The Weather . (Details F»*e t> THE Cfltfe VOL. 119 ’ NO.^78 ★ ★★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN; SATURDAT, SEPTEMBER 2, 1961 —20 PAGES mamM^v^^!r,onAL : ^ Nehru Condemns Red War Threat BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) — Prime Minister Nehru told the- conference of nonaligned nations today the Soviet decision to resume nuclear testing increased the danger of war. — The Indian leader said hedeeplju regretted the decision, saying it will permit pther countries also to resume testing. All this, he said, "brings us to the brink of war.” Nehru was the main speaker today at the cohfer-ence, the biggest gathering of uncommitted nations since .Nehru himself began to advance the idea of non-alignment in World War II. President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, fresh from a visit to Moscow, had said of Friday’s Soviet test ex-"• - • i*“ ~~r*plosion:.“It is a shock for Plane Section Coul Be Clue Discover Toil Pieces 300 Feef From Main Unit; fyrfider Sabotage HINSDALE. 111. (UPD-The battered tail section of- a Trans World Airlines plane which carried 78 persons to a fiery death in a mb* urban Chicago cornfield may pro. vide an important duetothe tragic accident, federal experts indicated today. The p here early/Friday. Its 73 passenger*- and crew ot five died In-alantly In' “ | M gfl “ ■ away. Don't Change Your Glasses, It's the Picture AME — This scene through a rain-distorted windshield vtyk the typical view of drivers during the damp August me and for you too. This shock shows what a big danger humanity is fating.” Nkrumah urged President Kennedy arid Soviet Premier .Khrush- .-chev to meet again and discuss j Down IT CAS their disputes. shield the tyj * * which continued into early September yesterday. The west side W^ile Nehru and Nkrumah both!.... ....* --------------,— attacked the Soviet tests, their general approach to the world crisis was different. j Nkrumah put emphasis on a fight against colonialism. No set. Dement of the great problem of war and peace Is possible unless n nlnnlallafti las ‘ nlimlnafaul Ih(l Pontiac Press Photo of North Saginaw Street slips in and out of focus between swipes of wiper blade, giving fun-house"mirror view of a summer storm. " Officials Seem Confident U.S. Will Resume Tests J FROM OUR NEWS WIRES J,, T WASHINGTON — Russia’s explosion of a nuclear test device was expected, today to hasten a decision by President Kennedy on resumption of U.S. nuclear weapons testing. . - I Well informed officials now consider it likely. Kennedy' will make a decision early next week and . that it will be to start up U.S. testiiig again. The last U.S. test explosions were htfld in the fall of 1958. It was also learned that the-administration is considering someu^mndification of the secrecy policy covering this country’s nuclear weapons arsenal. —- The reason: To give the Americaui prople and the world a better idea of the amount of atomic force available to the United! * * «*' States for its own defense Believe Part of Big Bomb Exploded African leader declared. Nehru, lecturing the delegates In English, said the present world crisis was such that, colonialism is overshadowed. He indicated -he t ‘Considered' that Germany and dis-armament are much more crucial. He received thunderous applause at the end of his 56-minute speech. IWiBSx-PERSPKCnVE’ We must look at. things Asks GM to OKG/oomy, Gray Kept Area Ducking we stand for anti-imperialism a UAW Wants Car Giant] By MAX tl SIMON (Sidered plenty a ^ DtdAug^st skies seem especially?-92 inches. to Accept Agreement cjoudy - and gray? ! . .* Ranrhad With AMC They were ■ (Even more rain was recorded Keacnea wun M/VIV. * . j by the Weather Bureau at De roit Rain pelted the Pontiac area on (Metropolitan Airport. The bureau 13 of August’s 31 days.' Three oth^ recorded 5.12 inches of rain, 2.5 DETROIT (AP) — The United Auto Workers Uniop proposed to General Motors Corp. today that it accept the profit-sharing agree- ers were cloudy or misty. ''Of curseIment-Avhich-the LiAW reached with Melvin Gough, Civil Aeronautics anti-colonialism and we Board (CAB) safety bureau director In charge of the tnvestigatior saM he won’t rulvput sabotage American Motors Corp. last week. ece* of the tall section of the remember today that everything huge four-engine plane were found! w* have contended against and .j <- ■ ...stHI ronDnne to struggle against r Imperialism, colonialism, ra- Relatives Absent > I rtsllsm and the rest—nre some. , at Morgue, Page 3 | £•* °ver*h.dowcd by mu ch- ,-ation was "significant.’' but he ,* * . declined to elaborate. ‘ .j "The danger of war comes ncar- ... pr and nearer by the recent dp-There was a possImlHy l jelglon ^ the soviet government to the plane, which exploded w th g(art nuclpar tMt>. j m not in a such force that nearby residents t0 know ua the facts un- bared an atomic bombhadjwen |derlying (he decision, but I know unleashed, disintegrated InfUgm. JWg dkecision makes the Situation such a theory wouidexptainln mlithnmor, dangerous, and there-part why the tall aectlon landed , regrpt n deeply because it ao far from tbe main body. ; may. )ead to other countries start- U al.si) could explain, anotherjing tests. mystery puzzling CAB and FBI probers failure of the veteran crew lo make'any radio jcalt despite the fact it whs hi full direct communication with Midway Air porfV radar departure controller and had been accepting his instructions. WON'T COMMIT SELVES | • But neither CAB nor FBI would commit themselves to the sabotage or disintegration theories. Precipitation"totaled 3.56 inches, considerably higher than Ponliac’sl inches more than normal, but shy of its record 7.51 inches which fell in August of 1940.1 Picnickers and swimmers found rain discouraging them from head-ling for the county’s beaches and ^^■3 Outdoors enthusiasts found a\new problem confronting them,. hoi The weekend saw tKMempera-ture dip to the month’s nw of 51 on the morning of August 13ur: And the high that afternoon whs slightly chilly 72. There was another side to the weather picture, however. August-average of 2.86 inches, tt lakes three of the month’s four was also higher than August total weekends. ’ rainfall last year-whfeh was con-! The only completely sunny week. Yellowstone ParicjEvening Showers Deluged by w, May Visit Us Again Heather m tbe Big Three — GM. Ford sad Chrysler — be-gaa their first weekend round ot negotiation* under a union fit rest to strike GM at 10 a.m. Wednesday unless it gels a pattern setting contract there. , . | At American Motors. hourly-IsJiiTOIl^ wr mClS rated, union-represented produc-i Don workerSjWill get. effect, *15 By the Associated Pr per cent Of profits, after the first! Heavy snow 1911 in Yeilowstone|(jon for Pontiac area'-is showers orjdian temperature 72 degrees. ”) per cent is set aside for stock-] National Park and cool air spread j thundershowers this evening, andj ciders. into the hor and humid sections scattered showers or thundershow- * * * east of the Rockies today, setting Lrs likely Sunday Ten per cent wdl.be in cash|ort HeavY ahowers. I j Rominc/nr and five per cent in AMC stock, j Six inches of snow, with strong The weatherman said tempera- CIS ilCIII IO The UAW ha* announeed that j w*n*‘' ctoslng ot the tures will hit a mild low of 72| by strike or otherwise It flrot ■ *“* . h i ... ..... __ stone Friday night. Six Inches of r"'.“ 'AT .IT " ! *»o« tell at Dunraven :*.ss, be- traet at GM. then try to get Ford ’ There w along with cloudy one The month's high temperature was 90—on Aug. 9 and Aug. 31. Rains were responsible lor k« ing the month’s average high tt perature several .degree? below normal. ] The average high last month was ! 81.6 degrees. That’s low consider j ing that- the normal August average [high over the years has beeit 88.' degrees. ( Yes. there's a chance of evening The month's average tow was j showers once again. The predic-]62.6 degrees, and the average me and the defense of it allies. The Kremlin was silent the Soviet 'atomic explosion, but elsewhere across the world . the blast resounded in anger, resentment, and alarm. Up to this morning, there had that Russia had resumed the testing of nuclear weapons In Central Asia as reported by the United States Friday. But observers in Moscow ex-pec ted? a Kremlin confirmation at my ttme. The state-controlled Soviet press built up a tremendous propaganda campaign in an apparent effort to prepare the Russian people for an official announcement., TO INDICT RUSSIA The White House planned to indict Russia before the United Nations for its- action, and delegates p the Belgrade conference of LONDON (AP) — The United States and Britain have decided against -re-* suming nuclear weapon tests for the -time being, qualified, di ported today. j Truck Lights On Ah FBI spokwim was " routine" 1 crashes to cheek of sabotage, lie would .not say whether any evidence had been uncovered to Indicate Ihe crash, worst in Chicago history and the third worst in U.S. history, had • Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 1 In Today's Press New Job I Kennedy eyes dlsarmu-| men! post for Arthur Dean f -PAGE 4. Space Secrets ■„ f Doctor* await contents of Discover XXIX-PAGE 3. Thank You, No Oil changing soon to be I unnecessary—PAGE < IE i Big Problem I Why, won’t people ride buses?—PAGE S. [ Church News ...... *> • I (jpntles ..... | Editorials........ i llume 8ect(on .. It, Obituaries ....... i M»............. I Tipilaft ■ I TV A Radio Programs 1 Wilson, Karl ...... I Women’s Pages . > 'Aside from nuclear fallout, all this brings you much • closer to ther verge of war." Newsflashes MOSCOW im — The Soviet Government sent .new notes today to France, Britain and the United State* on die Berlin crisis. The contents were not tnugedlately made public, but II was, understood they replied lo notes-Die Western powers delivered Aug. M. two government-held enclaves *i In Northern Ism al dawn today, a royal laiotlan government communique- said. WASHINGTON IB - Four squadrons ot U.S. KIWI Jet tighter attack planes—totaling about 73 sircrsll—will fly to Europe to Join In s NATO exercise. Thr Defense Department announcement today said Hi* Jels would participate In, Exercise (Beck; mate, scheduled for Sepl. through 14. Traffic Death Toll 989 Ford and Uh'ryrier also were elevaHon 8,55# feet, 1 holding general sessions today dur- east gate from Cody. Wyo. The ing the no-iettip'bargaining with north gate leads to Red lodge, the UAW. * I Mont. * * I Roads throughout tiie'park were! Morning sourtwesterlywinds at in I960. GM §, betore-taxesj coated with ice and snow, the Wy- 9 "’iles P*’r l™UT beconlj 18 profits, which the UAW proposes ofnlng' Highway Patrol reported, ,0 25 m PJh this afternoon and to-to split up, totaled $2,038 billion, and were generally Impassable, morrow, diminishing somewhat loin its 1960 fiscal year, AMCjWinds were up to 50 mile* per nign' had before taxes profits of 1103; hour, felling tree? on the upper The lowest reeordlng in down-million. GM employs approximate-j passes and knocking out telephone (town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. Was ly 325,000 hourly "rated- workers; (lines to ihe hast gate ranger sta471 degrees The .mertury had AMC 23,000. - g - ition. ''Climbed to 81 at 2 p.m. tonight and reach ’near 84 tomor-LFi^OilCfOfy DTIVeTS 'row. - The 'outlook for Monday; throughout the Lower Peninsula is| WASHINGTON (UP1) — Trudk mostly fair and cooler. (lights are burning day and night on From 10: tl a m rftrnlrT un | ^ t.nation>_ bjg,hw til the same ttnie ihU tm'rollg S IT**?** helP ^ of an Inch of rain fell on the motorists alive. The American Trucking Aspacl' ition is sponsoring a "Truck Lights On for Safety” program until 7 a.m.' (PonDac time) Tues- unaligned nations reacted with stunned protests to the Soviet ek-plosion. Scientists in Europe said detection of the Soviet blast by long-range American equipment indicated (he Soviets were preparing the test even while they were negotiating a test ban treaty in Geneva. ’* * * President Kennedy was in’ Hy-annis Port, Mass., tor the weekend, but he ’ kept remote control tabs on the nuclear situation resulting from Russia's test. He flew to his Cape Cod home nuclear tests, after the announcement of the Soviet explosion and a round of con* ferences on where the United 4ay to remind motorists of ttous driving. The Industry invited all motorists to join'tti: carrying the safety slogan by turning on their head and tail lights. if EAST LANSING lift — There have been 989 persons killed" in traffic accidents in Michigan so far this •year,; provisional figures' compiled by stNtc policy showed today. The total tor (He same period last year watt. 974, • Japan Hit* Soviet Te*t* TOKYO IB Japan lodged a strong protest' with Soviet Russia today on the Kremlin's decision to resume testing of nuclear weapons. T* Aiwa* tb« Mth Annssl Skxtln*" ptrty At ih« Roll*-(link' 4475 W. Huron tt I p.m. Old Alumni mo Pun tor till limn tikstlns (M-Ml Bopt. i WASHINGTON (AP). — Russia’s first nuclear weapons test in three years has triggered ^peculation that Soviet scientists tested a component for One of the superbombs about which Premier Khrushchev has boasted. \ ** The White House announcement Friday described the bl^st as “in the intermediate radge,” This would be. according to U.S. scientists, a blast with a torch ranging from the equivalent of 20,000 tons of TNT up to 500.000 tons. tests Wednesday, said Russian scientists now would proceed to develop a 100 megaton bomb, equivalent to 100 million tons of TNT. * * * U.S. experts-do not consider the size of the latest Soviet blast significant. They said an explosion « in the intermediate range could be to test components essential to the successful development of huge nuclear weapons. Smaller nuclear weapons are used to trigger the high yield blasts. MAY BE STEP Another theory, expressed by Dr. Ralph Lapp, is that the blast may have been a step In Die development of a super warhead tor a Minuteman-type intercontinental ballistic missile. Lapp, a nuclear physicist who is not associated with the government but makes a close study of nuclear weapons, speculated the Russians may have exploded (he device before or shortly after they announced their intention to re- Russia has decided to end the three-yeat moratorium on nuclear tests. Officials in Washington Indicated the'United States hoped to bring world opinion to bear against Russia through the United Nations. They called the Soviet explosion a flat defiance of the 1958 U N. General assembly resolution urging a half "to' nuclear tests while treaty negotiations were in progress.- The next assembly session begins Sept. 19. The blast, Lapp said, may have.. been a test of a trigger or some other compoOeat of a I or 3 me-gaton'missile warhead. He explained, "with the American U2 spy plane. acUvities already known, and the Samos (spy-in-the-sky) satellite pending. The Russians are no longer secure with their huge Uquid-fueled JCfiMS. ’ 'Therefore I believe the Russian generals are now convinced -they wiU have Co replace their large-yield IC8MS with smaller ones, like our Minuteman — but that they intend to arm them with a super warhead." Lapp said he estimates the war- AGGRESSION THEME heads .on Russia's big liquid-fueled The Soviet press and radio wereilCBMs range up to 8 megaton, filled ..with, statements aimed at( . (Continued on. Page 2. Co). 5) CONSTANT CLIMB — The United States now has a population of gainfully employed persons mticH larger than the entire population of the country in 1800. This great growth shown on the chart I* more than Just a reflection of the general population in-creasp. The percentage of workers to the total htit grown. too. Married., women returning to work ot* taking their first. Job in middle age continue to he a significant factor In the increase. Over four million of them Joined the iabOr force between 1949 and 1959. The figures on Ihe chart are averages. Guard Kennedy | Against Escaped j Mental Patient HYANNlS PORT, Mass. IB -State police kept a sharp lookout today for a former mental patient, | who, authorities said, was once : State police sent out a 13-sttfte j j alarm after it was reported the man, who escaped from a Texas mental instituDon in 1945. was en route by plane from Texas to | Massachusetts. I Security men protecting the | President at bis Hymnals Port | home on Cfcpe Cod expressed no j concern at this time, | Police described the man — a I resident of Boston's Brighton district — as "extremely dangerous" and urged caufion In'approaching him. 1, Kennedy was undisturbed by the threat. But other problems kept Him from the ftimtort he'might! have had in the company of hisj family tor a holiday weekend, -j As his main concern. White House communications kept him abreast of world reaction to Russia’s nuclear explosion. Gavin, DeQaulle Talk PARIS lUPI)—U.S. Ambassador (James M. Gavin met with President Charles de Gaulle at the Ely-see Palace today for a discussion (of the international 'situaflon. The i meeting lasted about half an hour. Baseball Battles ’ TIGERS YANKEES Won Lost Behtn New York . 88 45 — Frank Lary wns to oppose Ralph Terry sat the mound this afternoon as the Tigers I from a 1-9 MARIS-MANTLE-RUTH Homer Game* Date Nn. Played Bit Maria . 'St 134 Aug. 39 Mantle « 134 Aug. St Kuth 31 13# Sept. I* The Day in Birmingham Commissioners to Attend Municipal League Parley THE PONTIAC PRESS; SATljfjjfijir, SEPTEMBER 2,ltm WHEELS FLV IN CRASH - The rear tandem wheels of a tractor-trailer were knocked off . when It was rammed broadside by an oncoming car spinning out of control on rain-splashed Telegraph Road in Bloomfield Township yester-oon. A second, chain-reaction accident involving four cars resulted when drivers were unable to stop in time,. Six persons were sent to hospitals, but only-the driver of the car that hit the truck was admitted; Homer Case, 45, o(_839 Helston Road, Bloomfield Township, was reported in satisfactory condition today at St.'' Joseph Mercy Hospital with a fractured hip and cuts on his head. His car was demolished. E.Reich Protests U.S. Garrison Message Condemn Troops' Movement Info * W. Berlin on Aug. 20 BERLIN Ht-^mmunist East Germany, i has protested to the United States against President Kennedy's action bolstering the U.S. garrison in West Berlin after ^he ^mpriwtsts^vsealed th? city* borders. » The protest was relayed 'by Czechoslovakia, the East German news> Agency AON said today. .The United States does not the East German regime. The protest concerned movement Aug. 20 of the T,500-man 1st Battle Group, U.S. 8th Ipfaniry Division, into .Berlin across'the 110-mile superhighway linking West Beriin with West Germany! ’While 16 years after the end of World War I! it is high time that the occupation regime is West Beriin should be terminated, the- United States has taken mea- kfulart Invited to Be U.S. Traffic Toll resident' of Brazil i Our News Wires •K JANEIRO today invited Vice President Joao Goulart to bk sworn in Monday at the capital in'^trasilia as a purely symbolic "If Goulart accepts the presidency under, those conditions the political crisis toucbedvoff eight days Electronic to Move Soi| Elox Corp., Troy, Wants North Carolina Plant; Union .Officials Angry TROY l* — Elox Corp.., manufacturer of electronic metal-forming equipment, has announced it will move half its 50-man operation to a new plant'at Davidson; N.C. The plan was criticized Friday by Robert A. Klingenjmith, an official of the International Union of Electrical Workers, as needless. He called it “exploitation for more profits." Elox, 1830 Stephensfin Highway, toted Michigan taxes as a reason for the move and what it called the “political climate affecting smalj businesses that hope to ' grow" in Klingem {dace 25 of its present employes with “Southern workers who will have little choice but to' work for at least a dollar an hour less." Elox President John S. Larkins Jr. sate North Cafohna is an 'electronics center, and that his flpn was faced with the need either to expand here or purchase more sub-assemblies from outside. Larkin said.it had not been Sded whether the, firm would hire —«*ew workers,in the South or permit JIs Michigan employes to transfer. ago by the, resignation of president Janio Quadros may be solved. There was no immediate word fronrr Goulart whether he would agree to the compromise plan. "He arrived last night in Porto Alegre, capital of his home state of Rio Grande do Su), after returning, in stages from Ms visit to Communist China. But signs emerged of a split among Goulgrt's supporters. Some, including the governor of. his'home state, expressed belief be was being deprived of his legal rights to the office. The supporters took a! strong stand against others seeking to ive him the presidency, although with watered-down authority. V - The\proposal for ending Brazil’s political turmoil calls for changing over front a presidential system of government modeled after that ‘of the United'States and used since Brazil became a republic in 1889 to the Cabinet System used by Britain. have applied in writing for transfers. "change would The vice president's elevation to the chief executive office has been opposed by the military chiefs^ and others who charge he has too friendly with Communists. REAL POWER TO PREMIER The real power under the compromise plan would go to a. prime minister.. Among possible candidates for that position is Quadros, who now is on a ship en route to Europe. The' Invitation to go to Brasilia to' be sworn in at 6 p.m. on Monday was sent to Goulart soon after the Chamber of Deputies by a vote of 234-56 voted for the The measure Sffll must . Senate but approval eeemea cer-said-aH-25 affected -employes tain -since toat-house is-dominaled by the conservative and moderate parties favoring the change. The Weather .. . * gaMHMM&te < , « • ‘6 Continued warm and humid today, tonight and tomorrow. Chance of scattered showers or thundershowers this ’ afternoon or evening today. Tomorrow scattered showers or thundershowers, likely. .High today 88, low tonight 72, * high tomorrow 84. South to southwest winds 18-25 miles * today and tomorrow, diminishing somewhat tonight. T*a»r In r*n«l#e I Qne T«»r Ago In routine HlfhMt And Lowest Temperature* [■( This Date In B9 Yeilf Michigan Records Four .Deaths on Highway in Early Weekend Hours HOLIDAY DEATHS Traffic ........... 61 Boating; . . ........ 2 Drowning: ......... 0 Miscellaneous ....... 3 .Total ...... ......66 ’ By The Associated Press . The nation’s traffic death toll climbed rapidly today — the first full day of the Labor Day week-id. | A A • A „ Michigan counted four dead on its highways in the weekend's early hours. Before the start of the four-day holiday, state -officials predicted MicMgaa's highways would carry their heaviest traffic volume In history. John C. Mackie, state highway commissioner, said, “The traffic Volume will set a record for any holiday period,’’ as he predicted motorists would drive at least 734 million miles on Michigan’s roads. MILLIONS ON MOVE Millions of Americans were on the move in the holiday period that began at 6-p.m. (local time) Friday and will end at midnight Monday. , AAA idely separated rain areas added tb^the. normal hazards of motoring. accide Safety Council, In itimates, figured trally kill ,420 per-(Hsabllng injury The record traffik toll for* a Labor Day weekend -k a three-day holiday — is 461. It was set in 1951.______________________ servance 415 lives were lost In traffic, 28 in boating mishaps; 83 by drowning and 90 from miscellaneous causes for a total of 616. Plane's Tail Section May Be Crash Clue (Continued From Page One)1 been due to a bomb explosion Or tampering . /, The CAB said there Was no concrete evidence of disintegration, hut the possibility/ would be checked out along with a number of other theories. - Conflicting reports of witnesses to the accident hampered the investigation. A number of persons claimed 'to have seen an explosion in the air and /then, another on m “Ithe ground. Others said there was Hi to'ohly one blast l— when the plane «# ‘fl-hit I « 67 r” ji 7i I .Several witnesse* said the |* « piane appeared to be making a I fully controlled* approach to the pitch black cornfield, indicating the pilot was In trouble and was attempting to land. Persons living in homes near the crash scene said the plane’s landing and navigation lights were on and its engines roared at Mgh power seconds before the crash/ Federal Aviation Agency Administrator Najeeb E. Halaby said/investigators would have to ,/sift through the statements of hundreds of persons to separate fact from fiction, lie indicated the cause of the crash may not be known for bmetlme, if ever. ‘ German note .complained. SAYS LAW VIOLATED It charged the troops had'been moved over routes that belong to East Germany. This was a violation of international tew, the note said. 11 It said continued occupation of West Berlin by the three Western Allies Only served “German militarists _and revenge seekers." In East Beriin, Soviet cosmonaut Gherman, Titov warned that the Communist camp will wipe out any aggressor Jl$ing to destroy world peace because to the conclusion of German peace treaty. His warning came at the end of a brief, prepared speech delivered at a rally. He described how the. big Soviet space ship in which” he circled the globe 17 times could easily and accurately |>e piloted 1 ‘either manually or automatically.” ’Such a space ship can be made to land,-anywhere,” Titov said. v.At.nstolu' SITE OF BOMB TEST — The cross locates' Semipalatinsk, in Russia’s Central Asian area, about 1,700 miles east of Moscow, where the White House announced Friday the Soviets had conducted a nuclear test of “intermediate range,” The blast was detonated in the air. . . Blast to Speed U.S. Move BIRMINGHAM - City Commissioners Ralph A- Main and Robert Page have been named the city’s representatives as delegate-, and alternate to the annual meeting Of the Michigan Municipal League this month. The conference wiil be held Sept 14-16 job Mackinac Island. The League's con-con committee will report on issues that municipalities might consider in 'connection with the constitutional convention. Preschool conferences for a 1 will atari at 8:30 a.m.'lnd. end at' 3:40 pjn. * Bused-in students at Beverly, Franklin, Greenfield, Harlan, Valley Woods and Walnu t Lake will : begin school at 8:55 a.m. and be dlsmissecl at 2:50 p.m. ; Wa 1 k4 n elementary schools ■farting at fcjj s.m. and ending— at 3:10 p.m. include Adams, Pembroke, Pierce, Quarton and. Tarry; and- starting at 8:55 a.m. and ending nt 3:16 p.m. are. Pioneers Daughter Mrs; Newman Dies Mrs. Levi (Margaret) Newman, daughter of one of Oakland County'S-earliest settlers, died yesterday at Bloomfield Hospital after a long illness. She was 97. Mrs; Newman was the youngest of 11 children born to Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Sipte who4ive«Faround Mill Lake on Baldwin Road, Orion Township. The area, a thriving community in 1844, was at that time called Moho'pan-It was here that Mr. Siple operated the Siple Wagon Works. .The Newmans were married on Jan. 6, 1884 hptomtaK The tete Levi Newman was the son of the John Newmans, early settlers in the Mohopac' area settling on farm around/ Voorheis Lake. The Newmans often told to the plank road .between Pontiac and Lapeer, ^nd the cobblestone and cedar blpck paving on Saginaw Street; / After leaving the farm on Wal-don Road, the Newmans lived for many years on both State and Monrbe streets.- * Mrs. NeWman was one of -the oldpst members of Central Methodist Church. She was a life member of the Order of Eastern Star Chapter 228. Surviving is* a grandson. „,- .. . . Service will be held.at 11 TuesdHy~ar'VoaFHe®^pTe"Cfiaga wvance live, wore lost In wlth burial In the Sashabaw Ceme- A • A * Kennedy said .Thursday; after meeting with Cabinet officiate and congressional leaders, that this country’s atomic weapons systems were "wholly adequate” to deal with the policy of “atomic blackmail” which he declared was now being practiced by Russia. But some ofthe President's advisers feel that the public, here pud abroad,. should be given a better idea of the .proportions of American strength and the military purposes for which It is designed. Among other obpectivro, they evidently would like to dramatize, and make understandable what they now call Rns-j sia’s “policy -nf overkill.” That term was used by Amhas- tery. The Order of Eastern Star will conduct a memorial service at the funeral .home at 8 p.m. Mon-day. ’ -- . Observes Communion Holy Communion will be celebrated at 7:30 p.m, Sunday at Providence Missionary B a p t' Church. Pastor Claude Goodwin will conduct' the service. (Continued From Page One) justifying the Kremlin's decision to end the Sovtet-Britiah-U.S. moratorium. The statements stressed toe theme, that the West was preparing aggression against the -Soviet Union. . . District will.be held 9 a.m. Wednesday and Thursday. Supt. .Otis M. Dickey will speak at a general faculty meeting. Most of. the two days will, be spent by teachers preparing instructional' materials and organising rooms. School will begin Thursday. Classes at Bamuni, 'Derby gnd Seahoim wiit begin at 8 a.m. and end at 3:10 p m. Groves classes Midvale school will open at 8:55 a.m. but will dismiss at 3:20 in teachers In the Bimiiighaih School order hoHo oonfiictwlth the Sea- holm dismissal. Merritt Olsen, Birmingham grocery operator, has been appointed by the City Cbmmisston to fill a vacancy on the board of appeals for the fire prevention bureau: surprise that n t Soviet nuclear explosion came on the heels to the Russian am ment W ednesday to plans sume nuclear tests/ ft announce-lans to A** While senators discussed the nuclear blast, • Qte Senate Foreign Relations Committee pushed ahead with legislation to set-up a US, Disarmament Agency. It would coordinate U.S. disarmament policy. • ★ * A John Sparkman. D-Ala., acting chairman, said the committee agreed tentatively, on a rough draft of the bill and will consider it again Tuesday. Sen. George D. Aiken, R-Vt.l said the Kennedy administration began putting new pressure on the committee for test action Thursday after Soviet Premier Khrushchev announced plans to resume nuclear testing. following a meeting with the President. At the meeting Dean reported on his fruitless negotiation with Russian representatives Geneva-on a nuclear weapons test ban. treaty. Referring to Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s statements about development to a 100-megaton nuclear bomb, Dean said “the Soviet policy is the policy of overtoil.” Sr A A . The term comes from military sources and means toe destruction of human life beyond the limits to military necessity.—One to the points which the proposed statement on U.S. nuclear weapons capacity would bring out is that American bombs had veloped for military purposes and not for maximum' destructive capacity apart from military eorftid-erations. ANNOUNCED BLAST The White House announced Friday the first Soviet nuclear explosion known to this - country since Russia, the United States and Britain imposed moratoriums and began their test ban conference, at Geneva almost three years Pair Confesses Slaying Spree Teen Girl, Companion Admit Killing Four for Total of $16 The announcement said that th$ “The device tested had a substantial yield in the intermediate range,” the statement said. “It was detonated in the atmosphere.” In LondonSriBritish Foreign Office spokesman said the explosion in the atmosphere rather than underground "increases “by an amount as yet unknown the danger to health from radioactivity.” Most senators Friday expressed Two Arrested for Bad Checks Mother of 3 Released on Bond; Examination Will Be Wednesday term to Winston T. Kellogg, who is leaving the city. The form expires- Jan. 22, IHI.:——- 1 Newly elected officers of the Bloomfield Hills Camera Club are Jane McIntyre, president; dene Newton, vice president; John Cterke, treasurer; and Carolyn Oakes, secretary. The club meets 8 p.m. the first and third Tuesday to toe month at .2222 E. Maple Road, Birmingham. ■ ' ' p Municipal Court • examinations for two persons charged with [ ing bogus, checks in the Pontiac area will be held next Wednesday; Mrs, Sylvia, J. Deming, 32, 117 W. Fainnount. mother of three, is accused to Cashing a bogus check for $125 at the Community National Rank Monday. * * ■ * was arrested lice Thursday after trying to a $400 check at the Pontiac Bank. She walked out to, ttfe I when a teller went to MIDLAND, Tex. (API—Officers arrested a teen-age girl and her tattooed companion today said the pair signed written statements that they had killed four people in a slaying spree stretching . from Illinois through Texaa Jack Reeves, a Texas highway patrolman, said John Edwin Meyeqi,..ji2, and Donna Marie Stone signed the* statement alter he arrested them this morning the edge of the Far West Texas city. ■’ ★ , * * Meyers arid the teen-age^ the motive was robbery. Reeves said. They obtained a total of $16 in-the. four slayings. One of their victims was Carole Ballard, 11, who lives near Belleville, IU. The other victims were Carole’s father, George Ballard, 47; Margaret M. Wernicker. 