-groove. C grade . 15 30 each * aa* Oak Flooring ■elect r««_...... .... P“ JJ Ho. 1 Common ..........UP m No. 3 Common —........ $130 m No, 2 Shorts ..... I M M tty.. Used Trade-In Dept. .price. FB 3-1E CEMENT 8TEPI A^BtetT Washer Daveoptori A Chair Vanity chest.* Bed rca TV Cjaaeals. *r M old. like heif>H READYMADE. .»,.« ou wn Bpiasn alack, door sills, >14.85 chimney caps Pontine FfwOui *18.95 Stop On., M W. Sheffield FE $39.60 2-3900: . ’ - ■ j :'(! ffHM* CAR AND1, OAILAOB^ FOR BALE » Ad: 129 Ml. CAR FARTS FOR ’49 TO'I els. Royal Auto FarU. ] Clinini, Pontifto. , larm SnNER AND DRAIN SUPPLIES __ SEWER PIPE I” plain pipe ...........I .32 ft. r stipseel pipe , 8 .48 ft. r sHpauat pipe .......... 5 79 ft. r sltoeeal pipe ■ It 23 R. LAROER SIZES IN STOCK Complete etoek uf fllttelg DRAIN TILE . 3" thru 34" in etoek i ’ drain til* CkC . . $ .11 ea Orangebwrg pipe 53 9* as. ’-Om' culvert ......... *2.55 It. short pi eeei ALUMINUM CAMP TRAILER FOR j _ KING BROS. PONTIAC RD AT OPDYKE NlWpAN^ REBUiLT~jS' R AJ^N -M«hy. Fh- NA™1 Auction Sales- 88 A big auction starting Sept. - 10th at—1'yler's j —Gommtmrty Sales, - Lake j Orion. ' " " Third > Auctioneer's Jamboree ’ Wednesday, September 1 at 2 pm. till? Truck leads at everythin* Many, many Jiuettonaers. bun SALES. MO* Dixie Hwy., US-19. Clarkftob. Masa I* ' “ u, «.ii(U,r conil^m CENTURY _ SAILPISH-SUNPISH PORTABLE DOCUaOII AJAX TRAILERS RSPrrCH - BALANCE ----Aiir“— 24-HR r- IFKUJ— cameo in Stock •R0P- REPAIR IONS - SUV. SELL. TBADE. WA^cT?.|ff,?1Atnl.1Si^PPAY Htelev Leacb^JM^f. Op“ OUN REPAIR ANDSCOPl MOUNT- D o. p itTrririV tog. Shot guns and rlflei 111 O « B AUU IW in’ Gun,, buy or trad*. Burr-! 5059 DIXIE HIGHWAY Snell. 375 S. Teleeranh. FE 3-4708. 1 Across from . LADiiW'~FULL^RECTkION RbLL. | ^!^-7lllI>l. *r Skates. Almost new. Cleveland ,_— w ** *■»» j Site Hobk TraMer* 89 Bait, Minnows, Etc. 75 apache, tour-a-home. .cebe ifheilg Three). W# still have I M4 Wteto to choose from. Several -uaad travel traitor* and used mobile homes to soleet from cKrr7 dr!eyeVw HOLLY MA-R1NE AND COACH BALES. 11210 HOLLY RD.. HOLLY. ME »«77t. EN D-Oh -THE-SEASON CLEARANCE ON USED BbATS AND MOTOR* ALL TYPES kJBEBS IF TO IF BOATS 4. -LJ H P TO 22 kJ. NeWIB ALSO REDUCED HOW NEW SMALL UUTIBB BOAT* HARRINGTON BOATS tour ivtnruds dealer EAET PAYMENTS <1MUKI Wi B. TBLBOB4UW FB 2-MK _ EV1NRUDE MOTORS Wood. slu.. flbergla* Mots, ae- Ce**"luflitD TO FIND. BUT EASY TO DEAL WITH" QAWKMI*E sales ----- ^MAte »■ 21 FOR 2tc: CRAWL-^ Me; Leaf .worm* 2* ; 'Bad worms, 72 .tor Me; Saad. Pravci and Dirt 76 1Q0.000 YARDS FILL Loading track 7 day* a weak, cheap, anil deliver. Thor Cea> tracting Co .Jae. MA 5-9421. ‘1-A FIAT MOSS. DELIVER 812, I yard toad. F» toltel. iYl>ieigria-A MTMiM. *2 to! Beach land 27M yd. FW dirt 30c. 80-48 11.54 yd. American Stoat ________UOHTWEIOHT >1 Traitor Since 1433 Ouar-d for life, see them and get lonatrattop at WafMr Traitor 30M W Huron. (Fite to om of Wally Byam'a excit- POR RENT - 15 ft. VACATION-trallar. 12*1 Venice CV. off Cat* Lake, Bd. PE 2-545*. OABWAY Tlpslco Lake ~ nBb Mni ■ FALL CLEARANCE 43.240 VALUE MEW IT FT. BOAT. 40 HP. ELECTRIC MOTOR AND CONTROLS. FULL 'LOW DOWN PAYMENT ■EASY TnMS_ MAZURF.K MOTORS & MARINE SALES SAOINAW AT SOUTH BLVD. FT. WXMCriUILSBS- 4TM ciarkiton, ma mST "'[ Goodett Trailer Sales SHREDDED FEAT HU2IU8 3341 SOUTH , ROCHESTER BO-. Play-A-Fon Was UM NOW (MM Sun-A-Poo Wa, $7*4 NOW ISM Bel-Aire Cabin Craft WT am piece* jor meMe— Tfl* fair, ramp* aad * r*a»* traps ' II” wtth I boles ... *Mf-tok.' ll" with 2 hole* SMB eo. 6.1. autegti fWf" »■* graiae. wumSm' r-1 SOD^. JEMEN NURSERY. Jacobson’s TfKiler Sales and -Rentals ffltoSSTlJf*^ lOTUtfi Trotwood, Mar-Elhg Prank u»d ] »UMM» ™ , SIX)RTSM»^. -aiiaa«- 9^1*4. . _ llEADOUAi models. Re Florida vai ___________.V 9-M71 . Raarrve your trader" Jor I mr r THIRTY THE POXtlAC PRESSf TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER IMP t*MW«bs 1 - >Mti * Accessories srsnit ?w - mftjr*" **- **——****-! i« "WO^ffTi 25?s ’ — ^pn Hardware llSSW Far fcgfcthw jamcsa. un. like hew. i kktna ci ! iPVjr**kr3s: a^.1 Si- Far Mt*Gtrr £g5h: TBS ONE AND ONLY INI ‘ JBoat Repairs •54 DODGE .« ton Mm “A Nice YbuS” $495 I FISCHER RUCK. IXC. 15Q Cars and Truck* ! LLOYD ffelJ- HOTOft SALES i miiai. ‘M UPnUic ■HKgJTITSifln# a. aMin.w TONY'S MARINE Mr >ll»nli motor* K y nm m0nct. Ml Ore) Lake Rtt„ VB Hilt_ Oakland Marine Exch. ~~i SPECIAL wo metal row BOATa m HEAVY DUTY TRUCKS ■ ...........*\x . an-«........ itaa Station W«a. 6 dr ■ tod H ChmNf - _____ICI 'II-’II''II-'H-tU i Paswan. aw hm a. wa > ttimnn 'M and 'SI si Mateo, M mi Bar eel )i eraser Comb. wen or car filmy others to dnooaa pinanci no problem Economv Carir - 22 ; Auburn SOOTH BLVD AT WOODWARD m saw I SPECIAL i - Op la M par cant dlacouat ao all **ow*hb souliiiot^cftUS*1*" | 6t„Marine Sales, *60 Ford F750» and FSOOs _ PRICE? Tf—partafM Offered 100 They Have To Go MAKE US AN OFER ." HOW ABOUT ONE OF THESE .. BARGAINS? ’I) BaNk wart coupe U Ford ceded' ........ I '44 Pontiac t door ____ 1 'll ON* afdtt coupe .. i H omw « doer . I**!’ -1-8* ijlr AVERILL'S Nerd sharp lata MCCC lac Calif TOP DOLLAR ana ntrii in pa i-crti ______ CA* PATlIXirrir TOO B&M»N-aocaaf Coma to' and aaa ui and M aa half IN adjaet to • less a < pan lira nr.-‘-r — DON’S USED CALS «n MM Lake Orion , MTmB —-—t— lMd-'fcHriSurt'’1 BEL" An 00N- vrrtibla. radio, koto at. A-l condition. 4 now white urea. Full Em MM. aaiume payment* o( month Chit Credit Mgr.. Mr. u. FA MMt. Bin Auto inks. USB. Saginaw_ IMS CHBVROl.ST, 4 DOOR STA-lion eased. Ilka new. Radio. I ■ rr, aaoagwdm, ee- lotr adfii ,a fused I0FKR1OR AUTO, SALES. SSd OAKLAND I OK USED1 OikS. TAYLORS CHEVROLET-OLOSMOBILS Open Bvaateas MArkat 4-0*1 Walled taka REPOSSESgON sr cSbvt" POWERS!: mn oe d MW Ml dpUBli, LOd , gelea. San Francisco, tea Diego, to Hawaii, tat 1« extra Haw York SM. Prrry Service Inc. OR J-MM. . , . ■ I dMdfio BBW TORE ECWWEfEMUTBkBtT W IHMI TEOCE OOWO WORTH .PART lend aBhdrway. fk 8-saod. -»t> FLORfbr BiinchLY aiV tteman goto* before the let would ■a compaei. Apptv Pontiac Praaa Bon JO.__________j WlMlBd UBBd CfB - 101 j A BIG IF *" I iSSi kjj »UCh . . a N Chevrolet lmpalo V.Y.'.V. 7. $2j NORTH CHEVROLET NEW AND USED TRUCKS IN. STOCK r payments I *• • * j Dollar tor Tour Truck. !EA»T TERMS - BPOT DELIVERY ra**lreS evaluation* A*lc for Truck Dept. UB^*8 " ' ™ FE 5-4101 MO Oakland Areaua - Pontlae JEROME "Bright Spot”. Cy' Owens itoi i •ITcoRVEFfif ................ Dual 4 carbs. 4 speed transmission posltraction aile, solid white finish T)em*. VanCamp Chevrolet, Inc. MILFORD MU 44M i aid heater One $195 LLOYD CONVERTIBLE ’ Effortless. pow erelide tra__ coupled with V-a enelae wUl take , you breesing over The Ujibwtys $1595 . Grissman Far Sale tew . to Dodge Dart $47.43 PER MONTH DELIVERED ALL WTAHOA1 KOtnwMKMT FEDERAL TAB. BAL— ess*. CENSE. TITLE A NO CREDIT LIFEINBUR ANCE. John-J. Smith DODGE, INC. m I. SAOINAW FE »MM. —Just Makr, Payment a— For Sate Cara l06 IS FORD. HT WHITE WALLA. good cond. MM- OR 3-4601. . BRIGHT SPOT ORCHARD LAEB AT CAM , High Southern buyer on lot. JEROME For Saif Caw—-JjMt _ I FORD I DOOR. RADIO AND 1 - " ”• —ck mart. __'MO timra I Credi Last Call FOR THESE LOW SUMMER PRICES- MOTOR SALES it PONTIAC B’vtUd Convert »1»S •« fORD P-Lane »-Dr. 400 I1M4 _ FORD F-Lano 4-door . •44 FORD t-door ... ... . „ 44 PONTIAC 4-Dr. Sedan....4 41 '44 CSWTR-AIr T-ton .....{ « '41 WTOC R-CMr* “ “ '44 envy B-Atr 4_____ 44 PONTIAC 4-door aadaa . •41 CHfyy B-Air 4 door ..ill FORD 1-door ............Hi IIM PONTIAC BTATMK WAOON' ii^Si ^ ^SriarS5^ ^±1 .. ROPER CHXHF. t- HARDENBURQ MOTOR BALES Corner Cass and Pika PE t-tlM Open Evea. TB » ■ •$99 SPECIALS ■41 MERC3RT BEPAW 11 OLD# SEDAN 44 PLYMOUTH BEPAW 41 rrUDEBAEER OEDAW Jack Cole, Inc, IMl W7 MABto 4t ItoBM Trsll ~ LLED LAB MA *~m‘1 NO CASH NEEDED M 2-doqr. Full price. HEATER v-t, $nac . ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Assume payments at 4* 44 ---- • ---- Kr mo Call Credlltlgr Mr. | dkt at MI 4-1440. Harold Turner ! Nlto. nig.> Ford. , REPOSSESSION Ptymouth 4 door. Full price EM —===a—-i-- Owner driven. I I4h other col MY 3-1743;’ $1995 / ^ \ boater, automatic CJy CJwena) -m bssk 1441 FORD STATION WAOON. radta A heater, automatic. 3-tone palm. MN BIRMINGHAM-P. MBLER, 444 R WOOOWARD. MI 6-3900. ■ ...^ Forks at Ml -----Harold Turner Ford. FORD, 1*01 1-DOOR. RADIO AND —^ ^ tHAamlaalan.. 1 BOB FROST INC UNCOLN-MEftcURY 1958 PtYM’TH 2-DR. $695 NO CASH NEEDED (HILT 434 PER MONTH HHt AMo. Mr. BaU. FE l MM 14» E. Blvd. at Auburn 1444 PLYMOUTH 8TATON WA-gonr 4100 New paint, no rust, radio and heater. One nwanr with new Mutch and tranamla-slim. 1 dear. Call MI 4-nu tram NO CASH NEEDED MtT Plymouth, beautiful rad finish. 4440 full price. Pay only . Ml per month. Pint payment October (Mb. Ring Mr. Bing, FB t-1444, Lucky Auto Bake, 141 B. Rajtonw, __ 44 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR. BEST offer, nil Wenamaker off Scott . Like »T ■ ' . I Just Make Payments 'M PLYMOUTH. 4344 ' Pay only 411 me. Due Oct. 1 . Rite Auto. Mr. Bell. FE 1-4431 , 104 East Bird at Auburn 1441 PLYMOUTH SEDAN, RADIO AND HEATER AUTOMATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOW" Assume payments of 43414 j ’43 Chevrolet 4-Dr. HEW jPONTUCS AT . . x dona discount. Do »ot fall to am Keeeo Sales & Service V ~Kecgo Harbor ~~~ .. fust Make Paynteut* \ •» Pontiac, M4 Pay aaly fltf mo. Due On. Rita. Aula. Mr. Roll FE 1-4434 uiiv#^vferxo?? ................. $1295 Pontiac Retail Store . . 44 HT. CLEMENS IT. FE 1-7444 1444 PONTIAC CLUi. COUPE, RA-4 DIO AND HEATtR. HTDRA-MATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Aaawna paymenta of 130.14 pei mo CaU,Cradtt Mgr. fir! PariM" Ntt ilto Harold Turner Eord. ____ r '44 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF OOH-rertible, Hydra.. reaaooabM. Call B 3-044. 1441 RAMBLER STATION WAOON. NO CAOB— NEEDED . ,1IM Poptlaa Btarchtof, hardton, beautiful blue and whita finish, no rust. 4444 full price. Pay only filriiiMMSr Pint payment due Oct. tato 4la» Mr. Btok, FE 4-im~Lueky Aute saiei, iwr 8.. Baginaw,'- ■BA For Sale Cart 106 ewaboAL ii?T»7 TuS* **jiSgffc|maa*-RAMBLER. tMd 4. WOOETWARD iljno: che\^£$ NOG ASH -NEEDED^ fas Btof fi »7lM «■ I ^eSeT'uS'. ] Ramblers Ramblers Prices alatoed. Bt* discount. Alt model! to ctoek. my now and “'r Si c rambler Super Market COMMERCE RD Valiant YEAR END SALE SAVE $$$ MOTOR SALES Main at.. q«tod>MI 14141 - it where the ovarhaad li tow '60 Catcdiria CONVERTIBLE. POWER tTEER- — —uta 4 tpuSM • ___ $2995 ___ '60 Pontiac S-C, POWER ITEEIUNO A BRAKES, '60 Rambler AMBASSADOR WAOON. POWER STEERING A ERASES SAVE $900 '60 Bonnev. H.T. 1 DOOR. POWEW^ SAVE $95u '60 Rambler '59 Bonneville Orchard Lake at Cai, ■PE 4-04M _ • Open Etto, ^ee M & M Motor Ssle* Per tap dollar an later medal; Mdt Dixie Hwy. Q> 3-U03 j MSWAtl WddrtB ~ "Mi dW8! T CANT ■r HELP IT! I NEED CLEAN USED CAM QUALITY MOTORS j IMMRCHARfe LAKE,, PE 3-70411 ARB TOO OETTINO j THE MOST | FOR TOUR CART < | WE BUY - —] 4 TRADE down — — TRADE UP — DON T TAKE ANT DEAL tfNTIL YOU'VE BEEN TO LLOYD HARDENBURO MOTOR SALES Chaa at Pike FK 4-1344} tr« EOT AND 'ritoIB~q&0O , CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS ! ----------- N Auburn TRUCK MART Pontiac’s Truck Center * -GMC^ Factory Branch | OAKLAND AT CASS 4 TON MACE 13 TAM) DUMP ko«._JM 3-4414. iVTO'h PICKUPS. STAKES AND UTILITIES, '41>, 'Mt, '44s. 4144' AND UP A P. BOWMAN A | 4QN4 ,04 » SANFORD. _fc f '56 CHEVROLET"’ I MEW CONDITION PICKUP | rum *4». blit1 carrier meunl»7 Light iraen and Ivory flnlah wRh white jttrn- An •uelliM value. • .$850 I Crissmart ROCHESTER OPEN ETTA. 'TIL 4 Oh 4-4131 Auto Iniurance MOTOR SALES 134 1 SAGINAW FE 2-4131 itia* CtfETRLET 4 DOOR "tTA-TION WAOON. .RADIO AND HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Aaaumt pay- NO CASH NEEDED 1441 Chevrolet. 3-daor, canary yaliww and bleak. 4644 full prton ray can 434 y*r mo. Ftrat payment October 13th Ring Mr. Bing, PE 4-1004, Lucky Auto -Rklaa,- Ill k. Sagdnnw- ___ Suburban . OLDS 1444 Chevrolet. Blaeuyne. , ‘M anEv.,~a-DR„___ Fey only ill mo Dub Oct. 1 RUd Auto. Mr. Ball FE >4434 .. TdSElikElvdrriAtoma _ OIVE ME AN OFFER. 1441 CUSH-mna. 1141 Chevrolet. 4 doer, 4 cylinder, standard trana. Ford Doodle hut with Pardeon rear aala. deal teens. MT l-Ittl. ’57 OfEVROLET BEL AIR SPORT COUPE Solid Royal itoa ftoiah. Superb condition. Fully equipped and In-ital kit. Must -be 451 FORD 3 I HEATER, PO LUTELT NO: 104!, CLEAN JtBCORD PL. PtD. AND MED. “R MOST CABS CASH FOR'TOUR CAR Pontiac Auto Brokers 1344 H. FERRY AT MADISON FE4-9I00 AS MUCH AS 144 FOR JUNK AM cheap ear*. FB 1-3404 days o ATTENTION FOR CLBAN C.______ ■——GlenrV Motor Sales 4*3 W. Buroa Bt. PE 4-131 153 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR. RADIO AND HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Assume pay-m 4.3530 " IJ"" w "Vwa / 'pi t du« ! ®*®tt of II K pw BO. Oll| Credit M(r fir. Pork* at MI 4-Hil. Foreign and Spt. .Cara 105 - *F$!!J5B!L£sSL__________ -------------ZZ^iZZZ------f *43 CHBV., 1 DOOR, VERT OMR R and H, EM 3-00*1, Conway I '53 "cifiEV.. 3 DOOR, V4. .8iickr R and H. very clean, bargain. 3015 Cooley Lk. Road, Coaway. 10M CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, 1 V-*. STANDARD TRANSMISSION 1 "I A DIO---------------- SPORTS CARS NEW AND USED HKALY MO, SPRITE : 44 Austin Heity '*0 Dadd Austin Haaly HOUGHTON & SON >4* N. Mato, Rochester OL 1-41*1 i»4*JHorri* minor dIluxe —'—' miles. Like new. 1n*r-W 4faj^- ...._____NEATER, ABSOL- UTELY NO MONET DOWN. Assume payments of *34.14 per me. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI »lia». Harold Tamar Ford. '43 CHEVROLET, POOP CONDI-Uon. New iraaamlaatoa. First 1104 takes It. OR 3-4144. 1451 CHEVY 310 4 DHTWILIT TAKE Moer ear or pickup In trade. Call after 4 p m. OA 4-3434. 44 l.TAER A DEMONSTRATION RIDE Bimf HARTLEY . ^ »•* W *» «*»0«1- r.lSMrT. umd| ” " '*“-11444 VOLKRWAOEN 2 DR.. WITH | miles! Sharp.' Joe's Car Let PE . . 3-1431. ■ ' . I I : F»r SrIc Crtb 106 'illM^JBUICE SPECIAL, 3^'DOOR | J^rris, FE 5 Suburban OLDS H. J. VAN WELT -4640 Dials B*y- v I, OR 3-1314''M iguat CENTURY . | 443. .1 ONLY $1395 Crissmarr ROCHESTER--- l-mt OPEN EYES. 'TIL *57 CHEWY 2-DR, $595 NO CASH NEEDED ONLY |3I PER MONTH Rlto Auto, Mr. BaU. FE M434 144 E. Bird, at AukUIB ,— *; mo 4-inl Milford DOOR, RADIO AND . FORDOMAT1C ABSO-_______NO MONET DOWN. Assume payments of 43414 per me. Call Credit M*r fir. Parks at MI 4-140 Harold Tnraar Ford. MM PORp WAOOII.. MA 4-1444 I 1444 FORD CONVERTIBLE. LOW mlleair. RAH. WW P. 8. Interceptor engine. ' A beauty. 