39, . Snviot ♦«>«» Avptnainn u/a* in th* to St. Louis, and Lee DeKrasli. whose body was found betw Midland and Big Spring, Tex. The Stone girl, who is heavily built and looks qlder than had been living with grandparents at nearby Edwardsville, 111. The grandparents reported her missing Aug- 22. later at her home, and the charge- She was released on $100 al bond yesterday by Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan pending the’ hearing. * ■ ★ a a Donald J. Ciphers Jr. 29; to 1155 Fairfax.St.,$is accused to passing a bogus check for $122.34 at the Ritz Cafe, 9 N. Saginaw St., b June. ... He Is-being belil in the Oakland County Jail unable to fur- EERO SAARINEN . Saarinen Rites toBeHekfloday Plan Privato Service* for Famous Architect Who Died Yesterday Detective Robert Emery*’ Midi Ciphers had admitted passing checks stolen from a Pontiac firm; where he was once employed and personal checks made out to a Pon-i A prlvate wrvic« tor Eero Sard-tiac resident whore wallet he had wn internationally famous Bloom-found. The cashed checks totaled^ HilL) ttrcWUfct who died $700, Ciphers admitted, according' yegterday at the University of to Emery. — ;._ Padre Island, .off the Texas coast, was named after Padre Nicolas Baiii, a Spanish priest who vainly tried to establish a ranching colony there In 1811. L-----NATIONAL WftATHEK-------------Widely scattered - showers and • thundertoowers are,, forecast fur tonight fur the North and Central Appalachians, Ohio Valley, l-ukos region; Upper and Central -Mississippi Valley North and Central Plains and North and Central Rockies. with snow flurries in the higher areas of the • Rockies. Cooler weather is. slated for the upper Mississippi' . Valley, North and Central Plains and Central Rockies. 1 ) Sandstorm Brings Death KNOLLS, Utah lAP)—A three-car smashup during a wind-whipped sandstorm killed three people, injured 14 and Med up traf-" or nearly four hours Friday night on U.S. 40 in the Great Salt I^ike desert. HONORED FOB BRAVERY — Two. Water-, ford ■Township teen-agers were ^awarded certifi-■ cates of merit yesterday by Tow(nship Police ' Chief Millard J. Pender, (left) and Oakland County Sheriff Frank Irons, fur saving the life of their companion Tuesday, Jeffrey Janlk, 13, of 75!) Lyle St., was swimming with.Gary- Clement, 14, 5419 Sarvls St., when young Clement suddenly hdd an attack of cramps 50 feet from the shore in Elizabeth Lake and went under. Janik brought him jo the surface and held the boy until Eric Ijitz, 17 of 751 McDougle St. could get a boat out to the youths. Firemen were called and found dements revived by his companions. From left are Pender, Lutz, Janlk and irons. State Fair Lures. 48,279 People Despite Rain Nearly 50,000 persons .turned out A public memorial service will be held at a later date. ' UNDERWENT OPERATION He had undergone a two-hour operation Thursday for the.remov-al of a brain tumor. j.., «xi T,,p Sl ycar old architect had dlllon following the operation had steadily worsened. Saarinen, 1045 Vaughan Road, had succeeded his tether, Ellel, as one of the world’s most successful architects. The elder Saarinen died to a cerebral hemorrhage ih 1950 at the age of 77. From 1945 until his father’s death, they worked as partners. A native of Klrkkoaumml,' Pln-tiand, Saarinen came to the Uaited States In IMS with his father and became a citizen In 1M6. Michigan State Fair in petrait spite a soaking rain that lasted until mtdaftemoon. ★ * Yesterday's attendance of 48,279 was well below the 64,641 to the first day test yeai>bui Fair Manager Walter A. Goodman /aid the turnout was-better than had been expected with the rain. Goodman said, much larger crowds were expected today, which is Veterans' Day! Two Oakland County area contestants were among award winners yesterday. Harvey Dzodln, 14, ol Oak Park, chewed his way to top honors lor his age group in the annual pieeating contest. A ’ * " * Conrad Griedeman pt Ro took the blue ribbon and a $500 award for the best commercial exhibit Of perishable fruit. News in Brief The theft of |M and a carton of cigarettes from the home of Roma J. LaVergne, 16 W. Howard St., wfis reported to Pontiac police yes- ■rday. Mona Worley, B0 Close fit., reported to Pontiac police yesterday that clothing and other Items valued at $26 were stolen from her A portable TV ret valued at 63S was stolen from her fiome, Lucille Harris, 298 Prospect St., reported to Pontiac police yesterday. ported to . Pontiac police yesterday that a transistor radio valued at $38 was stolen from his truck, parked at Baglcy Street and Rockwell Avenue. A camera and' other Items with a combined value of $125 were stolen from his car, parked at 287 Irwin Ave., John E. Phillips, 478 Mldway^Ave., reported to Pontiac police early today. ' In 1953 he was named the country's outstanding architect for his design of the $100-milllon General Motors Technical Center In Warren. A *, A GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT He called that assignment his -greatest achievement. He. designed the entire technical centetwland-icaptng. an outdoor take, and a Score of buildings splashed with color floating staircases and pools. His other designs Included the U.H. Erabasy to London and the Trans World Airlines terminal at New York's Idlewtld Airport. He also was a special consultant In the design to the U.S. Air Force Academy. Another Saarinen design under construction is the Dulles International Airport new Waahlngton, D.C. He also completed before his illness the design for the CBS sky*, scraper headquwters in New York. ■ * * a He recently announced that he would transfer his architectural firm at 1300 N. Woodward Ave., Birmingham to Hamden, Conn., late this slimmer, Survivors Include Ms widow, Alina, an art critic, his mother, Hires children, Erie, Janies and Susan; and a sister, Mrs. Rab-. The family asked that persons wishing to make memorial tributes send them to Yale University Saarinen’s name, THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1961 THESE P^rty4qBolii0ut Bandwagon hr WillfatiO'Iftipn Democrats plan to 1 toot Ih# trumpets, clarinets iuid saxophone! tor William A. O'Brien Jr., con-con qmdldftft, at a political jam session Sept' 9 in Huntington rW< ' * "* r O’Brien, a< Clawson attorney, opposes Hepublican George W. Romney, president of American Melon Carp., ih the con-con iljectfdj) Sept tt. . , f V J.h- Democrats have been asked to Bring any - musical instruments— except a piano—fo the home of Dr. teon Ffli,877B NMd^Sr;r« 7:36 pirn. Campaign delations* are also being asked. t Delay XI5 Record T ry ^ EDWARDS AUfloRCE BAJL-, Calif. (AP)—An attempt to fly the X15 rocket plane to. a' record Speed of 3,700 miles „an hour was postponed Friday for- the fifth time because- of technical problems DoctorsAwait 'Discoverer' Retrieved From OCBOn, Capsule Will Reveal Space Effects onr Life HICHAM AIR FORCE BASE, Haw# .fAPP— JSbctors probing oUtef space for dangers to mao to- package plucked from the Padfic after Its refuni from orbit. • T Discoverer XXIX’s capeule covered north of Hawaii Friday, contains hitman tissue, a three-day-old .embryonic ebickeq heart, hone, and even an influenaa-virus with a family tree. ' I.V8TKCMRVTS ABOARD An undisclosed ntbnber of instruments—some to measure radioactivity—also were aboard. The nose cotie was to arrive at Pearl Harbor Jate tpday aboard' the destroyer JCpperson with the tittee Aif porce frogmen Who fsttwhufrtf pifa ^ "t-nfer t#:rfr trieve it. The meff, called “para-nsscuemeu.S spent most ' of the night with the capsule bobbing in a' rubber life .raft, : Tears Missing for Air Victims ! : at Busy Cook County Morgue About 40,000 patents are isuued n. the, U S. each year. J CHICAGO (AJP), — There were * no sobs and no tetars of anguished ... relatives at ' the Cook County 'Morale Friday, one of the busiest days in the higjory of the ' , the dead. t -y POT more than four hdurs hearses and ambulances rolled up to-the: unloading dock «f morgue. Attendants lifted onto rubber-tired carts the cairius and plastie bags containing the bodlee and parte of bodies- charred, mu-tilated and crushed in the cibash of the Trans Worid AiriineaCbnetel-lation. belts hotd but theseata pancake,[Joseph CToce, 30, a suburban Oak) craving: the limbs,' ’ Jtfark school teacher, who sought] ■ A * '. tj» identify the bqdy of his cousin,] The tolal included 32" inert] 26 j***1 women arid 20'children. He said O-hJeha. a French) '*■* vivU ^ ^ J -ar rkato>» DAYLIGHT AT CRASH SITBr-Wreckage of the TWA passenger plane—Stakes marking strewn bodies—Utters a cornfield near a southwest Chicago suburb, in daylight rain Frkjay. Recovery officials mill through the foreground area where the planf’^remains skidded to a stop and burned—killing 78 first cursory identification, people— after crashing in the background, where the tail assembly ■ “It’s always the same." said the pathologist. Dr. Harold Wanger. ’' i[an airplane crashC the seat A coroner’s pathologist and a || coroner’s official examined each.fi body as it arrived and made the board powers to delepite work and authority to subordinates and to panels of its own members. - Four-fifths of the people of China are farmers.. Sotof Start* Thun.: Th« . Last ,aun**t," Rack Hudson, Kirk Douglas, color; "On "ouble" Danny Kaye, Dana Wyntor, Milfor* "Oidgtt ooes Hawaiian.” James n. Deborah Waller, color. ____-Tuee.: The Ladiet Man,” Jerry Lewi*. Helen Traubel, color. Thurs -Sat.: "Th# Parent Trap,” Hay-ley Mills, color. Cantlnflas. Shirley RHNPDHL Time I Saw Robert Mttchum. Martha Hyer. Pearl Harbor Survivors to Meet in California Piaya Del Rey, Calif. All 78 persons aboard the plane —73 passengers and a crew of 5— -perished in the flaming wreckage -of the plane in a cornfield near , suburban Hinsdale early-. Friday morning. ■ But few of the 78 victims from the Chicago area and some 12 houfo alter the early morning traRldy only one relative ap- sume the plane peered to try to identify one of they died, the dead. ■ - ", • " j rsBiM Taair The first relative of a traish vkv W ” tim to appear at the morgue was; After arrival. of the bodies, came the grim task of receiving) and tagging the.-vietims’ bodies and taking Unger prints. . | Hip plane crash occurred in Du Page County "but the bodies were brought to- the Cook, County Morgue beause it-has, more facilities - ; James dark, chief deputy corner of Du Page County, said] bout SQ pcp ccnt of the bodies had) been tentatively • identified. -Only fpur had been positively identified EXAMINATIONS 1 Dr. Andrew’ J. Toman, Cook] County coroner, said-examinations being made to determine whether there was a fire or an explosion in the plane before...Rj landed. If the examinations show] arbon monoxide gas in the blood of the victims, he said, then the! Federal Aviation Agency may as-afire--before I said O’Meiia. teacher, was ffytogto Berkeley, t^alif . where be‘had a teaching job waiting. He said he was (FMelia’s qnfy relative in the Chicago area. ' I XASTONE AND ELiraaMUE SENM6. . a Iwt a \ ' J «wr FREE! 1000 S&H Green Stomps , -. Pt -2^2fr--. 24-H0UR SERVICE 2457 Paruli Orive-PontiBC ------DID Y0U VISIT OUR GRAND OPENING LAST WEEKEND? If not make it o point to be our guest this weekend at LAKE ANGELUS GOLF VIEW ESTATES, Wolton Blvd. at Artgelus Drive. JAMES L ZUEHLKE "THE CUSTOM GUILDER" Community Theaters! HUls—Rochester ?. .11 Bloodj^Rch.” , Wanted-- Credii Manager . for Your Home jji l . Survivors of the attack on Pearl * I Harbor will meet Dec, 7 at the | Disneyland Hotel to Anaheim, || o*y. ■ This year for the first time the pig7 |: | survivors, have been invited toja. J I bring their spouses to thb meeting.-p |j Reservations are being accepted) by Mark Ferris, president of|^^ : the group, at 7551 Trask Ave.,il||| | 9 Die in Mine Explosion TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — Nlpe workers were killed and threA •riously injured Friday in an ex-...osion in a coal mine at-Juifang « in Northeast Formosa. An investi-|j gat ion into safety measures at 1 the mine was begun. Is youi* family a SLAVE bo credit? Do bills . . . bills . . . bills keep you from enjoying life — from the pleasure your pay check should hold for you? Learn to bfe the MASTER of credit! It can be it marvelous servant for you, if you manage it properly. You can live better, have more money to spend and more to save if you control your credit Here's how to become a credit manager to your own home: • get aside a-portion of your salary (say 10%) In savings. Do this before * you even think about what you are going to do with the rest of the money. o Decide how much- you really need for living costs. Then use that amount of money for current expenses only. •*,. oPay off all your present bills before you incur new ones. Call the credit managers at the stores where you have delinquent accounts and set up a schedule. Then stick to It. • Before you accept any new obligations be tills you ci following questions with a “YES.” Do I nebd ltf Can I afford It? Have I shopped around? AM I buying ft from a reliable firm? ~ d I think about it Over night before deciding? BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Comijierce 'M tffih ^gBSBgggZSS^BZSZZSZZSSBZSSZZZZZBSBSSZZSSSSSSS& ■up RIF Alt "Expert Home" * REMODELING Complete Home MODERNIZING FREE PLANNING • FAMILY AND RUMPUS ROOMS • BASEMENTS • RECREATION ROOMS ,• ATTIC ROOMS , • NEW HOME FRONTS • KITCHENS • BATHROOMS • DENS • JALOUSIE ROOM ADDITIONS LABOR end MATERIALS RROYECTiS BY " ~ CERTIFIED GUARANTEE APD-A-ROOM FOR YOUR GROWING FAMILY NO MONEY DOWN - FHA TERMS -5 YEARS TO PAY NO PAYMENTS 'TIL NOVEMBER ! Call Note/ ROOM ADDITION FE 3-7833 A RECREATION ROOM BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO, 92 W. Huron St. jggagaaB^^B^zggggggggBsggaazgsBgaBaazga FOUft the eontiac press, Saturday, September a, laei CARL'S KIDDYIAND Cor. Telogropkainl Dixie Washed away and 80 more house! inundated here Friday during a heavy rainfall, national police reported. 40 Years of *= Distinguished Insurance Service AUSTCN-NORVELL AGENCY, Inc. 70 W. Lawrence St. FE 2-9221 % Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME **Thoughtful Service” 46 Williams St. ' Phone FE 8-5M1 BIG HOLIDAY SHOW! TOGETHER Pat I Jerry's FUNNIEST — Pat's GAYEST SOIMG-FEST on Air Corridor U.S. Uses Russians Own Words to Probe Soviets False WASHINGTON (AP) -. The United States has used Russia’ own words in an effort to prove false the Soviet claim that the air corridors to Berlin. are for mill-tary use only. The Berte have been contending that .postwar Allied agreement provided for use of the air coni* dors over East Germany only to supply the Western miUtiuy garrisons in Wiest Berlin. SECRET DOCUMENT The U.S. government Friday public a long-secret Soviet stating that the three Western corridors had been alloted by four-power agreement, including the “ ‘ . flights by Allied aircraft over the Soviet zone of occupation.”. The paper was presented by the Soviets at the 1947 Moscow foreign ministers meeting. U.S. officials described it as probably the most , explicit written record showing Russian agreement civilian and military traffic to Berlin. The Western Allies look on the air corridors as their most portant lifeline in maintaining'a foothold in Berlin against Communist CcptiMMU Shown*! SATURDAY md SUNDAY — Door! 0»ol I pm. Ample FREE Porklni To Ignore Peace Pact' FULDA, Germany (AP)—Ger--lany’s senior Catholic, bishop, Josef Cardinal Fringe of Cologne, Friday said the Vatican will ignore any separate Soviet peace ^treaty with East Germany. Whirlpool, Coin-Operated DRY CLEANING Open 9 to 9 Daily and! Sun. 2415 Elisabeth Lake Redd Phone 333-9207 3 Blocks W. of Telegraph ARTHUR H. DEAN Graham Asks li People Ready for Nuclear War PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The ley. I$r- Billy Graham, quoting Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia as saying nuclear war may be inf-minent, asked bis-audience Fridby night if they were ready for a nuclear holocaust. ' O A * Ate we ready to' go before the seat of judgment?” he asked a capacity gathering in Convention Hall esfimated atnB,7()0. He also quoted Soviet Premier Khfushobev as saying 100 million Americans may die-if war comes. A A A- •; The evangelist’s sermon was dedicated to youth. At the beginning,”T»e asked how many in the audience were under 21. Ait estimated 5,000 persons stoop up. To Head Red Delegation UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -Deputy Premier Frol R. Kozlov, secretary to the Soviet Communist party - Central Committee, will head foe Soviet delegation to this year’s U.N.. General Assembly, informed diplomats said Friday night. Tiiax^LovaBLE Mississippi Riverbqax Gw> is now teachiif a stuffy College town and p shy young professor — a lot of things they can9t ★ ★ NOW SHOWING! am from boohs! ★ ★ Kennedy Eyes Post for Dean E;hv-D)L'lD. Geneva Slated, ai Di^annament Negotiator for U.S. WASWNGTON (APT-Ambassador Arthur H. Dean, jujSt returned from foe floundering nu-’ dear> foil talk*- at: Geneva slated to he named a# I«L disarmament negotiator. if foe United -States succeeds fo- arranging* general disarmanent conference later this year with foe Soviet President Kennedy is reported • be deeply impressed wifo Dean's skill and-hard-headed bargaining ability in his negotiations wifo, foe Communists, to date.. Informants said foe President intends to keep Dean in some high position in fop administration, and word-fa that if the disarmament conference can be set up he will head foe delegation. 8B1GNED TO U.N. Meanwhile be already ii signed as a member of the UA delegation fo foe U-N. General Assembly openteg at New York Sept. 19. In that capacity presumably would handle much the debate now expected to take {dace on the failure at the Geneva negotiations for a nuclear test' and atomic weapons testing. ■ .A F A Dean and John J. Mcdoy,^Kennedy’s, chief disarmament policy adviser, conferred'with the President at the White House Friday immediately after Dean’s return to Washington. He was summoned home Wednesday after the Soviet government announced its decision to rshew nuclear test plosions. a - a • a • . Whether broadscale East-1 disarmament talks can be started any time in future months still fa an open question. MCCloy is due to open a new round of dfacusskma on fois problem wifo sortet rep-mtativ&Valerian Zorin in New 37 HurtmBwFfyngi SUNBURY. P*®-^ chartered bus plunged over asmpll embankment, then toppled over on Us side Friday night, injuring 37 passengers from PennAjdvania bound for a gala ha&day fair in Toraht* The western part of the United States is growing faster than foe east, -a trendnqted sjnce J ~ 1850. for low cost CAR LOANS. GMT0 EMPLOYEES FEDERAL 0BWT UNION Iff w, Hums — f! Mill I York Wednesday. They have had two series of meetings, one here j and one in Moscow. Both were j incopclusiye. iiuii£w!. 'YDD-mv* ;dnly * more 6AfL?o*TTEND a MATINEE Before School Starts’. . . Afternoon Shows At 1-3-5 P.M. Eves. At ? dM 9 P M-- • Regular Prices TECHNICOLOR" NEXT: TREVOR HOWARD AND MARY URI IN "SONS AND LOVERS" TAMMY SHOWS... aDeatt of Women that keeping *in«m happy is her real career! SAND! 1A DEE JOHN GAVIN Charles MAKE Virginia * GREY Cecil KELLAWAY Beulah BONDI Edgar BUCHANAN I •SCI 1 SAT. -■ 5 ■ SHORTS ......... H TAMMY ffiDULE* ■UN. - MON. 1:10-3:08-5:06-7:04—9:02 1:31—3:29—5:27—7:25-9:23 OPEN tM t.M. Show Start! 7:40 S.M. APlUTS SOt. CHILPRIN UNDtK 12 YKS. FKKI YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN \A MOTION -PICTURE LIKE THIS BEFORE — AMAZING! EXPLODES WITH SUSPENSE! VOMffWITH Muuuunornrx Sandra as the {JgfBMMYHWfoES a COLLEGE CAMPOS III A crime ' miff.:.; Na-«-BR0WN gig] ADDED. EXTRJU TEEN-AGERS e foa roal a< * revealing i J Of today's A A A A A O OOOOORp A MmPnmmrnmtimsmmim Michael Callan -Ibesday Wdd * ^ . n Victoria Shaw ywiMw rnub toms* * eucsMTMH James Deuen Duane Eddy Miio Rebels a Hi* W, (i Presents Big Problem scene make mere sense than rid- j^flffag costs than he would lor tog the bus into the heart d a I ................ SOLAR HEAT heafing oil Order tram us . GULF OIL Co. 392 S. SANFORD FE 2-9173 ^T^tE ^OICTIAC PREgS| S ATffiRIMY, gEP^EMBE^^ t06i FtYE is m Why Don’t People Ride the Bases? By HOMER DOWDY Flint Joans! Stott Writer Fewer things- on the American the bus stop: it may take longer Lines, a NCL subsidiary, fliv the portal-to-portal trip by. car f than by bus, and he more money in gdsaUne,ttre* and busy, congested, ovemm Oily in-gteadof battling impossible traffic in ears occupied by only one' at t#o persons each. - , *>■ * But jtathe tradition ot independence Hut Americans love, fewer Still, he ton't ride the local bus. His attitude may not nuke sense, but his a«%h are a confirmed feet of urban H sensible things are more Ignored than local bur jiding, : nearest bas stop and that is why heneverrlde* the baa to work, maybe it take* too long. Or taro is tfo steep, likely wffl walk farther ] toe downtown parking lot to bom Us home to BY GOLLY.. Wit Going 4 Dkk “SKYROOM” Vances restaurant . mmM ll>. too to 6k SPACEMAN MINUS FOR THI CHILDREN ' We Serve Only MI«Mfcade Poods sad Are Open ' Dally from 6:10 AM. to tOOO P.M. A " ’ Prices bom lie aad lie op to S1JS end tSJS PATRICK VANCE Mgr. Phono OR 1-2170 m tern is threatening the existence of tobal public transportation in cjties all* over Michigan may say he doesn't like u toe nation.. * from bis beam to the • ' * * * •As patronage faBe off. service is curtailed and farm are raised to meet' coats that still go higher and higher. Service cuts and Taw increases reaidt fat a further drop means new rands of service cuts and farfi increases. And so the cycle. In most Michigan cities, public transportotka to. at «p m &*■ from a citato. Bay City operations steppe# to MM. A jitney system of s« “ “ Tbe ctty was to pay lO per cent of noss revenues for the equip-mapf and 5 per cent for an operational profit. This method wap devised to eliminate faxes which, it was Mt, padeOto difference be-veen profit and loss. '' ‘ - ,; Patronage* has- fallen, however, and: service pap gone down as fares liitoe gone up._ taken to forestall the collapse of ’ Bid in city after city such effort* ire seen as delaying actions, Ct •at. |W " THE JACKSON PLAN Jackson thouftot It had a workable plan in a lease arrangement worked out in 1956. The dtytefced rolling stock from National City Lines, Inc., and hired Jackson City year in public fends to kdep Up the masoe have copied features of to Jackson pton. tkl firm serving the. MuskegOi Will1 Prosecute Man Who Punched Soapy LUSAKA, Northern Rhodesia III Hfhe'.Northern* Rhodesia white mill who punched G. Merinen Williams to the jaw here Monday night It gofaig to be prosecuted, a Northern Rhodesia police spoke*-nan said Friday night-“The acting director of public prosecutions has directed that a "THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF TOE YEAR ...RIPS THE MEARTI* th^ Lusaka airport during the night of Aug. **,” he said. . The name of the man who socked the touring U.S. assistant secretary df state was not made public nor the chargtt specified. Piaket Russian Embassy Against Nuclear Testing WASHINGTON W -- A dmn pickets protesting Russia’s decision to resume nuclear testing paraded nearly two blocks away from the Soviet embassy today. Police regulations forbid picketing within SOS feet of sa embassy. The group represnted the National Committee far a Sane Nuclear Policy, jrith headquarters in New York. . Other cities are An a transit brink. Their bus firms have received no Steal fotaks, except for 1960 Stkte act that changed bus licensing - fr^m a«-weight basis— and a 9300 cost fear a big bus—to flat 325 fee. The, act expire? next February. _ What wlU help lump the prl- ___j kiMtier wllfask why bus firtos don't operate vari-! ' - M coaches — bigger and smailer ones Leo J. Nowicki, general manager of Detroit Street Railways, dismisses foe Mea ns Raving little or ro saving* tote to unvarying wage rates regardless of bus size and higher costs of duplicate stocking of parte and maintenance, equipment. * - A local manager of City Coach Ines, Inc., which operates to Grand Rapids, Flint and Muskegon, agrees that small-size buses cannot do‘'toe job in these cities and to mix them with big-bus fleets would compound,'not solve, the problem. Little Boy Enjoys Lite's Big Things; Swipks a Bus NORFOLK, Va. » — A 14-year-old boy swiped a Trailways passenger bus Friday and took a 15-block solo ride before he was overtaken and forced to stop by another Trailways bus. Police said the youngster, who M "very - - ..... ■ ‘ *t n«wii EXPELLED — The Rev. Kurt Scharf, leader of Germany’s Evangelical Church, was'exiled Friday' by Communist East Germany with toe charge be .beaded an “illegal” group unfriendly to peace. Pontiac Theaters eagle Sat.-Mon.: “Wild Is the Coun-try,” Elvis* Presley, Hope I cotor; ‘‘The White Warrior,” Ste^e Reeves, color. _______ _______lJ Tue.-Thu.: "From the Terrace,” Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, ’Underworld U.S.A.,” Cliff Robertson. • HURON Sat.-Thu.: "Tammy TeH True,” Sandra Dee, John Gavin, Edgar Buchanan, color. STRAND V. Sat.-Tue.: "Niidd,” Walt Disn^ color. Starts Wed.: "Sons and Lovprs,-1 Trevor Howjprd'.'. The first lighthouse in the Eng-bm.cokmiee in America is believed little Brewster Island in Boston Harbor in 1716. [commerce] ■OX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 SHOW STARTS 7:30 SOUTH UNION LAKE RD. CM 3-0661' FREE PLAYGROUND GIANT CABT00N festival ran THE KIDDIES r HOW THRU TUESDAY DORiSDAYANDFRAUMWIAIRAf WARNER BROS. U i _ &JLm Gig YOUNG EINfl BARRYMORE DOROTHY MALOIK s... The boy w» carrying a packed suitcase. .He was " just going s where,” he said.' Kill Escaped Leopard ROFU, Japan 01 — A 7-year-old Leopard escaped from its cage in toe zoological garden here today and scared this city for 2% hours |M|re|tonreeg* ’ by police. gg^BggaaeggggaEgagEms^ggggga GALA PRE-HOLIDAY FUN SHOW! 10 SUNDAY—FIREWORKS DISPLAY HELD OVER! THRU TUESDAY IT'S A SCRUM! KIDDIES FREE! Cm. wittlaan Uka-AirpMt Road*—Box Offike Open* 6:30 F.M. -tt*8 a sur-PRiZE package—. DedMtad . . that teen-egvs and adults are created equally hilarious) v ^ ■■ ■ RUGOIfS MERKEl AND THIS TO DOUBLE YOUR FUN! |_____— « DANNY KAYE DBNAWYNTERo 0*TH* *£, - our tjrpe Of thinking “Working Midi’s Wife,” was “Meg, ■ there is One thing to for.' wondering what the union does eign aid program'that you could with dues and strike funds col-dp for Poland. Tell Poiisb people lected from members. During the that you are not to reality, as they precedbg election, Jwy/dooated see you. Tell them that your practically all they had toward “Radio Free Europe” Is used for getting Kennedy elected. Then selfish reasons—and not for what- over the holidays they couldn't they fought in World War If,- - even afford a food, basket for Polish children don't cry from '^^kteLel se. \ ' j ‘"'"A The big shots in the union live bigger on rands coiteated off. the poor woifctogman. . . ,,. - X Om Who Knows:. 'Railroads Need Help From Government’ The Wall Street Journal says the Pennsylvania Railroad te* ported a profitof$943,853 to July. In the 1960 month It had a loas of 12,100,432, In the seven months ended July 31, however, the rail-, road reported a loss of 116,841,786 and revenues of 8454,964,026 compared with a deflator 81,814.684 and a gross of 1531.763,228 to the •tear aaittwy X. ^ Xii; The Pennsylvania is one of the biggest, oldM and Most success. fid railroads In the country. Unless the government recognizes the plight of nearly all rails, they're absolutely doomed. last an Observer The Almanac By United Press International Today is Sept 2. the 245th day of the year with DO'to follow in 1961. The moon is approaching its'new „ —The morning Mar ls Venus. —— The evening stare are Jupiter ' and Saturn. ’ 1 1 - . . On this day to history: ; / In MM, dM great lire of Lun- acies, destroy tag and m churches si lions -of dollar* i Days of All Faiths: Portraits Churches Observe Labor Sunday By, DR. HOWARD V. HARPER Itmayniorbe true to say that Organized labor saw the religious aspect of man’s daily work before organized religion saw them, but it is certainly true that the American Federation of Labor took the initiative to pointing .them out.- Sked^for roM^peratiomT of*the Federal Council of Churches in giving-the working^ man’s holiday a religious emphasla. ■ Since 1910 the day before .Labor Day has been known as La* bor Sunday, and toe 'Chttrehes have been urged to recognise and observe It appropriately. EVtery year tne National Council Of * Churches (the Federal CouncU’s . successor) produces and dtetrib-utes a Labor Sunday message for use to. the local eliurches of the man Martyrology lists tnany such nor Prophet8.*'*H« was one of the figures: the Jewish patriarch Abra. - leading figures to the Jews’ deham, Moses, Islah and many others termination to rebuild the Temple including even Job. in Jerusalem after M hatf been de- * ★ * stroyed by the Babvlonians. Zechariah was MW of the “Ml- (Copyright 1991)______ In 1864, Gen. William Sherman occupied Atlanta before beginning his famed March fo the Sea. > In 1945, the Japanese signed, the terms of tlw unconditional surrender ending World War n. t *;■ - —i*f r-A thought tw today: French sciential and philosopher Rene Des-cartce said, “He who Is convinced that he already knows is barred from being able to learn." In Dr. Brady’s Mailbag: The Country Parson Unpeeled Cooked Potatoes Doubtful Cure for Ulcer This Vear'& . measage . stresses Christian doncem about unemployment, particularly that which results- from automation. With the message are included prayers for the unemployed. ST, CUTHBERT’S BEADS ' • Besides being Labor J)ay, .Monday is also the anniversary of the day on which St. Cuthbert’s bones were translated (moved) to their final resting place to a field that is now pari of the English city of Durham. The saint's bones had been carried from place to place, where they vtere buried and dug up again, a countless number of times over a period of seven years. * * * On Sept. 4, sometime around the year 1000, St. Cuthbert was placed in a permanent grave and a shrine was erected over it. From then on pilgrims begany to come, and there Is a happy legend In Northern England that Hays St. Cuthbert became so to-- terested in the visitors to his shrine, he frequently came back to earth to furnlHh beads for their rosaries. On a stormy night you can hcaV him hammering on aa anvil,' anil the next da^ all who search the beaches will find heads made of. fishbone*. Never forget that every legend has some truth behind it. The fact behind this one Is that this stretch of English coastline, after storms, is often strewn with the fossilized remains of a now extinct form of sealife. Shaped Uke little beads, these remains have holes to the center through which they may be strung. " ,. The pilgrims neither knew nor cared anything about natural history, To them the explanation was ’ perfectly simple.-St. Cuthbert was seeing to it that all who came to his shrine, even the*ptWtest of them, were propetly equipped with beads, . -.-OLD TESTAMENT SAINT Sept. 6 Is'a day for St! Zechar-iflh. a Hebrew prophet who lived In the sixth century B.C, It may seem a bit surprising to find to . the Christian calendar a saint Who ■lived 500 years before Christianity wh* ever heard of, but the Ro- DR. BRADY I’d like to know whether, the water from unpeeled cooked potatoes has qny medicinal value to \fhe treatment of ulcer? IT. MX- Ans. <— I know of none. / ’• 9r ft Please write something about \head noises, My brother... (F.M.) _ Ans^_rr ,H_e.a^L noises? Ely-gravy,’v , I had clean'tori’" .gotten. ’Quiet! Let * me 1 Is ten. TnkJ noises are s 11U there, after all these ■ years. But in 30 or 40 years,, your brother will I have to stop and! listen *to makej sure the noises are tHere. In Buf-' falo, we lived on a, Parkway for 10 years and L thought mV- No. 2 • head noise (I have an assortment of ’em) was t^e huni or roar of motbr traffic — until one evening -in the quiet countryside I heard the traffic where there was none within many miles. My No. 1 noise is -the song of the locusts on a drowsy mid-summer day. TUs isn’t really noise. It’s music to steep, by. Send -me * stamped, self-ad-dressed envelope for No. 10 pam-. phlet, Deafness and Tinnitus ...{Tinnitus is medicalese for head noises — which shows we don’t kneqy much about the trouble. , w f f Took lodln ration for leg ulcar.> ‘ ■ Had received treatment for years, without apparent benefit, to a few weeks my ulcer healed and, my general vite was better than I have enjoyed since I finished high school . . . (A. H. T.) Ans. — Thank you. For pamphlet 33, The lodln Ration, or for pamphlet No. 1 Varicose Veins and Varicose Ulcer, send stamped, ' self-addressed envelope. If you ask for both, enclose 25 cents to addition. . •-* . * * Water softener installed in our home. Have questioned our doctor and the health officer, but neither seems to know whether the softy ened water is safe or proper to drink. (F. R.) Ans. — It is safe and proper to woyds express a great deal. 1’U be happy to send the pamphlet on’ Hay Fever to anyone who asks for it and provides stamped, self-addressed envelope. By JOHN 43, METCALFE I wish the passing summertime . , . Would not be going home so soon . . . And stay to heaven and on earth ... To cheer and warm the sun and moon . . . I wish f did not have to hew . . , The restless winds send out their call . . . Across the yellow harvest field* . . . For entrance of the early Fall ... I wish these peaceful days and nights • • . With flowers on the garden ground . . . And lambent stardust-fo t&e sky . . . Would stay forevermore around • . - I wish tiw valleys would stay green “ ' And mountains keep their crowns of blue . . . And mission beds to foggy dawn , « : Retain thqir cloaks of crystal dew . . . I. wish tiie summer would remain ... And never have to go away . . That God would order alt the world . To stay just as ft Is today. (Copyright 1991) Smiles On iny job it s better to how than- to know who. ay still do Case Records of tt psychologist: Launch ‘Compliment Club’ Today Never In my 23 years of tufteri tog with hay lever have.I experienced such relief as I have had this past season, tlianks to the advice in your pamphlet. Also, my elbow*, ached for the past three years hut hot arty more* Words efthhot express • « • (Mrs, H. 8.) An*. — Oh, y«e, Ma’am, your By t)K. GEORGE W. CRANK . CASE J-484: Kay S.. -aged li.' is a\very attractive girl. “Mother,” *heT asked one morning, “I apn’t have - _ many friends so what can rtto to. be popular? ” \ “Well,” replied^ her mother, “wh^, don’t you follow Df. Crane’s vice and pay classmates < pliments?”