11516: PE 4-4431. FORD CONVERTIBLE RAH, White aide i I.BLUE, Suburban OLDS IEW - NEVER LICENSED COR-valr Mm* Deluge Sparta Coupe. Tutone. leather Arlm. all aeeesaor-lea. 4il3S-W delivered. 3144 E. Walton Bird.____________________ - ‘ NEW ~ Dodge Dart $1975 rammSSXiTas 141 N. MAIN ROCHESTER OL Mill 8 DESOTO. R ADIcTS-HEATER Used Auto Parts 102' 'MHM_| _ ■44 CORVETTE 21* SHORT BLOCKClltVTOlrtl Like sew. FE 4-4141 between 6 30 MILFORD 1444 CHBVT. 3-UOOR BEL AIR. , RAH.- power, 4. tttfk. Also. 1443 ( Inc. y- Pontiac. Phone OL } 4.5225 j rM CHEVIE 4 DOOB WAOON. RA-I nAv tUiC rtirtiiS . I 0<»- heater., automatic, 41650. OR _ . ; TT -, LUUA 1-i‘Ub OVER, I 3-3442. . ■ ORle Used Trucks 103, Convertjble. 14*4 Bulck, white,-j 1956 CHEVROLET. RADIO, HEAT- ■ernmm*nrMack top. red Interior.-radio, ........................er. sutoWIM* tyiBUHHUtoB.' VT. : traumluUm1* ****** *ut»m*Uc Red Block & White Interior 36.000 ^i^ton 'i Clarkston. Motor Sales A JBM >^cf*C?nt.r .truck SRSff™ M j!l65r BUIci SPECIAL FmoS FISCHER BUICK, INC. .,i with radio and heater. No money I M I. WOODWARD ill price 6M6-... Assume ---------* g __ .. . ■______i of. Ill ntah. Call Ml «8iw ' Includes all running lights. 64w| ^4jr. Whlte^ FK 1-0403. | — Ubuice ht. 1 owner! like I miles This 1 TOR STAKE H^Tatonieal Cental fidaatoa. II ply tires, brand” n snare, radio: healer, weal eoari ^kaasy-dwj^ eylyment; —, an ' running lights. $200 j f dqaler invoice. A terrific . No phene c BIRMINGHAM . 30 4-4434 Grissman SCHRAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT on but* of rn a month. hU-RIOR AUTO BALES. Ill OAK- 1444 BUTCK SUPER HARDTOP. cloon. IMS. 76 Thorpe. FE 2-W83. 'IMS BUICK ELECTRA. THIS Ys ■\ Jfi* Mg. enell 4-deer hardtop. | Power windows and neats, steer- BIRMINGHAM ’$2 CHEVROLET $45 'Cy'Owens iso Oakland avenue 1666 CHEVROLET, RA DIO AHD j heater, overdrive. 1445. B1RM-INOHAM-RAMBLER. 644 FOUTH WOOCR4ARD. * ~zzz 3 1-DR.. AUTO . CLEAN. ;Tell Everybcxiy fAbout it with a * Pontiac Press j Want Ad ! That’* because of the tfreater election of every-tkihfi from automobiles to 5pptoy*heot offered every Jhf. I960 ' . . MERCURY freatora. and Waahars. $2197 COMPLETE WE HAVE— "CDMETS" LLOYD M-H ,"0. K." SPECIAL •60 FORD OJOAEIE WORT SEDAN 1 ftwr Tirt Tlfailr , full power. 3 tana paint with. $2349 Matthews- Hargreaves LAROM^raEVR^LET^DEALER FE 4*4547 J, 453POAKLAND AVE. WAGON Ford. 1444 Country Sedan T-i, autotoattoatranetoledton, (HP A»d beater. Barf Blue, a sharp Birmingham trade.' *110* fun price. BOB AtOST, INC. LINCOLN-MERCURT _________MI 6-4344 -rORD DEALER— . , 4;1. Used Cw. PtoRPtocJCtntty ... ’57 Ford —- • - $795 'Cy' Owens tk OAKLAND AVENUE __ 6-4101_____ 1444. .FORD RANCH WAOON. RA-' MO AND HEATER, WRITE V*tL fauu ABBaonSf F5 MONET DOWd. Assume pe menu of 133.0* per me. Q Credit M«t Mr. Fait* at 1 4-1446. Hawld THW fSt You Want Bargains T4 Poattee Catena* 4-deer. Bydra-matle Rad'o and haator. WhHa-walls Beautiful blut. Low down payment. ’ll Postons 3-door Hardtop. Hydra-matlp. radl., haator, whitewall tlraa: 4-4ana paint. A BWa jewel. HAUPT PONTIAC CLARKSTON MU- one mile north of U.4. U Open Brhf Tw| 1444 FORD 3-DR . FORDOMATIC. RADIO klfnUm ABAO-LUTELT NO MOHET DOWN. Assume payments of in .46 pat ate Can Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks to MI 4-1444 Hnrag Turner Pird. REACH CASH CUSTOMERS through Classified Ads. Call FE 2-8181. — 4M9ir •____i 'Cy' Owens 434 OAKLAND AVE. INOHAM-RAMBLER. IN’ SOUTH WOODWARD MI 4-3444. Used Convertible# Sale '41 Olds, Super M convertible. Power steering, power brakes, new ttrto. new top-*..' *315 'll Bm AIT M ChtTrolet Convertible, Powertftlde . (10** '67 aid*. Convertible, *oUd white, power steering, power brake*, Houghten & Son HASKINS . USED CAR SPECIALS 1447 Chevrolet 111 I door *ed*n. v-» engine, PowergUde, radio, heater. Like new condition. Beautiful red and whit* finish. . * wheel drive. I___ 58 LINCOLN---- . Larry Jerome ROCHESTER FORD DEALER - ' OL 1-tofll LINCOLN 144* PREMIERE 3-DR~ BOB FROrr, DSC. , —LINCOLN-MERCURT— MI OEM* MERCURY. IBM Russ Johnson Motor Sales LAKE ORION MY 2-2871 My 2-2381 '»•». Transmission, power steering and brakes. Radio aid hdtoer. A beautiful light green. On* owner. Hurry at 11165. - lOB FROST. INC. LINCOLN-MERCURT MI 1-3304 MERCURY. 1454 S-DR HARDTOP Automatic tranamttaian. radio and haator. Black and white. Up to thirty months to pay- 6144. BOB FROST. INC. LINCOLN-MERCURT Suburban OLDS whltowaUa, |2.*45. 8UBURBAN-OLD6MOBILE * Birmingham Just Make Payments ,'M.Plir, 3 dr-, ii 'mn.-Pu» Oto. : RlUAutoMr. Bell, PE M*)* HI Beat Bird, at Auhura BRAD Suburban - OLDS Ju»t Make Paymenta '13 OLDS; HT.. 1134 *v oolv tl mo. Dus OeL l Rite AUto Hr Bell. FE ktelii IF** Cervalr deluxe 4 dggr.JMdas.J^rlg,,?^, - T FowergHae: TfflBo heater, 7 i equipment. Comfort and ’ eawBE^- aa->wiiwr■'; .'',7. SSJTI! 633*5 lanea group. Black and finish. Save I INI Olda Dynamic "N” 4-door station wagon. Demonstrator. Hydroma tic. power- steering, power brakes, radio, healer. Many other aoeeawortae. Uho new golden mist ’ j 1544 Chevrolet I Dr. sedan ,.. |in Stock convertible, dead cond. HASKINS CHEVROLET 1960 MERCURY 2-DOOR *n team - Pull Factory Equipment - Heater. .Do- • tractors, and washers. . $2197 COMPLETE "COMETS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY LLOYD MOTOR .SALES » Ml B. SAOINAW * y' FK MU1 1*44 Punitec « dr. toarehief .. * mi 1IN Chavnflat • dr# station wagon VI AutomaBo.......... ON f*N Butak I dr. hardtop ... inn INI Ford 3 dr. («dab ......... $444 tin Chevrolet station wagon. 4 dr. VI. Antetoatto ............. *11*5 UN Btndehakeir Lark 4 Dr. .. SUM UN Btudabpkar Lark 4 Dr. .. 61IM UN Stock LeSabrs I Dr, Hard- MN INI Pontlae 4 Dr. aadaa. Aate-aaatto tranamlaaton. Lika ■tor ...............TTITvcr 61164 1*N Pontiac 4 Sr. Hardtop. Em. HQM£H HIGHT MOTORS Jttar PLACE A ’’LOST” AD. Call FE 2-8181 for In id toTecover a lo*i. Dial FE 2-8181 for an ad writer. BILL SPENCE ;v "RAMBLER” WILLAa^PT _____ boats, nfricara- appllanees. ate. On onr Bamblan or any (eod is part payment. SALES A- SIR VICE ' 256 B. SAOINAW WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC — —Birmingham Trades ~ 1350 N. Woodward NO CASH NEEDED te October 12th Ring PMr. . FB 4-1006. Lucky Auto >■ 163 d. Bbgteaw 14*4 PLYMOUTH TAVION WAO-on. Radio, heater, excellent running condition. He money down, fu't price 4155. Assume payments' of 410 month Call Credit Mgr., , White. PE 6-0403. King Auto Bales, 115 *. Baginaw, PLY. N. CUSTOM BUB. BKAUT 6 pan. 4 dr. v-6, wgn. desert beige and carnal metallic/ WW tire,* Farr. etc. Chry. LOOK! BUY! SAVE! '60tonnevUle 4-dr. H-top .... 63361 '66 PeHOn* Mr, H-top. Hyd. tl«H 'N Dart Ptonaer Mr. wagon 634M 'N Stock Moor wagon, Fwr. $2**6 ‘67 PonUae 4-dr. Bid. Trana. . .4UN •M Olds "to" Mr. B-_ ... __ 11 Bulck Convert. Power ... iuM 'll Ford Cost. Mr Law miles * 444 ’44 Chevy Impel* 2-dr. H-top 41115 '41 Mereura Mr. Mereo. RAH *10*5 'll Bulck Epee. Mr. H-top .. 513*6 '57 PonUae B-Cbtef Safari . . 41104 'll Chevy Impale canvt. PO 411*4 •M Ford Crew* Viet -Panto. 41*45 '43 Dodge h ton truck. Nice * 325 SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK Rochester OL 1-B133 ACROSS FROM NEW CAR 'BALES Open ’til 9 p m.-or Isttur' Closed Wtd. a Sat. at * p.m.- BRING YOUR -TITLE 'far on-the-spot delivery 157 Ford ,.........11095 3 DOOR. FAIRLANE "4N" — Fordomattc tranemlsslon. an the **}». *1N OR YOUR 6lO CAR ’56-Chevrolet .....*.$ S95 4 DOOR SEDAN S3N under book CAE TOWN *** TOUn 0LD ’56 Pontiac ....... .$ 495 CATAURA. Hydroma tie. radio. eShn PATkttirT^RjSijUn&HL ° ’57 DeSoto ............$ 995 .« POOR. Clittem Interior, auto-on !S5 Buick .............$ 295 RIVIERA HARDTOF. DynaflWW. radio and haator. HO DOWN PATMBfT REQUIRED. OLIVER Motor Sales a,01 RENAULT ‘SAFE-BUY’ LLOvD' MOTOR SALES LINCOLN —. MERCURY - COMET ENGLISH FORD ---*59 FORD CONVERTIBLE V-* — Automatic tranamlaaton. radio, heater and power windows, One owner. . . $1995 ’59 FORD 16-DOOR * Standard transmission, radio, heater and whitewalls. One "$1595 $2295 ' • ’52 FORD S-DOOR V-6 — Automatic tranaaii radio and heeler. . $895 ’57 FORD RANCH WAOON bisatar aSSr^hltawitoiLWA*nic# ' .$995 ’56 OLDSMOBILE 3-DOOR “66" Aatomatto transmission, radio and beater, tertra toe*. On* ewatr. $795 haator and whitewalls. Bhkrp. $1595 '58 CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERTIBLE Blik engine, automatic trammels- $1795 AmviQi. Ntir 'K hb power brtiui. Likt $1295 ’57 BUICK v MX)OR ad whltewi $995 *57 MERCURY ■ $1095 $795 MOTOR SALES 232 S. SAGINAW ■FE 2-9131 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, IMP *HHtTT-<»nr ■ -Todays Television Programs-- ChMMl 8—WJBK-TV TONIGHTS TV BMBIMHIII itW (2) Movie (began at 5 p.m.) ________01 (56) Alt' «:U (7) New*. ... •:M (4) Weather. •:«0 (2) (4) News. (7) Boot* and Saddle*. (9) Quick Draw McGraw. (56) Compass Rose. •:« (2) Newt Analyst. (4) Sports. 0:4* (2) (4) New*, Sports. (SO Friendly fan. »« (4) Faye Elizabeth. *00 (4) Dough Re ML CD News. if:M (7) Movie.______-_______ *20 (4) Play Your Hunch. (9) Ding Dong School. (?) Douse of FaMdons tttOO tt) I Love Lucy. (4) (color) Price I* Right, y (?) Divorce Hearing. (9) Romper Room • (2) dear Horizon. (?) Topper. (4) Shotgun Slade. (7) Brave Stallion. (•) Movie. June Haver “Three Little , Girls in Blue," 046). (56) Red Man’s America. 7=00 (2) Divorce Court (cont.) (4) Laramie. • (?) Bronco. (9) Movie (began at 7 p.m.) 8:00 (2) Mis* America Parade. (4) Bronco (coiit.) (p Sugarfoot (cant.) (fLMovte (began at 7 p.m.) 8: JO (2) Dobie Gillis. (4) Playhouse. (7) Wyatt Earp. (9) Encore. 9:00 (2) Supper Olympics. ^ T4) Richard Diamond. (7) The Rifleman. (9) Encore (cmt.) 0:30 (2) Comedy Spot: (4) (Color) Arthur Murray Party. (9) While We’re Young. 10:91 (2) Diagnosis: Unknown. -------(4) M-Squad. i. (7) One Step Beyond. (9) New*. 10:16 (9) Weather. 10:M (9) Telescope. 10:0012) Diagnosis (cont.) (4) U.S. Marshal. (7) Mike Hammer. Chans* o-CKLW-TV tm (2) Medic. (4)Jan Murray- — SPay hi Court Hewa Party; = (4) Loretta Young. (7) Gale Storm. , l:oa (2) Millionaire. (4) Young Dr. Natoae. (7) Beat the Clock. rnttmt. 8:00 (2) Verdict la Yours. (4) Prom Those Roots. (7) Who Do You Trust? (56) Csnturia* of Symphony 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. mmiM Hi WA J ■ ttJlO (2) l ■ 111 (7) Restless Goa. (9) Traveling Time. 42) Search for Tomorrow. (7) Queen 1 Day. (1) Terrytoon Time. «:46 (2) Guiding Light. 12:60 (9) News. (2) Our M (4) State Fair. . . (7) About Faces. \ (9) Movie. l:» (2) At the World (4) Bold journey. (?) Ufa of Riley. s Brooks. ir. "V Tm suits. • 10:55 (9) Movie. Jeanne Crain, a_____‘‘Apartment—for—Peggy," (’«). 11:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Spts (7) Bold Venture. 11:20 (2) Summer Olympics. (4) Jack Paar. (7) Citizen Soldier. 12:00 (2) Movie. Dale Robertson, . “Devil’s Canyon." 053). (7) News. WEDNESDAY MORNING 0:20 (7) Funews 8:3® (2) Meditations. 0:50 (2) On the Fm-m From 1:00 (2)' TV College. (4) Today (?) Breakfast Time 7:20 (2) Felix the Cat. 0:00 (7) Johnny Ginger 0:15 (2) Captafar Kangaroo 8:20 (7) Stage J : 0:00 (4) I Married Joan. (2) Movie. 0:20 (7) Exercise - (4) Exercise. UTTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)~ ittle Rock, where school desegregation erupted Into vtrU»rw-+ |g and 1959, today begins Ha year of mixed high school dasaeo. Officials looked * Twelve Negroes were to two ooce-white high schools. Police detailed a few officers to the two Integrated schools, Central and H011, but no opposition was expected. The president of the segregationist Capital Citizens Council, Dr. Malcolm Taylor, said his or-no demonstra- Litlfe Rock Sfarls 3rd Year of Mixed High School 4:16 (2) Secret Storm. 4i20 (4) Rnriwddr, (56) Heritage. 49) Robin Hood. (2) Edge of K'ght. 6t«0 (4) (color) George Pierrot Presents.____ (2) Movie. (7) Johnny Ginger. -(9) Looney Tunes. (56) Search tor America. •.*» (7) My Mod FHrica. (4) Hole-in-One ~ fcso (9) Jac LeGoff. "Qmm fir a Day,1 mavod Ns (earn ever I* ABC-TVs daytime srhedale. "The Jan Murray Show” should ve little trouble fitting tow the daytime rates a filler lor deter-gent, headache and ooffee commercial*. Murray tries to josh the contestants before, during and after they plav • «■«■* ‘Charge Account.” Sample josh: When a housewife-contestant aakUhat her hubby sold ladles’ girdles, Murray replied, "He keep* you- well-supported." Actually, I thought ^Murray’s gaga far from his usual standard. dren for Rock integral February 1996 school. RETAINED SEGREGATION Under the original court-an- In 196?, when nine Negroes were ordered admitted to Central High School, Gov. Offal E. Fenton The cotntrejected a bid by Ns-roes to. allow attendance on the Mis of residential areas. Negro attorneys are appealing this ruling. Ironically, hone of the 33 chfl- Lmsnrr Brftlth ruler. IS Dinner course IT The ltoUerhorm is In tbs ------s ii Stinttr M Lard* tab.) SI He enjond • ssSa^®*"" 21 Lariats IS Damssl’s name S* Emollient 5S Expunied it Hidden br 1 2 knlthts M Devil* LEGKNDABY UNO rrr rr I- P l IT rr IT “ nr IT' RF“ It r 1- i PI Tb j J I » IT JT 1 1 14 R sr .5 ETT 1 s PI IS r .1 Pi r w m fc s r 57 | the original Little suit was filed in in an integrated SHE GETS ADVICE - Teresa I Miss Alabama, has an opportunity to get a advice from real experts as she poses with five holders of the Miss America title of other years wtion' contestants and former winners registered lor this year’s Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City Monday. From left; are: Miss Rinaldi; AT fhatafaa and the Mtoees America: 1955, Lee Ann Meri-weather; 1957, Marian Ann McKnight; 1959, Mary Ann Mobley; 1956, Sharon Kay Ritchie; and 1960, load* Loo-Mead, Mias Mead will hold the title until the selection of Miss America for 19H next Saturday night. Asian Officials Say: _ _tUoh plan, No-groes were to have emend junior high schools this year. But the school board, noting that' the plan was contingent upon successful operation at the high- school, level, kept Junior high schools segregated. Another Arkansas school district, Dollarway near Pine Bluff, will begin Integration in the first grade Wednesday when Delores Jean York, I, enters the all-white cbpoL About 100 Negroes are to attend No ktAL Soviet-China iplit in Sight By RELMAN MORIN SEOUL, South Korea (AP)— Government officials of a number Asian nations are generally skeptical about reports Of X serious split between the Soviet Union UMl itod China over the question of future relations with the nan-Communist world. ‘Tyre isaH any sign of It In Foreign Hyung. TV Features By United Press International MISS AMERICA PARADE, p.tn. (2). Hie 40th annual Miss