-So Kav decided) to try this simple db, crane prescription. “That’s a very pretty new dress you.are wearing.” she said to a girl companion that afternoon. “I know It,” glibly replied the wearer. Kay didn’t know what else to say so she turned away. Sloon she met a girl who had played the piano as a special number to Sunday School. “ “You really play the piano vefy well," Kay complimented this girl. “I think so myself,’’ replied the young pianist, and agnto Kay was stymied as to her next re* , - mark, so she said nothing. , Later to the afternoon she Had another little’Confidential chat with her mother. , , a V i t. ,.r, ★. After Kay had recounted What she md said and what the recipient of her compliments had answered, Kay added: /’Mother, i didn’t know what 'to do after that, so I kept quiet. Are you sure compliments will work on everybody or are some people so conceited that praise doesn't affect them?’’ ^ / CRUTCH STRATEGY Nobody Is so egotistical or .con- ceited' that praise does not register with him. < Some socially Inept folks don’t know how to accept a compliment, as was probably the .case with the two girls whom Kay praised, tir f f ' So those girls bluntly agreed with Kay, not necessarily because they were 'egotists but because they lacked soda) experience. Whan yon pay a compliment, notice how the recipient takes If. .;■■ , One person will Mush In ffowed contusion awl any noth-, Inf . ' j :: * '*«'•- Ay : * # Another will quickly try to bai* UM accounts by giving you n * compliment In return.______ ______ A thirtd may simply parrot what you have said, as did those two girls whom Kay praised. A fourth wUI laugh self-consciously and say, “Oh, you're just fishing for i quarter." ' f f i Tabulate to your own mind the many reactions of people but don't get disturbed .If they gurgle or grunt a reply, for, compliments'are so scarce, even in civilized America, that mbit people don’t even know how to geoept one, t But If you occasionally « ceited people who Mem unmovod by your., compltmonts,' just keep .on. ■ ■'/. Ultimately, they jrill begin to rely on your daily praise, the way a dope addict gets accustomed to his morphine. : T'- 4 Ari'Tjfi . Then, when you have them leaning upon" you da an emotional “crutch” to sustain (heir ego. tactfully refrain Bom further compliments for a day or so. Watch them wriggle end try to get your slteatieu end « For everybody wants to feet important. And a sincere bit of praise is the magic rood to winning friends, as- well a* new Sunday School or cteiteh attendants. Send for the “Oompllmont 0ub'’ booklet, endoelng a stamped return envelope plus 20 cents. Use It as a church or Sunday school experiment, for It simply put* the Golden Ftul« Into effective* diftUP, action — and la font . SEVEN* THEPONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1061 Mexican ffazaar Is Planned Four-year-old Maty Am Corl gets acquainted with her teacher Mrs. Mark Cheney, Dwight Avenue, at the Bethany Weekday Nursery School, while Mother SEATING GUESTS _ John Nelson was best roan and seating guests were Robert "Whati cookmg?n 3-year-old Mark *7 "■ Grossnickle, Illinois Avenue, appears_____Dwight Avenue, both S. The children to be asking, as he looks up from “dish- ' are enrolled at tke aew Bethany Week- washing” at flay mates Sherri Relyed, day Nursery School which opens Sept. Mrs. Richard Corl,Jilmor Street, fills out registration forms. The new nursery school is planned for preschoolers from 3 to 5 years of age. The Catholic Society ‘df Our Lady at Guadalupe at St. Vincent de Paid Church is sponsoring a Mexican Bazaar today through Monday on the church grounds. "-k • ir *.V. • ■ The. affair is featuring 21 booths featuring exhibits of ' Mexican food, articles and games. Highlighting the activities will be a greased pig contest in which the winner will keep the pig as a prize. * •* ★ -Dancing will be from 7 to 12 this evening and Sunday. On Labor Day a traditional Mexican dinner will be served . from 12 fo 4 p.m. w • • ★ k ' k' There will be 'no admission charge for women attending. Mascara Trick Mascara does the most for "beauty when it is barely, noticeable. It is a beauty treat-mod that should be treated . with a light touch — especially in the daytime. Try this quick trick. Dip the brush in witch hazel instead of water—dries much faster. Women s Section wmeemmmmmtmmm Lynne Ann ThotnpsoriBecomes Bride The Kenneth W. Thompsons of Birmingham were boats at a reception following the vows of their daughter Lynne jAim to Arlington R. Ash of East Lansing today in Holy Name Church, Birmingham. Rev. Stephen Malerlc offered the nuptial Maas. Wearing eight ivory peau de sole appliqued with jeweled Alencon lace, the bride choee an orange 'blossom tiara for her illusion veil and carried Amazon lilies and stephanotis. Her sister Jill and sorority Con Cotton, linen and rayon, important fabrics in the feminine summer wardrobe, are especially susceptible to add damage. Not tttutf dering, research and education center tor the]! professional laundry Industry. Some deodorants are acid in nature and deteriorate the fabric in tha underarm areas. Many deodorants have been tested In the Institute's laboratories to determine whether they will harm fibers. Those which are proven harmless to the fabric are given the A.I.L. Seal of Approval. Wedding at Bethany Paplisl Horn Is sister Mary Lea Kefop of Dearborn were honor maids. Bridesmaids were Bonnie Har-bison of Buffalo, N.Y., Barbara Kittle, Birmingham, Sydney Young of Belleville and the Bride's -cousin Susan Cal-braith. The bridegroom, son Of Mr. and Mrs. Arlington D. Ash of East Lansing, had his uncle, Gerald Ash, o{ Pleasant Ridge for best man. USHER AT CEREMONY Pug Wild£n and Todd Reul-lng of East Lansing, Janies W i}kes of Lansing and Tim Thompson, brother of the bride, inhered. The bridegroom will attend graduate school at Michigan State University • where the new Mrs. Ash is a junior. They will honeymoon in Miami. Sr .★ k Topaz accessories sparked Mrs, Thompson's ice green de sole dress and Mrs.. Pinal registration will be Friday. Teachers will be on hand to enroll children from 10 a-m. to noon and from 1 to 3 p.m. Parents have been asked to provide current health' certificates on forms provided. Classes for 3-year-olds and younger 4g.will be on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Older 4 and 5-year-old* will meet Monday, Wednesday and Friday each week.' k k. k The new Bethany Weekday Nursery, School was founded on Jhe suggestion of the church’s . new pastor. Dr. Emil Kontz & who for several years directed a nationwide Baptist Juvenile Protection program. Under his direction several hundred nursery schools were established, several hr the Detroit area. Furtiier ' details about the school may be obtained by calling the church. MRS. DAVID C. KIMBALL Mr. and Mrs. Harcourt S. Patterson, North Ham- mond Lake Exchanges Vows Today Miss Hickson announce the recent marriage of their daughter Barbara Am to David Clarke Kimball, soil |§( of the’ Clarke HHI ]R. Kimballs, H Ogemaw Road. They'll Select New Officers Officers for the Federation Of the Women's Christian Temperance Union will be elected Tuesday at a picnic at the home of Mr*. Joseph Green at Pontiac Lake. ....fr ft k Those planning to attend should bring table service and a dish to pass. Miss Wallace Wed in Candlelight Rites A reception in tto Rose Kneale room of All Saints Episcopal Church followed the„.„ vows of Karen Kay Hickson ^aMTotoMrHowarti, repeated to Rev. C. George Widdlfleld today in a four o'clock candlelight ceremony. The, bridal couple received some 200 guests with their parents, the Russell L. Hicksons of ' Mary Ddy Avenue and the . John K. Howards, Joslyn Avenue. * k k Fingertip, veiling of silk illusion held by a seed pearl crown fell over the bride’s gown of* white silk' organza and Chantilly lace. She held a spray of ’white roses, ivy and stephanotis. , , Attending their sister were Mrs. Dale Cpnn, Linwood, honor matron, and Mrs. John Carline, Peotone, 111., and Mrs. Robert Lawson, Union Lake, who were bridesmaids. They wore Dior blue sheath with taffeta overskirts and car- Candlelight vows of Juanita Susan Wallace andf James H. Craft were repeated to Rev. James McCiung Tuesday evening In St. Paul Methodist Church. The Minto Wallaces, Neome Drive, and the James L. -Grafts, Drayton Plains, parents of the newlyweds, greeted some 300 guests at a church lawn reception. A cresecent of white roses i Late Now Profit by Experience Nugy Dr. Emil Kontz officiated at the marriage of Nugy Horn. Detroit, to Wing S. Hong Tuesday afternoon at Bethany Baptist Church, In the presence of some 200 guests, / of the newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Kwong Sun Detroit. The bridegroom is the son of Ytck Hong, West Huron Street^ and Mrs. Hong, Hong Kong, China. ft1 ■ ft k Alencon lace re-embroldered with pearls accented the bridal _____of eggahell silk peau de sole which cascaded into a chapel train. Bouffant waist-length veiling of Imported silk illusion waa fitted to a crystal headpiece. White orchids, album lilies and atephanotis comprised .the cascade' bou- B> ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: What does* girl do when she finds out that a boy for whom she cares a great deal has betrayed her confidence by broadcasting to all Ms friends things that should have been kept secret? ' BETRAYED DEAR BETRAYED: There Is nothing you can do about it now. But you can profit by your own aad experience and never -again give a boy any-thing to.“broadcast” about. DEAR ABBY: While 1 am writing t h I s, my 22-year- • out on t he lawn chair In her bikini bathing suit with her s u n glasses and movie magazines, and she will be 1 1 all day.. She spends eveiy 'Saturday and Sunday that way. fc/ She is the laziest, most self-centered, inconsiderate person 1 have every known. She has a job which pays well, but she never offers to pay one cent toward her room and board. She is up to her neck in debt because she bought herself'a car and dresses like a millionaire's daughter. She has never lifted a finger to make her own bed or rinse out a pair of stockings. She talks to her father and me like we were dogs. I never know whom she runs around with because she never brings her friends home. What , does a mother do with a monster like this? « HER MOTHER DEAR. MOTHER: Who raised this monster? WWW. DEAR ABBY: I read about the, grandmother who was so upset because she had to be bothered by her grandchildren' over the weekend. I wish she could know how my heart would ting to see my dear little grandchildren trooping into my kitchen, leaving fingermarks on my refrigerator, dropping jam and chewing gum on my clean floor and making joyful noises because they are glad to be alive: My son and his wife have • left with their six children to-live in a foreign country. I will probably never see them again. Here I am, left alone'to enjoy my -dean floor, spotless curtains and quiet home, but with that endless longing for “the touch of a vanished hand, and the sound of a voice that izstiH.” GRANDMOTHER .k fr'\ k “Ape thing* rough?’*; Let Abby help you solve your problem. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope and send to The Pontiac Preps. and stephanotis complemented the bride’s . gown of white Chantilly lace, styled with chapel train and worn with bubble illusion veiling. Wearing mint green taffeta bubble sheath dresses, and white leaf caps were Mrs. Ben Wells, Saginaw, honor matron, and bridesmaids Phyllis Fitzsimmons, Hunthigton Woods; Lorn* Wilden, Lansing; Penny Craft, sister of the bridegroom, and Becky Bruce, the bride’s cousin. Marilyn Wallace, Rochester, N. Y„ junior attendant, wore white organdy over mint green. , Copper chrysanthemums ’They held crescents of dap. ' per chrysanthemums and white roses with Stephanotis ’ i in the honor, matron’s bouquet. Airman 2.C\Michael rt. Craft,, LOring AFB, Presque Isle, Maine, and Airman 2.C. Thomas Craft, Highland AFB, N. J., were best man ami usher for their brother. Also seating guests were the bride's brother. Gerald Wallace, Wa-\ terford; Robert Morris, Drayton Plains, and Robert Bryce. k k k White roses and copper-tipped Stephanotis accented beige embroidered silk organza for Mrs. Wallace and a teal blue organza sheath dress for the mother tof the bridegroom. Returning from a western Michigan honeymoon, the couple will live on Orchard Lane, Pontiac Lake, The bride, a ■ graduate of Central Michigan University, ia affiliated with Della Zcta Sorority. Award Trophy to Grand 'Loser' Mrs. Frederick Root won the trophy for losing the most weight this week at the Fash-ionette Club meeting in Adah Shelly Library Tuesday evening. Last week's winner was Mrs. Charles A hair. ft . * * Mrs. Albert Foster Jr. and Mrs. Abair were officially declared. members of the group. ... Following t h e weighing-in elephant sale was held. Netrt week the group plans to atr tend the City Gonuniasfoir' meeting after weighing-in at the library where they meet each Tuesday from 7 to .9 p.m. Sponsored by Pontiac Parks " and Recreation, the group extends an invitation to area women with a weight problem. Further information may be obtained from Mrs. Peter Hernandez. Appearance 'Wise' (UPI) For choree at home, teeners ought to wear crisp, bright washable blouses with I lue jeans, well cut shorts or tacks or pretty drip-dry dress-">8. NSfou never know when a drearahpat might ring the door- MR8. JOHN M- HOWARD Birchmeyer and Charles Stein-helper. The bride’s toother Russell was junior usher. After a Connecticut honeymoon, the couple will live in Pontiac. Mrs. Hickson appeared hr bouffant aqua silk crepe, small matching feather hat and white elbow-length gloves. Yellow „ chrysanthemums covered ' her purse. The mother of the bridegroom, in emboesed silk organs*. over beige taffeta and flower' tot, wore bronze chrya- Announcing My New Location to Old and New Customers Emipa Hicks WILKENSON BEAUTY SMS W. HURON ST. W 4-S14* Janet Hortr. attended her cousin as maid of honor. Nancy and Marge Chin .served as bridesmaids with Noroe Horn. BROTHER’S REST MAN Harry Hong stood as best man'for his brother. Seating the guests were the bridegroom’s" cousin, Sun Hlng Hong, Ralphael Mak and Da* vld Lam, both of Hong Kong. After a luntheon-reception at China Cky Restaurant, the new Mra. Hpng donned a native Chinese costume to begin the honeymoon trip to Chicago. Her hilshand is an engineering student at the Detroit institute of Technology. \ ^ ' You ore invited .to our BLUE MONDAY SPECIAL for Monday Only Southern fried chicken — creamy mashed potatoes, brown glblet gravy and hot biscuits. ALL FOR ONLY 30c La R 0 A C HT CHICKEN DINNER Only 50* Served 12 Noon ’til 10 P.M. A Word ug Cleaning TEA ROOM 70 BACLEY SYRHft / for Reservations Call ft 5-7014 No doubt yotiir carpeting and rugs represent an in-vestment of hundreds of dollars. Doesn’t it make good sense then to give them the finest professional cK Cleaners are equipped with the finest facilities to be found-in the area. Rug and Carpet Cleaners FE 2-7132 NEW WAY 42 Wiener St. HAIRCUT 1.00 MANICURE 1.00 Last Few Days 15.00 COLD WAVE 7.15 Nr*, franoli Spurlock * now wltt as NEISNERS Beauty Salon, 2nd Floor Open Men, and Prk >iS> te t PJg. eisners FE 8-1343 41 N. Saginaw St. 1; rr 'mm * /<- maim zEIk the PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1661 m i FIBST CHURCH OF GOD 'm 25 East Rlvd. Sopih . General Offices: Anderson, lod, 6,’ Johnson, "A Urtjfed Church for a Divided World" Hi GivesConcert Sunday Scbool ...... 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship ...10:30 a.m. L^adeirshlp Tfdihtr^ r 6:15 p.m. Tuesday, 6:30 p.i Youth1 Fellowship Church of Christ '87 Lafayette St. i The Orureh of Christ EASTERN LABOR DAY MEETING Will be held at ST Lafayette Btreet, Pontiac, Michigan Billy Orten formerly of LMrrinCeburt, Tenn. now of Shreveport. La. will apeak each evenlns.: Aug. 36th thru Sept. 3yd. carillon concert for the public. at Christ Chureh Cranbrdok at-4-jHtfc Sunday. | Marriott of 6840 E. Dartmo6r St., Birmingham will give the premier performance for this • Sniritry of "Toccatina” by Bonset. well known IDutch, composer^ and organist. Weakly servlcea oach Bee. 1;30 p. « Bunday Morn. Service! .. 10:36 a.m Sunday Eve. Services........6:0# p. n I followed with The Public Js Cordially Invited to Attend This Series of Gospel Meetings First Congregational t Church MU). E. Huron and Mt. Clemens Malcolm K. g Jr., Assistant ... Morning Worship and Church School 9:3ft_aimr "FROM THES^LiPS" Rev. Burton Premier Performance of Toccatind4'by Bonset at Christ Church Frederick L; Marriott, president of the Guild of CarjUonneurs of North America and organist-choir-m a at e r • at Central Methodist! iChurch. Detroit will present a| Other numbers will include "Pre-ludium” by Van Hoof, "Myjne Moeder Spraak by Braht-'Buys. Sprookje” by Rottters, "Sonata’ by Niccolai, Kreisler's "Old Refrain.1'’ excerpts from Strauss waltzes and severalfamiliar hymns.' A graduate and holder ot the first honorary degree of “Merl-toriua Laureate" of the International Royal Garlllon School at Belgium, Marriott represented the United States at the International Carillon Competition held In The Netherlands has performed many times on the 62-bell carillon at Christ I Church and on other installijlioip 'throughout the country. *- Concert-goers may enjoy the program from their cars or may sit on the church lawn. Parking space ,is available in the church parking loTiust off Lone Pine Road in Bloomfield Hills. FIRST CHURCH "E NAZARENE 60 Stats Street ~ j. E. Van Allen, Pastpr Sunday School ....\... r.' . >.9:45 A-M. Morning Worship ............ H :00 A.M. Youth Fellowship ............... .6:00 P.M. Evangelistic Service . . 7:00 P.M. "A Friendly Church in a Friendly Community", Special Service fb Guide Youth . A special service gf-farewellto young people leaving for college is held each year at Bethany Baptist Church. This will take place at 6 Sunday. U a.m. worship hour . All yourfg people whether going away Mr the find time or return-ing.to continue school are especially invited to attend as weU as parents. The service w» include Holy young people and youth of <»Uege age but OOt attending are invited to the parsonage at 3 pj», Sunday. Pastor anil Mrs. EmU Kontz wiU, be hosts. expected to attend the aaaual Youth K*treat next weekend at ~%laM Lake Recreation Center. Participating in the program will be Rev. Robert L. Alains of Crescent HUls Baptist Church, R*v. Chalmer S. Mastin of Detroit and :Dr. Kontz. 7 ' • The board of misstoia has invited a group of Internationa] smdenta from Wayne State University to visit Pontiac next Saturday and Sunday. They wtU stay in homes of members of Bethany. Anyone wishing to entertain one : these students may contact Mrs. Omer Lewis. YouthChoir Will Rehearse iv Marimont Baptist Church *8 W. Walton Sunday School ... Morntha Service FE 2-7239 10:00 A. M. 1.1:00 A. M. ' EveriingService > Pastor Somers preaching both services. , Youth Group ----v.------;• 6:30 P- M. CHURCH of CHRIST 410 HUGHES ST. FE S-1156 Roosevelt Wells, Evangelist Sunday Bible Study ior alt ages, 9:45 a.m. Tumtriny Weakly Bible Study. 8 p m The Church that "Speaks >1 the Oraclee ot Ood" (I Peter «: 11) LAYMEN PLAN SERVICE — In work clothes and carrying symbols of their trade are (from left) Roscoe Hodge of 1355 Airport Road, Waterford Township. Robert Cole of 2551 Silverhill Road, Waterford Township, Joe Morgan of 362 Riviera St., Denzil Flowers of 2930 Marlington. Waterford Township and Paul Colton Of 5192 Pontiac Lake Road, Waterford Township. Members and ■friends are invited to the 10s 15. morning service at First Christian Church. Huron at Osceola Drive wearing the garments of tiwir regular employment. Rev. Jack H. G dark, pastor, will preach on "According to Your Ability." Men of the church are planning the service. - ,. • \ ... fPastor Gibson to Ordain Missionary to India, Son at Central Christian Siivercrest Speaker Roger Lee Gibson, son of Rev.,40-day tour ot the- {£,' wifbTguea and Mrs. Gerald W- Gibson in churches and Churches of ChristLp^^ at n-u B m am| at 7 charge ofjfie pastorate of Central'throughout the southern states. p. m. Sunday at Siivercrest Baptist ChristlttS Church, will be ordained jiBIWM by his father St the 11 a. m. wor-ship service Sunday by laying on of hands and prayer. Roger was born in Findlay, Ohio on May 12, 1937. After attending in Findlay, Cincinnati Methodist Churches of the Pontiac Area v Central Methodist Services Temporarily at Isaac E. Crqry Junior High School v 1 MILTON H. BANK 501 N. Cask Lake Rd. Pastor H. H. Johnson and J, H. Hall, Assoc. Pastors. MORNING WORSHIP 9:30 and 10:55 "Handling a Guilty Conscience" Rev. Paul T. Hart, Preaching FIRST METHODIST South Saginaw at Judson . Paul T. Hart, Pastor r Churches of God Holding Annual State Meeting Marshall, 111. he entered Lincoln Bible Institute. He was graduated from the institute with an A. B. Degree in music ip 1960 and .a degree in ministry in 1961. On June 5, i960 he married Ann McFarland, daughter of the Harold McFarlands of Joliet, 111. of Mission Service*. Ann also completed two years of study at Lincoln Institute. j For the past two years Roger and Ann served the Bethany Chris-tlan Church-at Browns town, 111. They resigned recently to enter full time evangelistic work. 'They have just returned from a Church. A graduate of Northeastern BiWe College and Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary, Holm plans to teach in the Calcutta Bible College. He served'as pastor of the Baptist Church In Calumet Park, sent the General Oiurch_wlll be .._________ ■ n»„ r P Snatn field renresents- 111. for three years. Before leaving for India with the Conservative Foreign Mission Society of Wheaton, HI. the Holms will spend some time visiting churches in the United States to tell of their future work. The public is invited. Pastor Wayne Smith said:.. • • ROGER L. GIBSON Drayton Heights Worships on Donald T. Wittbrool, Associate Pastor MORNING WOpSHIP—10:00 A. M. ........ Sermon: "The Church's Message" Rev. PAul T. Hart, Preacher CHURCH SCHOOL-1 h!5 A.M. OAKLAND‘PARK METHODIST CHURCH Montcalm and Glen wood - Rev. J. W. Deeg, Paetar MORNING WORSHIP 10:00 A.M, . ' I SUNDAY SCHOOL .11:15 A.M. ST. PAUL METHODIST l«» E. Square Lake Rd. FE 34233—FE 3-31*3 Morning Worship 10 A.M. and 11:15 A.M. ; Church^chool 10 A.M. Intermediate and Senior Youth Oroupa, 6:60 P M Older Youtha, (:3f to 1:30 F.M - REV. JAMBS A. MeCLUMT. Mlnleter imple Parking _____Supervlaed Mura mmmmmt- Four Towns METHODIST CHURCH COOLSY tAIS ED. nt LOCKHAVZN > Bee. W. Cad man Front, Faator Sunday School ...—MILAM, Church Sdrvice 0 A M. Covert Methodist Church 2775 PONTIAC LAKE RD. REV. W. E, COURTER, Pastor Church Service —; 9:45 A.M. Church School ~ 11.00 A.M. ‘■**emsmss*mmM EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212 Baldwin Ave, ‘ Phone FE 2-0728 V WORSHIP 6:36 end 11:66 A. M. SERMON— ’TO GOSPEL OF LABOR" / Faith Baptist Church 3411 AIRPORT ROAD . Sunday School ...... 10:00 lA® M'- Worship Service .... 11:00' A: M. Evening Service .... ."7:30.P. M., 7:30 f». M. Wed. Prayer Service.. First Presbyterian Church Huron at Wayne the state will bald the»annual meeting at the lodal church at East Pike and Anderson Streets Wednesday evening and all day Thursday. Rev, Floyd Timmerman, state overseer, who makes-his home on Ottawa Drive, wUl moderate the business sessions. Coming from Tennessee to repre- Rev. C. R. Spain, field representative for the mission department. He will speak Thursday evening on "World Missions." HU talk will concern his haany experiences with mission work around the world. The public is invited. Rev. Estel D. Moore, pastor, said the local church will begin revf on Sept. 10.— —J H newly formed Drayton Heights' Free Methodist Church is holding services at the temporary location. Pine Knob Elementary School, 6020 Sashabaw Road. Rev. Thomas E. Dunn, a graduate of Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Ky., ’is the pastor. He was the assistant pastor of Free Methodist Church on Mt.. Clemens St. last summer. Sunday School is held every Sunday at 10 a. m. with Paul Ragati, superintendent. Worship service# are at 11 a- m. ' 10 AM- - WORSHIP SERVICE and CHURCH SCHOOL All Saints Episcopal Church ’Williams 5t. at Wj Pike Th# Rev. Wm. E, Lyle> A»»t. 8:00 A.M. — Holy Communion 10:00 A.M.—Holy Communion end Sermon by the Rev. Wm. E. Lyle No Church-, School CHURCH OF THE RESURRECTION will meet In* Clerkgton Elementary School, 6595 Weldon, Rd. 9:30 A. M.—Holy Coir?rruin|pn qnd Sermon Plans are now In process for the -Coiistructlon of. a new church building on the comer of May bee and Winell Roads. Members of the Pontiac Church* are -helping with tilft. plans. Several member# have d to transfer their member- ship to the newly organized group. Rev. Lyal H. Howison, pastor of the local church, is assisting in an advisory capacity. The Rev. Mr. Dunn- was born1 April 13, 1932 in Martins Ferry,! Ohio, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-1 Ham W. Dunn. He was graduated l ifrom Greenville .College with an! A.B. Degree in 1958 and from As-! bury Seminary in June 1961. From May IMS until July 1654 he served as an Instructor In the machinist school at Chanute Air Force Base. He was discharged as a senior machinist from Hells Air' Force Bose, Las Vegas, In ‘REV. THOMAS K. DVNN The new pastor who likes to par-1 tjelpate in sports said photography is his hobby. He was married to the former Barbara Mulholland of Greenville, 111.‘June 2, 1958. He was ordained to the ministry at East Michigan Free Methodist Conference Grounds, Flint on Aug. 7, 1960 by Bishop Walter S. Ken- Reorganized CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of Latter Day Salnta f If Front St.. Fontlsa FI 6-1641 Faster: Cider Roland L. Curtis "11:00 A M. — O. Ktnnath Cyril * 1.-60 F.M, ~ EMar Flabtrlld Dr., Airs/ Emil Kontz People to Invite Young J Parsonage AH high school graduates, college WESLEYAN METHODIST 67 N. LYNN ST. ■ i&iH- 1:36 F.M. METHODIST CHURCH 501 MT. CLEMENS STREET Lyji H. Howison, Pastor 10:00 SUNDAY SCHOOL 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship"" M The Inner Circle? j 7:00 P.M. EVENING WORSHIP “fundamentals of Our fdlkr Rev. Howison, Pastor, preaching Mid-WccR Service Wed. 7:30 Presbyterian Pastor Preaching Labor Day Sermon Tomorrow UNITY 6 N. Of near* FE 3-2113 DIMM Seaman. Mlnlatar 1100 A. it. Morning'Worahlp Spiritual Investments" 11:66 A. M. atuxtey School Tutaday 6 p.m. Clua as Frsya Mrs. Charles Buck will dtoeetthej new youth choir being organized at First Presbyterian Church. Chotoj accompanist will be Lee Patterson. Plane are for the young people to sing at the early service eawhj Sunday. The first rehearsal is set for 4 .m. on gept. 14, — -----------! "Our Dally Bread" wUl be the theme of Rev. Galen E. Itershey'e Labor Day sermon tomorrow. The sermon., will emphasize the role that Christian conscience has! played In exalting and honoring, all honest toil. Dorothy Dawson will sing "Seek Ye the Lord” for the offertory solo. The Chancel Choir will return to the re girl *r hour of rehearsal Thursday “ evening with Lyndon Salathie! director. A delegation of women wUl at tend Dettoit Precbyterial in First Presbyterian Church. .Dearborn. Friday. Mrs. JackjHunt Is )n gKriwb nt rv»Nd»rvation*. ^V charge of remimtkm.1Vm Bas-eetf wUl be In charge ot the devotional retreat following the luncheon Friday. Communion at Trinity "The Seven Pillars of Wisdom” will be the theme ot Dr. Joseph W. Modre’a sermon at 11 a.m. Sunday at Trinity Baptist Church. A service of Baptism and Holy Own-Ion will be conducted it 1 p.m. ’ • ' . BLOOMFIELD HILLS , BAPTIST, CHURCH > Tamporarlly Maatlng: Hickory Grove School i Lahaar, South of Squopi Laka M-SUNDAY SCHOOL t, . IQ A.M. MORNING WORSHIP It A.M. EVENING WORSHIP .. 6 P.M. PRAYER MEETING (Wednesday 7:10 P.M.) \ Interim Pastor 0. W. STUCKY Phone. FI 5-T755 "Waterford Township's American Baptist Church" CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST Creicent Lake Road near Hatchery Road Worship 10 A-M. - * ftur----- Large Parking Lot •, _,.U'Ail. Sunday fiehool Nursery During All Services CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH G. W. Gibson,, Minister FE 4-0239 347 N. Saginaw Morning Worship ...11:00AM. Youth Service ..... 6:00 P.M. Evening Service . 7 00 P.M. Prayer Meeting and Bible Study Wednesday .. 7:30 P.M. United Presbyterian Churches" ^ OAKLAND AVENUE Oakland at Cadillac ThtoOora R. Alltbach. Foawr Morning Warship 1:30 and l t:Q0 A M. Sunday School ..... 9:45 A.M. Youth Meeting* .... 5:45 P.M. Evening Worship ... 7:00 P.M. Wedneeday Prayer .. 7 00 P.M. AUBUKN HEIGHTS 8456 Primary Btreet F. Wm. Fulmar, Faator 1 10.00 A.M. — Sunday School 11:15 AM — Morning Worship THE BIG BOSS" DRAYTON Drayton Plains, Michigan - W. i. TMUVIaaM Jr, Faator Bible School .' . 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship".... 11 :Q0 A.M. Youth Groupe....... 6:30 P.M. Evening Worship ... 7:30 P.M. Wednesday Prpyer and ■ Study Hour .... .. 7:30 P.M. J0SLYN AVE. Joslyn at Third Mmond I. Wotklna, Faator Sunday. School ..... 0:30 A M. W0nhlpv~Stffvicee .. .10.45 AM, Evening Service ... 7:00 PJM. FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 46 NORTH ROSELAWN Sunday School -—10 A.M,1 • - Morhing Worship by the Pastor — 11 A.M. Evangelistic Service — 7 P.M Thursday Prayer‘Meeting and Bible Study — 7,30 P.M. Rev, LeRoy Shafer, Pastor APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRI$T 458 Central Saturday Young Psople........... . 7:30 P.M. Sunday School and Worship......... lOjOO A M. Sunday Evtnlng Servlet ...........,7:ip P.M. TtlSi. tnd Thun. Servlcet......... 7:30 P.M. Churdh Phong FE 5-8361 , Aaaoclota Faator—WILLIAM PARENT MI 1-341! FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ■ Oakland and Spglnaw /j Pontiac, Mlchlgon • ' Rtii. H. 11. Savofi, Pastor 9:45 A/M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL -Uv,'? .» ■ Cfentet for n|f ages r ,. f • < 10:45 A. MORNING WORSHIP • * "THE MAN QP SIM" 7.GO EVENING SCRVICE "LESSONS PROM ELIJAH" I. H. aoyoga, Fr«aohln» Both Sarvlcaa NTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER % 1961 NINE Sunday School 16:00 A.M. Worship Hour 11:00 A.M. Youth Hour 6:1$ P.M. Gospel Hour 7: 00 PM. PILGRIM HOLINESS^ CHURCH Baldwin «t F^irmount Rev. Calvin Hendrick FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N/ PERRY ;4e*chthe wdfu>"' IS THE ADMONITION 1 OF THE BIBLE. JOIN OUR BIBLE-TAUGHT ^r - ^ ~ ,• 'A/ &ath Williams Lake the Nazarene/ Corner Airport A "^335"* • Hatchery Road 10 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. WORSHIP HOUR 7 P.M. WORSHIP HOUR Rev. ,Dr. EL Elton Trueblood, professor of philosophy at Earlham College, Richmond, Ind., will be guest preacher at the lurk in the fells Sunday. Renowned equally for his abili-• a speaker and a writer Dr. the author of 18 the latest ones being. “Phil* _ of .Region,’’ "Tho Yoke of Christ” and XConfronting Christ.” His newest wprk, “The Company of the Coaunitted,” is scheduled for publication this denomination in Kansas City, Mo., next week; PEfE HILL CONGREGATIONAL Speaking at the Pine HWCoft-gregational Church at the 11 a.m. servicirwill be Rev. Philip Gentile of the Community ' gational Church in Lathrup Vil- Services are1 held in- the Pine Lake Elementary School on' West Long Lake Road one mile west of Middlebelt Road. 'MESSIAH BAPTIST- Dr. Tmebk$d,.bas taught at Harv ^ aty wideVchoir Union, con-vard and Started,. and loured I Siting of chofrs of 12 churches, botti here an^ abroad. He hasl^ 6ffer a p^g,.^ at 3:30 Sun- BETHEL TABERNACLE n r*t PanUcott Church of Pontiac I. ft U A M. Worship It AJif IMS Baldwin Art, PLAYS CARILLON — Frederick L. Marriott of . Birmingham, organist-choirmaster at Central Methodist Church in Detroit, will present a carillon recital at Christ Church Cranbrook tomorrow. Pantiac Praaa Photo Seated at the keyboard or clavier, he. practices for the concert with gloved fists instead of his fingers as on an organ. Marriott is a former organist and choir director at Kirk in the Hills. ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH IStl HATCHERY HOAD Rev Edward A. Lowry, Rector SERVICES 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. At Proleslanl Episcopal Conclave BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH W. Huron, At Mark $t. Patter, Dr. Emil Fonts Wotahip Sanrlcaa 1:40 and 11:00 A M. — Sermon — HOW TO BE SATISFIED” 0.40 A M. - Church Othool Claaata for AU ' J 00 P.M. — 13th Pott in fellowship Wad... T:BB P.M.'— MM-Wook S*r*lc* •‘An American Baptist Conrantlon Exhibit to Portray Top Church Issues Nine great world issues and cerns which directly challenge the Christian Church will be highlighted by artist's illustrations, photographs and charts at the special Mission Exhibit of the 60th General Oonfonttorreof. the Protestant Episcopal Church, in the U.S.A., | iCobo HaU Sept. 17-29. Some 30.000 delegates, missionaries, clergy and visitors are expected at the affair. Missionaries from overseas will be on> hand to man the circular exhibit. I served as chief of religious information for the U.S. Information Agency, and' as a member of the board m the Church- Peace Union am) William Penn College. MABIMONT BAPTIST Senior High Young People’s Group of Marimont Baptist Church will have an all-day outing Labor Day at Point Pelee... ,lj.