America pageant begins in Atlantic City, N. J„ with care and floats passing In review. Douglas Edwards, Bert Parks and Marilyn Van Derbur supervise. DOBIE GILLIS, 9:09 pm. (I). (Rerun) Dobie'* parents Join a itu-dents-and-parents league and suddenly find themselves ‘ 24 Smat (Scot.i HUMS (comb, form) n Ripped 31 BlAckblrdS it nnwnhis , - ___________... if matfatat * Reel retret 22 Cltrui frnlt 3t Olrmnlen cm T teiaraar B Tins of mr SI Butterfly * ------- - is Natural liiiii 41 Xsclsaatloa “ «| Dearth r j 12 OrerUme (ab.) , (word It Vewn • 4S neweonor 47 Concluitone 4* Drink bead* with matt M Scatter, ai he SI Asa Minister Chung [. "Does anybody really be-Khnjgbcbev wants peaceful coexistence A highly placed Indonesian of- integreteri darnerin 10’tArkihsas NottiiKbrea7’ says South Korean block integration. After rioting *cho#l ^ V®**- ” I “"***“ flMM *“ broke out federal troops enforced court-ordered desegregation. OPENED WITH STRIFE Faubus dosed the high schools the next year. When thqy were reopened last year, after a federal court otnw* the »—■ marching segregationists ct««h«A briefly w*h police near the school. After that, the schools were .uiet, but five integration-linked bombing Incidents have rocked the city since Labor Day of 1959. A federal court last week up-eld the school board's use of late pupil placement laws ■sign Negroes f schools. ficia] noted 4hat Moscow hod-remained neutral in Indonesia's clash with China, brought about by restrictions on Chinese merchants hi Java and Sumatra. But we do not take that as a sign that the Russians are with us and against the GUnese," he lid. The foreign minister of South Viet Nam, Vu Van-mu, said there are pro-Soviet and pro-Chinese faction* in the government of Communist North-Viet Nam. British officials in Hong Kong-le of the most sensitive listening OLYMPIC GAMES, 9 pm., 11:00 i.m. (2) Taped highlights of men's fencing, men’s track and field, I’o trick and field soccer, field hockey, wrestling and weightlifting events. ARTHUR MURRAY PARTY, |9:30 p.m. (4). (Rerun) Celebrity dancers sre fsut Wallace, Law! Peters, Buzz Miller, EHen Rae. Dick France and Imekla de Mar-n. (Color! COMEDY SPOT, 9:30 p.m. (2) Joanne Dni stem as a New York mannequin who is put through some bruising assignments by an energetic Texan, DIAGNOSIS: UNKNOWN, Hager Tulio Genovese (Johny Janis) dives into a swimming pool, not] knowing it has been wired to killj him. ONE 8fEP BEYOND, 10 p.m. (7). (Rerun). A fugitive underground agent Injures his head and becomes endowed with a high degree of extrasensory perception. Part I). JACK PAAB SHOW, 11:30 p.tn. (4). Jonathan Winters, host. With Arthur Treacher, comedian Don Adams and singer Barbara McNair. WILSON • - Today's Radio Programs-- wcab iiisn wroN (I4#» wins nsm cblA. («w« WruN Hews. 8pm *:**— WJS. Dlnoti wwj. >**. Km ' wxrh, j. Duly WVUM. CbBdMUt* WWJ, Ph. Opinion WXrZ, S. Morftn CKLW, Ju UOoff WJBK. Mbtf WCAB, Woodlln( *:*•—WJR, 7 WWJ. ¥/■ USS—WWJ. M. Byaph. cklw, s. Kate&• iv-'Os-wwj, Mttody r»r ‘ i iS^^jknu jy* WWJ. Uuale Sitt-WJB, nmra. Arrtdtr. WWJ, Hen., Rakerte wxrk, won CKLW. Boaster Club WJBK, Sara, Mans WUAR, Nana. StwrMaa WPON. Early Bird S:2a—WJK Muna Bail 7:aa—WJK Nana. Musm WWJ. Nan*. Marts ss&ssaL^ TWa—WJSL Muala KaB WSVZ. Nana. Watt WCAB Nana snarldaa S:ta—WJR. Nana, Ouaat WWJ. Nana. KNaiU WK »k|Hwa.WaM cklw . Nana. Data , ■ WCAB, Nana ' WPUN. Nana. Caaay WWJ. Rari. Marten! WXVE. Braaktaat Club CKLW. Newt. Dart* WJBK. Nana. RaM wcaC Nana. ISmB WPON. Nana Lark MOn-WJR, Jack Karris WJBK.- Nana RaM WPON. km Lark :Ik—CKLW, Myrtle Labbltt maa-WJJt. Haaltk WWJ. Nana, Lynkar WJBK, nSIk Nate IlMk-WJN. Time Jar Maala HWk—WJR. liana. Para WWJ. Nana Lyakar CKLW. Joa "Van -WPON- Nana- CanSa cklw. Jm Vaa WPON. Bob Lai* WJBK, La# 2:2k—CKLW Nana Shlft'brk. 1:2k—CKLW. Nana, 1-arlaa 4 00—WJR. Mmlc WWJ, Nuna. Ly siricL’i French Hotel Oilers Wine on Tap Rooms By EARL WILSON DIJON, France—The wife and I drove down hero to the mustard capital to look for * hotel that, so we’d heard, had free hot andi\cold running wine . . . two spigota to every room. We found it—the Hotel Terminus, down by to gare, the etetitf* and dare enough, there were two wine faucets up alongside the medicine chest la the bathroom so a guy can have a blast of wine when he’s finished brushing his teeth. (Wait till Conrad Hilton hears shoot that!) ■ ■■' ----*——---------— "The only one of its kind in the world ... inaugurated in 1954,, .it amt with groat and Immediate success,” boasts its proprietor, VIctdr Hkfllard.— We don’t doubt it—and we told Monsieur Milliard that somebody back home's awiped his idea and that ’’courtesy coffee” is now available at hotels in Chicago, Lake Tabes and deabtleae many ether cities, else from two faucets In the bathroom. For example, at the Executive Hnna* Iw ChU-ngn yn» p».H a button wfejch heats water from which, you can quickly serve yourself “instant coffee.” ★ dr ★’ “The instant Burgundy” has a little more showmanship. This is the Burgundy country—the wine-tippling bedrooms are called “Burgundy Rooms”—the wine cornea to you our of miniature casks, with one tap for white and one for red—«nd there’s s sign tbit twists ybur arm like this; “Remember that in Burgundy, wine is king. When you go to bed, drink • glass of wine. And when you get up, drink another one. THE MIDNIGHT EARL INN.Y.. Danny Kaye piloted his plane back to LA., from N.Y., his first long croas-i country trip . . . Jaclde Gleason and Lacille Ball have become telephone p»i« . . . Castro’s favorite cha cha band, Orqaestra Aragon, got a Cuban exit visa and will play here . . . There’s a plan afoot to erect a statue of Oscar Hammer-stein n in Shubert Alley Morris Levy, bon of Roulette Records, It dating, his ex-wlfe, cuvry model Cynthia Brooks. This is a big year for King Arthur's “Camelot”; the musical. “Camelot,’ opens on B*way in November; a cafe called Camelot opens soon with Vie Da-moae and Deo Drummond. EARL’S FRARL8: The divorce rat* would go down ft; Instead of marrying for better or worse, young people would try to marry for good. points In the Far E*i»(-4eBd to downgrade Ibe seriousness of any dispute between file Soviets and Red Chinese. A A ♦ Another observer, stationed does to the Communist satellites in Asia, suggested that Moscow and Peiping may be working a doubleplay to hoodwink the non-Oommunist world. A A A “Khrushchev doesn't want to be held responsible for what the Chinese do,” be said. He referred to Rad Chinese action! o der of India and file earlier events in Nepal and Tibet. “They hardly come under the heading of peaceful coexistence, he eaid. "So it's possible that the newspaper articles on the Interpretation of Communist doctrine were published detlberstely to promote the Illusion of a split.’’ Tha Soviet premier Is scheduled • visit -Pyongyang,, capital North Viet Nam in the next few weeks. A A A Officials in the anti-Communlst countries adjoining them attach litfia significance to the vistts. They do not boUeve-hls--trip has any connection with the supposed ideological controversy. In East Aaia, tbs struggle against the Commtmlsts li by no mesne theoretical. A-1 Jit A Between 5,000 and 6,000 Communist guerrillas are operating South Viet Nam. Hugs Communist farces are poised on or near the line of demarcation in Korea; ARM government officials do not consider that these are the' result of the policies of Red China tmSirwirifSK CKLW. etwa, OiHm wjbk. town*. Mw WWJ, New*. Lynktr WXrZ.I-.al Winter IKTa *CUWJ$a«i!UD*vla DEE TODAY’S BERT LAUGH: Comic Bob McFadden reports his sport* car ia so small he has to pay tho perking tickets in juvenile court. WISH FD SAID THAT: Someone recalled this truism: “Sometimes a fellow marries a girl because he cant afford to take her oat anymore.” ... that’s EARL, BROTHER. TV News md Ruriewg Jan Murray Show Recalls Old-Time Quiz Offerings By FRED DAN JUG NEW YORK (UP!)—The new TV,aresoo lev* us a peek at its 1969-1661 hairdo Monday. ' Just ai I suspected: Dandruff. NRC-TV aavkitod a naw daytime program, “The Jaa Murray Shaw,” started "Tates *1 Write Pargv” •(( on It* fifth seaasa, and somehow nsseagad to keep' kwhite.” Wanna betf What the abow lacks In inventive-nasa and Ireshmas R make* up hj§4 nostalgia. Remember those girt guktes, or hostesses, who used to guide contestants to microphons* and interrupt quiz shows by saying, “Sony, Charley, but time ia *p?“ 1 think they were fulled elbow- grebbow ie tto tmif*. Weil, Murray Is revtvlag this ancient Sri. Hia elbow - N. H. Dems Eye GOP Wrangle Hop* Three-Ring Bottle May End 38-Year Period of Political Starvation concord; N. H. (AP) - Politically hungry New Hampshire Democrats Are hopeful a bitter Republican wrangle may enable them to snatch the governorship for the first time tai 31 yean. Just like they did in the good old days on TV. I wonder how they ever managed to do a show without them? There’s also an authenticator, the college professor who rules on the acceptability of the answers, lava those old isolation booths, ‘nya. The quiz show Will rise igaln. ' IhCiddntallyr Mias Arthur and— ran Murrey turned up on “Celeb. rity Talent Scouts” last night. Miss Arthur, It turns out, Isn’t really a full-fledged elbow-grabber. She’s a pop singer. A good one, DUKBN’ MOVES 'Queen for a day,” for - five yrere a fixture on NBC-TV. I* the at pride «d joy of ABC-TV. ■ay some thing nasty sheet ARC-TV beweeSi after aM, bey cenld “The Cbarite Farreir backing separate Candidates in the Sept. 13 primary. A third GOP candidate la campaigning on <4 “plague on both your" houses’ theme and warning that tho spU could help the Democrats. The Democrats here aren't just hungry. They're starving- Even while New Hampshire wu favoring Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt in three presidential elections, the state continued to choose GOP governors. AAA The latest, Gov. Wesky PowB, as two opponents in hi* bid lor renomination to a second two-year term. They are former1 Gov. Hugh Gregg, whom Powell defeated by an eyelash in the 1950 primely. and State Rep. Wayne Crosby, who opposed much Powell’s controversial legislative program test year. Crosby is demanding abolition of county government and taking potshots at both his rivals. The return match between Powell and Gregg represents the second round of a long struggle for control of the Republican party in New Hampshire. FIGHTS‘GANG’ Powell is leading a fight against what he terms the GOP machine. His supporters have pinned the label "Concord Gang’’ on the party regulars who fought Powell two yean ago and were jolted by Me victory. Gregg is a Nashua Industrialist end former New England Council president. He is backed by many never forgiven Powell’s admirers conducting an unsuccessful election write-in drive after Powell's AefeeM* aHUSb GOP senatorial primary. I" has tost none of its charm in the shuffle. Host Jack Bailey otiU makes Mo little jokes about tha pregnant candidates on tiw Ohow and **ms ons and all _ not to faint, jeanna Cagney still bubbles. The “Queen” still cries and cornea dose to fainting. Yhef* was an extra-added attraction Monday- Bm Alexander cam* on in drng. Wearing a high-necked, ankle-length dress, Alexander welcomed Bailey to ABC-TV, introduced htewtfs *«d chU* dren and plugged his own ABC-TV He went off without shedding a tear. A A A • • -New time. New elation. New season. -Same old stuff, though. “Tales of Write Fargo,” Which faced-off for Us fifth season last night, hasn’t changed its time, station, date or—judging by the episode seen Monday—its scripts.— THE CHANNEL SWIM: “The Story of Will Rogers’’ Is being prepared as a “Project 20’’ NBC-TV special for next March. On Tuesday, Oct. 26, NBC-TV will present a one-hour dramatic special, "John Brown's Raid,” written by Hebert Creaa and directed by Sidney Lumet Production plana call for taping at Harper’s Parry* W. V*., site of Brown's abortive raid, CBS-tVo “Circle Theater’’ will present an “actual” baaed on the career of the Nail war criminal Adolph Eichmann on Wednesday, Mnnt Far From Horn* MILLIGAN COLLEGE, Tenn. UH -^finet Knowles and Judy Knagp live near each other in the Summit County, Ohio, communities of Northfield and Coventry. When they fiddly met this year, it was 500 milerawaF-at- Milligan College where both are- enrolled as first year students. ,” which starts another season ABC-TV Monday, Oct. 3, to adding four new members to the regular qsst: Jamas Holden, George Tobias, Sondi Sodsai and Laid Kai. "Not Without Honor,“ the FH- -Sir 'ZST h£ grun of nm, or Mm » MamrAnhor Kn- nedy as Alexander Hamilton and Ralph BeDamy as Thomas Jefferson. The (day deal* with the last four years In Hamilton's life. (A4««rtU*a*a Ha Couldn't Do It Sobar ~ TOLEDO, and (A-Clifford Me-Intire, 25, in court after he scrambled up a 200-foot tower over the Maumee River, agreed with charge of intoxication “I never could hlUie made it if I’d been aober,” he told Judge ; Homer Ramey who fined him $50. Gassy? Step Heart (ae 3 Tbaao Paster SarttSrt MwaMry Writ p**N KLL-AKS «*• - to* aiiBBMsmn aftjCaM** «*** 2a «a«ipi«| mm imteaSaiiw Utete. - Kt: GAS and OIL FURNACES 3r/.0ff ACC HEATING and COOLINGCO. , 1735 Williami Lk. M. Oft 3-4554 SONOTONE House of Hearing Fra* Hearing Tests VYm Parking at Rear af Building “Open fm, by Appointment” 148 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. DEAD END idSb WEDS- — Hunts Hall, now 40 years old, to shown with his new bride, Colleen Vico, 32, behind their wedding cake. The former Dead End kid and the TV actrem were married in Las Vegas Saturday, li was his third, and bar seoandL RCA COLOR TV Sweet's Radio TV m CARLOAD SALE - OVER 100 DORSETT BOATS m&^Mjiausr be sold immediately! SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS DT BUYING NOff... CARLOAD SALE PRICES NOT AVAILABLE LATER! Right on Loon Lake - Plenty of Parking 2 Miles North ef Telegraph on the Dixie Highway Come Out fox a FREE Demonstration Ride! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK DORSETT-Designed for Life On The Water! I Models or Display to Hm Water - The UHionto ia Marina Design! 15 FOOT RUNABOUT • Extremely foot and maneuverable. All Dorset t Runabouts have mechanical steering as standard equipment! Best riding 15's on the water! Til t-Lock windowshields, color keyed interiors, flotation ’-.--euwtione;-ytovy!- gunwaleguards;self-bailing safety motor wells. , » 17 FOOT RUNABOUT 3 models to choose from] 44 inches deep. Sleek, streamline beauties In a grand array of 6 different colon* - ” 17 FOOT CATALINA 2 full-size bunks, flying bridge, helmsman's seat, built-in !8 gallon gas tank as standard equipment. 10 FOOT CRUISER bleeps 4, storage ^seff-boiling motor well, stainless steel golley, sink; icebox, flying bridge < helmsman's seat, large forward hatch, 18 gallon built-in gas tank. A real honey! 21 FOOT CRUISER Sleeps 4, stainless steel galley, large storage locker, ice box, stove, sink, enclosed toilet, two 18 gallon buut-in gas tanks, flying bridge; helmsman's seat, large forward hotch. The Flagship of The Dorsett Complete Outfits: Johnson Motor, Dorsett Boat and Traitor at unheard of, fantastic prices - Highest Trade-ins Now! Only 10% Down - N months - bank rates 1out /4. fme Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains ORIando 4-0411 Readiness Phonics Dick Hclpc Salty '&* m> »>,« family Spot and Pu'lT and Tim. Tbn -is m\ little habv '/v . Tbi* » fun for me.; ‘ .f And fun for my family.'* X)h, D« V said June. ; *hu auiy# fem.iv '3Pfp Sallv * family i* funny." Which mm it different? Children. Meed te he able te distinguish likenesses and differences in erdae te K«-frtkt'Ttrtk ---' - ■:■■■■—/-----t------—- Basic Sight Vocabulary Beading for Fun Identifying sounds is n basic skill in attacking (to words. A bask vocabulary Is n massif beisse -teaching phonics. --r : :--—-r- —: ., ■:"... Ilr ^ _~ " ’ • ’/ . for Understanding, for Fun Reading for Information An effective reading program provide* for many levels and varied interests within the classroom. Reading for U rider standing After the baste shills are learned, emphasis Is plaoai so reading for understanding. THU includesInterpreting the main Idea, making lodgments sad drawing 'Aonclusiens, and organising Ideas fer the pnr-pese of reawmberlng. %^;V ilf In IcadiiRi fritiai, vide • knckgre—d far caaipeaittan Rending, writ- _ * ing, speaking, listening and observing help to ntimu- • * late unique Meta which grow inU well-writ tfn * * -IhaaMBr——-----------—---- . '; - • ‘ ^ • Speaking listening Observing . J. Grammar W&tm the writing process begins and after the corrected theme has been returned, the student faces many problems involving the basic langaage skills m pelt as the more mature considerations of logic and organisation. These skills an taaght at each grade level with nay attempt being made to provide Individual Instruction. Communication Handwriting wwciivt CUBSCS ttseso ft 3S2«ithmetic—New Program 2nd GRADE |« M amber »y»tem. 4lh GRADE | Fourth grade children explore the meaning of iivWons. 3rd GRADE | IhM grade pupile lean to eUte ah pretleaoi aa equation*. Emphasizes Student Discovery of Mathematical Principles 7th GRADE I Eg I then iHir Srnwto IWlW iiHW the hub re-of uunten, fencMIloe. prove emMm ere Me, u< then to new *Hoa tions. 12th GRADE i S3S true htnh the enphaata reaaona, and abstraction*, ■■iwptopihn, of ■nth—i ties In crown with tin ftntcat Ihtwthew hi* aehool career. Mathematics is a logical way of thought and must be taught in a logical setting. Each student is expected to recognize the relation of every new idea to an earlier one and to understand its development. —",Wi-it m r^n—f ati *nrr>/trr:"g facts. Mathematics in the twentieth century is a living suhject, not a collection of formulae or manipulations long since completed and embalmed in textbooks. 8th GRADE S^ fwlw* understanding iwwriaf. bat nrM, the funnaini ntal Mmi of Mlbnutln. /7-1. i^iVl i |\P 1 ThCM sixth trader* are using: ratio . Oil) AI wm'j I to sohre their problems. Construction to Keep Pace Aerial photographs of two of the largest school projects during the 1960-60 building program give an unusual view of the two most recent building additions. The two additions combined add space for more than 749 pupils at the junior high school level, sufficient to keep pace with junior high enrollments. Interior views show facilities which are indicative of the modern, well-designed spaces to ha found in the new additions. ☆ ☆ ☆ Seemingly, a never ending problem faced, by the Pontiac Board of Education is the need for 9 elementary classrooms and auxiliary instructional areas. Theear 1959-60 was no different from former years. Consequently, it was necessary to build classroom additions at the Herrington Elementary School, Franklin Elementary School and Mark Twain Elementary School. Pictured below are four classrooms and library at Herrington, a multipurpose room at Mark Twain (four new classrooms are not shown), and the four classrooms and library at Franklin. The three additions add space for 960 elementary pupils to the more than 13,975 pupil stations already available to the elementary grade children of the Pontiac School District _____________ __________ HERRINGTON ADDITIONS t»- -V __'" -.---. - y --r-.-:. c Maintenance Is a Never-Ending Job An example of the improvements that have been going on in the older schools (Webster was constructed in 1921) may he seen In the picture to the left. Fixed seats are being replaced with movable tables and chairs. ’Movable student work counters and filing cabinets are being provided. Inadequate light bulbs have been replaced with modern, bright fluorescent fixt hm* »mt--- ifilliig* Sit WMff Mpustfcaffy treated Devdrament Lincoln Jnnior High Science Inni Washington Jnnior Mfh Language Lsbor- Jeffenon Jnnior High Wilson BwntaUry WEBSTEB ELEMENTARY SCHOOL One of the major site projects is the leveling of the Bethune School playground. Pictured are large pieces of earth-moving equipment which are converting irregular, hilly land into a level, usable site by moving 24,000 cubic yards of earth. Floors wear out, too. An. endrgrained block floor installed when the building was erected in 1929 has been presenting increasing safety and maintenance problems. Its replacement with a modern short length maple floor, Iron bound on cork underlay, is a major improvement. The Central High Pool finally wore out after 45 years of operation. Improvements in the mechanical equipment, pool structure and the tile facings, ventilation, lighting, pool room walls, and locker rooms are now underway. The project has a scheduled completion date of September 12, 1960. BETHUNE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL SITE CENTRAL HIGH Not all of the major rehabilitation projects oooid be photographed, nor were all completed at the time of the preparation of this report. The following list of 1959-60 rehabilitation projects represents an expenditure in excess of $250,000.00. Those are scheduled for completion this faH. Baldwin Elementary css Important School Facts MANY STUDENTS ARE IN THE SCHOOLS? ARE WE STILL GROWING? Grade K4 * 1959-60 12,588 1960-61* 12,676 1961-62* 18,108 1962-68* 18,491 4,084 4,422 * QOO 4,557 2,862 225 4,499 3,267 235 —10-12 Special 8,097 205 215 TOTAL-* 19,924 20.386 20,752 21,492 HOW MUCH DOES IT COST TO EDUCATE A PUPIL? HOW IS THE MONEY USED? The cost of operating schools was $396.88 for each child in 1959-60. This is less than $2.00 a day, or 33c an hour for each pupil. The school dollar is spent in these ways: lMc Wafss U Wkir SaptorMs 14Jc AN Other Casts ...... Mi. r«»tu. WHAT FUTURE WEEDS LIE AHEAD FOR OUR SCHOOL SYSTEM? YOUR BOARD OF EDUCATION HAS THE FOLLOWING GOALS TO MAINTAIN A QUALITY SCHOOL SYSTEM IN THE YEARS AHETAD. INSTRUCTION TO CONTINUE STEADY IMPROVEMENT IN PUPIL LEARNING: —-continued up-grading of currjculums —provision of new and more efficient teaching materials —in-service education to up-grade teaching ^-adoption of new teaching methods —special efforts in reading improvement, for rapid learners, modern foreign language and other learning areas PERSONNEL TO HAVE PERSONS OF HIGH QUALITY WORKING IN SCHOOLS: . —maintain competitive salaries so we can hire and hold good teachers and othei/ employees -7- —active recruiting program to secure new teachers v'.:- SERVICES TO ASSIST PUPILS WHO NEED SPECIAL HELP: -^effective guidance and counseling for students 7 —nurses, psychologists, visiting teachers, and therapists to meet known needs of BUILDINGS our pupils TO PROVIDE EACH PUPIL A SAFE, ADEQUATE SCHOOLROOM: —new elementary schools or additions each year —an addition to Northern Senior High by 1962 or 1968 —a new junior high school by 1964 or 1965 —replace the central offices-warehouses-garage-shops on Paterson Street as the Urban Renewal Project No. 2 proceeds New and Returning Teachers ALCOTT SCHOOL MISS ALICE DAY18 MISS FRANCES HATES IMm* W Mh« ImM twfc BALDWIN 8CH00L MRS. HELEN HENDERSHOTT EuKr. Mlchlgaa UainnMi rW Ora4a. MRS. LORETTA JANICKI MISS BARBARA HOPPER MISS SHEILA TURNER % ■all Mata Taaahara CaUcia, laMaaa BETHUNE SCHOOL MR. HOWARD KILBREATH MISS PATSY McFALL CENTRAL. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL MR. HAROLD ROSE »«!•« MMt Valvcnity, Ofcft* MISS SUE WISENBERG Ml Mala Taaltn (Mm laglaaa EMER8QN SCHOOL MRS. WILMA CERRE »«SrSS.S«a.w Vfc MISS MARILYN KEIVIT _ ESSOA**" FRANKLIN SCHOOL MRS. GERTRUDE STRICKLAND Mafaa Ma*a MwMr * MRS. LENA WELLS ssrj^LsrsSL. MR. EZEKIEL WRIGHT IMh ftMii. Ana IMi Grate ♦MRS. DOROTHY YANCEY HERRINGTON SCHOOL ♦MRS. ELEANOR BEAVER gain} Michigan Ualeerelly IM Gnla MISS PATRICIA HUGHEY MRS. BETTY McQUIGGEN MALKIM SCHOOL MR. CHARLES HAZEL EllUtafl Stale llllfinllv PriaelMl ♦MRS. WINIFRED LEE NvmMy ef MIcU|m Tklrd Grade ^ miss ann McDonald Mtcfclfee Stale IMvinllf MMintiM* ' ^ . MISS AGNES HkltWY ; ' McConnell school ♦MRS. MARGUERITE BURNS Wwte State University Kindergarten /'*S» OWEN SCHOOL MISS NORMA KOESSEL Mlchlgaa Mat. Ual.ctaUr —ThUCraaa MR. RICHARD ROHE ROGERS SCHOOL ♦MISS MAE BURNHAM Mlahlaaa Slat* UalvenMy Plral Gralc MRS. MARION DEMPSEY TWAIN SCHOOL MR. RICHARD DEMPSEY MRS. CAROL ANN BROCK Michigan stale loir .ratty Thirl Grag. MR. BURTON CAVE ♦MRS. PATRICIA DUBY Eastern HleMlii ViivtriHy |Metgarte» MR. ROBERT KRIIGEL MISS NORMA LUSBY Baatera Kentacky State Tea eke re Celle ge Fleet Grade MRS. EVELYN MATHURA Naafh CaraMaa Callaia KSdargartaa MRS. MIRIAM ROSE verttr1* MISS ELSIE WEBER *Mtm Mlchlgaa Ualrcratty liml aag Third Grm«aa WEBSTER SCHOOL ♦MRS. ELIZABETH McMINN WHITFIELD SCHOOL MRS. KAY DUMMIER Eaatora Michigan UatocraM? ♦MRS. JEAN OSTRANDER MRS. PEGGY PETTI MRS. ELIZABETH MADDEN MISS NANCY PETERSON egfrMMytm —an* MRS. SHARON SIGMUND MRS. JUDITH WEGNER RSKLttMTVSL IRVING 8CHOOL MRS. MARIE CAN1BELL e"** * Wtmuitm LcRARON SCHOOL MRS. ANNICE HANCOCK ghtjjhiaaa^ilgl lar *«aa LONGFELLOW SCHOOL MISS JANICE MARQUIS Mk*a* *Teaehers returning after leave of absence WILLIS SCHOOL MR. GARY FANGBONER MR. PALMER SWANSON Ntrtktra Mteklg a a C elle*® Plsflfe Grade WISNER SCHOOL MR. ARTHUR GOFF ELEMENTARY PHYSICAL EDUCATION MR. WALTER GILLIARD UatrayaMy •» hialaihr MR. CHALMER HIXSON MRS. ELAINE ROE chiral Minin erarain MR. JEROLD STRICKLER SPECIAL EDUCATION MISS GEORGIA ANNAS JegtoraJIglrhlgaa Uai.craHy MR. RUSSELL ATTWATER B&^Saetigfflhe MISS NADBNE BORSVOLD MISS SHEILA DOUGHERTY MR. PAUL GRHMAN M Mala Ttachrra CaMaga, laMaaa Sfeerh Carreetl— MR. JOHN HAWKINS Virginia Mia Callage MaalaMf ■aaglcanarg. Jrlfrraaa MISS SANDRA SCOTT Mlrhlaaa Mata IMnnMi Tearhiag lh< BMad. Alratt MRS. RUTH SUGG8 • Wan Mala IMaaraMy MrlaNg ■aaMr*n«. Wllaee MISS FOSTINE WATSON MR. KENNETH YOUNG Calfiiam- It thUrigj r WiameSfK. Waahiagtoa INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC MR. BURTON APPLE Mlihlgaa Mala llalnlf ♦MR. GEORGE ECKROTH •eld ala-Wallace CaMaga, Ohla MR. GERALD IRISH Mlahlaaa Mala WinU- MR. EARL SOMERVILLE MtoMgaa Mata UatoctHy EASTERN JUNIOR " HIGH SCHOOL MRS. CONSTANCE COLLINS Mlrhlgaa Mato Cal reran? tlllaaae ♦MRS. BOBBIE COMPARONI MIL CHARLES IWAI MR. ARTHUR KATSER MRS. JOYCE THOMPSON ♦MRS. MARILYN TOMCZAK MR. JOHN WOLKKNHAUBR feftg* 11ll JEFFERSON JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL MRS. GERTRUDE COLEMAN asay-*- MR. SIDNEY SAVAGE MISS SHIRLEY TANT teLar*- * LINCOLN JUNIOR lllGH SCHOOL pH MRS. MARY CHOATE gagga Mlchlgaa BIcgiaMy MRS. LOUISE HERMANSON pahnncmii . Vi nl Man i MR. CHARLES RICKARD MIL DONALD SMITH gsaatorjjsa?*" MR. ROBERT WALKER V06Stm MADISON JUNIOR HIGH 8CHOOL MISS JACQUELINE BERTISON Mlrktiea Btete tlalunMy Bertel Bledlea MISS KAYE COHRBLL University^ nf Kenterky ♦MRS. BETTY FOURNIER gk|J|alvmMf MR. LAWRENCE JOHNSON Rest ere Htchi|M UeivereMy WeedeBep ♦MRS. NELLIE LOWE ♦MRS. ROBERTA McCANDLESS , NertK west ere University Bee lei Bled let MR. ROGER MATSON v Central Mlrhlgaa Uelverelty MRS. CAROL PACKARD Vlivtnilf at Mlrhlgaa GeMeeee : MR. JOHN THOMPSON gb^WhtoWracMly MR. KEITH WOLF WASHINGTON JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL MISS BETSY CARHALL Mlainl^ Uai.tr.lt;, Ohla MR. SETH CUMMINGS MISS CAROL CUMPSON Mtahlgaa Mala UalerraMy MISS VIRGINIA HAROUTUNIAN fsrtur***" m MR. GLENN HARTMAN ■topi Mato CatoartHy I . MRS. ELIZABETH KING Wa;aa Mat. Uiil.rr.Hy MR. ARTHUR LEE MISS MARY MUELLER ZSSmJSp*" Vm>,trmT MISS BLAINE PYRROS P^aajiato. Ualr.r.lt, MR. WILLIAM ROGERS PONTIAC CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL MR. KENNETH BROWN MR. PAUL DELLERBA MISS MARILYN FAIR MWMim Btete University ■enieHeg ♦MR. GILBERT GLEASON Central Mlchlgaa lal«.ratty ■aim ___ MISS GRETCHEN HUBACKER Mlchfta. Mato OntrcSiy MR. CHARLES PACKARD gtohj^^^learat, PONTIAC NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL MR. ANTHONY CHURILLI Maaafirtd Mato Taaahan CaMaga, fa. MR. DAVID SCHMIDT RSrtSA—------r An Expression of Thanks for Your Confidence and Support The Weather THE PONTIAC PRSMffiOVER PAGES 118th YEAR ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6.JW0-88 PAGES v^JSSSt^SV^Tma' ~ ‘ ,. 88 having his Hag at [the top of that staff. He whipped every hurdler in the world except two countrymen. , A Pontiac man. Wyman E. Nelson. 