„ John .Torni of Tint Baptist Church will provide the music far both mornbif and evening services tomorrow. Pastor Philip Somers will pimch. ' __J Women of the Missionary Society will hold the first fall meeting at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the- church fellowship rooms. COLLIER ROAD COMMUNITY Conducting revival servicesj Tuesday through Sept. 10 at thej Collier Road Community Church, 1245 Collier Road, will be Rev. Jesse Nicholson, former mission-1 ary to Cuba. Meetings will start! at 7:3(7 p.m.' The Rev, Mr. Nicholson, who j began his work in Cuba in 1946 j returned with his family to the United States recently. During his stay there he was responsible [ live new churches i conducted a radio ministry in Ttnardel and Havana for the past two years. The missionary will leave for Mexico-Where he will serve as an evangelist and as director of the Latin Mission and Radio Ministry under the Anchor Bay Evangelistic Association. BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR The regular service schedule of I will offer a program a day afternoon at Messiah Baptist Church.- Brother Joe May of Los Angeles, Calif., a singer of gospel songs, will offer special numbers at 7:30 p.m. Deacons and trustees of the church will conduct the si AUBURN HEIGHTS U.P. Rev. F, William Palmer will be back in the pulpit at., the United Presbyterian Church of Auburn Heights for the 11:15 Sunday morning service. Three ^ representatives of the Presbytery, Dr. E. W, Dunn of the C a 1 vtn . United Presbyterian Church, Detroit, John Hazlett, an elder of the Drayton Plains church and a member of the Pres- bytery's staff, will meet' with the: lession at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. i •The “ visit Is part of-the- pro- j gram of the Presbytery which in- \ eludes a visit to all of the 110 j churches of Detroit presbytery, j The Rebekah Circle will meet at! 8 pm. Tuesday at the church with. Dorothy Churchill, chairman. Mrs.’ Hairy Watson will open her home: at 3819.. Auburn Ave., to the Dor-: cas Circle at 8 p.m. Thursday. ORCHARD LAKE COMMUNITY 1 Allen Me Culium, a student at.; Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, will preach at 9 and 11 a.mr tomorrow at Orchard Lake Commun-j PONTIAC CHURCH of CHRIST Listen to tho “Herald of Troth” Each Sunday - CKLW — 8:30.A M. 1180 N. PERRY *ST.’ •------—FE 2-6269 __ W. W. HalT Minister-. Bible Study '. \T ‘9:50 AM. Classes lor Alt Agps Morning Worship . /,10:50 A.M. > “Can Two Walk Tofethsr Except 1 They Be Air*ed?” (continued) . Evening Worsfeip- v— .9:00 P.M. Vaughn Heard ‘will be soloist. Mr. McCallum is a member of Outer briye United Presbyterian Church, Detroit, and a candidate tor the ministry under Detroit Presbytery. His parents are summer residents at 3670 Edgewood Drive, Union Lake. The first fall, meeting of the! Men’s Council is scheduled for 8 p.m. Wednesday. Representatives: of the group will be included in the Synod meeting of United Pres- ' byterian Men at Alma College on Friday and Saturday. Walter Johnson will preside. - CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whittemor* Street SUNDAY, 7:30 P.M. OtTBST SPEAKER WEDNESDAY —SILVER TEA ' Beautiful Saviour Lutheran Church will begin Sunday with early serv-it ice at 8:30 a.m. and morning wor-j i ship following at 11 o’clock, Sun- dian mission. SENDING TEMPLE Taiwan is sending»a temple. Among the 50 speakers will be Charles Malik, U.N. representative from Lebanon and former U.N. ‘ I®*® ERAN I::; LUTHEI I CHURCHES I I MISSOURI SYNOD i Cross of Christ I Bloomfield Towmhlp 1 Square Lake and Telegraph | Rev Delayne Pauling 1 Church Service .... 9:45 A.M. 1 Sunday School . . .11:00 A.M. St. Mark 7979 Commerce Road ‘ (WMt BlonmfltKI To*n»hlp) Wm. C. Grate, Pastor 1 Church Service ... 8:45 A.M. ■ Sunday School — 9:45 A.M. | Church Service ... .11:15 A.M. Cedar Crest 1 Farnsworth off Union Lk. Rd. a (Mtit to DoUla School i 1 Howard £, Cldycombe, Pqstor 1 Services at 8:30 A.M. 9 and 11 A.M. I Sunday -School 9:45 A.M. Grace I Comer Oenesee and Glendale n - iwoit-atdo) 1 Richard C. Stuckmeyer, Pastor I Church Service — 9:00 A.M. B Sunday School ',... 9:00 A.M, 1 Church Service .... I LOO A.M. I-Sunday School ...11:00 A.M. H ' "The Lutheran Hour” over I WKMH 9 A.M. Every Sunday I •, St. Stephen Church Service__,8:00 A.M. Sunday School — 9:15 A.M, Church Service .. 10:30 A.M. St. Trinity Auburn at Jesale doit aid* i *-Rq/ph C. Claus, Pastor Sunday School .... 9:46 A.M. First Service .. 8:30 A M. Second SerVIo* . 11:00 A.M. St. Paul Rev. Maurkv Shackell , Joslyn at Third (North Sid*i Early Service , — 8:00 A.M. Sunday School — 9:05 A-M. Late Service-...10:45 A.M. FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH • 576 Orchard Lake Ave. . [■ Sunday Service — 7:30 P.M: > - Larry Sprow of Detrgit -Wednesday Evening Service — 7:30 P.M. \flev. Marshall, Pastor Nursery lor Your Baby. New in Town? Attend Here. MISSIONARY ALLIANCE church 220 North Csss Lake Road, Ponttac, Michigan --G. /. BERS.CHE. Pastok .SUNDAY SCHOOL ... .t:4l AM. * TEAnhlto'^ODR.. MORNINQ WORSHIP ,. The church in Japan is sending i Donald of St. James’ Church,.Bir-a Japanese garden and tea house mingbam and Elwood Hill, Christ J*S*!re ^J0 *trVe_i‘e*' Church, Grease Pointe. Dr. August Miss Calico and Misa American I ’ . ” , . , " , Unr*» turn Indian hrlnceases will Mpekelberghe of St. John s Church, be hostesses at a 16-foot tepee Detroit and Edgar Billups, A1 l|^y ^ sent to the convention by an In-Saints Church, PonUac, will be able riSy^id ii! organists. [school classes. WOMEN WORK T Hedy Oamihuidon wflt be cele- Episeopai church women will^™ted0 atJthe lf a rnL ^ , ,, , , „ . , . „ first Sunday of each month and! hold their Triennial Convention ^ 8 30 on the ^ Sunday. during the same period. Nearly ST JAMES MISSIONARY women began making arrange-! Cf°T wU1' ments. The women have a motor^^f11 ‘L thA-^ corps of 40d to chauffeur visitors' M^t°nary Baptist Church | to and from planes, trains and! ^ /“™***»d by »| buses and for. special sight seeing ^°UP „ ^ ..... r ■ Mrs. Ruble Harrison of Detroit, to be mistress of ceremonies. The I Pastor’s Aid Group will be charge. Rev. V. L. Lewis, past ■111 attend the convention of the! CHURCH of SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP BEMIS OLSON POST — 570 OAKLAND AYE. Sunday Evening Service — 7:30 P.M. >. Guest Speaker \ No Service Thursday, September 7 - September 10 — Rev. Margarei McDaniel ol Clawson President. The Rt. Rev. Robert fwo years ago a committee of 2.000( Brown, Little Rock. Ark., whb has Issues facing the church around!. , „ . . . ,___ the world which the exhibit wiili^ “ flrra *,and ln,e«raUon portray include ’’Health and So- ^ wi" ^ k . Conflicting Beliefs,” "Education,” i^1 Churt-h °f Pontiac, is chair- g/omm are baking nearly 90,-'Nationalisin'' and "Peace and ™" ol ^ V® 000 ,or ’'*** [unity. ” -r boure. Ptoce cards and decora- | j Another feature of the exhibit be a "Street of Shops" with various ary districts for safe aad display. Mr. Had Mra. - the opening service at 7:30 p. Sept. 17. Working with him as co-chair-Mrs. Roger Marquis, Choir directors are Kent Me- First Christian Church DISCIPLES ol CHRIST Rev. lack H. C. Clark. Minister Bible School —- 9'30 A.M. Morning Worship — 10 15 A-M 858 W. HuiiON ST. The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. Lawrence Street Sunday Sch'l 9:4$ a.m. Young People's Legion 6 p.m. Mora'g Worship 11 a.m. EYangeiistic Mtg. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. , CAPTAIN and MRS. I. WILLIAM HEAVER Good Music —- Singing — True to' the Word Preaching God. Meets With Us You Too, Are Invited • EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE 1400 Wstfcln* LsM M. u*»r Oakland County M»rk»t SUNDAY School — t* a.m. PREACH1NO - It A M. lad IS P.M. YOUTH OROUPS — 4:30 P.M. — You Art Inrltfd • RADIO—CKLW Sun., 7:30 A M. Tune In A. J. Buuthfy. PHtar — DeWlU B*u«hry. AHt. PMt< CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY * MAN Sunday Services and ' Sunday School 11:00 A M. Open Dally U A.M. to 5 P.M. Friday to 9 P.M. FIRST CHURCH of CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams Streets HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS RADIO STATION CKLW r—800 KC* V ' . SUNDAY, 9:45 A.M. \ tV Ev'efy Slinday. Channel 7, 9:30 A M. MVS .-fei'.’.l Horn ere being made f SO dinner*, already scheduled. The Rt. Rev. Arthur Uchten-1 Memorial Youth Attend erger, Greenwich, Conn., presiding bishop of the Protestant Epis-1 c°P«’Oufrih‘ an^ ^Irs' P®"’ TtoHl Thirty young people of Memorial| er, Wilmington, Del., presiding of-jB t, /, Chureh left tod foJ ■fleer of the triennial, will preside Maranatha Bible Conference near at the cxwivention. * L. . „ »v 1 W. Rev- Richard S. M-f aU^ tmm 9 t0 16 years of Emrieh is honorary Chaimian; aRe are invlted to the meettng ^ Rev Canon I. C.- Johnson of De-sk pil ts at 1 p m Thursday,! ««"cral ritairman; and Rev. Pastor (v>rtld 'Rapeije raid. | F. Plummer Whipple, vtrar of St. ____________ Alfred's Episcopal Church, Lake Orion, general manager I A man never sees all that his / I mother has been to him till it’s (too late to let her know that he sees it. —Howells We cordially invite you to worship with vs. O. P: Eastman. Minister ■ FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH - 14* N. But Blvd. Pontiac, Mlchl(*n Pastor. O. P. Eastman ~ Office: PE 4-1JU Parsonage;1 433 Benson" Residence PE 4-4*34 National Lutheran Council Churches ASCENSION WATERFORD 4151 PONTIAC LAKE RD. -Wm. La Fountain. Pastor CHURCH SERVICE 8:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL -9:45 A.M. CHURCH. SERVICE 11:00_A.M. CHRIST of the LAKES WHITE LAKE TWP. Ivan C- Ross, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:i5 AjM. CHURCH SERVICE 10:30 A M, SYLVAN LAKE / ■Plgk, off Orchard Lake / (BehlndsBylvan Shopping Center)' ..- Pastor Clark McPhad / 8:00 Aid.—WORSHIP. " j ■ 9:00 A.M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:15 AM.—WORSHIP BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR N. Adams Rd. Between Long and Square Lajte Roads .Donald G. ZfU. Pastor MQRNlNG WORSHIP 8:30 A.M, and 11:00 A.M. Sunday School 9d0 A M: \ CharU SUNDAY* CHURCH ST. JOHN'S PONTIAC 87 Hill St. at Cherry St. v t* A. Colberg, Pastor SCHOOL 9H5 A.M. SERVICE 10:00 A.M. CALVARY LARKSTON Clarkstoh. Elementary School Pastor Paul A- /ohns WORSHIP SUNDAY y. 9:30 AM. 10:45 A.M. Rev Browne to Ilustrate Talk With Pictures Rev. Hnnn Browne who has re-ently returned from Okinawa will o’guest speaker at 11 a.m. and again at 7 p.nt. Sunday in Missionary Alliance Church. He will use pictures" to illustrate his message. Public relations director of Far East Broadcasting Co. on Okinawa, he also served as head of the news, and special events departinehts. Among the military personnel stationed an the Island he was In demand as a spj?akqr. at religious services. The ^broadcasting compahy pro-; grams- were in English for Ameri-' con servicemen and in Japanese for the T|jeyukyuiin “population. His message and pictures will include, the fire that destroyed the, broad-* easting studios. First Social Brethren Church - 316 Baldwin, FE 3-0384 ~~ Saturday Nile . Sunday School .. 7:30 P.M. 10:00 A.M. WorsMp^....... II :00 A.M. Thurs. Young People 7:30 P.M. Wed. Choir ...... 6:30 PM. Wed. Prayer....... 7:30 P.M. REV. TOMMY GUEST, Pastor CHURCH OF THE GOOD- SAMARITAN 47B0 Hiller**! Dr . W»!*r|or)—A recent-• ly strengthened nationwide network of Public Health Service “fallout detection stations” is on the alert to spot quickly any potential health threats from resumed nuclear tests • * * ★ * This was; related todayJ»y Dr. Francis J. Weber, chiefy of the health service’s Radiological Health Division. He said the Soviet Union had resumed testing at a time when virtually all fhe radioactive debris from past tests had long since fallen to the earth. The debris at its present level, Jie said, is not considered capable of causing major harm to persons now living. .•k ★ ★ . Weber said he doubted Russia’s initial test would make any major addition to the relatively . small amounts of radioactive debris still left in the atmosphere -from past tests. Notice it hereby given 1 SWB •-«. MM__________________Tuetdey, September 13. imx. for the purpose of electing the following, vl*: Constitutional Convention Deleget of the polls. Election Lew. Act lit, P.A. 1384. Section 730. On the dey of any ■ tion, the pollt shall be opened, i o'clock in the forenoon, and shall be continuously open until 8 o’clock in the afternoon and no logger. Sven qualified elector present and in lh| at the poll* at tly hour Prescribed fo the cloems thereof ehall he allowed t "ne polle of eald election will b in at T o'clock a.m. and will remat m until S o'clqck p.m. of said day « OSCAR R. WALZ. Township Clerk Sept.* 8, t. 1»«1 • btati kicnoN To the Qualified Hectors of the Township of Wnito Uke: • . Notice Is hereby «l»sn. that a State election will be held In the Townshm of White Lake (Peeclnct Nos. 1 3). County of Oakland, state of Michigan, at Precinct l^Oubllh Community Center. 685 Union Lake Road: Precinct *-Towi Hall, 75115 Highland W: Wylnot S breathes. .The air- contains dirt and grit Some of this seeps into the oil. To combat it, manufacturers are constantly improving air'cleaners and fitters. Severe driving conditions, -and most especially short trips in cold weather and stop-and-go city driving, _cause_sludge and varnish .to develop in file crankcase: ■ * * * And yet Harold C. MacDonald, assistant chief engineer for Lin- August Is Low in Auto Output Production 2nd Lowest Since World War II; S-P Is Only Exception DETROIT Im — United States auto companies produce^ 195,266 passenger cars„ last month, the second lowest August output since World War II. The postwar August set in 1958 when-only 180,447 cars werf-built. Only one of the five producers, ' Studebaker-Packard, exceeded it? * August, I960 figure, according to cmnpany figures release^, Friday. S-P built 5,623 cars last month, compared’ with 1;1TO in August, I960. * Production lor the first eight months of this yean trailed a year ago by l.t million units. This year’s eight jnonthtotal was 3,381,959. ______i Compact cars account for 1,192,-945, or’more than one-third of this year’s 'output'to date. Compacts took slightly more than one-fourth in the first eight months last year. During August 74,344 compact cirs were built. For the year „ Falcon holds a 100,000 lead over Rambler .with Corvair only 900 units back in third; place. WASHINGTON ® — Sen. PhUip A Hart, D-Mich., said Friday of the Russian nuclear test explosion; | “I hofie we will not reach for the sword, figuratively or literally.” 1 d Thunderbird. lays neith-j types of driving. The API stand- nor a iiumber of hif jmdei-aid says lh»: atqs ever change oil,in their own! In summer, (change oil every 60 cart.% ' • days,....Jta.winter,. change every 30 MacDonald.says fids is possible days. But never exceed 21000 Only under certain comfidonil^thieliniles. of these is that the car must be] George A. Hound,'chief engineer, driven regularly, at least every! tor one of the major oil companies day, and at moderately good particular attention Shouid be speeds. paid to the oil 1n- your car during stop-and-go, short trips, especially MacDonald says he changes during the winter. his oil filter regularly and adds • _________ 1 a quart of oil every 1,500 miles PRODUCES SLUDGE or so. “It has long been known,’’ “T-" U j , •. .. j ,, says, "that fuel combustion at low For 196? Fprd has tested the ljnder temperatures. typical of oil change interval to 6,000 miles r7 oh all of its cars, from the Falcon In 1961 the Lincoln Continen- T tal was the only car in the'indus- , try with a 6,000 mile interval. MacDonald said a change in engine design, which eliminated to form," he said. “Now we’ve cut tjye temperature -almost 1,400 degrees and the oil has a much more uniform teiji- i 'perature throughout the engine.” Manufacturers’ recommendations on 1961 cars varied from 2,000 miles to 6,000 miles'between oil changes. For 1902 it appears 4,000 to 6,000 Will be ( gee, BUT } I HAVEN’T SEEN HER EAT 1 J GRANDMA,! A BITE PORDAYS^( * SMB’S either] . ON A DIET.,, IL00K6THIH/J ^ ^ It ...OR SHE'S WAITIN'FOR ANOTHER O' TM06E ALL-YOUi CAN - 6 AT-FOR-A-DOLLAR SUPPERS AT TW* Bazaar,' By Walt Disney . [WN-KINm rwJ. 4 r THE PONTIAC PRESS e iMvmt SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1961 EONTIAC, MICHIGAN [round for LIVING AT I I*PER STRAITS I .ARE-Most of the fine trees on the lot were saved when the Sylvester Leahys built their buff brick home and moved in last April. An attached 3-car garage is on the side closest to the road. Railroad ties between rock walls make com*. fortable steps up to, the porch. Trim on the house, including panels under the windows,"is white. C. J, Hanniken AlA of Royal Oak was both architect and builder for the Leahys, Your Neighbor's House -■ a .f ' ■ Sylvester Leahy Home Has Lake Setting By JANET ODEU, A* we got out of the car in the driveway of the Sylvester Leahy home on Upper Straits Lake, a fat, triehdly black cocker waddled out to greet us. Her family had gone for thS Tfity", leaving her and the laundress alone and Cindy welcomed company. The daughter of the house, Susan, is « college student. Her younger brother. Bob, still goes to high school. Before moving to ■their new lake hotpe, the Leahys. lived in Birmingham. Both young {Sfttple lqye water skiing: their father is an enthij- ' siastic fisherman. Living right on a lake is pure unadulterated pleasure for thejgheto family. Doable doors open Into • large hallway on the second level of this four-level home. The floor'Is black slate. Opposite the entrance Is a small blaek chest with an oval gilded mirror abovo It. Walls are treated in a dramatic manner with mural paper. Birds ' and flowers and ' tree branches are pink’and blue on white. Light fixtures have aw opaque white shade surrounded bv an openwork iron ball. From this hallway you can go -down Ip the-two lower levels or up to a bedroom level. On the same level you go to the right to the utility room and kitchen. h the kitchen the brtge with a sprinkling of silver. Walls are white and the soffit bine. One wall has bird cage paper In blue and gold. Cabinet* are birch. The counter tops and the top of the comer planning desk are white Formica with gold spatters. The breakfast set has a yellow table lop and blue chair seats. PARQUET FLOORS Dining room; family room and formal living room have oak par q u e t doors. Dining room waits have a white painted dado below gold and silver dowered wallpaper., Draperies are white floor-length ones. This room on the lake side of, the house prop- erly has- a picture window.------'-A There arc spotlights In the celling which can be bright or soft III Intensity. Three over the fable and two above the butfft are recessed. The two that spotlight the window are Furniture is traditional mahng- wy with blue needlepoint on the •hairs. Folding louvered’ doors separate dining room and family room. Beige linen ’ ifraperies frame the three long windows on room. .There are glass doors to the patio outside. Two of the remaining wall* •re,paneled. The end one, finished .In rosy red brick, contain* a fireplace. At one end of the hearth is a closet with louvered doors. Book , and rpagazine shelves are built in next to the windows.- The hearth itself is black slate. More storage is -found behind- the long paneled wall opposite (he windows. A beige and blue Chinese'rug. ,!Two parts of an aqua blue sectional sofa are placed at right angles on this rug. There is also a pair of iow club chairs, upholstered in aqua stripes. , eiurrenSittonnl grouping the floor I* left bare. Mere there I* a walnut card table set up. The walnut chairs have beige seatN. On the patio outside there is a round while metal table with ice , cream chairs around it. Those have, aqua tufted cushions. ABOVE LAKE The house sets on a rise above the lake. The. yard below is, terraced down on or side. Glass doors in the lower runipus room give access to the yard and beach,....... A second set Of louvered doors closes off the formal living room. Walls are while. Draperiea are heavy white own. The classically beautiful, simple fireplace is framed In white marble. Morn while marble is set Into the floor for the hearth. A painting above the mantel makes any other decoration unneressaryj The-rug is an Oriental in the usual glowing- colors. All lamps in,.tb.e room have either gold or crystal bases .and white, shades. Jn front of the fireplace are twin wing back armchairs. They have pink b a c k s and cream fronts with a pink and white floral design. Facing the fire- with a bathroom between are on the top level of the house at one end! Wadis of the hallway leading to the bedroom are lined with family pictures. There are two large windows in this room, one of which is on the lake side. Draperies are-cream color. Waifs and carpeting are white. Over the bed and at either, side of'IBe end window, there is wallpaper with wistaria-like blue and orchid flowers.' The furniture has- a painted rose design on the headboard* of the bed and the drawers of the vanity. The bedspread ■ I* creamy white. Three orchid throw pillows complement the flowers In the wallpaper. An orchid velvet cover Is on the vanity bench. Bed tables are gold colqr with crystal and gold lamps, on them- • The tops are marble. There are Tiny white shutters in the bathroom instead,,of curtains. The white wallpaper has enormous blue flowers \\ith bees and lavender butterflies hovering over them. Tile and fixtures are blue. There i» a long mirror over the double vanity. In the adjoining den walls are paneled in mahogany. This is one of the two rooms In the house that has window* on the road side. Closets are built on ... each side of the window to form an alcove. Here there is < a desk. One of the closet* has book shelves built into one *idb of II. The posts. At the ceiling is a second scalloped design. Furniture Is cherry. Spreads are white with blue brush fringe trim. The vanity bench' has a striped blue satin paid. Draperies and vanity skirt are , white. The bath between Susan and Bob s room is yellow. Gaudy butterflfeg flit across the white wallpaper.. - Bob’s, room also, has blue carpeting. His draperies are beige linen. Walls are paneled in birch. A- desk-'topped with black Formica is built into the window alcove. Twin beds fit Into the comer with the end of one bed disappearing under (be corner table. The Utter is also topped with bi&ck Formica. Over it is a drop ceiling fixture of white and brass. Plaid bedspreads and red bolster pillows make this corner cheery. A rumpus room,, furnace and tool room and a pool room are included in the ground level area. In the rumpus room the floor is covered with beige tile.. Walls are aqua with a number ed green plants used as wait decorations. Silver colored metal poles are used In lieu of a railing on the stairway. There Is a second fireplace in this room. Furniture Is bamboo with bright colored cushions. The-Leahy house is completely electric. It is unthinkable that it be anything else for Leahy is a Detroit Edison executive. The exterior of the house is buff brick with white panels set in under the windows. There is white metal trim on the porch. G. J. Hanniken, AIA of Royal Oak was both architect and builder for the Leahy house. It was completed in April of this year. .... tufted back. ' Other furniture Includes a chair upholstered In blue tapestry, a -squashy cushioned arm-- chair, also blue, and an antique lovcscat upholstered In.cream ami’pale i ural tapestry, bedroom- and r ing and an aqua sofa for, relaxing—overnight guests. Draperies a^e linen-like in texture. BUT, AND WHITE? Susan has^a bedroom on the '-ground .-levcJL.,fllriN'lly below the master bedroom. Hers ’is a blue ami white room. Carpeting Is blue. Wallpaper is white.. On two walls there is a blaek picket fence design with pota of blue or orchid flowers on some of (he MASTER BEDROOM -Because the master bed- with small touches of orchid and blue. The room is on the topmost level of the house, it is , delicate design on the wallpaper in,the far corner up among the trees Ttjts W watt-while room is repeated in a’ larger area behind the bed. TO WELCOME GUESTS—The wide front hallway is floored in black slate. Walls are white, jjhe murals are mainly pink and blue on a white background. The light fixtures in the center of the hall and over the lower stairway are attractive and -unusual. Pontiac Press Photos hr Ed VanderworP The doorway beyond/the little black chest leads into the living room. Up the blue carpeted sttfirs is the master'bedroom and the den. k RUMPUS ROOM—This room is on the ground level. Glass ' doors In front open to the yard. The sliding doors at the lift hide the furnace room and, beyond, a pool room. Metal polei next, to the stairs brighten'up what could be a dark area. Walls are aqua; the floor beige tile. One armchair upholstered in leather and gay bamboo furniture carry nut the practical aspects of this room. . „• ,* PARQUET FLOOR—All the living 10001* have oak parquet floors. Folding louvered doors separate formal living room, family . room and dining room. In this room the walls are paneled in Wood with a skndalwod finish. The fireplace wall is red brlc,k.\ There's a corner for reading over at the, right with built-in book shelves, a hanging lamp and comfortable armchairs. The aqua sectional sofa completes the furniture grouping around the fireplace., " TWELVE THE PONTIAC p'rBSS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1M1 Highland Estates 'ST 513,960 BERT SMOKLER Builder, MeCd Pttao* OB'S-OU ' ImM AlTMrt aul • Bttwt.n M-SD ui Pautlfcc Ukl Bdi. | Just Won'tWork-____ rifs a waste of tirae J[b useTefr-l over house ..paint on flows- and [porches; it wasn't, formulated to withstand the- abrasion of being walked on. Instead^ use a quality porch taajasl) either , solvent-I thinned or latex. _. OARAGES ' • • ADDITIONS , "Satisfaction Guaranteed" 10ARA COMPANY I 919 fostyn FE 3-7908 .immmmmsmsmmtmmmm 24-HOUR SERVICE Furnaces Vacuumed Gas Hooting LUX-At RE —MULLER ”SUfRfMt-—”eXCtt±- MOEIIY’S Phono 682-1810 FOR ADDITIONS OR REMODELING 14 Years Experience CAUL FE 5-8405 Ambassador Insolation Co. . , . For Better Living All Work Guaranteed • Breexeways * Room Addition* • Remodeling • Porches • Roc. ' Rooms • Concrete Work • Garages • Aluminum Siding * FHA TERMS YEIDKK K BUILDING 65 Court P>., Pontioc ---U. ' -ft 4-6909 EXTRA RAILINGS HEAVY $|99 8 pgr tin. ft. Porch Columns Unit Steps Concrete Step Co. 6f97 Highland Rd. Telephono 673-0775 MOR-SUN AUTOMATIC ■ MODERN +—GAS OR OIL HEAT 1 The Mor-Suri trddemark is your as- f—Tl 8 surance of quality in heating equip- , |r—iM 1 ment. Why not let the experts at I I 1 Goodwill Automatic Heating Co. in- jn*jl I stall a-'new heating system in your j^l I home, NOW before1 the fall rush. | M0 DOWN PAYMENT-FIBST PAYMENT NOVEMBER j WHOLESALE TO ALL! I OUR VOLUME BUYING MAKES IT POSSIBLE FOR US TO BUY FOR LESS—THE SAVINGS ARE PASSED 1 ON TO YOU. i I ' ■ • . 1 I v Neettkiiytyj i ■ . I Mot Ban It Guaranteed 1 by Good Honsokooping - GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING | 3401 West Huron Street FE 9-0484 If you plan to build, or buy a new home or remodel within 24 months WE WANT YOU TQ HAVE US FREE GIFT! »lieW “Home Idea File and Guide for Better \ Living” To Help You Organize end SAVE YOUR BUILDING AND MODERNIZING IDEAS I Tbit helpful aid to planning Is YOURS - ABSOLUTELY FREE I Use it to plan carefully for bettor living in your now home —and feel free to consult ui, Of a member of your local Council for Bettor Living, ,on any problems you may uncounted and questions you'd liku answered I Coupon for Your FREE Gift TObAY I COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK F.O. Bei lft» — PonilM Within "Mid ntxf 24 montlts, w# plan toi (Ndoid chock) buy or bollfl a now homo □ or mak« major homo Impsovomonfs Pl.nt. deliver In ui unur FDFF nlfl "Name Mas. Film nnd ftulA* MODESTLY ELEGANT: - Accents of brick and vertical siding complement the long, low look Of this three-bedroom ranch which io emphasized by the' sleek roof line and long planter ■ V*T braces. The house, designed by architect Rudolph A. Matem, contains three bedroom^ and • 2% baths In 1,437 square feet of living az®8. '* Enhance Fireplace looks With Ceramic Tile The fireptaceis a natural cent] ter around which to arrange fur-! niture in the living room. Locate the fireplace so there will be ample I unobstructed wall space on either side of it, as well as space in front of die fireplace to allow for fur-niture groupings. Zn older *> give your fireplace durability and Interesting design, surface the face, hearth and man-tel top with ceramic tile, which, is fireproof, waterproof. stainproOf aid easily cleaned. Tile comes in 200 different colors and many de» A ribbon snake is made of it [narrow Ytrip'qf spring steel and has a spiral screw at the raid. Oth-jera^ are shorter and consist of FLOOR PLANS: - Note the interesfing placement of informal and work areas^convenient -both- to main entrance and service entrance. Excellent traffic circuluation results from central foyer arrangement plus five outdoor entrances. Note also abundance of storage space, especially in garage-terrace area. ; R-82 Statistics Three-bedroom, 2 Mi bath ranch containing 1,427 square feet not counting ghrage, porches and basement. Dimensions are 30’ deep by 69’ 2’’ wide. Single car garage accounts for 11’ 4’’ of width. i; ■ Livihg room is 13' by l9’i dining mm 12’ hy in’, f»m. Jly room 10’ by 10‘, kitchen 9’ by 10’, and bedrooms 14* 6” by 11’, 10’ by 13’ 4” and 9’ 6” by 10’. Modest-Steed Ranch Some Luxury Touches Gl-550 MOVES YOU IN $150 FHA DOWN PAYMENT Value King and Value Queen Located In Beautiful Pontiac Knoll. Practical Home Builders re S-M5S UN 4-S*1t FRED W. M00TE ELECTRICAL — INC. — 845 W. Huron St. I Industrial Wiring o Free Estimates O Surveys Ovur 30 Tears fa Pontiac H.H. STANTON Plumbing and rw' Heating Contractor ■ 103 STATE STREET FE 5-1683 By JULES LOR Touches of luxury hi this sleek three-bedroom ranch make it hard to realfie the house is in the modest, less-than-1,500 square foot ategorv. ___________.________ .Its handsome roof design the way the garage is attached give it the long, low look sought by many home buyers; and its interior design is extremely well adapted to modern living. ’ Designer' of House of the Week B-82 is architect Rudolph A. Matem. Its most striking interior feature Is a spacious living room-dining room expanse — 367 square feet in all — high-lighted by a'handsome three-way fireplace. Both rooms conaeet through sliding glass doom to a roar terrace where flu fireplace chimney docs double duty as an oh t d o o r barbecue. (Actually, triple duty: the common chimney also serves ss a heater flue.) The family room-kitchen area is another open-plan arrangement, 19’ by 10’ combined, but nicely divided fate two nearly equal sized rooms by one arm of the U-shaped kitchen work area. The arm can serve as a breakfast bar' when not ruse as a counter. One of the nicest touches of elegance in the home is the second outdoor terrace off the master bedroom. . What could be finer than a coot drink on a warm night a step from the bedroom before turning in? Or Imagine stepping out on the terrace with a cup of coffee and the morning newspaper before the dew Is dry. That’s firing; ‘ ’Tve completely separated the j sleeping area from the activity area to insure privacy and quiet,-”' said architect Matem. "That way, both sections of the house can be enjoyed to their fullest. B-82 contains only 1,427 square feet, excluding the garage and porches, and the full dimensions are 30’ deep by 69’2” wide. The garage, single-car size but with extra storage space, accounts for U'4” of the width. ADDITIONAL DETAILS The unusual'placement of the. family room-kitchen areg in the] front of the house is one of the most up to the minute features of; 3-82. . "You’ll notice the kitchen work area, where a housewife spends much of her dmy,jLj|£ft£|Lcnlly the same short distance from both fhe front door and the . service entrance,” said Matem, “It’s also Just a half dosen steps or so from the rear terrace;” That’s only one of the step-saving features, however. There are no less than five outside entrances I to this ranch which, with Us central fbyer design, provides excels lent traffic circulation throughout. The foyer, incidentally, is slate-in-concrete construction — easy to keep clean’besides adding a note :harm. attention. Note the interesting design of the large hall bath; a planter at the juncture of the tub and lavatory counter top. The bath adjoining the master bedroom (and convenient to the terrace) has a shower stall. And the other lavatory 'is equally -well placed, convenient to the kitchen and informal living areas and rectly at the top of the basement stairs. house. All the bedrooms have oversized closets; there is a coat closet in the foyer; a good sized linen closet; a 20 square foot storage closet in the garage, plus a second storage area entered through both the garage and the rear terrace— an excellent spot for. lawn furniture, garden tool! or a shop. The basement, of course, also provides ample storage. The exterior of B-82 fS'tTjpirehs-ing combination of wood siding with accents of brick, and long planter boxes to emphasize the sleek, low look. Vertical siding plus vertical trellis-type arrangements at the main entrance and the covered service entrance complement the generally horizontal appearance. Come See The . . , MY-T 3 LEVEL MODEL sl«l bedrooms • FINISHED FAMILY BOOM • BUILT-INS V • LARGE LOTS • FAVBD STREETS. • SIDEWALKS \ • LOW P.O,A. TEEMS, - KAHNER CONSTRUCTION CO. MA 4-4301 — MA 4-3815 WAU.8D LAKE Choose From JO Models BUY WITH NO MONEY DOWN As low As $22 Per Month Towneond-Swift Homes C. ------SCHUETT--------- TRI-COUNTY REALTOR NOW . in -Now, Larger Offices to Betfor Santa’ You 1034 V. HURON 2nd-Blk. W. of Tetofrepk ----FE 8-0458 RID BARN SUBDIVISION FOUR NEW MODELS Just West of M*24 Behind iSl PREFINISHED Hardwood Paneling SANDJU.WQ0D FULL. •/."x4x8 Cash'll* Cany FINISH WON'T CHIP! EASY TO INSTALL ~ TUI* modern Parking coRWihr LUMBER and COAL CO. 117 S. Cass FE 2-MIS install a trim naw toilat by AMERiCAN-zStandard \ o gives long, depends bit, quit! operstton 1 ™ • o eliminates snnoymg, costly running water I EAMES & BROWN, INC. 55 Eost Pike Street FE 3-7195 oitclosiiig a porch? remodeling kitchen? REMODEL WITH BEAUTIFUL idersen Andei low Is the Mm M start If yes — MseMstad' urtsliltas sm> _____Bstulll piss* wM MW •goto be tarn* umwftaota Mod. yta bur ... ho cerises wtadswy- Art yeer burner ___ .Lsisrxs Wlwjliwi osrtean so Mask Wti«. Mill, b* «tad ta t "window idee booklet. Kimball a Russell inc ,r dtswrsiM sad Is* os rata rtw u*uta suHUu in*. Window, Don't oo- wrthrtss—usb ter And... 4 only bf S.loil leather finishing the second floor? SSYBaraofEqiiriBaM ANCHOR FENCE J PROTECTS CHILDREN, PETS AND PROPERTY^ kig security of a genuine Anchor Fence! Standi guard against the hosards of traffic and trespassers, makes any yard a safer, happier place- Get famous Anchor Fence quality... squarp poets and gatoo with otnndard or new Moderntaeeh, woven 4 times closerj Call no# for a free estimate! Alio AvoHable: PORTABLE DOG. RUNS , Phone FE 5-7471 Study Flan Order Coupon Send tb The Pontiac Presa, Pontiac. Mich. Enclosed u 30 oents In coin. Please wnd me^co^r of the The WeeT Design B-82. No stamps aceepted. Please do not use sticky tape on coins. NAME ..................... (PlesM Print) STREET .................. CITY .................... STATE .................... 