48. and his wife lone, 43. >1 151 W. Princeton Ave., were killed instantly Monday in a two-car col-lision near 8printfield. Ky. there's man-made magic in standing on the Olympic victory Mrs. NetrOn’* father, Harrison Taylor of I/mdon, also was killed. there wereflva persons in each, car, police said. The other seven are in critical] condition at a hospital in Spring-deli. Tattle on Our Spying 2 U.S.Defectors in Soviet ‘to Stay MOSCOW tffl—Two young code clerks from the super-Aecrit U.3. National Security Agency turned up in Moscow todiay with tales that the United States is even on its allies under a policy they feel will lead World War JUT Bemon F. Mitchell, SI, of Eureka, Calif., and Wil-Ham H. Martin, 29, of Ellensburg, Wash., announced’ • y’. j 4they have defected to IN • i* in I Soviet Union and Intend to Pontiac Burglar Slain by Police become Soviet citizens. Ex-Convict Caught in Attempt on Gas Station in Bloomfield Twp. A 28-year-old Pontiac man was shot to death last night while tinning to escape Bloomfield Township police when he was-caught burglarizing a service station. Killed with a single shot while running from police was Thomas Wright Jrl of 275 Rockwell St., a former Jackson Prison inmate. They said the United States had broken' the code of friendly nations and even planted a spy ir a friendly embassy. Wright was discovered la the Shell Service Station, 14U Telegraph Read, at Orchard lake Read, shortly before 11 p. m. by Patrelmaa Jerry Weaver, M, during a routine bent cheek. Weaver radioed for help, and Just as other officers arrived Wright jumped through a* large ptot^-glm-wintiiBW' from .inside *-ti# station and ran towards the back of the building. Shouts to halt from Weaver and Bloomfiled Township Police LC Newton Tubbs tailed to atop Wright. Two warning shots in the air alao failed, they said. Both Weaver and Tubbs then fired at Wright on* of the bullets hitting him and dropping him immediately. Wright died two hours later in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital- m police found three tires and a bag of pennies from a vending machine outside the station. Police are looking today for other person they believe may hive been with Wright to help cart spray the stolen goods. The Soviet Union put the two on display under television lights to the gilt-ornamented Journal-lots Club. Crain a platform, the two detailed their complaints against the United States and spilled fo newsmen what they said were NBA communication*- Rep. John W. McCormack, 11-Mass., said recently that the pair, who were bachelon and close friends, had taken with them "valuable cryptographic information-’ concerning secret codes. The top secret agency with which they worked waa a defense unit engaged in intercepting radio signals and in communications Intelligence. Mitchell and Martin refused to tell how they got to Moscdw from NSA headquarters at ft. Meade, Md. "That wfald prevent other* from taking the same route," they said. The two left Ft. Meade late la June an vacation, ostensibly to visit relatives on the Wool Coast. Mitchell and Martin professed o belieye that U. S. policy may lead to World War Iff. They complained chiefly of* American reconnaissance flights over Soviet and the rim of Red China, but said nothing about the May Day U2 flight for which’ the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Senator Rips Into GOP Oakland Labor Picnic By MAX K. SIMON 8en. John F. Kennedy, ripping Into the Eisenhower administration, told a cheering crowd of 15,000 persons' at the Oakland County AFL-CIO picnic yesterday that Democrats will fight for a piedical care bill for the aged "which is not based on a pauper’s oath.” * The Democratic presidential hopeful highlighted the +abor Day rally in Pontiac’s. Oakland Park as he, stumped through Michigan, addressing and waving to crowds at Detroit, Pontiac, Flint and Muskegon. “No one is satisfied with what is happening to this country,’’ Kennedy de- clared. "I say this not as a Democrat — but asan American who believes in his country." Hia Pontiac audience, uproariously and openly partisan, yelled it* approval of Kennedy's slashing attack on Republican rule. ••We ate not trying to tear Ike, Nixon Are Targets oi Reuthe units have charged." Kennedy GUEST OK HONOR — Two Democratic candidates flank Sen. John F. Kennedy, (heir party'* standard bearer, at the Oakland AFL-CIO Labor Day picnic in Pontiac'yesterday. To the left of the Massachusetts senator is James Kettis, candidate fqr the 18th District seat in Congress. The other candidate is incumbent Senator Patrick V. McNamara. Donna Threatens |Moveg to Avert Civil War East of Bahamas U.N. Captures Radio Leopoldville MIAMI. Fin. (AP)—Hurricane Dornta, with seven dead in its wake, whirled west northwest in the Atlantic today, *tfll a threat to tiie U.S. mainland. movement to 1* miles per hoar hut etHI packed Winds up to US miles per hour over a small area Early today the season’s fourth tropica] storm was about 200 miles east southeast’ of Turin Island in the Bahamas and 800 miles east-southeast of Miami, the nearest mainland point. The hurricane's path indicated it may pass to the east of the Bahamas. "But we are not satisfied to he second to alfy other power. "We are not satisfied that all who want jobs cannot find them. "We will not be satisfied until all who want jobs can find them —at decent pay ” DKMH •FOR THE AGED’ Kennedy charged that while Democrats sought to aid the. nation's senior citizens "the Republicans have a 'Not Welcome’ sign over Republican national ! headquarters.” ’ 1 Only one Hr publican senator LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP)—The Urtwa* Nations teak fOwnvnhtt. and * over radio Leopoldville today bannpd all broadcasts. The measure was taken as part of the UN. mandate to maintain peace and order in the nation, tottering on the verge of civil for power pith President Joaeph poid II, where the July army -3, --- S3 mutiny tiered up and swept the Congo, remained quiet. Living in the giant camp were an undetermined number of Soviet and sateUtte personnel brought to the Congo by Lsmufnbo. At toe same time Cange Command ha* tightened control ever all airports serving Its operation*. AH civilian traffic was halted. Premier Patrice LumuiAba called for an emergency session of Parliament to seek a vote of confidence in a showdown fight Lumumba acted after a rush of events in which K**avubu went ;ot) the air in a. dramatic move hlonday night and announced the fiery premier's ouster. The latter countered by taking over the net-and announcing he had fired Kasavubu as chief of state. DETERMINED Claiming they have the support of the Congolese army, Lununh-supporters issued the call to both houses after an all-night Cabinet session. Lumumba was plainly determined to keep his job (despite Ka- Pontiac's Mighty Proud of Hayes Jones; He Outhurdled Most of the World's Best Ry HAROLD A. FITZGERALD Publisher, The Pontiac Pram ROME — Pontiac’s Hayes Jones finished a gallant third in the finals of the Olympic high, hurdles here yesterday. Two teammates, Lee Calhoun! and Willie May. forged ahead, but the Pontiac boy saved third pia« for the United States by * tremendous dash into Die tape after clearing the last jmrdle. Martin Laser, world record holder, waa a step ahead, but Jones put the acoriehriar right an the floor and nipped the Qer-maa by laches. The golden fleece of ,hurdling luded him by a lew scant yards, but he put up -an heroic fight and P&ntiac is proud. . ■up THE LADDER Yes, Pontiac is proud of the little Negro boy who ran his heart out a few years ago fo win kbc The Hayes Jones Rooting Club of Section Six was augmented today by a grand looking English woman arid her husband from Sou Africa. For Additional Details See Page 22 That made about a dozen sorted nationalities and we gave Hayes top vocal support from the .crack of the gun. At the .end an Australian turned to an Englishman sod raid: ‘1 say, who Won the race?" And the reply was: “Hanged If I know. I waa just watching the Joaea chap, you know." savubu's charge that under the .premier’s leadership the Congo was [dunging into fratricidal strife andsUdlng~towufd"thrSoviet bloc. As dawn broke over the tease capital, it appeared that La ■numbs was still in authority. Kasavubu's house was surrounded by U.N. Ghana troops manning light machine guns.' * Jason’Senwe. secretary ■ Mercury to Flirt With High 80s for Few Days Temperatures ara expected to be in the high 80s during the next few days. The low tonight is expected to be 88 and the high tomorrow about B, the weatherman says. Precipitation far die period will total about one-tenth of an inch In widely scattered thundershowers, most fikely Wednesday pensation checks impossible to It is unbelievable, but in this day and age the average wage tor laundrywomm in this country is only 65 cents an hour."1 Kennedy said "the nation must move ahead.” DOUBT BACKING yeutrai observers to the C capita) doubted that Parliament would give Lumumba the . confidence vote he seeks. Hie Senate has been particularly critical of the volatile premier’i dictatorial policies. Morning southwesterly winds at two miles per hour will become southerly at 8 to 15 miles tonight and southwesterly Wednesday. fifty-seven waa the lowest cording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a m. At 1 p.ta. the reading'was 82. Additional Rally Photos on Page 17 Speaking'ahead of Sen. Kennedy. Reuther had this dig for golf-enthusiast Eisenhower: •flTie American people don't begrudge the President his endless hours behind the golf ball, but they do say when he puts the American people behind the eight ball that we are going to do something about it in November.” •file Massachusetts senator said all citizens must be provided “decent homei, decent schools—and 'That is what we are fighting tor,” he asserted. _ to foreign policy,, Kennedy declared: "Three years ago the American ambassador was the second moot powerful man to Cuba. Today the Soviet ambassador is the second most powerful in Cubs. “I am not satisfied to see the people of Latin America who looked to us for leadership now iContinued on Page 2, Col. 3) For Nixon there was the epithet 'tricky Dick” and a charge of political doubletalk” during the current presidential campaign. * Although giving lip-service to federal aid to education, Nixon as president ef the Senate cast the .tie-breaking vote against an aid bill Inst session of Congress. Reuther charged. Reuther quoted Thruston Morton, Republican national chairman, as having said on a television show that Sen. Gofdwater, a cod-servative, was the “most popular” man at tlu/GOP convention that nominated Nixon.. ' ‘SAME OLD LINE' , d Morton's remark ref* resented the true spirit of (Continued on Page 2; Col. 21 - ajarly an hour late Monday sight. He accused Kasavubu of (reason sad appealed to "youth and workers of Ike Congo” to defend the republic. Hie sprawling army Camp" Leo- 11 wi*i boosted tq> Iqr. . HHthe gAagc at (he. Labor Day ■HnSi? hi Charles Phillips Jr„ VfC. OsONttSL, Madlma Heights. >' » : ffl L» •« A . ■ . f ^ ~':£L w n^orfol injury Occurred tvtry fO Minutes on 'Country'* Highways CXmfflc accidents during the nation’s Labor Day weekend killed an-average of one person nearly ■every 10 minutes. Tte toll, with final figures still to come, passed the 400 mark at tIn end of the 78-hour holiday per- But the council said late reports may boost the final count to its estimate and pogpUdy set a record for the holiday. The Associated Press count of accidental deaths since 6 p m. last Friday until last midnight showed 409 in traffic. 24 in boating. 81 drowning* and *1 from miscellaneous causes. The over-all total, Was 595. .in last year's Labor Day holi-' day period, also covering 18 hoursi1 there were 438 traffic deaths, 29' persons were killed In boating he-1 cidents. The over-nil toll of 81) compared with the record of 658 met in the 1951 Labor Day week- . .The nation's highways were Jpmnwd throughout the long weekend. The weather was mild in jpast areas. It alao was the lad weekend holiday of the summer FYaakUn D. Roosevelt Holliday Deaf Pis Reach Grim to Be Discussed The Day in Birmingham J?oad Toll lops 10Nationally 4ft. It was sihort of the National [ __r___( Igety Kennedy's KENNEDY IN PONTIAC — Sen. John F. heads down Saginaw street toward1 Oakland Park where the Massachusetts senator was the featured speaker at the Oakland County AFLrCIO Labor Day picnic. . Beside the Demo- cratic presidential nominee are Lt. Gov. John B. Swainaoo (left* and James Kellis, candidate for the 18th District seat in Congress. Gov. Williams and his wife, Nancy, are in front. Eisenhower, Nixon Blistered by Reuther (Continued From Page Republican Party and the liberal-orientated platform under which Nixon is campaigning is “the same old. Republican merchandise in a new package." ■oather Mt the OOP raeard oa madleal care tor the aged and won rraensdtog applaass with bio remark an MepnbWcas op wngn to ItJU sa hour: "Every politician in Washington whooppoaed this should be forced fo live on *1.25 an hour until he changes Ms mind." Charging the -Eisenhower ad- Crowd Cheers of 15,000 Kennedy iContinued From Page One* looking to - Khrushchev and Peip- Kennedy asked for "help In the campaign to rebuild the country which we believe." INTRODUCED BY WILLIAMS Introducing the party standard* bearer was the man who turned the state into his political empire -r-Gov. G. Mennen Williams. popularity undlmmed—at least in the ranks of labor—Wil* The Democratic caravan also countered some minor heckling en route to Pontiac. It was accompanied for a by edrs plastered with Bagwell, Nixon, and Lodge stickers, a line of similarly decorated ears was parked at the edge of Oakland Parte. ministration with "seven leait,iams was loudly applauded as years.” Reuther won more cheers he ■H: Echo Timetable i6r Tonight, •Next Two Days r DETROIT « — Were are approximate times when Michigan skies Curing the next aff' ^P- 4h» gtvea are the elevafton, «ito direction at Which the natel tontoM be vtalkto and the «-motion to which It will to moving acroM the HyS i'~'k T TODAY—I: M p.m.. tow south, northeast; *t«B p.m.. overhead Xante, northeast; 7: OS p.m.. Ugh * tots p.m.. 11:81 “It’s time to bring the capital beck town Wall Street to Wato-inglon." With big business as an economic advisor, Reuther continued, the administration “has been helping the rich to get tidier while the people are being exploited by a group of aeiflsh economic kits that have taken country.” Reuther charged the nation has, failed to grow economically aa it should have since 1962. He cited unemployment figures, the fact that the steel industry is running at only about pacify, and losses In farm income .While retail food prices have rlgen. WEDNESDAY—«: SI p.m., tow Wuth, northeast; 4:89 p.m., ever i to4l p.m., ; 8:81 pm., r t h, southeast; • 18:58 p.m.. medium south, south- Dig toward Gold Miners •’^BOKSBURG, South Allies (UPIlj ^'jftescue workers fought against time today to dig out 16 gold joiners stiff trapped 7,00d feet underground three days after a min-Rjyshaft caved in aqa killed 12 .native workers. All la were be-ttged to be alive “I never bad toe leaden ef labor la Michigaa ask for anything that waa art for the good of all the people to the slate.” Williams said that the GOP fought Social Security in 19)5 “tried to repeal what the I Deal brought” in 1960. And. the governor said, the Republicans passed the Taft-Hartley Act in 1947. "And this year, they tried to make M wane." ■ITS AT NIXON Williams swung hard at Ken-sdy's Republican rival, Vice President Richard M. Nixon, Kennedy