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ROOMS easy Terms Up To 5 Years To Pay G&M CONSTRUCTION CO. 2260 DIXIE HWY. PONTIAC FE 2-1211 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, mi Delivers in -Stretch’ sssssas Most! Loses Bottle in 9th; Detroit Foils to Hit in Cfatch- JE 1 S N?W YORK W - New York manager Ralph Houk called it the toughest game the Yankees have won all year., Detroit manager Boh Scheffing said the Tiger loss was the same' ag any other defeat. Moose Skowron, who drove la Those? were the contrasting viewf of the main pnocip&u in last night’s 1-0 victory for ,the Yankees over the Tigers which widened New York's 'American League lead over Detroit to 2th games. Detroit’s Frank Lary (19-i V stis£i j 7) faces New York’s Ralph Terry (11-2) today In The second of the three-game showdown series' A Yankee stadium turnout of <6,MS — largest single game crowd of the season—saw a bril- Skowion's Bee Hitting fince~Bemovtng^CorseT YORK (UFP—Have you: 16 hits last night when he, Singled heardThe'orie about Bill Skowron’s!with two out in the ninth inning to drive in the only run of the *It starts like a risque joke. , but the punch line is tied in closely with the New York Yankees being 2*4 games in (font today. ’A The corsej,' • Which Skowron calls his "Mae West,” has proven a lifesaver te the muscular Yankee ftrst basemen for the past several years. He has worn it continuously to protect a back condition which once almost ’ jeopardized Ills major league caredh Corset and all, however, Skowron went Into a slump and finally was benched on Aug. 17 for not hitting. ‘We were in Kansas City, ron says, "and Haywood Sullivan I play without the cor- game in a 1-0 victor? over the second-placte Detroit Tigers. Skowron’s game-winning* smash drew a roar Of approval from 65,-566' fans at Yankee Stadium bat a look at despair from poor, sweat-soaked Don Mossi, who had blanked the Yanks on five hits in 90-degree heat until the ninth. ‘“I can’t ever remember pitching i better game,”- Mossi muttered. The only bad pitch I made was that curve bdU Skowron Mt.” Yankee manager Ralph Honk called last night’s thriller "the toughest game we played Sit year.” ■■ ■■■*.*■ • “I wouldn’t say .we’re over the top yet exactly,” Houk declared. ‘We sure would ’have 1 set tor awhile. Ho aaid it was only appointed had w& k»t~lt, but the WINNING COMBO — The four Yankees figured tn the big ninth mining Friday night in New York are, from the left, Elston Howard, Bill Skowron, Luis Arroyo and Yogi Berra. The Yanks broke a scoreless tie when Howard, Berra and Skowron singled in that order. Arroyo was declared the winner after hurling the ninth. after Mossi had retired Roger Marls and Mickey Mantle pro- tying me up in knots.” Reluctantly, the Moose stowed Ms corset in his Mocker and tried A couple .of yards of tape around his ribs instead. •'It’s working out Tine,” he said. “Since I’ve taken the thing off, I’m hitting around .340.” Actually, Skowron has slammed out 16 hits in 47 times up since: he put away his carpet. He de livered the biggest one of those world wouldn’t have come to i id.” I -I Last night’s victory assured the Yankees- they' still' would be .in. first place Sunday night even if the Tigers win the last two games of this crucial series. After Maris filed out and Mossi t fanned Mantle for the third tlme,| E3ston Howard and Yogi Berra Jjij g £ ,J,} £§ singled and Howard trotted Samoa, « l. m ot m 17 « a i«5 from third when Skowron shot a hard ground single through the left side of the infield. ’This was the toughest game of the year for us,” sighed Houk, “it was battle between two hard-nosed clubs, each- refusing to give an [IcSeiarSL oil.' m in hinnu J « _____i ua U4 at loo a io worrisome, self-critical type, was ili tmilesl It's about time,'’ he said. " did something. This has McKinley In National Net Play _ America's Best Triumphs FOREST HILLS, NY- ick Farrell, the fhird Los Angeles pitcher, whose two' wild pitches presented the Braves with their two runs in the eighth. The Washington Senators beat the Chicago White Sox, VI, after a 3-2 loss, the Minnesota twins downed the Boston" Red Sox, 5-1, and the Los Angeles Angels defeated the Kansas City A’s, 6-4 other American League games. The San Francisco Giants shaded the Chicago Cubs, 4-3, and the St. Louis Cardinals topped the Pittsburgh Pirates, 8-4, in other N L, action. man Harris, above, was named Milwaukee Braves 44 Friday night to move to within 2*4 games of the dile- Cincinnati Reds. The seCond-place Dodgers capitalized on three of 10 walks by Milwaukee starter' Bob Buhl and reliever Don McMahon for three of their tallies. interim manager of the Baltimore Orioles Friday after Paul Richards resigned.r Tiger Averages . INDIVIDUAL RATTING mem ref an m 1 “i'f 1 »! Colin* Mt 103 l»7 .310 17 JolhVlto . 470 110. 13a IN 30 loro* 310 40- M .370 4 Irovn 333 33 00 .300 II I futon 4M 03 130 .300 10 ........ II -it moBNa w l an* .if kk a | .14 4 3.01 310 01 It 110 .. * i mi :J*. i 8 10 111 330.0 M M IN .10 7 5.15 117.1 MUM 10 f 3.03 *. 143.1 M. 47 70 • • | t 3.53 43.1 if Sf .}* 3 4 4:M H I M if 30 . . 0 7 4 . if 111.1 if 41 77 . 0 0 1.30 1.1 3 1 U M U 1.40 1310,3 471 310,3*3 __________________ i„..0 1»M'7 ___Anttloa .,...........*’ * 14 < LA—FO Villanueva 13 LA-FO Villanueva »__________, , . “v-Brodle » mo (T. Davla kick I i—3. D. Smith I run (T. Davu kick) '—VO Davie 30 • _j-Pt>l»Ips 43 pnaa tram Bratkowekl (Villanueva kick) LA—Arnett 73 punt return (Villanueva -Btlcklea 10 pua from Kilmer (T. Davie kick) Casey M paea (ram Kilmer ,(T. Davie L». b. Smith 1 run (T. Davie kick) Oallae ................... 7' T 14 7-J Baltimore ................. 3 0 7 14—: Dal—Clarke 35 paae ' (ram Meradll _______ a a .300 ati Kans&s City ...40 a 4Mk FRIDAY'S RESULTS I Angeles «. Kanias city 4 Icago 3-1. Waahmftnn M. twl-elthl York L Damn, 0. night Cleveland i, Baltimore- 4^j4|ht__ (Lary 19-7) at Ne* York (Terry -3). Chicago (Larson S-l) a (Cheney 1-1). . - ion (Monhouquetta 10-13) a (Lee M>. Kansas City (Rakoir 34) a : Pittsburgh .........41 03 .4M ' 1 Chicago ..........si W m 3 Philadelphia 37 M JOT 4 FRIDAY’S RESULTS Hsco 4, Chicago 3. 14 In 4. Milwaukee 3. night K. Louie g„ Pittsburgh 4. night Only games scheduled. ' TODAY’S GAMES Cincinnati (Jay ISO) a (Bushardt 5-14). . . Angeles (Koulax ISO) a Mtlw lo-ii). i Francisco, (Sanford 10-7) a Cl (Brewer 1-7 tar Cardwell 11-13). Pltuburgh (MtaeU t-») a St. (SragUo 0-10). SUNDAY'S GAMES waukee at Chleago I clnnatl a Phliailalphta Pittsburgh a - (Oram kick) 31—Moore 17 pa il—Dupra 3 rah (Oram (1 — iRlikl 33 pass (i (Oram kick) dl—Moore It rim (Myra klek) Every Sunday Drag Racing MeHaReAe 26 Milt 14. E. of Gratiot $1.00 par Mils Ovtr 110 is V«»h Mils. CLOSED LABOR DAY Froth Physicals Set Physicals for 9th grade athletes] will be held at Rochester Junior! High/School Sept.” * at 9 a m: The losi dumped (he Braves into foqrth place behind San Francisco, which defeated Chicago 4-3 in 14 innings. Milwaukee trails the front-running .Reds by seven games. Milwaukee scored two runs on a walk, a slrigle and two straight wild pitches to tie the count 3-3 in the eighth, but McMahon was unable to check the Dodgers in the ninth. ' Ron Fairly’-worked McMahon for a walk and went to second.on AIRWAY LANES For RosorVotions OR 3-7340 FE 5-2513 PONY RIDIS 25c CARL S KIDDYLAND Cor. Telegraph and Dixie Opening ior.a Team or Individuals in the Farmington Mafoi Classic • PHONE • NORWEST LANES / *MA 4-2422 . ' .,!> ~ The Most Modern Idea in Boating The ’62 FLYING SCOTT BOAT A Whole New Concept in Boating! On Display NOW! History's first factory matched boat ,a . . dozens of new and exclusive features. 'One of the most daring steps forward in boat engineering! See it now. ( DEALERS OF: • GRADY WHITI LAFSTHAKIS • GIASTRON • WHITI NOUSI • AQUA SWAN * • AQUA QUEEN • DURATION SCOTT and WIST BIND MOTORS—Service fee all Mek< SHIPMATI-ALLOY TRAILERS CRU1SE-0UT BOAT SALES Open Dally 9:10 te 9 — typed Sunday* after Leber Day' Wol*op Blvd. ; FE 8-44C|2 '1'llE a-uK alAi ri SATURDAY, SKPTEMREK 2, jPtf? To Bnfl# ^tFi>p ;Center Unit, Convalescent Home * iMior permits were Issued this week for tAw major construction jobs in Pontiac. Work is M&ted . to begin next week on the first unit of file Glen-wood Avenue shopping center, a Advertisement lor Bids School District of the City of Pontiac, Pontiac, Michigan, will receive'sealed bids for the construction and completion of Renovation - Addition to Jefferson Junior fWgtr Sthoot until 2:00-P.M,. E.S.T., Tuesday, September^, 1961, at the office of the Board of Education, 40 Patterson Street, Pontiac, Michigan, at which' time and place air bids wUI be publicly opened and read aloud.- V ■ • •- Separate proposals will be received. as follows; ProposalA — General Cen- B _ Mechanical Work Pro petal C —Electrical Work i Proposal D— Kitchen Proposal ! — Arts a Crafts Equipment Proposal f — Motel' rwcepied bidder? will be requi fo fumlsha satisfactory Performance Bond and Labor and Material Bond in the amount of 106% of the contract. The accepted bidder* shall pay total cost of these bonds. Plans and specifications may be' obtained on. arid after Wednesday noon, September 6, 1961, at the office of the Architect, Eberle M. Smith Associates, Inc., 153 East Elizabeth Street, Detroit 1, Michigan. , ■ '. ' Proposals must be submitted on forms furnished by the architect and supplemented by * certified check or bid bond in the amount Of five per cent of the proposal submitted. .All proposals submitted shall fo-v main firm for a piriod of thirty days after official opening of A. cheek in the sum of MS,00 must be submitted as a deposit for each set of plans and specifications, same to be refunded when plans and specifications -are relumed. A rental of $2.00 per day will be charged contractor who retains plans and specifications longer than agreed. J-,The Board Of Education reserves the right to reiect any or all bids, Jn whole or in part, and to waive any Informalities therein. SCROL msTRICT »f (be ' CTTT of PONTIAC PONTIAC, MICHIGAN . Rev. ). Allen Parker, D.D. $350,000 S.- S. Kresge Co. junior department store branch. Grated- wU be broken for a two-story, (330,000 convalescent home about Sept 15. The structure Is to be built by Nonage della Salute, Inc., of Detroit, ut The Kresge store will be ..the largest of some 27 stores at’the proposed (3-mlIlion center biggest Kresge.. branch store in the nation, according to Irving Stoll-tan, of Detroit, owner and builder. ■ • . ★ ★ ; * .• Hie store -will cover some 30,000 square feet. This- is four times larger than the average Kresgt store, which covers about 20.WX square feet SET FOR JANUARY "The modem one-story steel and masonry structure is' due for completion ui January 1962. It will have parking space for 11.000 cars,” paid Stoiloman. Other unita will be placed under construction at a later date. The corporation owns a chain of reyen nursing and convalescent homes nationally. Tips is one of fair convalescent homes currently tinder construction or being planned in the Detroit area. ★ ■■ dr- dr Others are In Southgate, Warren and Ann Arbor. "The Pontiac-home will be one of our larger ones,” said Thomas MacDonald, corporation (Resident. It will be a 160-bed facility and i being built to allow for the addition of another 160’ beds at a later date," he said; EXTENSIVE LANDSCAPING The target date1 for completion is four months, from ground break- ing. Tbe building will cover about 30,00tf sq. ft. . landscaping 4n such a to isolate the building and grounds from surrounding structures. “Wp are planning o ires. Our of to© finest of Us type,” tie explained. It Will be a modem concrete, masonry and steel fireproof struc-ture with elevator-facilities. 'We chore the Pontiac site because our research indicated lack of modem convalescent home facilities in the general area. We think our building will benefit the community,” MacDonald Scottish Rite Club to HeaLlemplui Asst. County Prosecutor Robert Templin Jr. will address members of the Oakland Scottish Rite Pub -at-its-first fall meeting Wednesday in the Roosevelt Mazonfo Temple. He will discuss the new Oakland County Center: * Also, plans for the club's participation in a centennial observance of Detroit Scottish Rite bodies in 1962 will be (Resented at the dinner meeting. DELAYED OPENING — Because workmen are still putting the finishing touches on Waterford Township’s two new elementary to ires School (above) and , the Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths Services Announced Sunday School will be held at 10 a.m. Sunday at the Apostolic House of Prayer, 3156 .Hatfield Road, Drayton Plains. 'Morning worship is slated for 11:30 a.m.; ling service at 7; 30. Ah evangelistic service will be held at 7:30 pro. Wednesday and Bible study at 7:30 pro. Tri-day. This is a new congregation which will soon be organized. County Medical Society Plans Month of Meetings OIL COMPANY WILL LEASf OR BUY Your SERVICE STATION Wifte Afi fafoimaffoa to PONTIAC PRESS BOX IS The Oakland County Medical Society will open a month , of important meetings Sept: 6 with its quarterly business meeting. The quarterly meeting Is staled for the . Kingsley Bm rather than at the Pontiac Motor bivtstm as previously announced. Dinner begins at 7 pro. Items for discussion include compulsory social security for physicians, consideration of property for a headquarters, the recent Mo-Neroey Report and reports from ithe political actidh committee. This Is Your Year To Live In A Home Which Has Ml The Features You Want In Beautiful WATKINS HILLS • Ranches • Colonials • Early Americans • Tri-Levels* Bi-Levels We Are'Taking Trades Ask Us About Custom Building and Modernization "The Builder That Makes a Hduso a Home" W. W. ROSS HOMES 1.6 Miles Poet Telegraph Road on Mxis Hw/. ‘ wSTSJV OR 3-8021 -» ’...—------------------- On Sept. 18, the society will h special meeting of the board of directors, delegates and alternate delegates to the legislative body of the Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS). wUI be at the society’s office at 8 pro. Business will id final plans tor the Session of the MSMS scheduled for Sept. 24-2S at the Pant!bid Hotel In Grand Rapids. ’ Eight elected delegates and eight alternates will Attend. The society has requested its alternates attend at least one session of the MSMS House of Delegates during the convention. Delegates attend all sessions and hold voting power. ton tire toSM rhata Douglass Houghton School, registration of pupils has bden delayed until Sept.'11. Children whore, name* begin with A through ’ K register Sept.-11, L through Z, Sept. 12.. “ -‘ Jesse Griggs, . real State broker, died early thi* morning at t. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He was He was a member of Pontiac Masonic Lodge No. 21 FAAM. Surviving are a sister. Miss Helen Griggs of Pontiac; and a brother, Perry of Pontiac. will be held at 1:30 pro. Tuesday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home With- burial in Mt. Avon Cenietery. ELMER A. HOPP Service for Elmer A. Hopp, 60, of 3060 Edgefield Drive, Waterford Township, will be held at 1:30 pro. Tuesday at Sparks-Grlffin Chapel with burial in White Chapel Metnorial Cemetery. He was an employe of Pontiac Motor Division and a member of St. Trinity Lutheran Church. Survivors include his wife, Rosetta; his mother, Mrs. Augusta Hopp of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Carol Sutliff of Waterford; a son, Winston of. Waterford; five grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Bernice Wood tit Pontiac, Mrs. Beatrice Wenzel and Mrs. Violet Hartwig, both of Decatur, Ala.; and two brothers, Marlowe and Clarence, both of Pon-jtlac. Mr. Hopp died unexpectedly yesterday at his residence. MRS. WISDOM KIRKSEY Sendee for Mrs. Wisdom (Maggie D.) Kirksey, 59, of 297 Rapid St. will be held at 2 pro. Tuesday at the Antioch Baptist Church. Her body is at the Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home. She was a member of the Lime Stne Baptist Church in Waynes > Funeral Home, ifceego Harbor. j buty, Miss. • ' M Mrs, Mayworm, 47, died of a Surviving are .her husband; her j heart attack at - her residence) LABOR’S DAY September 4ti» we honor Labor and dignify the part these inen have played In molding their country. As they march, faces forward .pride in expression and step, with all a Republic has ever offered to free men, we too feel the pride of participation In their' mighty goal of creating beauty nut of raw material- We eee them as fathers, leading their families In prayer at their tables, see their pride In son or daughter as they guide tbore youngsters in fairness, honor and fundamentals of good citizenship. These are the men whose wives ...HM | are the background, the foundation of society, strictly and literally speaking they ate the bulwark of our economy: they control the piine strings of a Nation. a competitive position. They ate the men who worked a little harder, a little more conscientiously to make both employer and tf-elr position more secure. mother; Mrs, Ida Porter of Merida, Miss. several children, Mrs. Bernice Robinson of Dallas, Tex., Lena, Elnora, Lee, Fred, Odis. ' i, John, Robert, Lee, Ftoyd qnd L.C., all of Pontiac; three brothers,-George Gray of Pontiac, Hardy of Waynesburg and Steve of Chicago; and tyro sisters. Mrs. Kirksey died Thursday after a long illness. MRS. JOHN OTT Service lor-Mrs. John (ZUlah M.) Ott, 60, of 5497 Elizabeth Lake Road will be held at 3:30 pro. Monday at Sparks-Grlffin Chapel with burial in Orescent Hills Cemetery. “ was a member of the Waterford Community Church. Surviving - are her daughter, Mrs. Earl Ferguson of Pontiac; a son, MiltoA of Drayton Plains; six grandchildren; one greatgrandchild; six sisters, Mrs. Albert Burke of Pontiac, Mrs. William Baldwin of Midland, M-rs. carl Rapp of Saginaw, Mrs. Ernest St. Aubin of Muskegon and Mrp- (Re Balland of Poison, Mont.; and Mrs. Lorraine Myers of Pin- VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Ferry Street Rhone FE 2-837 Also surviving are six brothers. Chester Anderson of Pontiac, Elton of Coleman, Leroy of Midland, Cart of Manistee, Robert of Detroit and Merlin of Muskegon. Mrs. Ott died yesterday morning at Pontiac General Hospital after s illness of several months. ROBERT W. MALCOLM WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN* SHIP—Service tor Robert W. Malcolm,. 73, of 7885 Commerce Road will be held at 1 pro. Monday at the Hichardson-Bird Funeral Home Milford with burial in foe Commerce Cemetery v Mr. Malcolm was a member of Orchard l-«k» Community Church Presbyterian and a past master and Ufe member of Commerce Lodge No. 121 F6AM. He was a past high priest and Ufe member of the Commerce Order at Eastern Star No. 301. Mr. Mrilcolm'leaves a daughtei Mrs. Douglas Tuttle of Union Lake and a grandchild. He died unexpectedly at hit home Thursday. I MRS. ALBERT J. MAYWORM WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP—Service tor Mrs. Albert J. '(Irene C.) Mayworm of 2538 Ivan-hoe St. wiU be held at Id aro. Tuesday at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church. Her body wUI be taken to the Sacred Heart Cemetery in Bad Axe for burial. The Rosary will be recited at pro. Monday at the C- J. Godhardt Thursday. She had been 111 several years. §He was a member p&Qur Lady of Refuge Church ai Nto Altar Society at her church. Surviving are her husband; two daughters, Connie E- and Barbara T., both at home; two sons, Jafoes A. apd Pexter A., both at home, ad a brother. HUGH-H. MONTGOMERY HOLLY — Service for Hugh H Montgomery, 64, of 206 CoUege St., wiU Jm at 2 p.m. Monday at the Dryer Funeral Home, Holly, with buripl in Lakeside Cemetery. Mr. Montgomery died Friday night at Ids home. Surviving, are his wife, Beulah; _ son, Maurice, of Fenton, a daughter, Mrs. Elaine Hagood of Vienna, Ohio; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Marilyn Rolph of Birmingham, five grandchildren, ALVIN PARSONS WALLED LAKE — Service for Alvin Parsons, 38, of 3059 Fisher Road win be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Rlchardsdn-Blrd Funeral Home. Burial wiU be in Rose-land Park Cemetery. Mr. Parsons died unexpectedly of a heart condition in MaysvUle, Ky., yesterday. He was a custodian of Walled Lake Schools. Survivors Include his wife, Katherine; his toother, Mrs.Alvto Pap of Whitesburg. Ky-; five children, Leona, Thomas, Teresa, Michael and Charlotte Parsons; three sisters, Mrs'. Irene Dodson of Pontiac. Mrs. Iva Maggard of Whitesburg and Mrs. Vetoa Marcus ot Denver, Colo., and two brothers. ' A. B. SPIER ALMONT — Sendee for A. B. Spies, 55, of 6345 General Squier Road, wUI toe at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo, Mr. Spies died Friday of a heart i attack at his home. mill operator. I Champion Home Builders and fanner. He was a member of the Almont IOOF Lodge and the First Congregational Church pf Almont. Burial wiU be in the Romeo Ccmetond .* He is survived by his ' Gladys; a daughter, Marilyn, home; a non, Arthur, Of Imlay City; and a brother, Kennetiv, of Dryden. WATERFORD Hitt ' . A Planned Custom Community With Lake Privileges FEATURES: .Mac tt lamiTr Kltrhtn Inc •tree. <41 FI. lone) Wllb hire* floor Welle end Belton; • Cherrr f re-FHilahog ,■ retail; KKehen a Oee lltel a Lerft Bilele Site W a aoua Brit* • toll Baeemeal • OrCr-elee Met Oeri BALMORAL *26,990® MODEL AT 6288 Open Sunday 1 to I P. M. 100 Price INCLUDING LOT ■ Salat by ’’ SLAVIK REALTY 10450 We 0 Mile ltd.* 10 OMM A.M. **. HA « W# 1 Will Present '62 Budget County Operating Tab of $l4.8,Millioif Ready for Supervisors The ways and means committee of the board of supervisors Thursday put the finishing touches on a proposed 1962 county operating budget totaling '$14,845,586. It will bo. submitted to tire board of supervisors Sept. II and must be approved by Sept, ft Under the budget — $1,244,854 higher than the present budget — nearly 1,500 county employes will receive pay raises ranging from MOO for most of them to a high of $2,000 for Health Director John.D, Monroe. / * * ■■ ' — The ways and means committee also approved adding 30 new employes next year." to tire tentative budget of fl*.-■riSAM approved In April to pnr tor tire Increase In Blue Cross hospllallzalion Insurance for county employes. A recommended $8,700 waa put into the budget to cover the «r* S100 per year uniform alto) for sheriff’s deputies. ^ KEGEIPT8, TAXEA The primoeed budget would I met by estimated receipt* of $ 848,500 and taxes of $10,997,076 based on an allocation of $5.25 per $1,000 of equalized valuation. . The committee added about $70,000 to tire tentative budget during benrlngs, according to Leo Halfpenny, budget techni etef- Social welfare cools atone — foi general relief and hospitalization -were boosted $102,000. Reductions In other .appropriations resulted in the net difference, dr Sr- dr Nearly half of the suggested budget i> lor salaries. A salary schedule totaling $8,713,201 — or $104,000 below what waa recommended earthy — was settled, Thursday. ♦ • * dr The difference came from approving only 30 instead of the requested 51 new positions, Halfpenny aakl. High-Stepping Area Dad Is Top Strutter in Nation A high-stepping Waterford Township tether of five chlldrep has at--taifted his goal of becoming the ‘champion “strutting drum major" of the nation. endU-has promptly retired from all competltiofi. With white and gold boots flashing. big 6-foot, 200-pound Jack Hobby of 3749 Percy King Road, stepped briskly around an arena at Miami Beach last week. The Judge* were unanimous In choosing him as the top winner at the National Strutting Drum Major contest. From the time the 41-year old Hobby was 4 tiny tot, learning how to step “high wide and handsome” from his dad until nw, he has been strutttng around the country winning Contests. Even at the age of 5, Hobby won contests with the Solis of ths VFW in Pennsylvania. STATE CHAMP * For the past ton consecutive years, Hobby has been Michigan’s Champion “strutting drum major,!1' representing Pontiac VFW Poet 1370. Before that he started with the GrandHRapid* Crusaders and was the Drum Major for the St. Clair Shores Vanguards for three years. Of Hobby’s three boys and two girls, only Geraldine, 17, It fel-lowing to her father’s “footsteps.” She Is a member of the Rue-Vens, a Pontiac girl’s precision dltil team. f Hobby Is mb*t proud of his 18-man Eagles' lodge drill teain which he organized and trained-just for the fun of it, the team walked off with fop honors In the EggleF State parade in Lansing and has a first-place trophy for ' JACK HOBBY iaC Centennial Parade. Sr* A v Of his sudden retirement, Hobby said, “I’ve gone Just as high ‘ possible as a competitive 'stl ting drum major.’ Now I'll lei • it up to the 18-year-old kid* And take the pace a little eatler front dnr »l»t«r M CWorp Otowy/Xirii. Rou OrkOy. fort. AiUla MQDont-. IM sod Hard; *Dd St*v* Ora;, runeral iervtc« will to bm Tu««- tavtam* Robtown offimua*. to1 . terment In Count; Cemeter;. Hr». ^ in «t»W »» • toiuirtl Bom* _.oomfl«!d dour tikltwr .> , hold ’llondi^'Tkntr 4. 'it i . gun WjPemidi«a-ntr4 .r— _ Homo, Utltord, with Hot. Zdword I Auchord offtdotln*' Inlormont In . — mImL._______ . Townthlp; ns* 41; Mtoood orlfe ri JUboriJ. Mvrworm; deariwtbsr Keoto Rnr-will b* hold irsK&rTwi ■9 _ . p m. nt m Mrdt touHrsf' Horn*. ' - tontrel wrvleo I June chord te>l Co Iholle Funeral Horn. iStoS '»r-rniWiiAN.'siPir:' iUL' marcuT rot. Jioo Woodward *»«.; an (7; Mir ifindiwdlhir of Ilotert Cot; izzz. «-*• -j,/ j*,,. a voorhMi, . •idwThra. tuw aipio, 4a Oaborn and Ranry •Ipla. Memorial tarrlct will bn h»M Monday .at 4-p m, by lb* ______— . officiating Interment In Saahs-haw Cmri*r;. Mto R(waua wtt Uo In atata at Uw Voorhacadllplo Funeral Koma. r Milton H Sank . M- *ubln, Mr«. OM BaBand. Mra. Lorran* Mrtri and Chaator. B- grandchlldran and ana grgat- . Kandaon. Funaral tarnca will ha Id Monday, east.' 4, at S:j* p m ortwuuag. iStarmont ---------- r, n, mm In Croaotnt Ott wtO* i-Orllftn to- lll Mcmortom IN LOVtm MKMORT OF TOMMY Shtoh;. who nml nwa? oea rear ago. Boplomhar 1. it#/ O^rjong^rear h*» paaaad alnoa that Whan Jaaua took our darling aon , awa;. Our mn la nat Um ubu aon alnco _ rou bare gun* awa;. lut w* know that ;oura la hotter, .fur biui proparad it that way. You wart uw aunahtaa in our Awntaun. But ;ou tore ton* »»nr to mako aaotfiir iter in hrevon mliHd by Mothre. Dad, Orandmo Funeral Plrectora 4 Donelson-Johns COATS MtoRKa-OfUFFtN CHAI'Bt, rhouihtfui a- “ - **• Voorhees-Siple . m Cemetery Lota 8 s unt, vctkrans oardkn. Oaglonj^HIlli Manorial C*raol«r; 4 LOTS IN OAKLAND HILLS ME-mortal Oardtiu. In ih* Oardtn af lha La«t guppor. Tit 1-1474 after 4 -----------------------*—- ___ RBPLini AS IS wsTteday there ware rtpllas al The rieas eMse to the feltatriiii Help Wanted Mato 6 wing tor a .life ..A ASM 1 work bStS tojnrore panalon program naw undo; war, PLACE A “LOST*' AD. Call FE 2 8181 for An «d to recovsr a toss. Dial FF. i-8181 for an id writer. THE PONTIAC^l*R£Si S^TtJltl)AT, SEPTEMBER 2, 1961 rlFtV- Help Wanted Male 6 ,, CHEF tiBB/smeruaUK Canvassers «»> ' FOR i____ AND OENERAI# murmy-t labor INO TRUCK*, 7®^*' -JEMin^ ‘tSTr cam place a iam on women. , Pontiac UM to mpaar cuttomors with nationally advertised house- _____at opportunity. _ _... riencsd operator. Male preferred. Send- qualification* to Box 14, Pontine Pnu. SonVTvS.,? : .(rliOat. fb 2-3091, OS WOMEN. FULL OR DRAFTSMEN amf’orchltoc M1*c,11*n<0UJ Jr0“ I^WodiWMSS1,. for Mr. Crawford. 3M W. Wal-ton Bird ; Iw^TEDrjroSo ■ art soiling, lift iota character ai PIN BOVS, MOTOR h«N REC- MEN WANTED eated In fol • field. Neat, ai to get' aheac. " laarnlni. Apply MAN om SI FT •hip In tntsrsi rv 3 10 ARB mSSl tlout and Wing .. 4»w. If you would like to t reur income by til REAL EtBTAm MlSsMAN EX-perlenced preferred or have Vain- R J. Vataet, 140 Oakland Ate.,; FS 44111.- i. > ' " • ■ ■ aTEA^bY~EMFLOTifENT FOR RE- ■Te-any •ponelble men over. H with late model atatton wax on. Men no re* ■ tlrement acceptable.. Bo traveling. Deatrable working condition* with one of the arena fastest growing oompanlea. Reply to Boa 75. Pontiac Free* giving complete TOP RANKED NATIONAL CON cent hog opening b inlet de-partment for o young married a"%J^.^k%:iS.^ to tun. par and’ refaranaei need; ed. For appointment call OR i nRtwi,_ - ______ VOURO MAM, BIOR SCHOOL Age to work eronlOE*. Hunt'a Pet Sop. EMI t. Telegraph. Help; Wasted Female 7 1 WOMEN WITH SALES EXPE-•iaet^i ||| botb women* and ' Help Wanted ^ good future. Ph. *73-37*7 between Instructions *■10 MEN NEEDED Meat Cutters . ‘ And Countermen complete preaent claee -group Until elagg completed Only $199 REGULAR pUa ’ Become a Meat Cutter, Counterman 1 Proceuorln ' HI Weeks KK PLACEMENT SERVICE DAT OR EVENINOS WORSEN ■ Cashiering or Meat Wrapping Alter two VMki you will b# able * w$lt fc* Rent Apts. Unfumished38 For . couple. ^Jroom apqrtment. . Private bath, entrance" ground ftoor. stove, relrlg., utUltlc*. laundry pHSw* fumUhed. Immac-ulatoly clean. 2 block* from downtown. Permanent tenant* desired Bloomfield Terrace. MODERN 4-ROOM. If no onlldren. .washes ~*» — (urnlehed. Ill Onotda. |1M month. F» 3-74P4. . 1 NEViLY DECORATED 4 ROOMS, partly furnished. furnished or unfurnished. Utilities furnished. 440 Peacock. »_____________________ ORCHARD COURT; .APARTMENTS 1 and 2 bedrma. Sir conditioned. —■Adultr--------—V-- -FI g*d»tt Member, 1* Battier St.. Apt. «■ { ROCHESTER 3 BEDROOM APART------- 'leal and hot water fur- Liaooin asm. • i UPPER 2 BEDROOM APART- { —mw- -Hh r Aeteate - oath, clove. _ .._______ heat and hoi water. -Palm—Tula Apartment,, 484.,All-. MT dve- FE99I66. Rent Houscs-Unfum. 40 coLqbEd Brand new ] bedroom fun base- f-HSSSsjR Kitchen vpnt fen-hood. Nicer big lot. with eld* drive: Low rent. Mg by LudW BttUdtog Co Sale* gae bee M8U0. 1 HOUSE TO RENT OR LEASE WITH option to buy. *M Myrtle. PE ____________.'Hro. . NEW HOUSE. 4 LAROE ROOMS, utility room. 3390 Oak wood Rd.. Oilord. Couple ontr. OA J&glu, NICE 9-ROOM SOUSE IN PON-< tlac. Oae neat, fun bagemont, ga-—rate, qw—location, near all schools. Will rent or tell. Call-. OR 3-9896. . JTl NEW RANCH' HOME. 3 BED-: rooms. 2449 Union Lk. Rd. ■OFF Baldwin. --Mttt-Lrte" Bedrooms. WEST SIDE. 4 ROOMS, SECOND floor. PE 4*1091. UPPER 4 ROOM APARTMENT. .Suburban home with .garage. *™ per — ■ i utilities! PE 9-39M. UTILITIES^ HEPRIOChATOR AND JTUOEB- Just $25 1EOULAR 9» Thia ta the lost time on thle tpecltl offer. ROYAL FOOD CLUB 19 W. 11 MB* 090 947-1139 ROYAL OAK. MICHIGAN ILL TUTORlATlN. ENOU8R ______■ FE 4-47*8 ; Work "Wanted Male 11 AAi -PAINTING AND DEOQRAT-lng. 39 year* axn Reaf.-Fred d»-tlmatee. Phone UL 2-1393. aTlady interior DECORATOR^ ■ worm. FE 9-0343. INTI BIOR AND EXTERIOR painting, WOO’ washing. Free **-time tee. PE 9-0379. ' lO^.nsu^-Ei** Nio^ PAINTING AND DECORATINO. Wall paper removal. Eipertly done, torn* carpentry, loh* or additions. Bca*. Cheep. 646-1113. Wanted Real E«tstc 36, ANNETT . NEEDS LISTINGS ANNETT INC. Realtors 39 E. Huron St. FE 9-0469 Open Evenings and *—*— y Lost and Found 26 LOST: SMALL BLACK FEMALE dog; large floppy ear*, toot tall. Aoewera. to name of 'Soots." 9 months old Reward ACCOUNTANT EXPf RIENlrtli ih vaenmi tA Pnnfllr PrMI Ini ALL CASH ‘ OI OR PHA EQUITIES If you are leavhtr state or need money quickly eau ut for imma- Elwood Realty 443-3416 CEMENT WORK. ALL KINDS, REA- eonabla. OR 3-7*34. _____________ ARFENTER WORK OF A N Y. ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEICDINO kind. Reasonable. Call after # a friendly "*■“* ” p m. FE 9-9W, • ‘ “ .....kcry. It. Blrmldgbem. Mt Milt DOMESTIC WORK, MORE FOR home then wate». FE 9-1192. DOMESTIC TTHITE PLAIN COO Ing, leundry and waantot. Noon to* pm. Tuee, Wed^ood 1----- Ref. Orchard Lake Tillage ”l$OES ASROTRI KNARp:_______ -! FRED HERMAN OB 2-1992 -/ore. new And ! retnStoltnt. 392-9199., - j CABINET MAKER. CARPENTER. ' BACK MAN NEEDS WORK BADLY _______ OB 3 4999 man wirt min ANb child will da aov kind of work. Call anytime before 4 pm FE 94463 •A1NTINO INTMliOR AND EXTE- ____ SCHOOL COLD WAVE. 64.90. Dorothy'S 400 N. Perry. *FE 3-1344._______'_________-■ DAINTY MAID »U#Ftlli». 739 LIST WITH US FOR SALE OR TRADE WE CAN OET YOU CASH OR AN PHA OR OI SALE . JUST PHONE FI 3-7399 AND LET US IRON OUT YOUR REAL ESTATE PROBLEMS. CLARK REAL ESTATE. 3101 W. HURON ST____<__*_-c____-i—___, LISTINGS NEEDED Aotlvt office needa 3. 3. 4 bedroom salable properties to meet demand. Fret • appraisals. PACE REALTY OR 9,0439 BUILDER USTINOB-COLORED ~~ L R. Middleton. _FE 9-3203 _____furnished. FB t-2947._________ UPPER. STOVE AND REFRIOER-ator. AH utilities. Near —■" and Auburn, UL M444. SIDE. 2. 3 AND 9 ROOM ■ment*. Bent, hot water, and refrigerator furnished. St. Benedict and Donelson laT shopping end bu*.«rv-;all FE 4-4232 or FE 2-2992. WEST SIDE. 4 ROOMS AND BATH, garage, utilities furnished, 475 per month. Call after 9 p m. FE l 8-9746. ___________ - YEAR AROUND 2-BBDROOM, ON June, lovely efficiency apj&meht; In modem ranch home located! In Drayton, or 3-74M - 1 Rent Houses Furnistted 39 im Modern, to] june bachelor, quiet and pri- vate, carpeted, nice. FE 9-4374.1 CHOICE OF 3 CLEAN APART*! . l». 1 chllk okay. 34>3*33; 2 BEDROOM HOUSE ON LAKE unUI Jltmr * |gBg CLEAN AND PLEASANT. FOR i-bedroom lake-front home near Pontiac. Sept, to June. M5 ! monthly. Oas heat. EM 3-4322. ! 2-BEDROOM Y K A-R AROUND home, oil heat. Call MT 3-1461._ 3-BEDROOM. LAKEFRONT HOME. !• Automatic heaL lireplace, garage, ■480 month-. EM 3-4323.______ ROCHESTER RENT WITH OPTION TO E room* and bath, full br~ Newly decorated. Leke m 476 per month. Lauir- I basement, e privileges, iger Realty, SYLVAN LAKE wnrwtck .btt* 3 bedroom ie at 1949 Lakeland, full-br - ____I. recreation room, nil 6115 lease. Phene 662-283< SMALL HOUSE. SUITS COUPLE Large living room, fireplace, g»! beat. Immediate occupancy, 391 Voorheis. s>0 I—■* Phnna -482-282Q, 6-UNFtTRI . Beautiful beac! Rent Lake Cottages 41 LAKE LIVING, DAT. WEEK OR month: BedrOOm- apt*., kitchenettes or sleeplnt rms., 690 .and conditioning, phone Edgewater, Beach Motor Lodge,. 3844 Dixie Hwy- 3 miles north of Pontiac, next to Howard Johnson's, Dray-ton Plalr — ........ For Rent Rooms 42 COLORED LADY THAT DOESN’T tfrlok. Lovely room. 8hare both and kitchen, FE >4447. POit~COLORED,, 2 NICE ROOMS. 439 Orchard Lake Ave. MA 9-1709. private bath and entrai >t water. FE 2-2061 3 JtOOM MODERN DUPLEX, mo. Walton Blvd. , ' 5 roomf in Keego* .Nice location, 949 mo. FE 4-7100 or OR 34)103 ROOMS AN*. BATH, ON LAKE with boat, nenr Deli's Inn. FE 9-3370 or FE >3397:___________ 3-BEDROOM, CABFORT. RANCH-typ* hr— |-------at JORION. HOUSEKEEPING tie, All utilities. Winter- —t. Tru-Rustie '=x— ENTER] __________3-9415____________ Work Wanted Female 12 MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS ' 103 Pontiac^stata^Banh Bid* ND CO«»t*Hc cLERK » WOMEN DraiRE WALL WASH- j PonUto^Oldtot «d l*H.*t hudgri Experienced only need 'N York. FE. M131, EXPERIENcSd^OMAN OKNER-al housework. 4 days 3 children, Reference*-rB - 93919. ■ EXFEEW0KB WAflMM. it Of over, must be neat and clean. - n*.. Burger Dttve-ln aggg D«1e ., Waterford 'tRONINO' SERVICE REFER-! WILL THE KIND OENTLEMAN ce. FE. 9*6473- h «ho helped toe Injured man tn SVBtaOTNO-.IIY^HOME. 574? j SfSi Doeer'ftd *on Aug”Vt. please >U 992-1393. Rent Apts.,Furnished 37; l OR 2 ADULTS. REAR PARK-1 lug. 680-—Rohlnwood, FE 9-6006. J rmnrmBSsm:.........3 union i taka-ltd. MA .. _ 1 (1) l.BEOROOM AND (1) VBX& j room, clean, avallabla , imme-dlately. Ml 4-1404 \ | 1ST FLOOR ON SQUARE LAKE. 3 and bath! FE 9-1370, Ft 4-3319. | l AND J ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH i and entrance, 430 H. Saginaw. 1-BEDROOM EFFICIENCY APART. furnished. Parking. ! NEED AN APARTMkitTf SLATER APTS, FURNISHED ANb UNFURNISHED ' 13- N. PARKE ST. FE 4-394* AFTER. 9 AND SUNDAYS. SEE CARErrAEER MR. CARROLL. AT ' « N. PARKE STREET. apartment. All utilities, garnge. Near i Ksego' Harbor. LI 9-1990. 3-0130 after « NEWLY FURNISHED LAKE-front home, 0 miles from Pontlae Available Sept, to Jfune. EM *to June EM 3-0134, CEDAR ISLAND LAKE. 3-bedroom bungatoVr, basement, AC oil .furnace. Ideal for couple to June, 1962. 699 per month to reliable party, no nntntala. 06*2 Mandon Rd . off Round Lake Rd. Vermont 7-6206. ______________ SCHOOL YEAR. LAKEFRONT - Each I __________Mi________________. GET OUT OF DEBT [ MIMBOORAPHINO. TliPINO. S*C- I WITHOUT A LOAN! ) retarial escrlo*. EM 9-2642 . Regain _»;ea«* of Mind througR our j ...• —......-........mu; I weekly peyment plan i PICK ; prot,ct pour job and Credit. : ota- left. Immaculately. fartment suitable . xor 1; block from Centra! High1 school, 2Mi blocks from down*, town. Utilities, laundry privilege* furnished. Reasonable rent. .Hurry these won’t last. Phone PE 3*7007! Height* Rd. MT 3-1294. LARGE RlVER FRONT HOKE,' fireplace, screened porch. 1 ear garage, baaement. Available Sept. I, I yaar leaf*. 6100 mo. C5HU - AUTOMATIC heat. srin* Dr„_Wolverine r Ph. OR 4-0176 BEDROOM. LARGE KITCHEN. bath, prefer couple. FE 1-74M, 2 BEbSbOMS7PAR?EY FCR-, dished, takefront apta. OR 1-0106. and Co- j 3-ROOM. LOON LAKE APASt- ams. Call mornlnga. FE|M aLTKRATIONB ANfi*MODERN-PART r-DaS’^C^^'cT r&u “wsii.a? jgual=--------------------- Drive-In, 1790 E Highland Road. A HOMS APPOINTMENT City Adjustment Service FE 5-9281 713 W. Huron - Pontiac, Mich OPPOSITI MAIN POST OFFICE Member of Pontiac I ..........B......_x. 9 Chamber of Commerce Construction FK 1*133. | 0N AND AFTKR THI8 DATK. 8KP-r-m. —— . tfmbtr ^ I .will not be re- ■ PBH „ |________ __| _____ _________I sponsible 'for any. debt* contracted . . ,..aIung,lpersonaltty i CONCR*t*\Wavira®drWLL : SjUftfiY SSuLCM!ch t refereneo*: writ* fully j afttrl. FE 94647. JgiSia. 16, Fwitlae Frssa. evonw OR ai i.’wlWnn j’Wtd. Children tO Board 28 to nos ... _______; CEMENT WORK OF ALL 1 HOUSEKEEPER. OyER 26 LIVE Free ssUssatss OR 3-6741 in, reference* required. ** i I^EE: fcigtTlim> 1 a ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE. Ble are friendly? Cool in summertime. warm In1 wintertime. These rent for $86-80 per nonSt. Adult* only In this building. E. O. Hemp-j stead. Realtor, HO East Huron, FE 4*0304 or 1% 6-7671, ___j Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 PONTIAC-MILFORD AREA. MOD-ern lake-front house. 3 bedrooms. Lease month. MALL S-IMWdM*tAfa, AUMHM9U.U Lake front. $76. Sept, to Jane, ’ Fg 6-7170, TEACHERS AH 6^ ROOMS, *50 a month. EM 3-4700. able in preeuge nosmeea. no «**, Quinn s Construction FI >-$133. k«f?*nVrsaIlfsaUon “ AIBRSCK. Bt*OCK AND CEMENT Ifr^^’lHriu^neff 111 OB H4M .onto. 431 N, Ferry. I 1-2 BEDROOMS. PARTLY FUR- XACHfiHS — CUUin O’ 699 n month- EM 3-4740. UNION -LAKE; YEAR AROHHd Completely furnished. 3-b*droom and den. lake privileges, gas heat, 1110. (039 Barnsbury. EM 3-0685 tot. will finance, r. b ‘ Munrc i "esnacd. open tor enrollment. For . Elccrtc On,, 1040 W Huron infermatlon, Ph. UL 2-1109. J^ttJS©4$3Elgi Wtd. Household OomkIb 29 . esumnte*. Russell Marion. 1, 2-7300. B BtllLDKR. oTStXoC p_m FE 1-7601.______ - UST CALL” With Ocnrgc's tar*. I moi onstrators needed In thl . Call collect OR 6-OOQ7. IttrrXnTIMT HOTHER'S HELPER. PLEASANT: “.dmuS,™,_____________________ ... 7“! RELIABLE WOMAN BABYSIT tin* I to E own trantportatlan 40M Newcrott, commerce. ■-ipANisk spkaIino waitress wanted. 1414990. Mexican Hot spot' Y TOY CHEST THE FIRST _______ AND ONE0OP THE FINEST-' TOY PARTY PLAN IN MICH. Our 17th Year THE PLAN THAT OIVES YOU THE TOPS IN EVBRYTH1NO TOP BARN1N08 plug. season bonuses _ Read tbs Classified* dally money-# arid* bargilns. 1 your own profit-matin, a, phone 1 PE 34111 la to* numb eim, by_m*U,ot over toeooun-tsr In THE PONTIAC PRESS' Building Supplies TOP HOSTESS PREMIUMS 10 per cent In frta toys, or 10 per osqt If we deliver to cacl guest Amusing “Party tiltg otic TOP DEMONSTRATION KIT 130 fun to show Items furnished free,, to dealers TOP DEMONSTRATION AIDS Kxcellent company training TOY cuft* Delivers — Oqllect* -- Services 1 ■ • CALL FE 9-4731 WOMAl ...............PE 34630 Bi«OOMFlELD~»ALL CLEANjCRS. Wall and windows. Rsosonabto. hum ruuwiny; inw ivr .oval work $74-1361. $306 Andcr-wonvilt* Road. lOCCTRlC MOT6h iEftVWSt hS- OMAir^T^-^,,, KrrCH.in cork. Apply atBlg Boy Drive Inn 3900 Dixie Hlihway. -Urrr.-r'yi- hi-' ■.---l-afxr*-'! ist bs abif >IUqn mor« ns wxp*rl- tRuSaiTT^fl?Btii5R tio housework and ear* of 3 ohlidi 9-3-1, private room a ' rimdM lovely country homo. 9 to drive, plsasant dlspi Important than pnvl snoe. Writs Fonllao r‘««, ... ■ h Phono or writ*. OA 1-3360. SAlFfiFr WOMAfl TO WORK . part Urn* In labor union offto*. for clerical and secretarial wor” ■ Mint b* able to typ*. ft)* ai 1---- wrttlpj washer repair aervlo*. ........j*. FK 94431. housIpLans DRTWN~EeONfiH: ' lily, Orad. Re*, builder. MSlf -J-3620 Bam Warwick Jr. i.E-rK lanBscaFin6. [atlmataa available law* out. Mid isrtUlalnl. OR 3-0U0. 1 CALL SELLS ALL. MORE CASH lor fumlturo sod appliance*. Bar-galB House. FK .34149. AUCTION OA 94091. HIOH DOLLAR POR FURNITURE ulturg. Wtd. Miscellaneous, 30 OFFICE FURNITURE AND BOSl-nsss equipment Forbes FrlnUnf and OOlo* Supply. Ml 0-3010. R O O P ~dTONAOX. ^INSTAU-Xt) Wanted - weneSt/ST menu Maker. FE 3 6343_________ Wawtad to. Rent. 32 3-BEDROOM HOME IN CLARKS ton School district. Fhon* FE 3-7217 or FE 4-2300 RENTAL SERVICK Tenants waiting. Call R. J. Value! Realtor. 344 Oaklond Avenue FE 4-3631 ______________ reWaL sKBVicl Call John Laulnier Realty 1631 Williams U~ RA OR 4-0461 WANTltK SMALL APARTMENT n floor tor elderly p Wanted Transportation 34 RIDE WITH WOMAN, FROM Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 3S AVAILABLE CASH FOR LAND eontroct*. Dawson and Butterfield It1, N. Saginaw. FB 24430 or ACTION maSITall’Mr. CH?l\*r°%’B lSom! Broker, 3100 Kile. Lake Rd, EJ? ABILITY rash for your Land Con-rqultlas and mortgages, .on i roes that home. Are your aymenta too much for youf Let n expert counsel with you. Call ed MoCullough, *02-1090. ARRO REALTY 9143 CM-- ABUOLUfELY THSTeAfrUSy k&-tion on your, lend contract, cash buyers waiting. Call Realtor Far-trldgt. rE 4-3601 1050 W. Huron. CASH Land Contracts, homos, equities. WRIGHT . Mind Aw. ,1. Win W*Ue 4640 DUI* Hwy. oh 3-jw>. , IMMEDlATfiACTION- 'oti any good ihqd oontracts. New or ssaaonad. Your cash upon aat-Isiaotory Inspeotloq of property and title. Ask for Ksn Templeton. 0034000. 2339 Orchard .|Jt~ltd. Land 1 coNThhcrrs1 'to hfFjSR to *jU| Earl Oarrels. EM 3-9511 Wanted Raal Eatata 36 2 ROOMS AND BATH BABY com* 016 week PE 0-1631. Inq. 373 Baldwin Avs. ! Hollerbaci e Auto Parts I 3ND PLOOR, f ROOliO AND BATH. clean. PE 9-6161 I. ROOMS. ALL UTILITIES FUR-1 3 BEDROOMS AND BATH. IN 3 ROOMS. KITCHENETTE, SHOW- I er.'downstairs, privet* entrance, | viemny Auburn Hslghta. UL 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ADULTS FE 6-0063. 3 “ROOMS WTfH TILED BATH, Inquire Apt.' 6 at 67 Charlotte. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, NEWLY decorated, heat, hot wator, refrigerator and stove furnished. Nonr Fisher Body. 640 month; FK 't-Tedt. ■__________■ , Crooks and bath. utcLities, ----**W>f*' 4239 Hlgnl*nd 3 ROOMS AND BATH? Wi'IUt'lWSB.' 613 week. 100 WUllnms, FE 64714. ~OOM8, FIRST FLOOR. ADU’ I E. Howard, FS 1-2360. 3 AND 6-ROOM APARTMENTS. FE 3-4667. Call after 3, 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ■ FE 64310 ' WALLED LAKE — 3 BEDROOM. Rent Houses Uiifurn. 40 96 ACRE — 4 ROOMS AND BATH Rent with option to buy - on MSI noar HMjlUend. Klwood Realty *•*-“•• 2-BEDROOM NEAR DODGE PARK Nokomis. can Oa--'— ■ », Will BO open ....... PI 4-V330._______ a-R65Sn,RlVATE BATH A Nil entrance. UtUlUea. 0 bloeka from downtown PonUk*. Lady pre* ftfrtdvOA 6-31W i1LilL jr x r ROOM KLDllRLY COUPItl _ OR m«nt bldg. L($ living roon on, dinette, bath, bed rot children in Mdf. SHIRLEY APTS. K j I$$ K. Huron_______FK 6-4$14, 4 ROOM FLA T. PAHTLY FtfR-j nlahed Shower, furnace heat. 4643 Fourth St., Woodhull Lake. Tear! around, $36 per month. 1 month i »ecu«lty. 4 ROOMS. MODERN. OtL FUR- I. fE 14004 fur Adults on\j. OL 1-0770, ! 4 ROOMS AND BATH UPPSR Refrlg.. stove, and utllltloa fuf-nlshod. FE 4-99— - T ROO»i8 BATH, INFANT WEI--come. IDs Center FE 2-2390. 3-room, ist"....Floor" neTTr school, quidren, 72 Washington. I ROOMS, JxTRA LAROE. CLEAN? __ . FE 3-7000.__________ CLEAN ROOMS AND BATH. mto|Ato|dA varpstlnq nod utllltls*. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 1 CHILD welcome. ,01 Norton. _____. i" RodflSrTTOr A W 1s atST aSd entrance SIT wk. -FB 3-1199. OR 3-7910. i~c5tSAN, MODKRN, hgWtY bPC-trancs. No drlnktrs or pets. FE 7-3944. ____________________ 1 and snfranc* Baby welcome, lie per week. Inquire, at Hollsrback Auto PorU 273 Baldwin. FE K 0-624*. ..da. oa4 t*r»9« 1 4 ROOM TERRACE ON S. iOlTH, near Auburn Avenue, 004 per month. Inquire 130 S. Edith, or 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatic host — Full basement WILL DECORATE _ $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 “ it Blvd. N. al Valencia PONTIAC 910-0 a month. OL 3-BEDROOM H09IE. 3400 Laka St'. Mill Lak*. ; 3 ItOOMS, ^ELECTRIC RANGE. K*-'prlv’legea] no’ peter QOS^OR ‘3-4330 3 BEtlROOM HOUSE. obOD LO-—*“ month. Spotlit* Bulld- 9 ROOMS AND BATH, OARAOE, gas boat. Whlttemore Terrace*. - FE >4110. ' %-^dofi Upper, clean and heated. 804Vt E, Ptks Bt. 1ST CLASS APARTMENT LARGE living room.- full else Mdroom, All big closets Fins reception it Wetsr Tiled. 3-BKDR65m BRICK, FENCED aes^Rr':?:.’!.^ Evenings, Sot, and Bun. 909-7790. 3 BEDROOMS. RANCH TYPE. AU-tomatlo heat, water eoftener, full basement carpotod, 0 ml. north of Pontiac, 6100 mo my Til82. ^ 3 BEDROOM, lto 'BATHS. Btttf In oven and rani*. 0136. FE 9-0004 Eves. 4ROOM HOUSE WITH OARAUK near Waterford High. 009. OR 34772____________■ and rsfrlgsrator furnlst j OR 3 r66ms. privaY* bA+h, year Central High School. Adults l|>^r Carstaksr. 7 Prall, corner 4 riOTOTOIUSteSj cixmt ■hj Waterford schools. 4700 Highland Rd.. M40 at Watkins Lk. 4-ROCfti. 1 hftlVATi ENTRAN5B and unto. Apply Apt. 4, 71 Clnrk ■Laka Rd. Oas heat. 4 ROOSlS AN! Inquire 96 J is AND Bath, UTlUTils. - a "Night 5^oli^WffiClt)'rrAfeL» jNSR I orl ptP8lbn»rt. F» L 4 ro6ms an£T»ath, 34 n. uW i«nd. nishsd, coupl* only. 90 Nnrton. « RObMU ifoRfaTiBEIIrc*’ Oarj^ps. Children welcome, FE I lAiiff1 HWIIi 66HKBVBLY furnished. Private sntrano*. 6 minute* walk from downtown. Call FK "94761;___ irrENTioN...Ubachkrs—CLli&N roomy *purtm*ht*. N*»r Central High aohool, rw 6-40^ ground*. ohoV “ORAKFIKLD4' rhnm — In * beautiful s*t 14 landscnpec 6 ROOMS. HATH AND SUN PORCH. ipactou* Dice two-fc equipment,1 newly <1 your Uat*. Close to *< 9?to"mwtilly*l9M n! >; park. Brick Flat—Hefttcd Attractive four fomlly building *— Um Auburn Hto. "trancet shanetta garage. -------- required $76 par ra< FIC 3-710^ or FK M$_____ COLORED^ r60M. PRIVATE --------- Phone'FE 3-3407. J006 Auburn_______ ____________ Front A rear private ontranooo dlnoL, both A COLORED 3 rooms, private hath aim entrance, hot wotor End hoot fur-nlshod. IIP per week. FE 9-0441. . cSlSred Nice apartment for rodt, heat, dtova and reirigorator furnlahed. Phone FE 94007. country apartWknt. ib85- r», big yard. School bus lit p*t*. Fgl o-itoio. ,r Ing Co. I -ROOM, NEAR SCHOOL. CHIL- OXRLS TO SHARE A twin beds. Cooklni " FE 9-9791. A ROOM WITO Everything furnished. mn||| from downtown. GIRLS. NICE BOMB OF YOUR PRIVATE ENTRANCE. AUT0MAT-le heaLand Hot water. PE 4-77*0. ROOM N*AR »LINC0LN AND WIS-ner school with kitchen prtvt- leges.FE S-3199. ' ..... ,'v ROOM FOR LADIES, KITCHEN privileges. FE 3-9770, Onrage. FE 0-1739. Rooms With Board 43 REASONABLE. BOARD OPTIONAL mq Oakland Avenue. Fg 3-9100. GENTLEMEN - CLEAN ROOMS, home atyi* meals. FK 24310. Rooms With Board 43 For; Sale HotisOs Convalescent Homes 44 home; ■ F. N.' is charge. .1 MAIN BUSY CORNER LOCATION next to a large drug store, suitable for Beauty Shop, offices and many other businesses. On* heet-, ed building. Antoinette,' hot water • day and night. Newly ^decorated. In a fine apt. building. Call Mgr. JBE fetOOl. ' ~ l 3-BEDROOM, FULU BASEbdENT, ! $500 down. *2* EtooTWeet. FE T~'^jir—rr—- 3-BEDROOM RANCH. NEAR MSUO. 040* down. 079 a mo. FB 240301.. ■ Just painted in and out. 4 BEDROOM HOUSE WEST SIDE; close to schools. ' 402-1943. 4 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. NO basenteet, l'.v bstirs. carpettiw. storwi, 3-car garage- Water soft-ener. Fenced yard- Convenient to* public and parochial school*. $82-336$. * 4 BEDROOM8. • BAYPORT STONE. Fwi—a#-.— y^tnte*. carp$t- . Rent-.OIficie, Space \ 4? 2'offices FOR RENT. 404* pj*- l» Hwy. OR 3-1399.___________\ DENTAL SUITE USED BY DR. for 11 years. 4940 Dlxla Highway. Drayton Plains. OB 3-1385. UketY43eTfrU 'ROOMS. MODERN. ( I close In. small dowt PB 2-0432._____________________________ OFFICES Court' H( CLOSE TO THE NEW louse. FE 3-0814______________ | ^ 0290 MOVK.1HI I I M-f---- -140 Me.;mill........... ~ pliid taxes lor this 6 room house with. 2 baths, gas heat, full basement.. For Ol's at 07.200. Located at 79 Tregent. Look and call W... w Ross Homes at -OR 3-9021 for, For Rent Miscellaneous 48 . Oakland Fuel A Paint, 436! '491 S ANDERSON 0 room - bungalow. . Bargain tor quick aale. $500 dn._ 244 GOING ST. .6 room, lull basement, newly re-decorated. Repossessed. Make of-. fer. $600 dn. < .\ W . ^ I Paul M. Jones, ^eat Est. ( pg ,4-0580 \ PE 0-1379 For Sale Houses 49 - appealing pink taxes. Near E. Highland. Klwood Realty_______Ph. 833-3410 2 BEDROOM HOUSE OFF OAK-land. 6900 down. FE 04724. BEDROOM BUNGALOW. OA-ago. on W. Ann Arbor. FHA. 6350 down. 6350 down. FE 8-3866. 3 BEDROOMS. MODERN KITCH en. 2-car garage, clean, near St Vincent .de Paul church and school. Will, sell land contract with reasonable down payment 00.0*0. Can after 9:30 P,m. FE 2-3005. 162 Whlttemore. 3-Bedroom Brick at 11*2 Maurer Street. Kitchen with dining *11 and plenty of cupboard space. Finished recreation room with tile floor, celling and snack bar. Oaa beat ami water softener for your convenience. Lot 90 X 190, completely fenced. Storms and screens in- 5-4245. after 3:30 p.m. 3-BEDROOM HOME. OAK FLOORS, fenced yard, close to LoBaron school; 8700 down, 601 per month. 3-BEDROOM RANCH. 2 YEArIB. beautiful oak floors, oil hot air furnace, birch, kitchen, cabinets. colored hath set. 100*i» brides# Cost new $1760. NOW ONLY $1400. One new 14-ft. Crestline. cebln fiberglass Cost $$$$- NOW $626. One l$-ft. Lone 6t»r FlsminfO. Cost $61$. NOW ONLY $$60-One new Crestline Mustang 14-ft. Cost $736. NOW ONLY $636. Two fishing boats. 12’. #l$0->14-ft $310. Oator Trailer 600 lb. capacity $UI Little Dude Trailer 1000 lb.$300 KELLY HARDWARE 39*4 Auburn Road OPEN SUNDAY 10-3 UL 2-3440 PINTER'S 1370 N, OPDTKJf RD. FI 4-0134 ----IKTT FIBKRGLAS AEROCRAPT OLASS AND ALUM. OLAS8 AND ALUM. CANOES •’ AND 10* ALUM. PRAMS BOCK SAIL BOATS SPEED QUEEN FIBEROF AS JOHNSON MOTORS WE RENT BOATS, MOTORS. TRAILERS PAUL A. YOtjNG, INC. BN 7 D, *- ----- do Hwy. ___^OR — REDUCED ----------- Boats, Motors and Docks Cleaning the floor for New 1»$3 Models I YOUR EVXNRUDB DEALER . Harrington Boat Works 1 m 8. Telegraph Rd. PE 2-3033 ALUMINUM SIDlNO. ADDITIONS. ATTICS. OARAOfc. CEMENT WORK. ALL TYPES OF CONSTRUCTION, PHA TERMS, NO MONEY DOWN. G & M Construction 3330 Dixie Hwy._____PE 3-1311 GARAGES. CONCRETE ADD!- T j© n “ —--------* — “ “ ‘ PHA' ^ewmatS?s,vw * *or Vi mi Cement Contactors CEMENT WORK BY PEDY-BILT. We art Experienced, licensed, bonded. Oarace floors, driveways and pauos our specialty. Dregimsklng, Tailoring Alterations, all oaHments. mo.. Knit Drotoos OR 3-7103. * ROPMS . atut tide, t...--—— T ROOMSANfilTk BATif~K5(C«E: lent condition. Largo foncsd to yard. South Saalnow. Cull FK 8-0000 or 044-0033. H6TOTIOTTW*TinOS$reYrr lags, 9 rooms. 911 heat, ttrsnlaeo, large vomer lot, 676. Av*lla*l* about Sept. 1st, OR 2-7*0*. Rel- bTrM1NOHA99. MobERN. 3 BED-room , house, recently decorated, fenced In yard, $36 per month. MA $-337$, BRlckrtiKK Wfc# '6^.iiedi 'iMfK-1 man $110 mo. PR 3-360$ or VB MWll ' ___ ■ h. Cass' nrr pront, yttr iund horn*. All modorn eon-iwnoos. Boat, beach, sleeps s. t miles ttom Pontlae. 966' nth. till Kirkwood. Kenwood THIS (PACE RESERVED * Nor yo^w*bp8iness ON SERVICE 4t> TODAY! H DIAL PE 3-3181 Floor Sanding Nursing Hemes R. a. snydEr floor latino. sanding/' aim finishing. Ph. PE $-3603. NICK PRIVATE HOME. ROOM FOR 3 ambulatory todlot. private facilities. rates rtaa. 334-8069. CARL L. BILLS SR. FLOOR SAND-Ing. FB 3-578*. Paint Furniture Refinishing NON-CHALK HOUSE FAINT (139-INTKRIOR LATEX-... **:•* FURNITURE REFlNISHING AND repairing. Free estimates. Merritt A Son. 3611 Dill* Hwy. *74-1174. INTERIOR ERA9QBL 5S AVIS SUPPLIES PE 4-439* OPEN 9-9 1999 OPDYKS RD. Paintiers & Decorators Fencing , ANCHOR FENCES Alumlfium—Stool—TVood No Money Down. FHA Approved FREE ESTIMATES. FK 9-7471 1ST CLASS PAUfTINO AND DEC-orating. Paint Shop UL 3-3340. Plastering. Service A-l PLASTERING AND REPAIRS Rets. Pat La*. PB 2-7912. LpontiauFcnce Company Continental chain link fence. Com- PLASTERING FREE ESTIMATES b. Meyers v EM 3-0163 JeU* Eaev*1terms' Fres^ist. OR 3-6595 • Stamps for CoBeclors Landscaping STAMPS ON APPROVAL Squirrel Stamp Shop I Box 4004 Auburn Heights BAH LAWN SERVICE. BLACK dirt, fill dftrt. Ocncral clean-up Koto ytllUjDg. Wsjd ^cuttlgg^tf- 4 StencBs : r/ . MA( 6.3143. BOAT# NUMBERS 81 60 3 Inch — Pe* set 10 ptecas MADE-TOORDER STENCILS Pontiac SUmp A Stencil Co. $4 8 Cass FB 4-3336 , Lumber Ixf PINE ROOF BOARD8 4c lin. ft-1X2 PURRINO STRIPS. 2c Unit. 3x4 Klin Dry Fir 5c ttn< ft. 2x4-3 Economy Studs .... 33c ta. 4x8’ Peg Board *2.89 4x3' V-Ordve Mahogany .. $4.53. Television, Radio and Hi-Fi Service 4xgxMi Hardboard $1.3$ ea. PONTIAC LUMBER CO. CASH ARD CARRY 931 Oakland Av*. FE 4-9(13 3X4 — 8* ECONOMY STUDS ea 3$e tfn wmtboard* lie Uni ft. 3x4 MJj). a^fir 10-18 ft. Mc^Un. ft. MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICfi DAY OB EVES.. F* 8-129* ' Try? 31* TO t|**,../.'.'.V09c lln! ft! lie - lTS/ct. aiuh 40% off Waterford Luinbep Cash and Carry 3978 Airport Rd. ,• OB 3-7772 BOB S TRKK SSRVICB Trflnmtng and removal. 338-2324 EXPERT fREE TRIMMING AND rembval. Reasonable. PE 3-1803 EXPERT TREK SERVICE. FREE estimates FE 5-4893 or OR 3-2000 Plywood 890 000 clock at all Umes ALL TRICKN8S8BS AND 5PBCIE8 Oct our prices before vou buy l SHEET OR CAR LOAD Plywtflcx? Distributor |75 N Cass PB. 2-0439 SPECIAL THliTwEEK ONLY 4x8 (H» fir plywood . $4.76 sheet General Tree Service—r Any slie Job — Try our bid. PE 2-964$. FE 6-3026. TRIMMINQ OR REMOVAL. VERY Low Coit. PS 8-330$ Tmck Rental^ 4x3 . some nearly finished, furnish iaglorial IgJKML-Or — buUd on,.your lot. Term# to ault. A. C ©tonpton &.Sons After*' p!m°nOR 3-4998 FE 37058 Ideal (or A! large family. S5»^osrjs&S '■ landscaped and -mutt to be appreciated. 828 take trade. L ! SYLVAN SHORES DRIVE I Country living, five mini For SAle Houses _____: ranch, near li t# mtg. Elizabeth.... Lake bom* Sfc 9-2 • tec) ty-Stt. bam ****** 0( Lake prlvliagea. Dandy h.- homo.. all large rooms, plus a enclosed porch. Excellent mt. oil hew, Fireplace, oak -plastered waile. Two bod- armttjs&m-. WANT A QUALITY HOME. SEE THIS ONE! West Side... FORCED.TO SACRIFICE LOVELY 140,00* custom built frl-level home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large ..... room. Full dto- i kitchen with space. Lauhdry room, PmMHway and double gar Age. Lovely view of Upper Long Lake. jprlvUegas.Ptlce 833.000 living a: lug rooi eating ake prlvl BS-874*. garage and basement. Suitable tar cubic or buildings. Frontage on 2 roads. Shade, shrubbery and fruit trees. Sacrifice for OU.*** with 85.000 down. Near Union LUO Village, call EM 3-0161. NOTHING! DOWN LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS -Real sharp! 4-bed room brick ranch - 114 baths - Largo living room, nice kitchen, gleaming hardwood floors, blacktop street. Excellent beach pri»u»g>« Newly decorated - VACANT. >rlcc_5l5,-000. Coat* approximately *275 - ---E W 34301. | [ Clark Real Estate. UtEMO STATE. - WIFI and 3 toddlers want to go too. 4ta% OI mortgage. Downt payment. 3-bedrooln, basement, brick. 1193 Eckman,- off Bay. FE 8-8*18. OCK AND 3 baths, OWNER, 2-BEDROOM, NATURAL fireplace, alum, siding, storms. -naesK- util. na.. garage, 1-sre fat. fenced, _ fimdacaped. sarMOTO. 84,900 dn. FE 3-7017. ROCHESTER. 3-BEDROOM BRICK ranch. Ilk baths, 3 fireplace- -11 bullt-lns In kitchen, full |, 214-car attached _gt PAYMENT. tOL l-*70». SUSIE’S LAKE nee this targe 4-bedroom h with extra large living room family-room with walk-out b ment on targe lake-front 1 scaped lot. Clarkston school at door. Will consider good land contract or trade. Open Sat., Sr lion. 1 to g. Busin Builder. UNION LAKE. NEW YEAR 'ROUND face brtek. 1-bedroom ranch, din; tag L. $13.80*. 7830 Looklln. KK 4A304. Paved Winding Streets Located Adjacent To ■ - 'Beautiful Fine Lake 800 Ft. Of BEACH and Park Area Developed and restricted by ent and racreatlon room. , at,-white aluminum siding, .2 r garage. With sewer and wa-r. Close to shopping centers.] -Iced, at 812,800, low down pay-] arpet, drapes; irset, 4 bedrooms,- 2 baths, lot. , >e homes WiK garage t fully landscaped. Rorabaugh FE 2-S0S3 Office on Woodward at Square why always, pick on MY room! ” STOUTS r Webster G»b Heat, Paved. Concrete ' Streets and Drives-WAter and Sewer Located In the Bloomfield Hills School District. . School Bus Transportation is Provided . DISTINCTIVE ARCHITECTURAL o DESIG1 Colonials... Tri-Quad Levels..., Ranch Homes. $24,900 Including Improved Lot HOWARD T. Best Buys .. Today 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL — Solid] brick 2 story family home, lo-i ceted in exclusive west side-area. Featutts 214 baths, large ear- ' peted living room with fireplace, formal dtnhig room, 2 sun rooms. I , den, basement, 2 car garage. New- ] \ ly decorated, ready, tor lmmedl- c ate occupancy. .Only $28,900 with! - home. 2 bedrooms and bath, living room, kitchen -and family t-a-lator fireplace. Rosur for more bedrooms and bath on econd- floor. 114 car garage and. arport. Small barn. Nicely land-naned grounds with some fruit . Several young scotch pine. ____II young be p road. 818,000, terma. VEBSTER, Realtor ________ MY 2-2201 LAKE ORION — Price reduced for | i immediate sale on this attractive 1 3 bedroom raneb home. Aluml- ---- — ittJi^Mxterlor. v kltcb- and Mural a utes drive from FonBac. MODELS OPEN DAILY Noon to 7:30 P.M. . Closed Thursdays Noon to 5 :30 Saturday Noon to 7 :30 Sunday ■ MA 6-7948 MODEL PHONE : “OU 1-8133 borne. Interior finished in plywood paneling, 2 large iota, aD only 15,500 with only 8000 NORTHERN HIOH Only .J.JiJflcks <—n this solid built 2 bedroonF school. PONTIAO-W ATKINS ESTATE? — Custom built 2 bedroom cedar shake home with 18x2* living room and fireplace, king slxe bedrooms, ____modern kitchen, basement with oil Tired, hot water heat, 114 "car" garage, lot 78xld*. Real buy at only gl2.«8(L owner will accept late model house trailer as partial payment. Warren Stout, Realtor 77 N. Saginaw St. Ph. FE 94166 Open Evci. Till 6 P.M:-------------- HIGHLAND ESTATES — 3 bed-room brick ranch. Large family has large % recreation area. Oas heat. Spacious high lot on bank __/. Take time and s<-« — ?fore you buy. Only $18,100. Golden Real Estate 2833 Orchard Lk. Rd.. Keego Harbor PHONE 682 3200 CALLS TAKEN 34 HOURS A DAY >6r Sale house' ___ >d proposals will be rrunrea by the City Clerk, City Hall. 35 Parke . Street. Pontiac, in. Tip to 4 o'clock p.m. i Standard Time, sept. 11th OPEN BUFF BRICK RANCH LOON LAKE PRIVILEGES* -... SUNDAY 2-5 ..... Walton Blvd. to Plaint to 3388 Coaeyburp and.inspect this eye-appealing 3-hadroom home with 3-ear attached garage and pried Includes automatic dishwasher, also automatic washer and dry tr, all - rooms larger than average. A step saving kitchen without that crowded feeling. * 13 I 13’ en---ctosed rear patio, a park like neighborhood of well kept yards and homes. Lot s 180, a buy at |1«,*00. OPEN the of the foil* bedrooms end bath on second, 4 rooms and bath on first. Recreation and Mi bath in basement. 4-car garage. Lot 60x337. Only $16,-000. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. 3 bedrooms. living room with picture window, large kitchen, new gas furnace, fenced yard and priced right at $7,600 with $1,000 down. CRAWFORD ^AGENCY 366 W. Walton FS 8-2306 600 E. Flint MY 3-1143 YEAR AROUND 3'&&DROOM RUB-nlsned cottage, large lot at Wood-% dn. payee .8-2431. • ANNETT $6,950 Low Down Payment t^ms and b.ath,^ood cmidl-fSl basement* gasnheat. Oa] , _ ..rage. .Close.to. shopping, area, and bus line. Lake Privileges Splendid 5-rml ranch • built in 1063. Excellent condition Wooded and fenced extra lot. $7,960. Low dn. pm t ~TJakland Lake Privileges 3-bedrm. brick ranch, excellent condition. Lae. living rm.. model kitchen, 14 TRIPP OPEN * jSunday 3 to 5 IZa1 Illinois Avenue Choice West Side 6rick 4 bedrooms - “walk-in” closets, carpeting and drapes. Like-new carpeting and drapes in lining . richly paneled1’ llbrary^Dish-washer and cupboards galore In efficient kitchen.' Break fast room, Florida room, plus low* er. level den and recreation, room, one full bath - two I half baths. IBxcellent basement I Vttb tiled floor, plastered ceil-1 ' ing. Large 2*car attached garage. Large nicely landscaped I site - fenced. .- Realistically priced! See It today! - Turn; south off HUroii at OeriesCe and { west on Illinois. Fe 6-0106. OPEN Sunday 3 to 5 —-408 Ottawa-Drivr~~ Mlchigai Eavtei 1881 1 lug: 1810 Wllliama Lake Roarl — Two-atory, 24'8"x42’K' frame house. Pull purchaae^^rlce shall be^Jn payable to the City of Pontiac. Michigan. i Purchaser agrees to eaiums full ' responsibility of the house, and is house and remove all re«!ctu a tbs premtsei. comply with alp ana ^Otk- Oct, 31st. 1381 . all Waterford T land county rul< abovr'agreed.^the’w"y""VeiirV^ei moved* from* the premises and the sum paid shall be 'forfeited. A cash or certified cheek deposit will be required with this bid in a sum of not less, .than 25 per cent of bid price. Said deposit to be made as guarantee of good faith on the part of the bidder; to be forfeited to the City as liquidated damages II successful bidder neglects or refuses to enter i agreement to ^purchase RM________’with basement. oak floors and plastered walla, beautiful lot $0 x 120. A restricted neighborhood. . ATTRACTIVE BUNGALOW per _____„b wall k carpeting, gleaming oak floors, plastered walls, decorated in beautiful pastel shades. Nice bath arid kitchen. Expansion attic, basement. anchor fenced lot. $10,640. A BAROAIN i BRICK 3 BEDROOM BUN- ealow. $10,900. Vgcant aqd. for dollar value cannot be , beat, wall to wan carpeting, nice bath and kitchen, exceptional lot 80x22$ fenced black top street. Loon Lake * privileges? ^ , OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 2-6 DORRIS A SpN. REALTORS For Sale Houses FOXY BUYERS Will know this LAKE-FRONT! home is priced below the matket value today. 3 bedrooms, living room with, fireplace and barbecue, kitchen and dining area, large bath, 44-ft. front porch, white ■ aluminum siding, 65-ft. frontage on Lake Oakland. $12.-750 ON EASY TERMS. RETIRE NOW Bi this 'homey 3-bedroom borne, with ‘fireplace, and eaay up-keep. 150* moves you In wtlb low monthly payments. Has LAKE! PRIVILEGES. See this.today. For Sale Houses 49 OPEN SUNDAY and MONDAY 12 TO 5 P.M. ■ ■ THE;.': "Loadstone". garden spoL Living room. ni -fireplace, Rlnlng room and ern kitchen. OD beat] tall ^ ment. IlKtOt te the full price. BURRY! . LIST WITH ' ^ Humphries FE 2-9236 , ■ *3 N. Tefegranb Open Ives. plVstered wall#. Attached 3 ear Don McDonald Mcm3g°3-8g#p,lt VEIS $40 “ ” Moyas Yotr in 883 PER MONTH TOTAL 8 Rooms Basement 1877 Sq. Ft. $11,990 li sounds unbaUavaU* but Its true, the exterior Is all aluminum Georgian Colonial i styling. m ForSeleH.«>ijs»e -S 0 NEAR CA$$ LAKE • s mmt- s JS. Small ^ payments to si ——- Immedtato7 posse—rndk '■ JACK LOVELAND noe casa LeJkolht.'.'-..aPb. ggsj2M SYLVAN LAKE 3 and 4 bedroom brtak trt-tavals. Plastered 214 bath. City water, newer, paved streets. 3 car garage. Large recreation room. AM-FM Intercom system. Tuipan < luQtdda. Lake and boat privilege. Priced from 333.100 to 883.000. Opea Saturday and Sunday or by appointment. Phone *82-1714, 883- Sylvan Village : mediat* poaseaslon. Oet all ,e| for^scbooL term. 313.00*. fha . Brick Bungalow Nice aubnrban location near WU- -Hams taka. Lovely groom modern. 3 spacious bedrooms, file bath, carpeted living room with picture window, larga dining It. basement, gas h|e»t, breeee-garage. Lot 100x150. Shown tar appointment. InveatnMbt . 3 natal, apartment, plus ■ store --- .— — over 83,000. t Oakland Avr Willis m. brewer }^tiF.RS^y^M^ KAMPSEN an lluM «.-can bit used is dBroiullSWWSPSIlIRRS —- ■ * sm, ,ta ttling MR __nth. Inali?" principal bN*roA"666ta, aod. house. M principal It™™ __ suranee. To aaa the George Town, — ^Mri#, miles .. Follow the can- | Co. n 3-0133. D'LOrab r 55 ft. deluxe GE rahgi , Kitchen domed radla______ citditrijaN I- solid wan spUt faea firepli pUBUKonW _______________ picturesque StadOtatTOI ligt 4-bedroom bom* that baa EV- Madams 7x8 ft bedroom ■_______ '"iyg ---------—• * " ft reereatiSi «e*?°?ltAtar'*i rr .T-„r. .,"r raised hearth fireplace, it Is of all only *1,- j a |«iephane. planned bom*, with OVER 50 FEATURES -------1' A' f*W planned cabinets ■mtaduul oven beat, catling ■Ml ffiS— shadowtrol 350 down. Real bnyabl*. SCHUETT FE 8-0458 —...... ..NOW___________j NEW AND LARGER OFFICES At 1034 W. Huron DAILY * TO 0 SUNDAY I TO 8 5 station radio Intercom, also 114 baths with two Aft. vanltle extra large 354 attached gang also, tber* are over —4* mora features to -‘attract" and help you visualise those features- you wish In your borne. The bade price It Open 2 to 6 I only $16,000 , THIS IS YOUR LIFE I Directions -^ott^Mtlreaxt of Poe moi? new'°ranch*11^.*° R& tlil R«hStt.r^2d. fi onV'k hullt-lns, fireplace, 2 bathe, bar. or* Lawn ™ block. Urge lot, *100 ft, of good beach on I _ , „ _ , Brendel Lake, excellent for fish- W. H. BASS, Realtor tog. swimming, boating. Nr Al-1 gPECUUZINO IN TRADES sir n % 15^-----------------el4ss M^1%j&Arltut^:ftinS,^*udej! Lakewood Village. EM 34103. I SCHUETT EM 3-9102 Big. "T" I MODEL HOME Tri-level. Tfxta completed family room. 114Jbatte, complete kitchen bullt-lns. We have 10 UlUdta* sites on Midland Street off Sashabaw Also 1* sites In Pontiac on Columbia Street. Priced from 113,-. 