stuck to his promise I to attack Nixon directly while the vice president is hospitalized with a knee infection.) Ml factoring fobs have been lost under Elsenhower — 180,000 of them la try la toe last five y< Pointing’to the Pontiac Motor Division plant across Montcalm Street bom where he was standing, Reuther said employment there has been trimmed almost half in the past five years! The UAW leader called tor a rw administration id Washington that would wort) for full employment and full production. He urged an end to "drift and stagnation" under the Republicans and said tiie nation needed ‘inspired. affirmative, adequate" leadership ,to answer "the call to greatness." “Only an America fully mobilized with full employment and full production can provide leadership for peace and freedom world." gtfiool il Aid Assurod fl5&jSTIN, Tex. (AP) — Texas 38$. -Gen. Will Wilson ruled to- (|m that Houston schools will not lose their state aid if they kite grate because integration was . fogged by federal courts. The Weather PUS i s Wulkcr Sanaa »<»•' roarruc add vktwitt-m^ut mm* man «a«a*. MhWht »■■ •*---3. Sitasw ss aai the law iaalfhl BCfaBUPtert' *toto. Defectors in Soviet; Tattle on U S. Spying Continued From Page One) Soviet Union gave Francis Gary Powers a 10-year sentence. CHARGE PERSECUTION They said one.of the reasons they left the United States was persecution there of persons who do not believe in God. They attacked what they calletj harassment of thqse with unpopular political views. ‘Talents of women are encouraged and utilized to a much greater extent in the Soviet. Union than In the United States," they said in a statement. "We feel that this enriches Soviet society and nukes Soviet woolen more desirable as mates. "It is a difficult and painful experience to leave our native country, families end friends, Yet we felt that the United States government, In carrying out policies dangerous to work! peace, should not be allowed to rely on these emotional attachments to guarantee the loyalty of its citizens." Kennedy drew squeals of delight from teen-age 'girls who threat-ened to swoon at the sight of the From Pontiac the Kennedy motorcade headed for Flint. The senior caused a minor traffic Jam at a Waterford Township gas station. Williams was not nearly as gen- On IS key labor-management issues In which Nixon voted la Congress, Williams charged, Nixoa voted anti-labor 14 to 11 The response was a loud "No! "I knew you’d say that," Wl Iiams said. ' "Our stand is — No Nixon, No Republicans)" Williams said that Kennedy had voted “right" on 33 labor-management issues; Massachusetts aa “a great American, a faithful friend Of labor, and the next president of the United Stoles." Kennedy Introduced himself as it home in Pontiac," "I drive a Pontiac car," he explained. and added: "Ml bet some of you make them." Before launching his attack on the Republicans' national policies, Kennedy threw a barb at Oakland County GOP Chairman Arthur G Elliott Jr. who had complained because Republicans hadn’t been touted to speak at the ptenir. He put in plugs for the Democratic state candidates in Michigan. particularly gubernatorial nominee John B. Swaineon and Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, both >f whom were with Mm in Pontiac. Jowtsh' WoifarB Board Executive Is Dead at S3 NEW ROCHELLE. N. Y. Samuel D. Gersbovitx, 53, efcect* tive vice president to the National ‘ Ish Welfare Board, died Moo-after a brief illness, had been active In youth centers in set . flatter Mem joining Ike welfare wnzs. to 1939. miim "I understand he’s been invited sd is here,” Kenedy raid, hope he gets the message and The nearest thing to a Democratic disappointment la Michigan yesterday came when the crowd la Detroit's Cadillac Square for Ms main speech hit •MM or teas — by seme estimates slightly smaller than Adlal E. Stevenson drew la I8M and considerably under the Hairy 8. Truman turnout la IMS. At the State Fair police tried to keep Kennedy from mingling in the crowd and shaking hands, but ^V^r^ ntotoroade trav» Al Oerter pointed the United States toward two more Olympic gold medals today. Johmota, world record holder , from Klngsburg, Calif., rallied on the discus throw and regained the lead from stubborn C. D. Yang of Formosa after seven events of the gruelling 10-event decathlon competition. With three afternoon events to go^-the pole vault, Javelin' and !;• 300 meter run — Johnson had 6,281 points to 6.137 tor Yang, who (ticked up many a pointer from Johnson when both were attending UCLA. ♦ ft 0 Yang had Jufnoed into the lead when he did 14.6 in the sixth decathlon event, the 110-meter hurdles, to Johnson’s' mediocre 15.3 Seconds. * But Johnson took over once again when he threw the discus 159 feet, one inch to a mere 1366 for Yang, Russia’s Vasiliy Kuznet-drawing closer with every event, was running third after seven events with 5,784. IT’S WILMA AGAIN — WUma Rudolph of Clarksville, Tenn., crosses finish line towfo ’ finals of 200-meter dafh by four yards at Olympics In Rome Monday., At extreme left, ptrtiy Three Titles lor U5. Boxers ROME <0 — ’’Three-for-three" yelled United States boxing coach Jules Menendez as he ushered his third Olympic Games boxing gold medalist to the dressing room. Menende*. from ban Jose, Calif, mw bach of his three final-hit* rack up a gold medal finish he congratulated each of his, win- ■t after Oerter had In defense of hla vlth a In the gruelling 10-day ring competition. A-capacity turnout of 15,000 m hand for the finals Monday night. The shdw climaxed a 273-bout tournament, which saw 283 fight’s in action from a record 54 coun-ics. America’s three flnaltoto-light-middleweight Willie McClure. Toledo, Ohio; middleweight Eddie Crock, Fort Cafopbell. Ky.; and light-heavyweight' Cassius Clay, Louisville; each racked up a tied-for his gold medal. Italy, with nix men In the’ finals, also wound up with three gold medals. Poland and Raasla with lour and three men respectively In the final*, each won Menendez chirped with pride i And all in turn lauded" him (or taking them fo the top. fit McClure won a 4-1 edge in out* pointing Italy's Cartnelo Bokm. Fans hoped the verdict, and McClure said he was a little Surprised by the win. * h f _ just too tight in that first round, and Boss! was hard to get tq with his style,” McClure said. ”1 just couldn’t get In a good punch In the drat two rounds,” the slim Ohioan added- “Then Julie told mo I hod to go real mod Frank Lory In the ninth Inning to protect the one-run Nyi The Tigers collected only four hits to the tint gome, but two of then were home runs. Charlie MaxWefl hit n two-run homer and Norm Cast got Mast.' Al Kaline drove other run with a single Tigers pinned the defeat on Jim (Mudcat) Grant. Grant fanned 10 batters and reliefer Den Newcombs whiffed two. Three line drive double plays helped Fischer out of trouble. Ex-Tiger Tito Francoha was FlacherJ Mg problem. Francona singled, doubled and got his 14th home run, driving In two of Cleveland’s runs. Another foefoer Detroit player, Bubba Phillips, gtofoeoftec_with a home fun. The Indians wrapped up nightcap early, handing Pud Foy-tack his 10th detent in 12 decisions. Woodie Held smacked a two-run homer in the first. Ken Aspro-monte and Vic Power Singled across runs In the second and third. Then Barry Let mao, who Viewed Bosky Oslnvtisx «h home ran wHb a man on bane In tin second, provided the re* of the heroic*. Phil Regan pitched two hitless Innings after Foytack was lifted for a pinch hitter but Latman — stronger in the late inninge-got five of the last 16 outs on strikes nd the Tigers couldn't square the Banned Caqer Spivey Appeals to NBA Board CINCINNATI (AP)-BUl Spivey, banned from playing in the National basketball Association, appealed his cade by letter'Monday to the NBA' Board of Governors. Spivey sent letters to the board asking them to appoint s special three-man group to hear his ap- •al President Maurice Podofotf of the NBA tost Thursday rejected Spivey's contract with the Cincinnati Royals. Spivey, former 7-foot Kentucky star, was tried on a charge of perjury in New York in 1953 in a point-shaving scandal. The case ended In a hung jury. GALS SHOW ’EM HOW — Brazil's Maria Bueno (left) and Carole Wright of New Vork City demonstrate tennis techniques during match Ar rhatetax in women’s division of National Tennis Championships at Forest Hills, N.Y. Maria won, 6-4, Seeded Players Pacing National Tennis Meet FOREST HILLS, N. Y. (AP)-t hope," Chuck McKirtey said wistfully today, "all I need is experience. I know I’ve had plenty of opportunities to win big ones.” McKinley, a sophomore at Trinity University in San Antonio, Tex.; is one of America’s big in, international tennis—if not this ^year, thdh a year or two in the future. * starting singles berth If he shows well in the National championships, he might get Michigan Softball Crown to St. Clair By The Associated Press St n-ir beat Dearborn 5-1 at Lsnsiig Monday to repeat as Class A champion of the Michigan Softball Tournament. Ypsilnntl beat Zeeland 2-1 Lffwhiy for foe girls’ dans A tt- At Niles, St Joseph downed Bay fStv 241 lor the men's Class B title “ndKatarazoo nipped Midland 9-5 for the Kiris' championship. b CfomC, Sebewatag del Flint Al’tor fo* men’s titk fold B«y dty downed Port Huron 1-6 to repent *6 the girts’ tititat. Chesaning nipped Livonia 4-3 to tone innings 8or foe men s QassT) title wbOo Bay City mkmxn*Yfo aft.*a io-9 for'the women y title. Dodoring Your Golf By DR. CARY MIDDLECOFF PATIENT’S COMPLAINT: “Can’t tuni freely on my ■ backswing.” ' DIAGNOSIS: Yota’s* spread yourself too much. TREATMENT: Many golfers who’ve been hitting the -ball well after playing fairly regularly for several weeks fond to lose the rhythm bf the swing suddenly and un-accountably. All at once they find themselves no longer taking a. free turn on the backswing and unable to reach a good hitting position at the top. More often than not, a check will show that thb stance has been unconsciously allowed to widen too much. Having boon hitting the ball fairly long and straight, the player < slips Into a tendency , t* spread ont mops and lortojr la hit It even longer. Pint thing you know, ho has widened Venezuela in the final round of the North'American Zone Davis. Cup competition to Cleveland starting Sept. 15. not really satisfied with my game,” he continued. "If .a player ever is satisfied, then he’s to trouble.” . McKinley spent three hours to trouble in the second round of the Nationals Monday against Martin Riessen of Hinsdale. 111., while a; crowd of 9.000 stored in disbelief. attack dropped the first set atid permitted Riessen to get to set point five times to the second set. I "I don’t know why, but I never L seem to have it easy,” said Mo-| Kinley.; ’‘But', bn the other hand » Marty has a good service. If your ; |! opponent has a halfway decent service, you never are going sweep through real easy.” Meanwhile. Russia pulled ahead of the U. S. in gold medals j- 22 to 21 — by takirtg the first final of the day — the free pistol shooting. The champion was Alexwy Gust-chin, who scored 590 of a possible 600 points to break a 24-year-old Olympic record ot 559 set by Torsten Ullman of Sweden in 1936. 4t ♦ * ‘ The .Americans picked up five old medals Monday in track and boxing with a minimum of surprises or upsets and stood right behind the Russians in the unofficial team scoring race. The Soviets had 38514 points to America’s 355Mj. hi to If. a trouble then Uoo la the fact that the USSR now goes Into gwmastics where they will undoobtMty pile up e boodle ot medals, ate# In wrestling and shooting, where** Uncle Sam has nearly finished Mg scoring. Trade and field hbld foe major interest. WUma Rudolph, the newly crowned 100-meter Olympic chant-! pic champion, added the 200 meters for a rare double and she did tills racing into a headwind that preceded a savage rainstorm. In spite of foe wind, she beat out a brilliant field in 24 seconds, remarkable time under the circumstances, if short of her Olympic mark of :23.2. • . i If the Moot-ll Clarksville, Tenn. girl can anchor the U. S. success-againstjfU||y fa the women’s 400 meter re- Pott Gains 1st Major Golf Tourney Triumph big In the third, *o I did. And I pulled It out.” Middleweight winner- Crook, the 31-year-old Army sergeant, stood Impassively on the dais to reccivp his gold, medal for scoring a derision over Tadensz Waiasek of Poland. He smiled only when Avery Brundage, International Olympic Committee president placed the award aroiind his neck fans lustily Jeered the 3-2 verdict. # * * . •They could have booed. all Jit,” said Crook, "and I wouldn’t havb cared a bit. "I had the decision, and the medal was around my nfok. “But I thought I had the guy beat ail the Wat. boxing him Inside while he wL swinging those big wide punched” Clay, a 54) tvw\wlniwr on the judges' cards, pqunded out a bloody win for the light-heavy-weight, crown over Poland's Zbigniew Pietrzykowskl, \ I didn't want to giye theme judges any roam to do any extra thinking,” Clay said. "I wanted to win it all the way—but there for a while 1 wasn't sure I was doing It. That Pole guy was tough.” DALLAS IE — Young Johnny Pott won his first major golf tournament Monday when he beat veteran Ted Kroll on the third hole' of a three-way playoff and captured 33,500 first money to the 325,000 Dallas Open. It was the drat tournament victory for Pott "to four years of Victory for the tall man from campaigning, dr * * dr Shreveport. La., came when put his tee shot Within 3H foet of the pin on the No. 3 hole at 6.826-yard Oak Cliff Country Club course, then sank it for a birdie. Kroll, the war veteran and veteran of foe golf tour from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was 15 feet away and missed his putt by foot for a par. The regulation battle wound up i a tie among Pott, KtbU and JO Wininger of Odessa, Tex. each shooting 275 foi\ 72 holes. In the playoff, Wininger eliminated himself on the first extra hole when his second shot was 60 feet off the green. He chipped up 25 feet away and putted past by 3 feet to take a bogey, .kroll chipped 2Vii feet from foe pin for par and Pott was 8 foches away for his par. d On the second hole Kroll missed chance to win first money whin he missed a 3-foot putt by inches and failed to get a birdie. Pott two-putted from 20 feet away for his par. Wininger and Kroll split.second and third money, getting 32, year Wininger tied lor Kroll made the best run for foe title. Two strokes back storting foe fourth round,, he shot a 4-under-par 66 to pull into foe deadlock for first place. Watkitts Lake Team Honors Won by Blups There was plenty of excitement for members of the Watkins Lake Yachting Association yesterday as the sailors staged a two-heat team battle. The Blues won out over the Yel-, low by 17 points: Winning team members Included Glenn Fries, each. It was foe second straight Harm Glllan, Dave Green, John Berlien, Norm Led wan, Frank Fleck and Ben Weber's snipe skippered by Guy Duffield. Regular races Sunday saw Chuck Morris win in his snipe and Don Zaimoth take thistle honors. Burglars Also Like It I and she thinks she „ U be a third gold medal and an taU-star performance equivalent to] the great Fanny Blankers-Koen of Holland a dozen years ago. "Skeeter” hb staaee so Mach that he raetetota hla tarn. The drawing shows a stance that Is a few Inches tao wide to alow froe body action. The lines running down from the shoulders Sbtaw how wide the stance should properly be at the Instep*. Avoiding pattern-changes In every shot is important; W* all know how much depends Margaret Varner of Wilmington, on consistent duplication. -- | Del., 4A,1 W. 64v sad IHsa ftantse J £jturoed back Oka A. M Mahaney 1.