0*0 Including lot. See our model on Snpw Apple Drive In Clarkston. H. R. HAOBfROM.; REALTOR ^cHI,bUndRrod. ^0358 WASmNOTON ^OOL^TRICt: ---- bedroom family .hau. tag room with flreplact. - room, family moat, kitchen and breakfstt nook. 4 bedrooms and bath up. Pull basement, forced atr oil hast, gas water beater, tw* ear f«nt*. Priced at.: llt,- edroom Brisk - Living room i fireplace — family dining m — kitchen. 3 bedrooms bath up — Basement, new furnace — garage — Nice with back fensed. Rear thing ton Junior High. Shop-I and Bus Immediate pos-ilon. Priced at: *14.800. FHA i ti.oo* down. NORTH BIDE BEAUTY *t«* Dn. - P h a. Taras* A -root - gem — an '~aa» -carpeUng, (So kitchen, • tile balb. third bedroom paneled in mahogany, painted baa*, meat, gas Mat. aluminum statag. saved straat. PnU . price 812.5*0 — will trade DRAYTON AIUBA “hree-Bedroom Ranch A family room 18x13 tor peat ‘round enjoyment, car- WALf.BJD LAKE area After * p.m, FE 4-7Q08 4 Newi Model Home* RED BARN SUBDIVISION 3-BEDROOM, $67 Down p------* - 2-6036, CLARK Hooq t, storms sod . 87.380 with ! Tsoe£ru*ar Wi oak floors, full_______ matlc furnace. Vacant. and Baldwin. .-and - pay , -MM with City Ordl.nl days from data ties of acceptance of bid City. Deposit of unsuccess d.r. Wllfb. ^“‘'’bARKELEY City Clerk Dates Sept. 2. 1881 ______ _ m within 10 tta of receiving “ ------------ir Modern kitchen "BUD" • 17 Acres . ■ [Oxford-Orion Area : K*e* bLargen|lvlng room. Far -4-..—-Hy—rise kitchen and dlnii i urea. Large bathroom with bun in vanity. Part basement.'Adt full I Good Paved Watkins Hi 3-bedruU family 4 I'nit Brick ApartmHil Excellent condition, tfood rente! area showing net. return of 13 P«r cent. unit has 2 bfcdrnu . 20-ft hath* Add kitchen, sepal ale street!. * $23,6 W * TM‘msP‘l V *d Brick Tri-Lewtl— , from town. Carpeted Uvlng | • kit, With built-in*,’ 34-ft. sc-' Uvltlcs rill., wall-type fir,-bines. 3 Igo. bedrms. and 2 ! ., ' tall baths. Att'd 3-car ga-1 rage, expertly landeoaped corner location. Built In -T*». I Lake privileges-. 820.0*0 '~ Terms. WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. Realtors 38 E. Huron St. Open EveolBli and Sunday 1 • 4 FEB-0466 TEMPEST RANCH VIOME $29.00 CAN MOVE YOU IN YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO RENT WHEN YOU .CAN BUY IN,THE CITY OF 1 PONTIAC $55~ Fruit orchard. Priced at 80*. Term*. jw Down Payment OPEN Elizabeth lake estates FHA TERMS, $1,000 WILL HANDLE. Elizabeth Lake Rd to S Winding Dr., left to Lakeelde, then right to open sign. underwood”’estat*’ OR 3-1265. If no An*.. FE 6-7026 MA 6-6667 ' NICHQLIE Drayton Area_______ Three-bedroom bungalow, lie room. Au^omi ated. Va ____BE TO C1-- About $260.00 i Why Pay Rent ? North side or north »ubi Two-bedroom bungalow, and dining area, kltchet ~ uttmjriipace. Oit-HA-tfeat: ;ly decorated. Vacant R«i able, ddwn paymenL Balam only $55.00 a month. iNorthern High Area Three bedroom bungalow. Ing and dining area. Full i ment. automatic HA heat. I ly decorated. Vacant. About j move* you in. Call today. 1658 Parkwood 'I iWXk°7?«B I j Quick ?d**e.A.lon'‘il ....... lot 42x58*. *8Mdowu. . |OI BOY, NOTHING DOWN. Off H. C. Newingham, Realtor Joalyn ln NoriMra. High District. m. 1-331* ’ Has dak fleers, plastered waile. ------------------------—-------I ceramic file bath, full basement. oil beat, lV4-car garage, nice lot. Only tio.700. AQ you need la mortgage closing cost* and prs-paid Items,_ LAKE OAKLAND HEIOHT8 Who would ask for more In a home? * irivUtgas. playground, boot full basement, recreation new gee furnace, 3 bad-wall to wall carpeting, id 2V4-ear garage, outside ind barbecue, all brick ea- HIITER NEAR NORTHERN HIOH, 3 room ranch style home.- 1 kitchen, full basement, »»•' I brick front, excellent fenced yard. WEST BLOOMFIELD TWP. 70 foot brick ranch home, wltb U shaped kitchen, built In stove and oven, 1V4 glass" tiled baths, large sondltlon. I wells. NEAR MSUO. Attractive 3 bedroom sad bath, targe 50 x 210 lot, only 88.5*0 with f50» down. | Coll FE 4-38*0. B. C. Kilter. Real: ~ ! -V. 388* Ella. Lk. Rd. 1 leaped lot with ft 117.800, terms. OPEN SUN. 1 The OrionyStar 3 Bedrooms Full Basement Esc* Brick—Oas Beat The House of Ease 3 Bedrooms — Face .Brtek Oas Beat '- Frilt Carpeting Attached Garage The Oxford Squire 1 Bedroom Trt-Level Paco Brick — one Heat Select Oak Floor* The Expandable • 4 Bedrooms — Full Basement Oas Heat — Birch Cabinets Large Walk-in Clout* . Just West of M-34 on TEELIN behind Albon'e Country Cousin betwten Lake Orion and Oxford. OPEN 11 s.ta. to I p.m. Daily 8POTUTE BLDG. CO. FE 4*** wErr ntDOB guBi the Lake* Area. iuui ism bedroom, tta homo. Vary large family Built it mm - ttiir. m fully landecapad. entrances^ Gas| hut and only 810.000 JOHNK. IRWIN ft Bon* — Realtors 313 Watt Huron — Since 1W5 — Ft 3-3441 - BVB. n 3-W83 BATEMAN REALTY MULTIPLE listing Jayno Heights 2 Fabulous Models COMPLETELY jURNBMED MANY OTHER PLANS OPEN COME LOOK ! C0ME SEE! COME BUY! T h la PIONEER HIGHLANDS brick. Seauufui landscaped tat. Ctou to shopping and city bus same*., Sylvan Lax* Priv-lieges, too. THE PRICE WaXAIUZHTCV. js7o<* row* WOODHULL LAKE fronting on bosutlfU Wood-bull ma* — Romas brkk ‘ bottle Urge Anderson window*. Kitchen baa buth-tn double rang* and ovens. II **. ft. rrmoarr-glrowaibaT," extra targ* double etak, snack bar, gasbags disposal Activity room. Doubt* vanity In bath. 38 ft. pauo with ftanbto barbecue and many more unusual features MUST BE SEEN TO BE APPRECIATED^ PONTIAC NORTHERN FHA TERMS. Lew down payment take* this 8 room bom* Maturing large utility room. 3 tar garaga, beautifully landscaped - “ ---- ■— tine 1 starts. Urns school US SHOW MODEL TRI-LEVEL At bulldars- oast. 1,850 sq. ft. 3 bedrooms. '3 baths, paneled family room. Hvlng room, dining ! room, kitchen, 2V4 ear attached Res.-. FE 4-4813 MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE MILLER HP______________Bttngtoa . West Walton Blvd. - ■ Near Tsle- Price $21,900, Clarkston Mill Pond 3-bedMom home wltb aluminum •Ming. Convenient location. Lpt 800 tact deep wltb ample water ' frontage tor swimming and boat-ing. 32.000 da. .at reditced price. “ISfw? car garage, gu beat, brick ana ffamu coastructlon on quint street lust off Elizabeth Lake Road. Ottered at rock bottom, 112.500 No settle estate.. iV. Huron Near Hospital Rrlok A-bedrm., with axtri targ* living rm., dining rm., sunrm., Roife H. Smith, Realtor 244 8. TELEGRAPH RD. FE 3-7*4* MA -8-4431 - dosed Sunday ond Monday . • JOSLYN AREA n * rooms and b* Carpeted Uv. r Northern High. data to sto 18. CRESCENT LAKE PRIV clean 3-bedroom home af floor, N*w oil furnaci Mated. * jtta — •oom bom* all on ope - lac*, fully In-. . ■ wall shaded, right—*7,4*0, term*. Will William Miller Realtor • FE 2-0263 070 W. Huron Open 3 to ' Designed' for - Today! LOVELY MODEL HOME Id Ideal Setting ‘ 3922 Percy King IN Lotus Lake Estates ' LE BARON SCHOOL j Jamae Madison Jr. and North- | 1 era High are walking dlswne* ! i of this 2-bedroom, full basement ] ! home Located on p«!FBtt|MU Fenced roar yard. Ft 13,450. *1,000 dawn. TRADE. WHERE ELSE SMITH . WIDEMAN Between I and * e deck. Priced way down Ion quick aala. LETS TRADE. COUNTRY STYLE COLORED' OPEN- 5826 Htunmingbird Lane SUNDAY 2-6 P.M. r« country .tylr kMtTrigg- oat „..ig srea Ttabaths Willt-U inlty and mirror. Aluminum win tlirwi with storms and ecrcane Wardrobe type Tsloeete, Bullt-fi oven and range. Attsoiied 2 •* garage and brick and alumlnun construction. Situated on iavell wooded lot. , Jixie Highway - —, ■ right to Hummingbird ‘I to model. OEOROE R IRWIN. REALTOR 308 W. WALTON__________FE 3-788: tbteot Duntl ces and baths. Pull basgment. AC furnace. Paved el. Near mbi Junior Hlghr OaH -Mre. ----- —t Milt --------- ---- HANDY MAN WANTED - Uncompleted borne but a real bar-gala. Pull basement wtlb living quarter* finished. Oil AC Junta**. Large 3* k 3* ft. bungalow with exterior ail finished. Lak* prlvl- . fec^TtaSif. ^a'T. only $7,990 and term*. Almost on acre of land. Call Mr. Fenny HURRY! PEn4n-ij3« , Realtoi j “Hud” NicholiJ ! 40 Mt. Clemen* S>- * Pontiac. Michigan EE 5-1201 I After 6 n.m. FE 4r8773 i Homes-Farms t ORTONVILI.E, 81.000 down. Be ■ NICHOUF. - HARCER * B3Va WEST HURON ■*. * FE 5-818.1 VaSant11- TRADE 0.00 down. PIONEER HIGHLAND - 3 ! BEDROOM *- FULL BA8E-i MENT - GAS HEAT ~ 2-CAR OARAGE — LANDSCAPED LOT — $$00 DN. — —* MORTOAGE — REAL LIVINO^* bedroom modern . ....llame Full base-----id eun »"call ^ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES -A Kome that offer* you the most In omfortable and oonvenlent Uv* ig. Only 11 year* old and the tit of condition. Full baaemqnt ith tiled ree. rm. Large 3-bed* oom brick bungalow. Two-car arage. 2B-ft. Hvlng rm. witn rail to Wall carpeting. Many appointr ^4- — ng i .jellna. _ . .ifntmenta I-------- ______ thle beautiful home Pall Mrs. Wheeler, FB. ,2-6864. L. H. BROWN, Realtor 80* Elisabeth Lake Road Ph. PE 4-38M or FE - 8-4810 MULTIPLE UBTINO gBBVlCB OPEN A MONTH Iricr Taxes and 1. I surge 4ieEN SUNDAY 2-5 LAKE OAKLAND HBKIlITg. 3»» SHOALS, Lake privileges, 4 bedroom brick, Ita baths, oak floor*, gas heat, large lot, full price only -gift,*00, no down payment requited. I years laxat and insurance to move In. WATERFORD REALTY, OB *4*38. ATTRACTIVE 4-bedroom homo .on Honry Clay. Wall to wall carpet-! tag, farg* living and dtatag room. full basement, automatic hast, |a rage. Immediate possession BEAUTIFUL P1fbedroom 3 story home on Lorraine Cl. Like new I Inside. In basement. . NEW RANCl garage, only 838* down ■mmbH HOME/ 3 bedroom, lta balbf. bullt-ln oven and range, slldlne glass door* open Into pstlo. full basement, gat beat, vet's no money down. Abqut 130* down. BRICK RANCH HOME, Lbadrimtas. kg-iS L- HAYDEN lEfas-r • story a a r garage. 1 LAKE FRONT. He** Is a IO« buy for |l,*oo. Cash. A 2 B.l home with larg* tunporch. Bail pining room. Lot tC t 240'. MODEL OPEN bAILY 4 TO 7 P M. *AT. AND SUN. 1:4* to l:(M PM. 1 BED RggM TR1 LEVEL. “ 1100 an ’ With 81.488 dn. Lower down payment If you own your lot. W-wiir finance for you on llberi contract terms. No mortgage eosl TO MODEL: Ellaabeth Ut. R< to Union Lk. Rd.. south to Fsrni worth. Right to model. Watch to open algn. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor « E: Walton________ FE 8-044 ANY hhBD Of INO HOM1 IN "LHCT TION — FOR SALE U.S. GOVERNMENT PROPERTIES THE VETERANS ADMINISTRATION ARE orPERlNO TO ANY FAMILY IN ------'BETTER HOUS IBS WHICH ARB ‘ — CONDI- ---. r ropertles Jfferad at aubetantlai SA VINOS TO TOO — YOU «D NO DOWN FAT-T ~ You can purohas* those homes on a long term contract with low Monthly payments and low tnuram rates — 3 Md 3 bedrooms — Larg* lota — Ideal JOca- ■ ilon* - YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE A yETERAN TO- Stnr - THE O'NEIL State d^prSp^tjf**MAifc » fe « FE 3-7103 and on* of tbclr representative* will show these properties to you. Ray O'Neil Realty 1 S. Telegrsnh Rd. Optn 18 p.m FB 3-71*3 ---Ttt Close to end beautlful new carpeting, strictly old fashioned country Hvlng wtlb lota of room. For quick deal only 813.890 wltb bast of terms LETS TRADE BLOOMFIELD ' ] 3-bedroom -brisk inch, slmoet new and Ideal location to Birmingham and Detroit Only years old Large 1*0 x 183 lot lot Nicely laoderaped Lots < •xtras such as earpallag. wste FHA —8 dn LET* SCHRAM Crooks i Road n bungalow Ml. 1**13 I - Ilwng Clicerl— with g|* Cboerful kltchon, I “*4‘ |A* PA: boat. -om. Star gari fruit trotts Ulad rcorea-HMf. grape ■ H .1". iTS icaDept condition, loeaied ta terma Approximately 11.04* plus e I o • I r - aatta * * trade REALTOR FE 4-0528 FE 8-7161 LAKE FRONT INCOME-3 complete units. 3 five rm. and 1 four rm'. apt, 1 baths, 3 Ml furnaces, etc. Some furniture Included. Beint. and drop lot. All far M3.M4 with 33.3M down. WILLIAMS LAKE FRIVILBOES-I rm. bath, bungalow on well landteand, - fenced lot 100 x 113. L*rg* llv. rm. with fireplace, din. rm., loads of cupboard* ta a mod. kitchen, burnt,, 2 ear garage. Ntee garden epaoe. 88.500, Wtn SIDE INCOME >' Good Investment. 1* rme. and 2 bathe. Ideal for owner plus rental apt. Full bsmt, and corner location. Call for appointment ta ••• tala at 80,890. Terms. FSrflng 1 Priced at only »l IVAN VV Realtor SCHRAM FE 5-9471 MULTIPLE USTINO COLORED and ful TlM dining r< ■me, targe 81*.- “ Wr*fc 4. nice rt right jy landscaped! Vacai?tU'mo NICE INCOME on east elds 2 fimtly flat. 3 bedrooms, beta, kitchen. Hvlng room and dining room up and down. Separate'an-trane*. l car. garage, estr* lot. _ A wit* horn* buy on very liberal terms. Located In esocllcnt nctah- ktatSM; sr lot. c .........wttn mPM,. and range. 1 bedrooms. I ta bath, ta balb off large master bedroom, sliding glass door from your kftobos, opening ta your back door patio. Full basement. $•» heat, Oita no money -down. FHA about fSo* down. ST. JOSEPH AREA. Live In tala nice section In a 3 bedroom boms a quit! street. Immediate possession. Very low down payment. Can be ranted with option ta buy. Payment only m a month whlob Includes taxes and msur-lurt*'mov*r*ri *TlU ®*,*®k 875 TO^838* down oh many 1 and ARRO SQUARE LAKE .COUNTRY CLUB — Mammoth living room with railed briok fireplace, f lovely bedroomi plus den, lit ceramic til* bath*, hardwood floor*, 1 car ,AKR ORION TWP. - VlriVtlm# ly of supboarde, separata dining ropm, gil hett,. iT*xwor lot, school bus st door, fantastic bargain 11 ELIZABETH LAEEFRONT LOT-Thors'* only a few lot) still avsll-able on beauilfW Elisabeth taka. Tlrti li ait End-Of-The-geason sp«, dial and eitouiah t Hit long, so' trooi. Only 88,800 TED MCCULLOUGH. REALTOR PHONE 682-2211 1183 Oaes-BHiebeth Road Open 8-8 Sunday 1* 5 these low dawn payments. ohMoe of locations. Can today. —ASSOCIATE BROKERS 48 Franklin Bird, FB I GI/s SPECIAL room bungalow. East std* all on on* floor close to . bus lino and stares.' 3 bad-room, living room, kltelian smd dining room. Full basa-—“ * 5**t. Monthly nly 2*5 tnciud- maitt, . payments of only Phono fE MIM mJmS for Nick Luoas. RAY O’NEIL, Realtor \ i THK PONTIAC VftKifo. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, SEVyXTKBN For Sib Homes 49 BUILD $340 Moves You In • NO MORTGAGE COSTS Eart*KwiiSriM aw, Ora I or ifai WILL BUltD OU TOOK lot OB our* TOUR PLAN OR OURS Ban } bedroom, m bath, ft — --- ~*Jel to mow. Don McDonald LICENSED BUILDER $39 Moves You In _ - CHESAPEAKE BAY MODEL * 965 Carlisle1 3 bedrooms j Family-Sise Kitchen * Vanity in Bath North on Baldwin to Xon* nett, left to Corlialo. OPEN DAILY 11 to 7 THE HUDSON BAY Basement Models $100 Moves You In SPOTLITE FE 4-0985 TRI-LEVEL STARTER Mod*) Open D*l)y 10—0 p m "i money down, on jour tot. — -- ——. lUncb or your plane < Bl-Level IritMWS for Sale Homes 49 ----<3M RANCH . Dwton'plates; We have « Available With BO -down payment, l aaaw YOUNG-BUILT HOMES Really Mean Better Butt LAKEFRQNT _______ IDEAL DEER SUNTthO SrOOM bou**., V JoU, compl«t«ly fur-, nl*h#d.; Wectriclty and W h t • r, Mich. WwBtoWS-SWI. B WILL TRADE 919 Tames K Blvd. ■. • FEATURING: BURS NEW BI-LEVEL LARGE PICTUR” AND LARGE, PANELED ItU- OPEN L___Daily 1 to’S— '. -?■ RUSSELL TOUNG ' Builder — FE 4-B08 »10. Jama* K BIW. 'OPEN 1 modEl I1H Monrovia (Oil Airport Road) SAT. AND.SUN. 2 TO 6 Trl-level and ranch type with full basements Don McDonald Township; Here -1* (reclous .ItwttoK at Re finest - * grand sited bedrooms. Stone living room Jflth (Replace, l bathe. 'The-large family room te every ones favorite spot for fatally fun end informal eatartaidtag. STKiSI ona, ruu __ FoaoetM# yawl. . I King*. Bl Waterford Tap. Price MM. Owner Is Building A new home- - anxious to te! .1-bedroom nous* In Pontiac. It very nice neighborhood. small dn payment and only *11 per mo. Including taxes and insurance, JOHNJ. Y1RMETT 3331 8, Tetegrai Val-U-Way $250 Closing Cost , ! Nothing More to Ray fih*rp nt»riy »♦# J bedroom ranch home on lartf north urban lot. beautiful kitchen with olenty of cupboard* pJuar dtnli>* arna Automatic; beat, tua bath, aluminum *torm» and *«r*tn» 'Many Vacant. l,ake Front, $1,000 Down 3 bedroom furnished bungalow oo good lake with sandy beach. Reasonably priced' with payments of B*n monW! Vruly a woo- Colored GI* WRITING — Be aura to write this down In your notebook—"Call FE 3-7io;r to make appointment to see , the exceptional buy m the j Webster School erea. Brick Colonial with 31 ft. Dying . room, fireplace, mil dining room. den. ] .large bedrooms. Recreation room, garage, paved drive, many other lovely features Priced at 3M.559 With only SLIM down Including closing costs. ARITHMETIC — Too don’t need tab* e methemstteian *« noUR) these tow monthly e of only |S« per _____deluding take* end Sate R—ort jjfeipijW M- Holly Recreation Area tte I I ran i. a swm tot. Near J - re *>ald Eagle________— made like. bams, riding stables right on property, sunken gardens. )iats homo it a. gracious white colonial: second home la 5 rooms—pine panelled. Rear Ex- For Sals Lots 54 1 OR 3 LOTS NEAR M0UO. IN LITTLE FARMS. A Large Choice of y3. Yo 10-Acre Parcels Many on paved roads. Beautiful hilltop sttet. Soto* with lake privileges. Low at SIM do Win. — LADD'S. IRC 3IM Lapeer Rd. (Perry) Mat FE 5-03*1 or OR 5-1331 after 130 SEBEWAINO BAT SUBDIVISION. — all tote on the water. Lota sox- MARMADUKF - By Anderso*. Jt Leeming Sale HiHW^OoMiM Sale Hoasehwld Qofrtb *5 IMpM „ or. trade. Come out •WMfiSgP■ wB. rw 34 MONTHS T? PAT , • 4 miles E. of Pontiac or I mile E. MTAnburn Heights on Auburn. MM UL 3-3300. • ATTENTION sx*, “L.sr AwUjjBCB 65A NEEDLEPOINT PICTURE Oeorge W--*-'-—4- -*-*■ frame, oil days to .. Re take ter articles 1 finally threw away that old pair of slippers. BOTTLE OAS APARMENT-SIZE J > a BETTER BUYS ..dtustable bed frames ..... N« Shijpffs'isS [»**«#£ * ’. .s OR 3-4134 ■ Open S till 5:30 Mon. tln »:*y O'NEIL WATER-FRONT HOME SITE m xerox good level Mlldtag .» site with frontage on small take MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE READING - Altar reading all the “Fer Salt" ads you. can find we'ta sure It wenud i ■ take a whole .book to adequately describe Mr'tovbtr rsmhlmg ranch hone, located U the "Heart of the Hill. *' In hMUitlful Avon- “Bud’’ Nicholie, Realtor 4S ML Clemen* FE 5-1201 After 6 tun. FE 4-8773 For Sale Acreag • M Business Opportunities 59 BAR- FOR SALE. taStoM DCWX. Reply bok 38 Pontlao Press. SALE: GROCERY STORK. man Reason tor setting—retiring. WO Squirrel Rd-. ■ Auburn Heights.,- 40 ACRES. OOOD SOIL. PLENTY of road frontage, stream. Appro* M miles Dorn Pontiac. Only f per My*. 30 per sent do Dorothy Snyder Lavenderf 7001 jnOHtAND RP. (MM), I EM 3-3303 DATS jMU 4-0411 EVES. For Sale Fsnm .lt S3 ACRES — RURAL CLARESTTOR. Partially remodeled 0-room hone, barn and storage shed. Located north of Clarkaton. Cover-crops on all fields and IS eere* of woods at mar of parcel.- Smell apple orchard near house. Offered at I31A00 for aulek sale. RolteH. Smith. Realtor *4. PE >7544 Party With beer and win* llebnee. Near jm^dotem-«Moe-m%ear ---> living guarters. will sell property STATEWIDE Real Estate Service of Pontiac Partridge Mortgage Loans MORTGAGES OR 1-ACSRB P. With 160-foot frontage. No epprals- A Mortgage problem ? Refinancing, remodeling And" coi struetton loans. .. CREFP MORTGAGE^ A REALTT $600 to $2,000 : On Oakland County homos, mo on or nut, _ Voss & Buckner, Inc, 103 National Bldg. PE 4-4133 'cAnf heater. Bike, mtec. MT 3-1100-CASH. FOR lUiSED m. furnT-— mtec. FE 2-03M 'sets. : yourself, save, four r win, 5MJS yalup. t».W. ---r 1M1 designs, formica top*. Mlchl- Hi-FI, TV & Radios 66 31 INCH CONSOLE MODEL corner ■IgiHgro^pmjicE, COMPLETE RADIO AND TV equipment for WB .1-1485 afUr 6 egpftpp on weeltenda. ■ For Saie MiEceilaneoits 67 1 RCA SCOPE I ---------— *-4, Outboerd motbr 'llS Oft 3-0348. ,4“ SOIL PIPE. 44.14. COPPER pipe- 14c.. Toilet* 518 95. O. A. Thoinptpn. 7004 MM West. tlNCH SOIL PIPE. 5 FT. 3 4 to US 53 85 PER MONTH FOR ALMOST c"^8^ « W c’ss; price. Call Capitol Sewing Cenwr. fie 5-5407. 5X7 AOUARTUM CAhlNET. FOUR 10-gxilon tanks, filter*. Ught* -Phone EM MI75, A SUPER GRILL Dwtakt Pontiac restaurant grill to excellent location. Pi of privet* parking. In M»y •-ping orea. Beet ofequlpment greased *15.500 to 1050. Only 55,550 Swaps 4-BEDROOM HOUSE ON E. WAL-ton. close to school, will take lot* model ear, housetrailer ‘or oay-thlng^Myiloa a* down payment. —REFRIGERATORS— Admiral, Phllco, Wlgldaire Norge and OB .Rebuilt by our Service Experts Tour choice ■i-S" WHO v 100 K-Bagto* EAST SP1NDRV, *35. CALORIC 3 ijoe dryer. 5M. FE 5-*3T1. ■ __ 4-0031 ______ 53-uAL BtEC. HliATESr 415 56. 30-gel outs gat beater, 445.55. Cab-• met stake and HttUs. M5.5S up. Leundry trays end stand and faucets. 531.55. Cash and carry. S/VE PLUMBINO . — - —------- FE 5-3100 30' TV ANTENNA TOWER For Sal* Mtsc»BsneoHS 67i Sal|E Sporting Ooo«ts 74 — b6t.: I ■ .. loaBStop. -f;, -■ ilBULMAN HARDWARE ' I iS£S^SLH$^jgi, hmj ■ehdSlt "TO 5: SUE. 0-8 LtohW fot bedroom*, kitchens, dining rooms .haHe, « J-Prised not at ducoont | low wholesale. Michigan I tant, 3»3 Orchard- Lake; OgTOfQ T6WR, ^.ij.fl hold good* for aal*. Oardejn ment, tool*, gad mtec. (torn-. Mlddiebury Lane. MI MUg- LARGE SELECTION Browning, r— Also Large- Selection ^ ______• of Used Guns NEW* AND USED OAS , AND OIL I furnace*. Per best by, isoll HA *- DiH Drever lWl AAH^ales. L-llilLricycr new oa5 Furnaces and all Gun & Sport Center control*, lies. Ac* .Beating and W3ig Holly Rd. ME 4-4711 Cooling OB 3-4554. _____|HOLLT MICHIGAN. BANK RATES * MEW SHIPMENT °r° — . .____.USED Sand, Gravel ft Plrt 76 grr need*. 1 J0..:" MILLION . YARDS OF — •-'-ck girt. L"*-' _____ . days a a.— ran’ Hoad. PE 5-MU. SURPLUS. .LUMBER ChStea ut>-l TOP SOU. CRUSHED TOJ. MM*' cost racks, draftinu machine*. SOIL BLACK DlRf. electric A3. Dick mimeograph, j -fui and gravel. FK 3-TI74 ^^^^naachtawb^hec^^n-otec-1 ®3t^ENt^UP~SpEWALKT~DEiLJV-—- OR 34WI and J*» a-totn i ored. FE V3371. con. on ,un -i* 4-3010.1 CTed. FA 4-3411. . —.------ Forbes Printing tc Office Supply., BEACH SAND.......40-40 OR 1 OIL AND OAS FURNACES. SEV- gtovef 51, » Yd<; <*«• '1 eral floor model* at discount Cushion eaud;, 8 *C Heating- amf-Coollng: r WlUtama Lk. Rd. EM 3-MT3. OR 3-4554. _________________ | CRUSHED STONE. SAOT). ORAV- PILE *OP LUMBEIt. >W. SEARS *? flVg - BlllLDOja’NO' Roebuck collapsible wheelchair. D B A O L IN E ^L^nmiO. $45. 540 Miller 8t„ Rochester. | dump trucUw No Jobe too cmau. -FRLEPEAT plastic fife, m, wcr. 4«.~i - --- ■ • K,_ . top**#:- L»*JH .K1 Ua'Vrak bS? a.. | petit Lake Bd. at WliUama Lk. per hundr« hundred; 1 __!__ IV* inch, ip’tr ^talc^.W^'eT A^PTho^r%J» ply, Sand.^gina. buildee si otto dirt. 1 tile. OR ♦35 Orchard Lake Art, FE MMO-. m-w—, -j-— REDUCED PRICES- RI-^* -?LAq?- 3 . Bolen* riding moweri. ate. |_____ Porter Cable mowtrsandi Tard-, ,*nd. stone, gravel d condition. 131 'M MOPED MOTOR SCOOTER. -Mmp'M deer ritie 1.44511. -----TOP mm* BLACE DIRT. MA-itarter" Wheel Horse [ ftJl^dlrfl'EM VSllI or Ebf'^Wf'"-m*lte>HwygTMA ^^i-^'B^^A^BEA^J^D 8INOER SLANT NEEDLE DE-I Oravtl. Me yd.—lOA Ston* end Zlg-Zagger. Like new. In Ovcrtlsed Stone,. 53 rd. FBL^t. —~ gahlBIt w"'1 «e yd. Dellyery.extr*: lyrge mahogany c , both for 535. property OOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP nr SMitlaf r7» ;51 WEST HURON ____ PE 5-3023. SELL OR SWAP ALUMINUM; - 'kg*, runabout, 30 hone Mercury mo- “ ’ tor, trSler and Bkl* lor housetrailer. OA I FREEZERS—$148 Nam* brand freeser*. All ft '—«* shelves, bandy door st, -—- hi unit, new to —*■ ■mall 5317 Li l t UP O arrumnuKO j 17 Dtxi* Hwy., Drayton Plains ‘•j Mile N. Williams Lake Rd. ! 1353 PONTIAC TRUCK 480. _ Phllco portable TV 150. ’M Cushman I h.p. 5115. Refrlgerator-ffeeser $358.-MA 5-1513. ANCHOR FENCES No Money Down. FHA Terms FREE ESTIMATES'. W Hffl 6atSroom TOffroraroiL AND ______m ___________ WUll- Me yd- Delivery extra. AmERI- rlflce tor balance of 553 oi>, can BTORE, 5335 SASHABAWT iw.l xn. 1H 53lfl; - | ------------- ------- j, wwBctRp SPECIAL! BLACK DIRT itb | HTAINLE8S STEEL DOUBLE SINK gg * load, delivered. OR 5-1550. &*! *?< ??■ Teueu^ 517.35. Fan hoods, j or ft BFI55. __________ SWIMuatG POOL. PORTABLE ! 3xj WOOfl, COnl & FM*i-----------77 PlantE. Tr*e«, Shnilb 78 L.1 EVERGREENS, SPRUCE pin*, fir. arborvtta*. juniper, yews end mugho. Dig your o*m-Bring tool* andburlap. M33 Bleed) Road. 3 miltowWMt>of ^mmene Large transformer. TALBOTT LUMBER nt. Gold Bond pale*. Vgf, ____..site no drip wall patot; Hardware. ptomUng. electrical i supplies and'fuU Une_ef lumber. | Open g e.m *tU 5:38.’ on busy paved city street la good i area. Haa small b------*■*’"*- i merit block building t r“o#*- -- j ! “ Brewer Real Estate j I JOSEPH F. REISZ SALES MOR. i PE 4-51*1 ______Eves, >1 0-0M3 } Rent, L’se Bus. Prop. 57A j SUNOCO STATIONS ___are available to Poctlac- iheater area* offering then 00- f^S’AIID*TRAnnNO PROGRAM 3—TOUR OWN BOBS 3—MODEST INVESTMENT «—OUTDOOR WORE 5- HIGH PROFIT POTENTIAL For information edit FE 54)545. isirriDlo buy: "dry clean- tng and ahtrt laundry store, FE *0056 ’ , Sale Land Contract! 60 j Se.lBl BALANCE AT 51S.M Or more per month. 5% tot., secured by nest 5 room home, attached _ _ bedroom set*. EM 34lit after 5 p. _______’ TRADE 1-BEDROOU HOME IN Drayton^ ' ^ m°de* car I ____________~ Pearson’s Furnl- turs. 43 Orchard Lake An. it ta'ponttae", I FRIGID AIRE REFRIGERATOR, m-frnt>rcj .yxoda coadltha. 535. FEMI53 WILL TAKE CAR, .TRUCK. BOAT! chrome dinette set. Emerson TV. 3 maple bedroom sets, maple settee and chairs and many other AP like new. QB 3-5835. r' M-34 and FREEZERS—UPRIGHT, _. ,t- Peters, Dl naSe brand*, scratched. Terrific ’ *148185 while they laet- - —Michigan For Sale Clothing 64 0 phone ordrs pie*** Mi luoreecent, 383 Orttard 'UPRIGHT i GIRLS SKIRTS, COATS DRESS-] cubic fool. Like new. HI 5-3314. ■ --------- O I B I O N' tilLUXE ELE&MUC , range, reasonable. UL 3-4844 OlTKUKZhMC BTOVE. 3T ■tee 1-15. Petite *i ____air Some ladles. FE *t GIRL'S SCHOOL CLOTHING. I 13 to 14. Blouses, drouer. J ---- - -“(te, *1 ■M____________All g FE 4-4133. LADIES' COATS SUITS ... 11-13-14. Borgant cos 11. Bub-teen coats and <1 GROCERY STORE. iBEER AND f wine licensed Equipped. |U IS •. ,T£*«nph Open 1-4 jgw^E^’l^iMxLL BUStHBM j 1 W- * r° *r i wainm ftnlah ell KdtMt KAY O’NEIL. Realtor _J3 * Tels FE >1183 n Stout Realtor. Ti N. ____ OXFORD COMMUNITY l AUCTION OA 1-3551.__ E LARGE SUPER DELUXE 3 DOOR Frtgldalr*. ----------*>«“■ - 5151 comm, ■ month taeludlngj K. J. (Dick) VALUE! Realtor FE 4-3531 344 OAKLAND AVK OPEN *5 Partridge IS THE ' BIRD’' TO SEE COUNTRY COLONl.\l Spacious 8-room whit* frame ct lonlal located West of Pontle paved road. 4 large bedrooms baths, full basement. Ft rep 1 acre. Additional land aval! Only 53 “ ■ I - r-f; n ling at 1343 W Huron I LAND CONTRACTS To BUY OR Vlll leas* on long or | to sell. Eteri Oarrels. EM 3-34U | ... carpeting 415-■^1. 55I-J185. ■ - ’ | MATCHING VANITY DREBSER n k-j -w-.4 *i st-ifiri, 180 Onetd* InferUted ' NGBTH Btpu: for one story — home. Walking dtetane* to town and but only one block . away. Basement- Oar***, Large front poreh. Make* . an Ideal home tor retired couple. Call FE 5-#»3 to- --4^T ONLY 51.388 DOWN. PAY- price. Large kitchen fenced yard and lake privileges (tell FE 38583 to sea this good buy. BETWEEN PONTIAC AND LAKE ORION- Get settled, homV^lie/ore^SwS *Sues •tart. On a large i08X4M lot with olj furnace. Tiled hath. Tale heme la so con-venlently located. 513.508 and make an offer on the down payment. Call MY 3-3531. _____ LAE%ENCr1ifrOAYLORD,k IE K. Pike St At City if* FE 8-9693 .HOYT ' 'Fpr that perasnl interest'' 4-ROOM BRICK RANCH —Built ih l54i. 3 bedrooms. room, dining room, kitchen. I In eren, oak floors, toil ment. well landscaped, cioi schools 53.005 down. Vneeni. 354 g. Telegrepi; J____ partridge , 1530 W Afuron0* ' B***>0fe 4-3551 Income Property 50 i 8-FAMILY ‘ INCOME, ■ DRAYTON , . ___ ______r. FE 4-4383 ] irarort^GS^wisrwA- • irrford Towntthlp, t*tv« in one , Aid*, rent th« olto«r fK Mill dir MA M&M _____ L ",______ a-rABEV'T*’ &ka~linKT. zoned ‘ cammercHkl. p* Ml Cj#mf;*»■•_ fOR I^LORED i ROdMS DOWN ■ Y *U»r« M0 weekly ---- ,,,v j »Ulr*. Mutt «ftl ^ _ ^ CAU me MUi. m I WEST SIDE NEAR NEW SHOP- i K? I ping center Ask for Tom Bate-of j mam^rB^8-T14I ^ ^ Mf-UU' —1 BuElneii’O'pportiliriiBgi 59T ^ A 1 RESTAURAW““t )n comer of 3 busy hUhwoya In l be Thumb are*. Moet equipment | iew. Bake their own bread, rolls ind plea m new get fired oven justness and real ertate and ev13 PE 3-3335. 3544 WI.I7.ARETH LAKE ED- beapwppl NURBERY grown evergreens. eulUvatato enmrao. sprayed, state inspected, VL-JP iinii 11. i* ***r" to Sat *a YOU*Mg. » „» Pontiac on gj. 18. Cedar Lane kvergrten P»rm *8to Dlxl* Hwy., IV*. 181. MA 5-18M. For Sale Fets 79 I toy WHITE FEMALE POODLEB. seasonable. Clipping or hathta*. hit home or tatoeT MY 3-2893 dition, M8 UtjMWI, bathing, ______________ 3-3*83 5 PQODLE8 — BILYEB BROWN: P* Bl _______I ..... 81-25 4x8 % Plyscore :. . 84-79 Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY 1 7840 Odoley Lake Rd. - EM Mill Open 5 a.m. to 8 ,p.m. dally Runday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. CEMENT STEPS. READY MaOE, chair. 1 .38, Wood.; MOVING. BENDIX WASHER-DRY- -™ B~---------•Xhge. 524.1 com bln'— 50 claan. *uar. stove*, rofrlk. lit. Serve) gi Carpeting. ■iew, > mah. II lr* • and miscellaneous i ..._____gpiaah bleak, door.-—, e.iimney eons Potto IVeOid steg^do., A W. Sheffield. FE duo thIrm OIL SPACE HEATER suits," 531. "Big' lV> W (IWIHTii odd bMli-IWkl ... Baby crlhi. phonograph. NEW 1H1 AtrKifATIC 8EWINO bS;Xpfc..“ .H^^SIchin.. Take on payments of u payment and onto 111 per t month op balance. _ j Peterson Real .Estate .1 MY 3-1681 OPEN EYEN1NOS i BAR WANTED — HAVE LAROE i Equity to beautiful hon(* -land I contract and other equities im ( Pace, OR 4-043*. ). it. l OftOCtHT aTOfti! - Worth Andi 1 .... Lancer 44x40 building. .....____________ ______*i wee.......■ ■ „ ,, ---------,—------------ , ai.trk and equipment end a 58 i For Sale Lake Property Si & M,,or ,U'°* T" 14 ROOMS. MAIN STREET. LAKE Orton MY 3-1188. .. . WuSiSiMtA^B PAR*0»k. jraStf- : ed lot. 58*158. 35 mto. Pontiac. Lge. private lake. No motors. $585 810 down, 510 mo. FE 4-4508. U 8-1111. Dal* Brian Corp- i imHaris »n»y™rTS ’ Pont,, (k ml. Let/, M.W5. IM down. 530 mo. Blacktop. F» ; '4-4SM, LTi-n i i. Mt Brian carp jOSMiMSoFFl equity for houaotralln i » offtr MA 4 43 LAKE LOTa vs, tome woodedj' Buy > ...... h& -Lekeahore De- KAST HOWARD KT. 74-It. brick achoql. Rldg. Baeement. gae heat Conld be used es church, lodge, union hall. etc. 143*150 corner lot. For farther details cxU FE 4-3880 B C.. Kilter, Reel Estate. 3t*0 Ella. Lk. ltd. town, handles — pen* *no ecceaeoiles, sporting goods, home furnishings. ■ tools, etc. Good location, franchised store B. R. Cogswell. 130 W GJ/s No Money Down IGOK AT WHAT YOU CAN BUT FOR ONLY |55. NO OTHER OOdTg, Riot Urge famlto home on the east eld*, Two large bedrooms — Colored heth fixtures ~ Carpeted living room and dining room. N*wiy_ pkiht- *58 will move you in. rr ORLY TAKE*. 1108 to move you Into »Je roaf HOT ROD SHOP - And Auto pertx.- Equlnment Ind s(ock must be moved. DtetreiL mTcHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION JOHN A I,ANDME8SER, BROKER 1573 TELEGRAPH RD FE 4 '*** Open 'Ul 8 Ev44. 41.108 II THE BULL PRICE of tale (feel emit clean 3, bed room home, full «***“ ment. foroed klr furnae*. Alum, atorms ‘ Kiri** ' on atom* and tereane, garage. Oloetni eoete of I4M bin move you In 1 ' RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 8fAW«,?,wh newTSkdroom. it rireplaces Own Your Own Business Exclusive 'Franchise-Secured Future Signature Up to 34 mqnta* to npay. PHONFlFE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Company ' 33 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. BUCKNER FINANChUCOMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN l Pontiac — Drayton Plains — Utica, Walled Lk. Birmingham, Plymouth BAXTER8 a* xi^nStone s* W Lawrence 8t. FE 4-133* TEAGUE FINANCE CO.1 202 S. MAIN . 214 F.; ST. CLAIR -ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS »*3 TO SHOO Ai/Toa ~ Avenue-PK 3-5388, Aft H Bales r (Ml..XtrrQMATic ! ,chine. Take on pay« 05 for 1 months. Total ..... ....1 onlv a43 33. Button holes, fancy j *«• d*. dtaettro, rug*, ftemee. v0'k wtthout using^attachment* I lot l2i 't'L ^ 1%:. TS Just dial. Also in modem cahlnt :bhda. About Vi, price. EZ Call Capitol BUY. SELL, TRADE 3. Denting water pump. silent condition 8 46“x84>r — 4—W'wi lot 825* Ph. FE 1-8961. Open tU end -Ftl. electric dryer. .. 8133 meludlng ■ . 1133 338 MAHOGANY DROP LEAP TA-i""*"“ 'wATN^OABERT _____ hie and 4 chairs. 538. Apt. I«*|ui W Saginaw_FE 3-4158 RrtrigfmtortVE: & tub. r‘» vmm ^\n^t*i.C«UalS: Utt TsWmtNM III. Odd lOltog* ohelra 5*. Dreas- trio range P — beds./ springs . and chests.) _go-Jg?L51jS'—. for the home at RECONDITIONED AND QUARAN- . B. Munro Eleetrl 53 Orchard _____E RUO. 13'5" X 11'- ri'Hll'3. Oood condition. I p.m. in 3-1153. ROOjSs OF BRAND NEW PUR --.venjMrt and enalr, »- ___ps. bedroom suite, met, 1* end sprints, vanity Tamps, Jecedtnett*. Ail for 5355 _Pay-isTnts onto 53.55 a week. Pear-oii's, 43 Orehard Lake Ave.-YEAR CRtfiS. BRAND Nil, 313 35 up. Pearson'e Furniture, 43 Orchard Lake Ave J RUGS ..... T^ r_PHALT mi. BA "BUYLO' ^IE. a!' gAOINAWt* 8Bl Tirmi afS«S§8.'"B«iyr0|,5 TONBUMKR8POWER COMPANY REFRlOKRATORSr 5*» 8»:TVs. 313.51 end up. nwoet's Radio and Appi, 411 W. Huron. P« 4-1133 REPRIOKRATOR. COrPKE TABLE. FI N t SM ED PAN EL INC. Dak Abltlbl 4'xr . . 53 54 Oak Abltlbl 4'*T...........53 J* Rustle Blroh 4'x«' fiN Oray Ash 4'*4' j Mahogany 4T8 I PONTIAC PLYWOOD OO. 1451 BALDWIN AVE. PE 3-3543 FREE STANDING TOILETS ll« Double Bowl 8tat ■ :• ” -ipper, 15 ft. lengths ----- “ * i—gtha BAcEir'icE p6r cabii - M.soo. II g 333 wooded lot. West Bloom-field. South of Pontiac Trail., 413- yAcXhf" LA^PifoNT^ K-SP- J'l’iJ'.c roetied" porch’ |18%0. OB fidT AUdBkB' ^eWI® home. Lower Strait* Lake, 3983 Tan bey. Ideal for couple, easy mtllitcnliict, 2 bFdrooitu, alwm- pdUt^ ^ccu^kncy, km3*5iei. Northern Property 51A MODERN TRILBVBL 1 RCWM- Sn£niS‘rSr^ . Bos 181, Mlo, Michigan. EARN UP' TO 413,000.00 N1 -----am e~*-lY IN PRO VP [NESS Nor Ah POMP . .tOGRAM . ASSISTANCE. PROFIT YEARL1 SERVICE BUSINama nvw ITS SIXTH YEArT, COMPLETE TRAINING PROGRAM_. A N 6 SELLING. NO INVENTORY TO ^•viriiidww T*£mNOWN BEURINE«t‘ IN b”p TEMBBR AND OCTOBER. TQ-, TAL INVESTMENT #011 ALL OPEBATINO EQUIPMENT INCLUDING NEW TRUCK AND COMPANY TRAINING to.TM.85 DOWN PAYMENT , OF,,, JM.150.to. 8» ¥taa INTlBRisTED AND HAVE NTJC; EHSARY CAPITAL. . WR I T E STAT1NO YOUR BACKGROUND. delamater mfg. _4 B. Seginew____•— — ' "LOANS |30 TO 5500 ~ 138 — 3808 COMMUNITY LOAM CO — - - ,pm -M j condition. 