* ^ Washington, D- C.,'64, Al. McKinley, finally pulled it out with a service break in the 15th game. He won the third set when he broke fo foe 11th. But ajQ foe while Riessen was battling for every point. The third round is complete w(th only Tut Bartzen among the missing seeded, players. He was eliminated by'Chris Crawford to the first round. I Defending champion Neale Fraser of Australia, top-seeded, led {the pack into tile third round with a 6-1, 6-1, Al victory over Crawford Henry qf Atlanta. Bartfy MacKay of Dayton, Ohio, No. downed ' Mac White of Corpus ChrisH. Tex., 6-4, $-2, A4; Ron Holm berg of Brooklyn, No. 7, disposed of Rdbto Spengler of South Africa. AL 6-3. Al, and Bobby {wifoon' of England, No. 8, took care of Don RuhrD of Brooklyn, jAO. Al. 6-2. I All eight seeded women are still in theurumtog. Defending champion Mbrta Bueno of'Brazil defeated Carole Wrighl of Brooklyn, 6-4, AL DufoAe Hard of Montebello, Caltf., No. 4 and Karen Haatze of San Angelo, ..To*-, the two top American seeded also came through. Miss Hard j after America’s Ue Calhoun, Gary, Bid., Willie May, Chicago, and Hayes Joeeo, Poetise, Mich., *11 o"traced Germany’* greet Martin J#ner to take all three medals in the 11A meter hurdle# finals. The remaining track final of the day, fo# women’s discus, went to Russia’s Nina Ponomareva with a teTOrd throw of 55.10 meters (163 6-i/4 ft). This broke foe old Olympic 1 mark of 176 1-* set by Olga F1W-tova, competing as a Czech in 19». Don BraggT'PermsvUft, NJ. the mcord holder.' and Ran Morris, Burbank. Calif., qualified for foe pole vault finals but Dave, Clark, Dallas, -Tex., a 15-foot Jumper, toiled to clear 14 1 1-5 a*4 was eliminated. ROME (AFi—M*S*1 toor* 1 Olympic* stter •*,* Home Mecca for Cameras By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD Publisher, The Pontiac Press This is a haven for camera fiends. They’re everywhere. -* They even take pictures of each other taking pictures. f * fe ' A few days ago I explained this w*|i the current' mecca for th* burglars, second story men; pick pockets, dips, etc. Also, It Is a gathering place for royalty. There are more than 20 distinguished European and Asiatic royal families aboaL I finally have seen some cars bigger than my .Pontiac. Two were Cadillacs and the other was a Rolls Royce- The Pontiacs* dominated the action as RoUs was about 20 years old. I saw a new Rolls on the street foe National Championxhip Drag] and it’s a beautiful Job that retails for about $25,000. The Races came to a close yesterday!' front end looks about like our cars did 15 years ago and I to Detroit. 7 believe It is shorter than the Pontiac. Jtoi Wangers, who writes ads! Pontiacs Sweep] National Honors Taka Top Throa Places Feature Races of ’Drag about Pontiacs for a Birmingham: firm, drove a stock 1960 Catalina; with straight transmission to wini his first National champoinship. Runnrnip among over MS ea-trie* to Ihe five-day meet was Koval Oak’* Jack Kay. also la ] a ’M Catalina. A IMS Pontiac, ] driven by Clarence Walton of j Detroit, ranked 3rd. * * * The Auatralian swimmers call Dawn Fraser "grandma.” The little champ Is the oldest swimmer from Down Under. She’s a doddering, tottering, decrepit twenty-two. ★ ★ fe My fellow directors on the Board of the Associated Press will admit I’m an amateur authority on the National Anthem. I pronounce the renditions of this song by th* Italian band pMitlvely the worst, the most atrocious and the most Over 39.000 torts saw Wangera *tttUe to aU ^rthermore they never get past 'wlfTOBt-swith a speed of 100.A nilfa per hour through the quarter-] a good thing they don’t. ; mite straightaway. the'twilight's last gleaming:” We Americans agree it’s .. George Montgomery of Dayton, i Ohio was the only champion to re-j J peat taking the Little Etiminator| • crown to his Wtilys coupe. He was siamong 24 drivers to set class llspeed records. tl Top' Eliminator honors went to , j Len Harris of Playa Del Rey, » Calif. Howard Licklites of Stauton. *{Va., was Middle Eliminator champ J to a CadiUo-powered Austin. Har-t ris had an Qldsmobile-powered car. S Driving a 1934 Fort! with a De-| i Soto engine, Gourtney Scott ofj i Washington won the Street Class „*°s ____ ar*,:----- Detroit State Champ BATTLE CREEK. Mk*. tm calf Name it on one of three,innlng for -Rame at Wrigtey ’ first, game -victory in their Field, only major league park [Labor Day doublcheader. The [without Sights., was called because By The A—delated Preos The Baltimore Orioles, surprise!' team of the year, win or lose, lost _ _ * ■ r , " „ half of thhir American League! Bups, playing .66 lead in the Labor Day firing, and , «8«u«‘ Milwaukee, things, or all three together ]. Illness and injury. 2. A letdown by the Baby Birds. 3. No let up by the Wataington bo“£«1 ’-.li0' darkne“ - in the nightcap, but the split . i second place shelled Spahn in the fourth: Don Hook's 15U> home run, with a man and Dick ^Stuart's 18th,. a three-run shot off reliever Joey Jay, put it away. The last three runs were unearned. Fred Green (7-4t was the winner, although pitching only -the ourth inning, in j relief of starter Bob Friend. Spahn, now 17-8, had won nine of 10 decisions since July, 9. The 0-5 against Spahnie last year, are 3-1 against the NL’s premier lefty for the season and are the only club he hasn't beaten as la starting pitcher. Pittsburgh is Cincinnati walloped Phifadel-124-46 against Spahn lifetime, and phia 9-2 "in ,a night game. Sanijj^jun beaten him three times in Francisco made it four in a row onr Reason since 1956. Los Angeles, winning 12-8. [ doubles batU behind a seven cKTIWlflfo, | i , » . •.* ■* ' dropped them * ___ *. * * _ tie with St. Louts. With third baseman Brooks! * * * i Robinson ill and left fielder Gene! ' . ■ •' . . . ■ . Woodling hurtin’, the Birds split That also dropped the I irate their doubleheader at Washington, magic number to 17 in pursuit of before the Dodgers »«> the ^ i banged l losing 44) before rebounding for a!«»l «i»l «*>«* po*-4he game|ond game of their twi-night dou ■ Bmvfg ca 3-1 Victory behind Skinny Brown's Mat clinches their first flag uii 33 blcheadcr 4-3. three hit pitching [years. Any combination of Bucj TV Pirate It could have been * let down victories and Milwaukee by the Birds, after they had swept! ■three from New York and! knocked the Yankees out of first place, Or it could have been Just another round for the fourth place Senators, only dub with an edge (10-7i Over .Baltimore. St. I Mathew Whatever the reason, that first | game defeat chopped the Birds'i 'winning streak at seven and whittled their edge to one game over the Yankees, who took a pair of 3:2 decisions from Boston j The third place Chicago . White Sox, four games behind, lost 8-7 in a single nighFgame at Kansas City. Cleveland and Detroit split, the Tigers winning the opener 4-3 and the Indians winning the sec-j ond game 4-2. ♦ * * The Orioles' troubles began before they left home for Washington. Robinson stayed behind in a hospital, because of a sore throat and fever. Then Woodling, like Robinson has swung a bit bat for the Birds, found he aggravated a groin injury in Sunday's game with New York. Woodling played against the Nats, but was Odor-5. * * * Big" bats were whaf the Orioles i needed in the opener. While Harmon Kiiiebrew and Reno Bertota crashed two-run homers for Washington, lefty Chuck Stobbs and Hal Woodeshick blanked the Birds on five hits. Stobbs (10-5) allowed only three, hits and struck[ out seven before giving in to an asthmatic attack in the seventh! inning. Steve fyrber (9:5) was the 1 loser, giving up Killebrew’s 25th J IgUner in the first inning. Tbe Birds backed Brown, who] struck out ’11 and had a two-hit shutout until the ninth inning! while winning his Uth. with a clinching pair of runs in the fifth off Pedro Ramos (10-14). Ron! Karan's 20th home run, a walk and Jackie Brandt's single did it. TheJYankees had to come from! behind in both games against the Rea Sox. They, ended their four-game slump and beat. Bill Mon-t. bouquette (13-10) .with three runs in the fifth inning of the first game, scoring on Mickey Mantle’s double—New York's first extra-base hit in 43 innings—an in-j field out and Clete Boyer's single. Jim Coates (11-3) won it. shutting out Boston on one hit for five innings in relief of Bob .‘Turley: [ ■ f * * Boston took a 2-1 lead in the j nightcap on Carroll Hardy’s first - home run of the season and an RBI double by Lu Clinton. The Yanks tied it on Tony Kubek’s home run- in the eighth, off Ike Delock, and won it with two out in.the' ninth when. losing reliever Mike Fomieles (9-5) hit Johnny Blanchard and gave up singles by Gil McDougald and Joe DeMaeSr| tri, Blanchard Had homered for the first run.,Bobby Shantz (54) was the winning pitcher in relief, t i F i The A s banged loser Bob Shaw 1 (12-12) and Dick Donovan, first • of five White Sox relievers, for seven runs in the first inning on seven hits.! four of them doubles. Ray Herbert (10-14) was the win- nightcap agaifist Ray Sadecki. St. Louis then tied it in the eighth on singles by Joe Cunningham and Boyer and Wait Moryn's forceout against Glen Hobbie, third- Chicago' pitcher. A' * ■ *' Cincinnati, eliminated by Pittsburgh'* victory, tagged loser Robin Roberts (9-14) ’ and two relievers lor 1?'hits, including home runs tig Frank Robinson (No. 27) and Billy Martin and Vada Pinion. Bob Purkey went all the way for his 16th victory although allowing 13 ''hits—all singles. He now. has beaten every club in tbe league. TTie Dodgers had 1$ hits, in- n^ci, I*- errors. Stu Miller ,(5-51 won it in relief for the Giants, who scored five runs in the flrtt inning, three on Willie Kirkland’s home run, to beat Stan Williams (124H. hit pitching job by Bob Buhl . ,|(14-8»' and whipped Harvey Had-counted (w 8| cottier's first two-bag- Ex-Cripple Joins Greats Wilma Track Heroine of Olympic Games ROME —The track and I among international male comeld heroine of the lTfii Olympic'petitors Games ii a shy, frail and almost sickly Tennessee girl who never walked until she was eight yean cdd. a baby. Wilma Rudolph was stricken with a . form which rendered her limbs helpless. Every week her mother . . ed the staining infant in a blanket and took her by bus 45 miles from Clarksville, Tenn.. to Nashville for treatment. Wilma learned to walk. Then she learned to run. Today she is the fastest woman runner in the world—acclaimed as another in a line af great Olympic- champions which Includes the Babe Dtdrikson. Fanny Blanker* Kocn and Betty Cutb- "We don't know how fast She really can go,” the c°*ch said. 'She pever has been really tasted,' since she came into her real rm" The Rudolph girt, a 20-year-old Junior who |s studying to be a one- of children of a poor Negro couple in Clarksville, a tobacco center. Her father. 73, has been 111 and unable to work. Her mother hires domestic. The! tall, leggy Tennessee girl on her second gold medal Monday, capturing the 200-meter race in 24 seronds flat on a slow track. Previously die had won the 100 phenomenal U seconds. On Thursday she anchors three -of her Negro teammates from Tenths third. jger. a single by Billy Bruton and , , Marirhal thro lost became the first double gold medio double by Del Crandall scored *{* for the United State, in wo- ".■3“'l“"d “o.<■»*■«*> * „ third inning, nightcap. Roger Craig (7-1) won'™"0**1 “drikson won the hur- Thc Cards won the first game his sixth in a rovv dies and, javelin in 1932. on a walk, George Crowe’s pinch . _ [ She is the darling of the Rome double, a hit batsman and a > a J game*—surrounded by admiring forceout grounder by Stan Musiai State Team in Finals ' I fans and autograph-seekers, pun against reliever Don Elston <8-8 in the 10th. Lindy McDaniel won relief- of Larry Jacksotf. St. Louis led.--on Ken Boyer’s 29th homer, until the eighth, when two walks, and Richif Ashburn’g single gave the Cubs il-l lie. Five walks helped the Cubs'pionship game. WICHITA, Kan. <*- Grand Rapids. Mich., defeated Tampa, Fig., 54) in a semifinal «ame of the National Baseball Tournament last night and will meet unbeaten Pon-chatoula,. La., tonight in the cham- 70 Players on Hand Wings Start Workouts DETROIT on—Seventy playet reported yesterday for the first skating and picture , taking session of the Detroit Red Wings this sea-si. Parker MacDqnald, left winger drafted from New York this summer. was the only unaccounted for absentee. MacDcmald is reportedly an his way from his Sydney, Nova Scotia, home. Heavier workouts start today, with the players split into three shift, for two-hour sessions each, Twenty players will mate no the first shift this morning, with newcomers Dennis Riggin, goalie: Gerry Odrowski, defenseman: Tom i McCarthy. left wing, and right wings Howie Glover and A1 Johnson making an appearance. ★ dr * The forward lines in the first workout are Murray Oliver centering. for Gordie Howe and Alex Delvecchio: Norm Ullnjan/working between Gary Aldcom and Glover! Brian Smith and John McKenzie flanking center Len Lunde: and Marc Resume, Lloyd Haddon and Odrowski. Riggin and Terry 6awchgk will man the goals. sued by the press and adored by an Italiap populace which has equal fascination for a good athlete apd a striking woman. Wilma has wowed them all, but me perhaps more than her coach, big and gruff Edward Temple of Tennessee A. and I., who ' q is coach of the Olympic n's team. This girl has limitless potential,” says Tempfo. height (5-10), good legs, natural *, a dogged determination best of ai), perfect relaxation. "There’s not a nerve in her body, she’s almost lazy. She often goes to sleep between semifinal and final runs. She can go to sleep on the rubbing table.” A * * Wilma's 11 seconds flat was the fastest a woman ever corned 100 yards, but a wind technicality p vented acceptance of the time world record. She has done tbe 200 in 22.9, a world record, and has 5.8 seconds for 50 meters and :05.7 for 50 yards. .Temple thinks WUma is capable of 10J in thC 100 and 22 flat in the 200 which would put DEL MAR, Calif. (API—Jbckey Johnny Longden was thrown in drairthtic spill at Del Mar race track Monday, suffering cuts, bruises and a thorough shaking |np- After a checkup in the track hospital, the track doctor decided to send Longden to a nearby hospital for a more thorough exam-I (nation. Longden- was leading in the ninth race when his mount, Amarillo Speed, durited through the hedge into the Infield. The horse stepped on -an irrigation pipe in Uie infield, sending a geyser of water shooting into the air. as Longden was hurled to the grass. Longden lay curled In a ball until a stretcher was hurried out to him. His horse got up aiA galloped away, apparently ’ uninjured.' ten Franct*co Cincinnati Chicago ..... Philadelphia Cincinnati ». Philadelphia Z. night TODAY'S GAMES San Franc taco Ufaranda M) at lei An--- galas (Dryadala lt-U). 4 pm. * Cincinnati (O'Toole M-IU at Philadelphia (Buzhardt Mf' 1 “ ~ j Milwaukee (Bur* (Gibbon 4-Z) ' Only games scheduled Summer Champions Determined at PYC Three tost race* Sunday deter-mined 'the summer champions at Ponitac Yacht Club. The annual Snow Ball series started yesterday. ; • Competing in perfect wind, Clarence Holman took title honors with 47 points as Bob Flack had 4014 .and Claude Bennett 40. Commodore honors went Ralph Johnson with 29. He edged Ralph Behler-Burt Bouwkamp 28 and Cart Marr af 27. Challenge series victors Were Mamie Goodwin 34, Jaon Gray 30 and Don Van Doren 25. Labor Day winners were Flack, Mack Goodwin and Al Gray, 3rd. A dub potluck following the holiday racing. WEDNESDAY'S GAMES ■ at FbllwSelpble. 7:05 pm. ... Louis at PStabursh. 7:15 »m. Saa Francisco at Milwaukee. I pen Los Angslos at Ctncahati. fcU p n Ex-Star Athlete 'Critical'; Les Matthews, who. starred in basketball and baseball at Pontiac High and later in city , leagues, is in critical condition* at* St. Joseph' Mercy Hospital. ’ He has been under dose observation since last week when he; collapsed at the GM Track k. Coach athletic field. ' ' ■ ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER AOAINSfT THK WALL — Fans in the left field corner look down as Stan Musiai of the St Louis Cardinals falls against die wall attempting to catch a foul fly ball lit ,10th toning of 1st game of Monday’s Labor Day twin bill with the Cubs at Chicago. The Kids Are Back In School ARE YOUR BRAKES SAFE? i *4 OM4 for rm UtoMrtw f ptVKffw! i 5 TOTT-mT | ! mThA 5* Haiti * r m GOUT f 2 B irjB JUMP'JVNP I s ^ 17.8.A. i f*'. TRAMPOLINE CENTER I i *sm MXB IBWT, mSSSsr-vsL.. i 1 bf 1 ' m esses - k - l.toww ® .... TSunA-St*—*«« i 5 om)P>r< wmto-itp.OT i j Rd a*ts for »w-—p- > Brakes RelinED I- Ford I Chevrolet f Plymouth *11 OKw, U i nn $41 M51775 GUARANTEED 1 YEAR tr 20,000 Ml Firostone car safety service INCLUDES LABOR AND MATERIAL 0r grandchildren and one great-grandchild. rado; a son Robert of Wolverine Lake; and 12 grandchildren. MRS. CHAMJOf RICHARDSON HOLLY — Service for Mn. Charies (Carrie A.) Richardson.; 83. of 213 Emily St. pill be held, at 1 p. m. tomorrow at the Dryer Funeral Home. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery. Mrs. Richardson died Sunday at her home after a long illness. Surviving are a son, Russell Bradley of' Holly; a daughter, Mn. Albert Schroder of Lake Fenton; and two stepchildren, Mrs. Lillian Hutchinson of Da vis-burg and Eugene Richardson of Holly. K mamaam Business and Finance folloMng name p*r- j Murphy, Jr roMva* Thirty flni Hundrrd Zl*hl>*.vt" nfw vnnk' (api _ tL «tnrk HAVANA iAPi—Americ them in wholesale Package Wts. ,»«£ YORK AP^ their language are becoming un- U*Vn, »l~.t/« f„11 P°PUllU ln ' THOMAS H. SHEEHY The body of Thomas H. Shechy, IT, of 2670 Mott St.. Waterford Township, will be at the Voorhee*. markets (Mixed News •Dips Market The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer’ Market by growers and sold by Cuba Re Americans, s-Language Ptmfl S .............. rhouatnd Nln* Hundr IS STSi votM* ratal votes K ill RXntmBN TATI VB LBUHU.A.TURS MM lUtnnoii'uiic codtriY" trsasumr Pawarrotla Party i l« ittimbar of vote* Ml rad Um UrMat nurobar of VStaa St the Democratic Party tor Um matt ot United State# Senator That AMn M. Bentley received. the number of yotea bp the Return > ' i offfed ¥ United Party l . JB Treasurer ■■■ Thousand Ona Hundred ■ following a c Party i ll ! »pwT'^ou^aniTont Hundred ivtnty-iwo tn.nat wot#* b Toui Win iMpuMIcAn fortvi - , Th# whole niiMNr of TMM flYfll I) ii Fifty tit fijj K nan J ft Treaa rhouaand tight Hundrad It tali and tnay swa gir-ollevlng named twraona Sparks rsastvad Thlrljr-lwa tint Nundrad Hlnaiy-taro by I nut James Kellis having racataad Uaa ,or iari»«i number of? vote* M sdSMisuS .. IMjgaadMaM by ww jemotroUc Party' for . M oftlee of Representative- ln Con-rets llth 01 Mr let That William 8. Broomfield hsotnf re-deed the iaraeal number o( votes la Dominated candidate by the Republican “arty tor the office o(' Representative i Congress ISth District That 8; Jerome Bronson having mj , lived Um largest number ot votes is ..omlnated candidate -by ■ the Democratic .; Party tor the office ot State senator 12th Dlatrlrl - “it Parrell B Roberta having received • largest number of vote* h nom- i Hundred tigtaly-li DRAIN COMMISSIONER . . muran uuaini susniur wi inuuri-i _____, QUoUtion* arc furnished by the;*,,. trHding ,^,y Key stocks ffll||^l“r Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of [ fi-om fractions to about a point Thursday. - Detroit Produce Three Hundred Duchess, bu., .. ... Apples, Burly McIntosh, bu. .—>-,t Orrromas. bu........ ». Wealthy, bu I, Wolf Rivers, btt---- Csotsloupes. Beans, Roman, bu ’ Beets, dot. bchs. I Beans, Was, bu BMts, topped, -hu MRS. WILLIAM MtOINNIg HOLLY - Service for Mrs. William (Ida M.) McGinnis, 87, of 104 College St., wil .be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Dryer Funeral Home. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery. Mrs. McGinnis died yesterday at St. Joseph Hospital, Flint, following a heart attack suffered Friday night. ’ She was a life member of the Groveland Grange, Oakland County Pomona Grange and the State Grange, Siple Funeral Home until this evening, when it will be taken 'to Greer-Croy It Fitch Funeral Home. Poplar Bluff, Mo. for services and - - burial. He died Saturday following an auto* accident. He was ah llth grade student- at Waterford Township High School. Surviving besides-his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Sheehy, grandparents Mrs. Pearl Robertson ot Poplar Bluff, Mo., and Mrs, Hazel Sheehy, of Williams-j ville, Mo. Also surviving arc a sister. Mrs. Edward Keehn and a brother, George E. Sheehy. both of Pontiac. WILLIAM 8. SMITH ROYAL OAK — Service tor WH-liam S. Smith. 66, of 1821 Boon-ieviewDrive, were to be held at *30 p. byterian uiurcn oi itoyai ui Burial was to be in Oakview Ce etery, safety tor^the^Ford "fiotor Co., died S pttal, 10 day !ubu under the lash tin who/ lof Prime Minister Fidel Castro's J{'« .scattered issues made gains . ' . . k. TtSmeoas* ..zz | A riot broke out in the Night|‘n;„*"ua ^ land Day cabaret Sunday night be- Ww#•» The list, entered the important L,juse (jlc master of ceremonies. Til-mtn-pbst-Lnbor Day period with mixed Eduardo Guerra Valdes, refused!.... reports about business and the|to pronounce its name in Spanish. rUXmtativb in stat i overall economy. It was expected | ^ ♦ ♦ ■ | lsowlatukb. *i>cono own | that steel output ipay fall below I 50 per cent of capacity because of!. J railroad strike*, sluggish orders1 i and Labor Day cutbacks. * si**" i tartvet Dumber i offH* One Hundred rn^Thounand Rttuell rvovlved Twvnt ---- Hundred forty-one sndldstd by the Democratic 1 Party lor the otlteo of ItMHMIUH ■ i State, Legislature 1'" - iKrput * Party I ■■■■IPBHDHtriri H Lloyd' L, Arideredn having rr- aeM candidate by the Republican, y lor the aflM of siiwatllhi tat* Legislature t*t Dletrlct . uaa Arthur J. La* having received ’ )ar*Mt number of vote* Is nam-—,'emoof»tic ... __ _____ - -„r. ieehtatlve . lute Legtilature 2nd DUtrtrt That Richard I Moore having, motived Party VSORTARUES Cabbage, bu “abbage. Curly, bu. labbage. Red. bu. . fabbaae. Sprout*, bu htuUflowcr, i Pascal, lit do*, i He i Surviving are twq daughters, nf Mrs. Lambert Hadley of Dearborn and Mrs.. Arthur Grover of Holly; six grandchildren; 11 great-grand-chUdren; and two brothers, Jay Coleman of Imlay City and Stanley Coleman ot Holly, . them JOHN N1ECHN1EDOW1CZ TROY — Requiem Mass, tor John Niechniedowicz, 74, of 1065 Kirts St., will be sung at *9:30 Thursday at Guardian Angel Catholic Church, Clawson. Burial •be in Mount Olivet Cemetery', Detroit Mr. Niechniedowicz died yesterday at William R. Beaumont Hospital,Royal Oak, after a brief illness. The Rosary will be recited at 6 p. m. tomorrow at the Gramer Funeral Home, Clawson. Surviving are six sons; Joseph at home; Bruno and John, both of Clawson; Waiter of Pontiac; Frank of Berkley and Edward of Troy; a daughter, Mrs. Stanley Szyszlo of Detroit; 15 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. visory Council of the Nat visory Committee on Safety Engineering and the Advisory R«rd Service Command in Chicag man 2 apiece, anaconoa «na i-oi-jAmerit : illArd (ex dividend) were up about Let* I : a point each. Small tosses were digappt of Safety. Police said patrons began shout- The *hoi* number ot « ing at him to pronounce the name JJJ uif*omc* ut h/iiV-c/ In Spanish, and he i-cplicd; "JiL**i»ietuir uevomi don't know Ruasian so I'll pro-j fj’war'and^'tuey were i Steels were unchanged to jnounce it in American." r'i’thu* ^^*^fJ*Jv*ii slightly lower. 1’. 8. Steel and The patrons then began throw-|und AW1 Hundred Ntaei Jones A I.uitghlin dropped frac- jing chairs and bottles, Nipe per- j sl VM )m (ions. Motors edged off slightly, sons were injured before police < Republic an r» Ford and ChryMer lonl fraction*, arrived. |uJ^V^ubtleui!,"1^rty,. ti General Motors and Ameriean The well-known steak house; tor the offtte of Rrpre**"1 Motor* eased. The Yank, changed, its name last I-^uliand*s»ve»°"tunured' Only a slight delay marked the Criollo, A ?“,u,»,non^yptfiinJ- **' openings of-Comptomriw and Tele.|fJnK »*-V»** ohject- Rkh.rdit ..*6*jm«*i* autograph, in which trading was to the oid name. |“u. held up most of last week, first; j . TMRgMuMHt tanvb ti because of a pile up ol buy orders,[Plan Subpoena tO Get ucuiIlatmRb, third next because of sell orders. p._._ __ n ! •»,. -■ -*-,***■ Comptometer i«e \ to 21*.-on Data On 2 DofHCtOrS 1 an opener of 1,500 shares, thenj WASHINGTON' iUPIi—Cohen's-1 rc-rtf''0,*«“th' ^ S ^.srws.-crcrH E »«f «H.on|------. mpuri*B a Ru^na in I J candidate by the Republtban * party for the office of ReatoomtiMv* •- —an- Le«l*totunt 2nd DUtrlct , , l Jamr* M, TdoHeely havlas r»-I flic laraett number ot voids la i*ted candidate by the Democratic COUNTY SURVEYOR candldl e by ihc RepubUcui I Eight Hundrad ( umber of voted *lv*i Party for candid*tei inuiniT BtafcT* nun la State LeatalatUN 3rd Dtotrlet That 8 Jama* Ci*rk*an havtM.x-civrd the targe*) number of voted i« nominated candldaW by the Demacrailc p«rty for the office of Iteprttentative In State Legtelatur* «th ..hdtrtcl That Raymond L. Baker haVtni re-reived the laraeet number of vote* !# nominated candidate by the Republican Party for th* tfflce of Repremntotlv* In State Legtelatur* 4th DHlrksI That Wllilam A. o Brlen having relved the large*) number of vsto* t* . nomlneted candfdate by the ugmaerstle Krt? for ihe^offlce of IMprvoeotoUV* : ot graph dropped b PROBATE JUOOE I Of 4,70 n oE. pS.drM It Ohio, International Paper, Boe- ,NSA) had refuted to give the Thousandi Quo Hundred Taenty-tive ta^^wa.acUve, with,heirmH,rC ? ^ °" * New York Stock* - ;JnriLd^u^uipo(^ta- Rchiock having re- mssmm m Poultry end Egg* Road, will be held at 1:30 p.m. CLYDE O’ROURKE AUBURN HEIGHT?—Service lor j Clyde O’Rourke. 76, of 3423 Nichols ♦ Dr. t will be held at 1:30, pjo. ■ Thursday at the Donelson-Johns Funerah Home, Pontiac, with burial in Willow Grove Cemetery, j Armada. A retired shoe repair man, O'Rourke died unexpectedly Sunday of a heart attack. Surviving are a son, Edmund of “ Auburn Heights, five grandchil- J dren and three great-grandchil- [ dren. MR. .tJ'a&.’KVK; i -ist!LT MRS. RAY RCHNLUND WOLVERINE LAKE — Service tor Mrs. Ray (Mable) Rehnlund, 62, of 265 Oak Island Drive, will be at 1 p.m, Thursday at St. Matthew Lutheran Church, Walled Lake. Burial will be .in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit •Mrs. Rehnlund died yesterday at her residence after a long illness. Her body is at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Hotne, Walled Lake. Surviving are three daughte.-s, Mrs. Margaret King of Walled Lake, Mrs. Shirley Ogar of Utica and Mrs. Dorothy Mather of Colo- Joseph brief ill* by {he 1 Home. . Wall Street Chatter Starts in Housing Should Hit Low Point This Month NEW YORK (UPI) — The value Line Investment Survey reports that the tow point in the seojon- ! ally adjusted rate of housing starts probably wUl be passed this quarter. News in Brief The improving supply of funds for Individual home loans ought h to stimulate both the resale and n the new home markets by the ti closing months of 1960, it said. The investment advisers said fhcrv appears to be a wMclaH T . Over Mackinac starts in INI. By the. mid-1960 s, it said, more rapid increase in family for- j mations will probably bring In« about 1.500,000 new units a year * —on average rate as high as the c 1959 peak. B. K. Thar-low of Winslow, Cohu i Stetson believes that we sc s bear market which at best will t , be a tong 1996* - 49 type trailing 5 range and at worst will be not so c sm-a lSSula: liWIii IffliEl :7£wtt UrMsr-- jg.^^ fM mmim slace Bridge in Walk MACKINAW CITY (UPII—A |UP!l^A^14- OWL til,. Then aa you yron’t JSJS9£ rt bh(Vfc. missed Wi^i hit by the wrc^M|p. |®fly largfr than the nifties. FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO FE 2-91*7 i : 818 Community National Bonk Bkfe.