111. Hi----- IE wTn 6 machInESTwhole-sgle to all. New. used and to-possessed. Over 15 models to choose from. Prleee etart Singer AHHftil.M si* mueift •s Appflar tb” copper. SO ft. lengths 5‘»", sm|K.. to %.s«m , 3 pc. beta seta with trim •8.93 i lie ft. baby graad Mahogany spinet piano 1 used organs. GALLAGHER’S lg E. Huron____PE 4- BUT NOW AND SATE ON ALL O JSOTSrjSKElWras LIBERAL ^RADE^LLOTANC* g jTODEOTySWMfs |.W-4iM . - p #LuraY“w5rErtmii. k lstered. Term* avallahle. nlkt ' Mrfr aNo6ra" Wf-ygl. To a good hone only. EM BAND INETRUMENT REPAIR -Br CO 110 N. SAGINAW • to eood;h8BI*. MA 0-378S. . .. MINIATURi FOOfM* 10 week*, male. OA 0-3083. -------!----------- , North Mcrrlmac .... NEW SPINET PIANOS FROM 1fMfj^2kKCahifrl**D^casS^^and* tu^ up. BUfhtly used Hammond chord I talk, Cananea. cages. ?” »w; OoSy11 ■ Beautiful walnut c FOR SALE. 1 3'xO'xe". IHj.- M tail'l " (1) 3*38 3". | K*ump, no,' Oil 'stove.'llis Wasfi oWl. $1.80: Like new: medicine cabinet, if 30. FE 3-1100. 1041 Colraln off Voorhees. FOifi^A7>LUMBiNO P^iTC plies. Tropical tlah. tanka, and «hni%Lj^ither! Mmf. MAMBa B LON D .. wttti blfcc*. +*p*n. m 4^5W- .. »PUBflL AltC* * Ml 1-5407. P|gt I RELIVE BROADWAYS tNrTLL-| SotoTm.. Rotoeatar. E I*?” nts PBe. Walton, corner ol Joslynj OAS ilpiECli DINING ROOM SET. W)tb..lhi SflGLKR OIL HOMK HEATERS P»y» for ttiflf 1 keyboard Tours f< i MORRIS MUSIC , .FE 2* tt Tel-Huroi OL 10771 Need $25 to $500? See • Seaboard • * Phone FE 3-7C17 -1185 N. Periw St. • PARKINO NO PROILEU ,-Seaboard Einiy»6e Co. “WliEN you NLed $25 TO $500. We will be glad to help you STATE .FINANCE CO. BOO Pobtlgd State Bank Elds. FE 4-1574 Credit Advisors 61A BUDGET YOUR DEBTS CONK LIDATEi EILL3L-NO LOANS to Set Outf of'Sebt, See Financial Advisers, Inc. 3(b S. SAGINAW FE 3-111 1 twin si ■PIEC Davenport bedrm. set, 3-9411. Fi-™« backed rugs, 515.55, else . tweeds and Annin-stars. Rug 'Mas *3 *8, Peareon's Fuwilturc, 43 Otonaro Lake Ave iiX^TY Kivt NATTRiSS, BOX AWloWAiVm fWioffifl9bi YARDS U 8 ED carpet.,, good condition. Call OR ie, Eelvlnator refrh rig., tail min. r'E 8-1339. APARTMENTSlii ■ stove, electric refrigerator. 530 both. MA 80101,_____ fixio NWlifHiix"f»;rToNTWilT ci>rp*tlng >»0. OR >5094 | ___________offer. PE .d^ATic^wtN^NE-EDti, siw • lux machine tu. beautiful cabinet, Makes fancy (tnlxna, mor w— button hole*; 8, Call F i-»U' »•; bjr aial iU M me Waitca AW|6liATIC^ DlAt- tlful Qonaola. Rcautlful natdla fa wing, Fancy j buttonhoif*. mono*rams I butfttma. On naw account m .-> or full price. 88>-45. call PE , 4-2511. Waitci Used Trade-In Dept. -—tform rocker . ....... 33 Davenport and chair . 53— , Cor. table, Heywood Wake- __ i}tlS'r!t . NEW NATIONAL CASH JUEOIS- ENOLISH BFRIOERATORS - . USED RBFR1 Reconditioned—I ye -LIANCE CTBNTER j‘ENNnE"f-ir> I LONO-LASTINO PROTECTION FOR ASPUaIt pAVEMENTf Stops frees*-IhtW damaga as sqftenlng effect*- of — Give* a smooth satin--- 5-Gallon Can $9.95 Rl.AYI.OCK COAL ft *UP£LY CO. 51 orchard 1 •sra« RIB $160 UP - _ _ __ ftddiug fn«*hWM front $55 up. Th# only tftotory xuthorwtd brunoh office* In Onklnnd nod Ifnuomb Mto^Mt'*^ lu. 33 S. Gratiot. Mt. Clemens, HOw-'AVBMKXIV I i i -jj..Mr -i-n- ra M In biaek finish I is Auburn Aye. ■ Ht 4-jd*! MV r^,r^.ertA.«SS: i Hm JStSSL KKNMORK SPACE HEATER. ' 300" oil tank, all tubing am) connections. Jacobsen rotary lawn mower tvi year* old Wheelbarrow, garbage can — never uted. Rabbit* and trying chickens Also air conditioner ter car. OTlS Dcland., - Drayton Plains, phone OR 4-15** J EfOto 5sl« Stora Bfalfwiuit COMPLETE dRILL, EQUIPMENT HUSSMAN iv JrakTCASE wWij seated comprestloi; unit OA mXM j^d«Am¥D"WlNT S3 For Sftle Llveitock 4-11 WINNER HALTER AND H0R8KMAN«H1P Bay quarter gelding. * wall trained, beautiful conulUon. 43to. OR 3A355. CHOICE BKl^E ^ARTER. HALF. ..asAf^ND^TTtffiy nar^" fiORSE -rt'Aff&. U5 Farm “n»dd.W^.OR3JtoI__. Mb Tit MPR- EIGHTEEN the Pontiac press. Saturday, September a, mi Wanted Livestock 84j. SrIc HousetraHers 89 Wanted Livestock 84 rOB RENT: BOX STALL, NICK, dry stable, her “ ...a try.OH-6418. Sale Farm Produce 86 APPLES, 8PKATXD FRUIT. 3336 Bold Mountain Rd. APPLES Akb pEars. PICK them yourself, $1 bushel. gjg ATcay Kingsbury** Market. 3330 Claries* Parkhur$t Trailer Salts “~~*i* IN MOBILE LIVING—, , PEARS. ... _ . ____ "big savings. Cut out tbfe middleman, you pay 1 — 4 cents' per lb. Bring {be or here today. Oxford Trailer Sales Mile S of Lake Orion on M-i I BARTI-ETT , PEARS. WEALTHY! THE TIME IS NOW! FOB US TO PICKUP AND SELL your ttalleti- any- It' TO 50' WE HAVE feUYERS WAITING I' CALL US TODAY I HOLLY MARINE * COACH SALES 15210 Holly Rd.. ROLLT ME 46771. VACATION TRAILERS Three 15' Vacation Trailer, and a fleet • tralle-the 26Eh August, the 27th August, •. 3 available for. Boats & Accessories 97 Jarsansas 1 ’ Thompson C KEEOO HARBOR, MICH. Boat Discounts SHOP AT DUNHAM'S LARGE g A VINOS FOR YOU ON BOATS, MOTORS, TR/ OPEN EVES. AND SUN. UNION BAKE 2365 Union Lk.m" EM V_ CLOSEOUT SALS’ ON ALL 1061 Winner Cruisers, Arkansas Traveler,. Tee Nee Trailer,, aim REAL. GOOD BUYS ON USED Biosi — ' Holly-Marine & Coach 15210 Holly Rd. • ME 4-6171 hollyTmich. BANK RATES Opien Dally and Sunday Sale UaajqTrgcfcE 103 DAWSON# SPECIALS! ! EVINRUDB MOT O R S. Orchards, 331 N.v EVERYTHING IN SEASON FROM P Telegraph. FE 3-9073; Openr T HALEHAVEN PEACHES READY NOW. Excellent c * bu Oakland Orths of Milford on E._________— Also, quality apples, $1.75 per bu and — HENS, ALL NEW IN PONTIAC, CRUISE-OUT BOAT i SWEET CORN. OTHER ireart vegetables MA>32M. MCINTOSH APPLES — BURBANK plums. Sprayed. FE 3*7240, PEACHES Now picking and telling, .... Haven, atOreen Orchards. 37800 14 Mile Road. Walled La ' miles West of the end of J Co'ueen, Swy.__ . *“ PEARS FOR SALE Orion. MY 2-1061. TOMATOES. AT . WHOLE8A1.E price. Pick your own. 61.36. already picked. Dealer* tori YELLOW TRANSPARENT 1 pie,, hand picked 61 60 a total 533 N. Coate Rd., Oxford. 6-3644, .BARGAINS WE HAVE A TREMENDOUS LARGE INVENTORY OP USED SMALL WALKING AND RIDINO EQUIPMENT. FARM AND IN——■ TORS AND EQUIP! AU, ARE PR1CED TO SELL. WE GUARANTEE TO SATISFY OR MONEY REFUNDED. CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4-U12 PONTTAC ROAD AT OPDYKE JOHN DEERE MODEL R DIESEL, reconditioned, -also 4 bottom plow. Davie Machinery. Phone NA 1-3282 Manor, Inc. 42667 VanDyke . * . C CALL 731-7190 Bank Financing r 7 Yeats to Pay Credit Life Insurance at no ei OPEN*DAILY 6-6 SUN, Rent Trailer Space 90 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR PONTIAC MOBILE HOME PARE. Large modern tpaeeel located ^ 228 East V Wheel Horse Tractors Bolen, riding mowert. Orblt-Al mower, and tiller,. Several use •MM tractors. Evans Equlpmeni 6501 Dixie Bwy. MA 5-7676, Ol B & B AUCTION SALES EVERY MONDAY . IjW p.U. EVERY WEDNESDAY ,.. 7:30 p m. KVlBRY FRIDAY JU.. 7 jMn. EVERY SATURDAY 'ff.... 7 p»m. EVERY SUNDAY .... 3 pint. OPEN 7 DAYS WEEK MV.. BUY- SELL - RETAIL DAILY DOOR PRIZES EVERY AUCTION Lunch Room Open Every — 5089 DIXIE HIQHWA Sale Housetrallers 89 RXNT 18-FOOT VACATION TRAIL er, eleepe e. FB a-gggl, ALUMINUM. 1900 MODEL, WL 66.200, M------- count, FB 4-7752. A IRS fit E A M ' UOHTWEIOHT Travel Trailer. Slnoe 1833. Ouer-anteed for Me. See them and tat a demonstration at Warner Trailer Salet. 3086 W. Huron. (Plan to Join one of Wally Byam'e exalting Closeout on All ^T96T CREES 16Yi- to 29-Ft. Now in Stock 1 "Liberal Discounts" • . ALSO A LAROE SELECTION OF USED TRAILERS AT A LAROE $AVINOS TO YO STOP OUt TONIGHT! Labor Day Specials! Tremendous SAVINGS. 50x10'. front bedroom. Silver Line 5()xlfl', front Kitcheh, IUchird8on_ Mote to Choose From For. a buy iti a quality mobile home - and-' top trade-in alloyande on your present mobile home, stop in or call Larry Rohlfs at „ . Mobile Home wood and lapstrakee. Buy now at winter pricer. On the laky demonstrations. Your satisfaction Is guaranteed. Take M-M to W Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Road to Demode Road. Left and follow. eigne to DAWSON'S SAXES at TIP-SICO LAKE. Ptaoht MAIn » 8-3178. LOOMIS - BOATS — SLIPS AND LAUNCHING on Lake Fentf Stocking inboard and outl RACE OR SKI, SIDCRAFT D UTIL-’ ltr, fait, trattoT 6150, FE 3-7740. SAILBOAT 13* NIPPER, EXCEL-lent, custom trailer, MI 4-6242. SAILBOAT, 14 . ____________ ■ '* equipped,, excellent eond. OR 4-1760. WILL SELL SEPARATELY OR Together Beautiful I7-ft. Fibergle, Cruiser only three month, old. Loaded with accessories including convertible top. 62.100. Johnson 3:00, p.r» e Road. OA 8-3022 W Sale Tim ~W 18ED TIRES. eell.,,. Aleo- wl I Sale!. 603 I 4-4867 or FE 'hT 15 Jueh. Auri, ~_ptscounLU S’. KUHN AUTO 6ERTICK _________ » W. Huron FE 3-1715 SokTtmxh black tires, all name brand,. Off new ear, 615."' plu, tax and exchange. State T1 Baler 603 8 Saginaw. FE 4-4667 3 BRAND NE' ■ on Oeneri ED WILLIAMS r. Cylinder* rel In© Shop, h H Sale Motor Scooters 94 1056 LAMBREATTE MOTOR acootor. 185. Lloyd Motort, Lln-coln-Mercury-Comet. 333 S. Seg------- •“ 3-6131. ALL STATE MOTOR SCOOTER For Sale Motorcycles 95 1*54 HARLEY DAVIDSON. LIKE new, must sell. Ho fair offer — fused. Superior Auto Bale,, MttrdR&rcLE tN 958 MACTO good condition, mm ok e*w For fait sal*, only $300 ca Call FE 4-3531, ask for John .. Dick. R. J. Valuet. 345 Oakland For Sale Bicycles ____ Hdly___ ____ HOLLY. MICHIGAN BANK RATES Open Daily and Sunday HOUSE TRAILER FOR BALE ’ -Mg 3-0744 Boats & Accessories 97 3Va HORSEPOWER MOTOR. ] |g---1?T *30 MA 0-7773. PRAM, A40. Call 682-3032 •OWER OLIVER SHORTS MoSlLE HOMES 14 ft. to 33 ft.. Oem travel trai an. Wolverine truck camperali plate itne* oT'SLrt.^nd- JOKT^DMCK gas Hitche, Installed and c< ! "h"1 |gjfg| •* wired. . FE 4-9743 3173 W Hut FND-OF-MONTH < I KARANCE Wnnllaa if tlf.-S forward control,. 16 ....--------lotor. Now tune-up. 3 3360, .OR HEAR THIS! We ere dealing the deck,. -NEW AND USED BOATS. MOTORS, TRAILERS DEAL NOW AND SAVE Mazurek Marine Sales 8AOINAW AT S. BLVD. . nIo A RO-OUTBO ARD SALES-8ERVICE43TORAOB Complete boat and motor repair Till line of new and uaed boats Full lino ot new. and used motors f CENTURY, 130 HORSE. "SEA RAY BOATS ----JOHNSON MOTORS- Marine Supplies. Repair Serf PINTER'S For Sale Airplanes 99 Sat., Sept. 2. Call UL Wanted Used Cars 101 $25 MORE* iat high grade need ca Veit, 4540 >R 3-1356 - FREE TOW$$ TOF ill uaLL JPE 5-0142 BAM ALLEN A BON INC. 883-3050. _____ CARS AND TRUCKS, WRECKS OR JUNKERS, ROYAL AUTO PARTS. FB 5-3144. Close-Out, ON 1961 . CHEVROLET Save $$$$ Dollars $$$$ While They Last! - -EXAMPLE^ " __>^-Ton Pickup - All. Taxee and Plato, $180 DOWN $12.72 Per Wk. FE 5-4161 Ask for the . TRUCK DEPT. Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oakland at Cass Track Parts TWA* FRUEHAUP 12-FOOT STAKE body with lift gate. Will eell eeoarate or toxether. MA »--- Auto Insurance 104 -------te5,006LIABgJTY----— ,1.000 MEDICAL $1,000 DEATH BENEFIT • $30,000 Uninsured Motorists COMPREHENSIVE (fire theft, etc) COLLISION (6100 deductible) ROAD SERVICE ALSO CANCELLED AUTO Evening Phone .FE 2-6353 01 Foreign & Spu. Cars 105 CLEARANCE SALE' v '50 HEALY 3 SETTER '53 MO •57 JAOUAR Houghten's ■.wSBiK. 61 HILLMAN MINX. 4 DOOR SE- For Side Cars 106 r 0. VERY CLEAM.JOR ■Manning, dealer. Grtherelo'J&ance Arranged. Eoonomy Care. 33 AS- I CHEW, 4-DOOR HARDTOP, tion, private 3-6800 betore WILL-ACCEPT Beat,, motors, suae, echo off a ■team whlatle, sunshine (tom a beanery, exhaust fume, (ram an outboard motor, or almost any- Bin Spence, Rambler . 33 S. Mato SL JMI5) CLARK8TON OPEN EVES. ' HAHM 1861 OORVAUt. STATION WAO«N. Deluxe model. Power Glide, FM . radio, white walls, 1..... fluteteT Pemeaat-— NORTH CHEVROLET CO.,_ 1000 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM. Iff 4-2TW. •58 RED CHEVY BMCAYN*. 30.- 000 mtlee.. cle*^ e?£51!f?L.,conal" ____ .waring, radio,. i.vmvue i whitewall tirts. Silver-blue. This car is immaculate. !19t NOMH OTEVROLETOO. 1056 CHEVROLET 3 DOOR. RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. .ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of- 633.33 per mo. CeU Credit Mgr.. Mr. Parke at 111 4-7800, Harold Tui REPOSSESSION 313 W. Sfaptealm_ 15 PORD V-8. PORDOMATIC. RE-!______________ r^ra nbergla- Mm mo ■njj alloy tri ;r«atly reduced price Yi ■ou will save 6100s at lost and alloy trailer, good cc lltlon OR 4-13*3 0 MERCERY OUTBOARD. tort ei Bob Hutchinson lioo’or bestoflcr. UL 3-3366. Mobile Home Sales, Tim-. I**7 WAYN* runabout with 3* =rrch,;rr,uij dalH. *LJTgrjt. I MY 3 1943 _ IIA f|IY a C• Porte-Camper Camp Trailer Wood, Alunw.FIberglss, 3 ft.-34 ft. - soorr motors And service 1 I CRUISE-OUT BOAT Mt.ES r~FORD V* TON ,PICKUP. V-6, 66 PORP SUDAN PANEL, WITH cyl., standard transmission, t-down. 637.34 per month. .Lleyd Motors,. Llncoto-Mercury-Comet. 232 8 Saginaw FE 3-9131. jjPOk wy^r.ltal ,. NOW If, VsyFare by •jut haa been deed I Only $376. Holly Marine & Coacb 16316 Holly ltd, ME 4-4771 , HOLLY. MICH. BANK RATES Open Daily aqd Sunday _ ropes 41.30-and-JipIc.-O.- ai ed cushions. *2 oWen’T' mIrine supplies 3*6 Orchard Lake Are. - . ,FE 2 *020___________g_ BOAT ifORAOi. EM 3r4666 ^pOAf'TNSURlV^ Hsnsen Insurance'Ainncy* FE 1-766] Used Trucks .GMC'' Factory Brandi OAKLAND AT CASS FB <-6466 , • DOWN 66S.il MONTH ORDER YOUR 1863 VW NOWI 1858 VOLK8WAOEN. I860 EXC» "tion, radio sod heater. CeU Set. OL 1-6346. 1858 VAUXHALL STATION \ Fttf Skte t REPOSSESSION 1155 Bulck 4-door hardtop, full pries *385. Payments ol *33 » mo. First payment due Oet. 8. Lakeside Mtrs. 336-7181 _____313 W. Montoslm 1857 BUICK. WHITE CONVERTI-tole. Radio, heater, automatic transmission, powsr steering end, brakes. 1186. Lloyd Motors, Llncoto-Mercury-Comet, 333 S. Sagl-naw, PE 3-8131._____________ 1866 BUICK SPECIAL. 4-DOOR Blue and white. Balahce due 1187. *1.13 week payments. King Auto 8dies, 114 8. Bektoaw St. I BUI CX. CONVERTIBLE, harp. *46*. Superior Auto Seles. 16 Oekland. ________ ... top. sununa, pww«, and brakes. Radio, heater, wtmewalls 36.666 actual miles. Extrs clean. Mto NORTH rttEV-ROLET CO.. 1666 8, WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM, Mi 4-2736 '66 cApnXACYDbraft •HARDTOP, wlto Power steering end brakee. Real sharp through- °Ul--- 63.6«6——— Van Camp Chevrolet, Inc MILFORD_______ MU 4-1631 ,jn, owmr, full power and l-way seat. Special at 63,1M. , JEROME ____fa 6-6466, , rt'j Cadillac Fleetwood-DAN, fuU Of- — Fa—gm BUtMINOHAM. MX 4-3735. 1 FALCON STATION WAOON radio and heater, white sldewaltt. 4-door. Uke new. 166 N. Johnson, i Set, or after 5 p.m _____ ! “ MUST SELL | WE NEED BOOM M3 Chevy hardtop ..... J JJ i 663 Pontiac. First ... 4 g .. ..........- ,653 Plymouth. A-l shape .. . f *61 ■Ha w»^“a^XsalesJ 656 Oakland ** fk BIRMINOHAM- 1856 CHEVROLET, IMPALA, 4-DR § cylinder, radio, heater, white walls and ■ low -4 btlleSw Call MI 4-2304. a^^lt^ljr"Sm.r ^hj(t# * smh red trim. $1695. NORTHCjmtVRO-LET, 1909 8. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM MI 4-2735. 957 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER horritnn Radio, heater And auto* power IBkllOk.^ JLMS.”'" 1966 FALCON 3-DOOR. RADIO, heater, automatic transmUelon, sharp light blue. Full price 61466. Lloyd Motors, Ltocom-Mf---------- SOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aeeume payments of 636.76 per mo. Call Ctodlt Mgr.. Mr. Parkr at MI 4-7566. Harold Turner,—' 654 FORD 3 DOOR, R. MISSION. ABSOLUTELY HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMONEY DOWN. Assume , payments of 316.86 per mo. Cell Credit Mgr.v Mr Perkj et MI stenaara transmission, rsuiv ww heater. Full price $1186. Lloyd Motors. Ltocoto-Mer*""^"“*»■ 8- Saginaw. FE 626.15 p*r mo. Call Credtt Mgi , Mr. Parke at Ml 4-7566, Harold Turner, Ford. 1656 FORD V8 4-DOOR STATION " RiSloqo» - • Hardtop, brand new throughout One owner. Must seU right away I SURPLUSMOTORS -ezr* 81.765 JEROME^FERGUSQN ROCHESTER FORD DEALER 0X714111 PONTIAC CONVeRtIBuT ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY I DOWN. Aelmme payments of 811.46 per me. Cell Credtt Mgr., L Mr. Parks. at MI 4-7S0«r Harold I Turner, Ford.. BEATTIE WATERFORD PORD DEALER At' the stoplight in Waterford OR 3-1291 '^FeF&l- f m t WILLYS JEEP. CHEAP, all MY t-16g3 eftor 4. KESSLER’S Inside Ujsed Car Lot All Sharp Oxford All Inside r steering and brakes. " - ".368. OB4-US6. 61 PONTIAC 4-DOOR wrjte b NEW ECONOMY specmTi ‘61 Studubaker Lark, heater and defroster. Accessory kit, white. ■ah pORtmc. s'door sedan, ra-•dto.--heatorr’ nydl-amatlo, vary, clean, tow mUeoge, 61,466. OR 34366. lMl WwhAC STAR CHIEF. LOW “Ueage. good engine, no rust. PE BLACK PONTIAC CONVERT!-e, Power brakee, Tri-Power, •si Ford 3 door hardtop; Full price $735. Uwd Motors. Llncoln-Mercury-Comet. 333 S. naelnaw. FE 34131. I >R A GOOD CLEAN CAB properly re-conditioned — at '"BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER choose from, *150 down nnd o . low *15 a r—*----------- u«-h i Motors. * — 333 a. a ik payments. Uoyd j 34131.' s, Lincoln-- Merci _ drive ti 1858 RAMBLER AMERICAN STA-tton- wagon.'. Radio and beater. . Solid blue finish. 41,085. north CHEVROLET COt 1006 8. WOOD-WARD, BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-3735. •56 PORD. 4 DOOR, 6 PAS8EN- fSougr *r?oo*ri co“ I____________ ____need mlieng• squeezing over-. — JtownliilQn. Yw tf»l J to yoursell to test drive fpe black J compact ______________ ... m Woodward. MI $-$909. OPXN LABOR DAY. 1656 Plymouth hardtop M8J Superior Auto Bales 666 Oakland R&R MOTORS PE 4-3636 ^VeUecl [ 'door.' iiandnrd' transmission Full w nMt. RAMBLER 666 * ——--- c white with haT* ---— lury and e_________ performance and save hundreds at toe full price of only 61.415 BIRMINGHAM-RAMBLER 666 8. Woodward. MI 6-3666. OPEN LA-suva mi . . ' REPOSSESSION u________________ 1657 Ford station wagon 4-door nu- j 1656 PLYMOUTH SAVOY 3-DOOR, tomntlc V8 power brake* uuh 1 steering, fuU price _4*65 Payemh** Sea Foai 1668 B1MCA SEDAN, RADIO. HEATER. ABSOLUTELY v6 MONEY DOWN Assume nay. t meal* of 633.33 per mo. Cell | Credit Mgr., Mr. Parks at Ml • 4-1*66, Harold Turner, rord, J 1861 TEMPEST, 4-door, auto- i -----—-m, heater. .^2 *••! whitewall t miles $2,95 OR 3 1 1958 8TUDRBAKKR HAWK. SHARP! Hew 'fli Car, radio, beater. 41.448.30. 468.30 down. 646 *4 P«r rambler SUPER MARKET EM 3-418* 6346 cwsmoran Rd- GIGANTIC Pre*Inv«tttoi^ • SALE All Cars Must Go!. AT Suburban-Olds j ’61 STARF1RK:- $3840 j’61 DODGE ...’... $2388 761 FORI) ... • • .$2295 ’61 COMET .v,....$2l98 '60 OLDS .... .. . ...$2345 ’60-CHEVV $2295 '60 FORD ...$1678' *59 RAMBLER . . . .$1087 ^9£HEVY_lL. ’59 OLDS ..... ’58 OLDS 98 ! J ’58 CHEVY ... 758 BUICK V... ’58 PONTIAC . j’57 FORD 500 . *57 CHEVY . . .| |*57 PONTIAC . ’57 PLYMOUTH . ’56 CADILLAC .] ‘56 OLDS ... ’55 CHRYSLER . All These Bargains and Many Others. Credit statements taken over the phone. Immediate delivery, 1 year warranty, ALL THiS-TAKES PLACE AT | Suburban-Olds I USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 ^$1692 ..$1888 ..$1369 .$1395 ..$1349 .;$1195 . .$ 888 /.$;888 ..$898 . $ 599 ..$10% ..$ 666 ..$ 697 excellent condition. Bargain at -56 MERCURY HARDTOP. WITH m hahv blue and white flnlan t Full power, *366. Full price! 63.15 weektot MARVEL MOTORS, 3*1 , Oakland Ave. 3384076, •57 MERCURY 4 DOOR RADIO, Heator, Power SteertM. Power Brakes. Fun Price 67*6- _Lloyd Motors. LhtoolnStorcuw41Utaet, 233 S. Saginaw. FE 3-8131. 1858 MERCURY 3-DOOR .RADIO, cury-Comct. 333 S. Saginaw. F* S59 METROPOLITAN CONVERT b,«- «?-*-l"^!vkil*i5 B-mk REPOSSESSION 1866 Plymouth Station wagon, power brakee and steering, Vt with automatic. Full price 6365 and papmenta of 623 a_ month. First 851 PONTIAC 4 DOOR HARD-top. Rydramatlc. ■ Radio. Heator. Whitewall*. While wlto -blue Insert. Your ‘61. 48. '63 for down payment Haupt * Pontiac Sales, Clerkston. M16 1 mil# north of U S. 16. MAple 5-54*6, Open Mon., ■ fete «V»»gSilSS' -.J£ONTiAlL-_!LA D1U AC 92!ff Jfetotau: mi *4.2135' BIG SAVINGS I RAMBLER 8E_.... . •67 METROPOLITAN sharp * ••r8gS®B^EWH^' ‘ ’56 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR . 6 >56 OLDSMOB1LE AUTO. I ■66 FORD PICKUP” _ 4 ■66 PLYMOUTH SEDAN 6 ■65 FORD WAGON 4 54 0LD8M0B1LE SEDAN 6 ’63 PACKARD AUTO ... 4 •66 CUSHMAN. «Cleao I - I RUSS JOHNSON LAKE ORION MY 2-2371 aMY 2-2381 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 3 . FB I-1333. IT CLEAN. Manning, 10 OLDSMOBILfc *6. Power Ing and brakes. Hydrnmatl 356. Bxc. condition. FE HASKINS Back To School Used Cars Low Down Payment for Son or Daughter With Co-Buyer OLDSMOBILB 3-door I ’61 CHEVROLET 316 4-DOOR SEDAN, with V8 Powergllde transmission, radio, heater, beautiful turquoise and Ivory finish! •58 CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERTIBLE! with VI PowergUd© transmission, radio* heater, solid gold finish! •59 FORD FAIRLANK 2-door with Chevrolet -PShtiac-Buick Dealer “15 Mlnutss from Pontlao OXFORD. MICH. OA i r, black and whits fin- Financing No Problem HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds CLEAN ■ Birmingham Trades WILSON . 1350 N. Woodward BIRMINGHAM I. PONTIAC SPORTS SEDAN' 8.-10. MAple •61 CATALINA 4-DOOR, STAND- DETROIT CARS At Detroit Prices 1950 CHRYSLER Like new. 4 new tires. Full Price......... 1951 FORD 3-door coupe, V-l. strclg Full Price -------- 1954 PLYMOUTH , 4 cylinder, straight stick. Pull Price ........ .$ 54 .-.$68- 1954 CHEVY 3-door herdtop. Radio FuH Trie ....... 1955 PONTIAC Radio, beets r, tutom Ful! Price ...... 1956 PLYMOUTH Straight stick, 6 cylinda Full Price ..... 1955 OLDS 3-door hardtop, Full Price..... 1953 CADILLAC On* owner. FuU power. i Full Price . 1956 FORD 6 cyl. straight Full Prjce . • $129 . .$184. .$187 ...$197 *Uek. Like t ..$227 SOUTHFIELD MOTORS 164 Eaat Blvd., at Auburn . FE 8-4071 „ Absolutely NO CASH NEEDED I .ittie as $6 a Month SHOP Sunday and.Monday BUY TUESDAY! Drive Safely Over the Week-end . I960 FORD FALCON >DOOR KeiUr, . •Undard tranimitslqu, leluia chroma, all hhia with vhitawall lire*, matching luta* lor trim. Nioa onaowncr oar. .Y...r......... $1395 I960 iPONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR SEDAN 1961 WILLYS , STATION WAOON (.heater, toer mile- blue finish. Just broken ' II hunting •< . $2495 Wblt^rall1^tlrra*too f* {) rives "like *d"*":.....,..,. $2095 1960 GOLIATII------ STATION WAGON Oermaif hull* Cylinder. 4 HP««di forward. AU whlit fin- JAWUKIK m*\‘*00nd.W;.. $ 995 1960 “MG" ROAP0TBR i'fpvvd tranami :anva* top and gray tea ............ $1995 1961 BUICK CONVERTIBLE h«*t*r, power steering . All white with blue - •.... 2— •rcgewui and blue top. whfiew • traded $2995 1959 BUICK 6-DOOR LSSABRB HARDTOP Redle. beater, turbine i «8ia ■toering a a 6 brakei .. $1995 1959 DODGE tVTON PICKUP rwarful 6-eylln o and heater lvln$aglokup^ besuti . $1295 2-DOOR HARDTOP • Rnlah wi y idtiU foi rtth whit© Interior “ * —and car . $ 805 many mUci In It todai1! ... $ 895 .................$ 795 1955 BUICK SUPER 3-DOOR HARDTOP m!»slon,h'*MW*rM^tl«ring srvd brakes. Tu4on* finish sno whitewall Urea.. Really nice! ................. $ 595 1955 BUICK 3-DOOR SPECIAL HARDTOP Radio, heator, automatic trane* miction, tu-ton© grey flntnh with black tlyct, Very clean Intlde. . $ 545 OLIVER Motor Sales 210 Orchard Lake-Road FE 2-9101 . FE 2-9101 Buick - Renault - Opel - Jeep - ■ * THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1961 v ^ NINETEEN1 ’s Television 'rPtogrmt, furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to changes without notice Channel 4-WWJTV Channel *—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 4:00 (2) Movie (coni.) (4) (Color) George Pierrot (9) Popeye 0:30 (2) Highway Petrol (9) Cowtown Rodeo 7:09 (2) Death Valley Day* (4) Pony Express , ... (9) Ted Lindsey 7:15 (9) Passing Parade 7:36 (2) Perry Mason (4) (Odor) Bonanza (7) Leave It to Beaver (9) International Law 0:00 (2) Perry Mason' (coot.) (4) Bonanza (cont.) i7) Lawrence V/elk (9) Ooseup (2) Checkmate (4) Tall Man (7) Welk (cont.) . (9) Closeup (coot.) #7oo^(2) Checkmate (amt.). (4) Deputy 0:30 (7) I 0:30 (9) Invisible Man (2) Have Gun—Will Travel (4) Nation’s Future, . (7) Boxing (cant.) ' , ' . (9) Explorations , 005 17) Make That Spare , 10:00 (2) Gunsmoke (4) Nation’s Future (cont.) (7) Roaring 20s (9) News 10:10 (9) Weather. Sports 10: *0' (9) Golf Tips 10:90 (2). Sea Hunt (.4) Panic — (7) Roaring 29s (cont.) (9) New York Confidential 11:00 (2) News (4) News Ronald Reagan, Betty Field. 11:UM2) Weather (4) Weather (7) Movie: “His GW Frt-4aT (1940). When a paper woman divoecel her managing-editor husband, * she wants to quit the paper marry another man. Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell, Ralph Bellamy, Gate Lockhart, Porter Hall. 11:90 (2) Sports (4) Sports 11:95 (2) Movies: L “The High and die Mighty” 0954). plane carrying 22 passengers —irdui Honolulu to San Francisco develops motor trouble. John Wayne, Claire Trevor, Laraine Day, Robert Sack, Jan Sterling, Phil Harris, Robert Newton, David Brian. 2. "A Note of Fear.” The girl friend of a convict scheduled to be executed refuses to supply him wifii an alibi. Jan Staling. 11:30 (4) Movie: “Golden Boy” (1939). A man who fought poverty in order to become a great violinist announces his decision folteCgtne a boxer. William Holden, Barbara Stanwyck. (7) * Movie: “King’s Row' (1941). The story of a town and the strange relationship* among inhabitants. Ann Sheridan. Rbbert Cummings, SUNDAY MORNING 1:55 (2) Meditations ■ 8:00 (2) Mass for Shut-ins ' 1:10 (9) Billboard 1:15 (9) Sacred Heart i:S0 (2) Christophers *' (9) Herald of Truth 1:55 (4) News 1:90 (2) Decisions - v (4) Ctmrch at the Crossroads (7) Understanding Our World (9) Temple Baptist Church 1:15 (2) To Dwell Together 0:30 (2) Detroit Pulpit TV Features By United SATURDAY _ PERRY MASON, 7:30p.m. (2) (reran). Perry- d e t e n d“s young t newspaper publisher accused of Slaying his double-crossing fiancee. CHECKMATE, 8:30 p.m.tt) (rerun). Julie London, Harry Guar: dino and Lynn Bari guest star in story ot ex-convict and his successful magazine editor wife. GUNSMOKE, 111 p.m. (2). Rerun ot story of callow Southern gentleman who insists on detending Kitty’s (Amanda Blake) honor. SUNDAY TIGER BASEBALL, 1 p.m. (2). Detroit ends a three-game series at Yankee Stadium. ISSUES AND ANSWERS. 4:30 p.m- (7). Secretary of Labor Goldberg discusses the employment picture. ' ACCENT, 5 p.m. (2). The poet-war revival of the arts in Italy is discussed by three Italian leaden In the literary and art fields. TWENTIETH CENTURY,'S p. (2) (reran). 'A documentary on the League of Nations. WALT DISNEY PRESENTS, 6:30 :p.m. (1) (rerun).,The first half of a two-part drama, “Moochie of Pop Warner Football.” MOBLEY TEMPLE SHOW, p.m. (rerun). “The Black Arrot a dramatization of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Rory of a boy In medieval England1. ED SULLIVAN, 8 p.m. (2) (rerun). Bobby Darin, Edith Plat Wayne and Schuster, Trade Adams and Jackie Kannon lead Ed’s, parade of guests- MYSTERY HOUR, 9 p.m. (4) (rerun). Walter Siezak stars in “Hie Inspector Vanishes." ____ HOL&AY LODGE, 9:30 pm. (2). Wayne ami Schuster get involvedTiTaome amateur theatricals. ASPHALT JUNGLE, 9:30 p.m. I (7) (rerun), An ex-boxer is offered!#: 98 (2) Accent a deal by loan sharks. * <0 U.S. Wants to Know EDITOR’S CHOICE, 10:30 p.m. I Sunday Funnies (7); Keith Funston, president of:1 the New York Stock Exchange, is guest. , (4) Catholic Hour Oral Roberts -0:45 (7) Americans at Wbrk SHOO (2) Thip to the Life f ‘ IPftWl DflVAV A (4) (Color) Davey and Go- 47) Faith for Today (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow 10:15 (4) (Odor) Diver Dan------ 10:39 (2) Felix the Cat * (7) Q. T. Hush 10:45 (4) Industry on Parade 11:00 (4) House Detective (7) Realm of the Wild (9) Christophers 11:15 (2) Little Lulu 11:80 (2) My Little Margie (7) Championship Bowling (9) African Patrol SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Camera Three (4) Seekers (9) West Point 12:30 (2) Voice of the Fans (4) Builder’s Showcase (7) Western Manhunt (9) Men of Annapolis 12:45 (2) Tiger Warmup 1:00 (2) Tiger Baseball . . (4) Journey 47) World-Adventure Serier-(9) Movie: “Only the Valiant" (1951). A Cavalry officer is blamed by his men for causing the death of a Junior . officer he sent* on a suicide mission against the Apaches. Gregory Peck, Ward'Bond. 1:39 (7) Movie: “Spirit of Notre Dame" (1934). A member of Notre Dafoe's football team becomes swell-headed when he Is put in a position to .make spectacular rouping plays. Lew Ayres, Ahdy De-vine, William Bakewell. !:00 (4) Captain Gailahr !:30 (4)-Mr. Wizard 1:00 (2) Sunday Showcase (4) Movie: "Destroyer’* (1943). A veteran of World War I re-enters the Navy as a chief boatswain’s mate. . Edward G. Robinson, Glenn Ford, Marguerite Chapman, Edgar Buchanan. ’ (7) Youth Bureau 1:39 (7) Citizen Sbldier (9) Movie: "The Story of| - -Seabiscuit11 <1949). An expert trainer takes charge of o—WJH. Form row uiw.l liulnal’fl Chur WJBK, WPON, 1:00 - WJR. BUI WWJ. itorrio- -. - wxvk. Dr. Bob Plato* CKLW four WorahlP Boo WJBK, Hfinna W. tow WPON, Wi J»hB l-utta, Mr* l!»0—WWJ. JNwa. Mu*k> WWJ. MiP*,. Moalo WXVZ. Radio Blbl# WPON, Bun. I •its—WJR, Album. Rallflon WWJ. N«w». MutlO . wxvk voloo of ProphHI CK|jp |j»b, JthrUtlon xvk Voloo ot P XW Mob. JBhrUt i UK, World tome —WJR, Potto: wWJ, Novo. Ro WXVf. Hoollhi wjrk sri WPON tmmonu *-,L WXVZ, ciirt* CKI.W, Nawa. WJBK, 0*1. I odor Baal, k SlotoU 10O WJR. Parer Faith WPON, Sun. Itaranada WXVZ, Sun. Brat, Nawa WCAR, ‘Nawa, Lo*»ft CKLW, Ron Knbwla* Nawa, Lo|on i—WJR. Montoranl Muale *ar Beotaboord 0:00—WJR. Hawaii Call* OKLW, N*wa, Knowlat WJBK, Sun. Soundt WXVZ. SundarBaat WPON, Bun. Baranodo WPON, Pont, 1 SttNIIAT EVBNINO, t oo—WJR. Nawa Forum WJH^,' Sunday So'fnda work Ntvo. to«*n wpoR r----------- ____... Bound id CKLW. Ron Kl 0:00—WJR.' .... ...X spootrum WJBX, Buijdor Bound* CKI.W. Nava. Tobr Dovld IlOO WCAR. Nava, Thomi WWJ. Monitor WPON, Clork Dorlo ■ OKLW, Radio Churob WXVZ, Sundor Bait 1:10— WCAR. N*v*. Thoi :ms-- THE WEEKEND WINDUP CKLW, WJBK. ......... WPON. Cltrk DrvIi WWJ* Mo* $isuv WJR, Rynu WWJ. New* ■ CKLW, Tlx ____ot noth Monitor ^ _______ 3— -Julot mt • WPON, Jorry Olotn. Ntwi WWJ. Nivi, Monitor f .Mi^WJR. Chop«l rfour CKLW. Gross« Pt. Bpt. WXYZ. Doc u men tor y WCAR. Rows WPON, Chuck Low!* WWJ, Now*. Monitor •iio^WJR, Loyrntn** WPO!< Boh Lork I0: 5 O’BRIEN i ^ ...__ . * V HEATING and « ^ SUPPLY CO. £ ^ 371 Yowkeit Rd. J MOSCOW W — Mass meetings throughout the Soviet Union are being staged tq.show. support! for the nation's military buildup,! the official Soviet news agency! Tass reported today. . Reports of the meetings were: featured in Moscow newspapers, with Pravda giving a full page to! articles and letters from readers protesting what was characterized as "the sinister plans for unleashing a new war hatched by{ Western imperialists." Headlines! said: “the U.S.S.R. is discharging! its duty to mankind." t General Motors DELCO Gas-and Oil Furnaces AIR CONDITIONING Rnid«nH«l Commercial G. M. DISCOUNT Oil * FREE ESTIMATES Authorised FHA Dealer Chandler HEATING CO. 4431 PARNELL OR 3-4492 OR 3-5632 A Clean Heating System is a Wise Investment It can prevent Tragic Fire Loss!. It pays for itself in fuel savings. Fires draw better in clean flues. Saves repair bills. A must to keep your Home clean. Wl DO NOT SILL OR RIPAIR—WI CLIAN ONLY KLEEN AIR FURNACE GLEANERS 1702 ALMA OR 1-0100 tv tubes ei*KIAl0IHCTIIC dBoNhakreew Amr of lb* Oakland County , 'Mow: Arnold » Stavor TV lA 2-3800 HH Min |M.. Nalhl . Auburn Radio fr TV FI 4-1055 H Ankara, PunUM •MT* TV Service IM 5-0511 C a V TV te*. FI 4-1515 Dslby Radio 5 TV FI 4-9802 HI Lafelyk, PuaUau Dob.: TV O Radio OL 2-4722 laa W. Valvmltr. auahuaur Hampton EUctric - FI 4-2525 Jackaon Applianca (MS Mate Hwy.. Lako TV , MY 2-5111 I|P« Orton MA 0-5205 Lattmdr Radio * TV OR 3-2052 aaaa a»>k>a.«. anjiw ruin. Mono lloctronlca MA 4-1300 tM W. «>IM Uku Dr., W.ltod Lk. Norton Radio O’ TV PL 2-3100 WU Van Djk«. Waiktaflaa ... Obot TV Sorvtco FI 4-4945 MM Waakath taka. r«alto» Pour Appliance IM 8-4114 11*1 Rich Radio O TV FI 4-0221 iaaa n. opdrk* an., Poatta# Stafanaki Radio » TV FI 2-0907 ust t. Haraa, raaUaa Sweat’• Radio e TV FI 4-1131 A! Roodino TV M* Jaalya B MY 1-1124 K4-, Lake Ortoa Talaviaion Sot*. Co. Ml 0-3500 Ml a. Maple, Blnalofhaar Walton Radio » TV FI 2-2257 *U B, Walton. r,aUaa WKC, In*., Sank* Dopt. FI 3*71.14 M w. Alter, Peatto* KJ:: THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, m SWER KEM-TOHE Assorted - Fresh, Lepn^ LUNCH MEAT GROUNDBEEF 39® ul •"£ 79® Lonlr Ktw (tka U **J*jjj* ^Sjflj M________KEM-GLO SUPER n * *— — ■ 04 7« *7* _ Those low price, available -Sai- NO LIMIT s^tSS&tS.lsr aaaK SISTERS’ MARKET 608 West Huron Street Open 7 Doys—9 A. M. to !6 f. M. At the Intersection of Baldwin and w Walton Blvd. Next to Atlas Market OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY 9 A M. to 9 P.M. S5«: «p»' 10 i. 3 ~ TELEPHONE PX *4*40 p BALDWIN AVINUI and WALTON »LVD. Tieii •wine • UQUORHifTAKE OUT , -■KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP SALAD DRESSING OPEN LABOR DAY Speciols for Mon., Tues„ Wed. For Your Labor Day. Picnic Farm Fresh For a Labor Day Treat Try Westowns' • Sirloin Tender Beef • Round • Swiss STEAKS ^69* Westown CENTER 706 West Huron BIER • WINE • LIQUOR SPECIAL for Sunday Monday. Tuesday Red* Ripe WATERMELON 3 * 1.00 3 SISTERS’ MARKET 608 West Huron Street ^-.- COUPON SPECIAL vl^y i SHIRTS LAUNDERED I | • Uelixc Finish flri i • 855535 C.llo- ”A Heap «' • , • ! ’ WITH COUPON™” --' - . for a Wee til o I ONLY — MON., TUBS.. WED. , Money" ■ ■ . I, ■■aw.eeape.w m mmm £ ' PRICED LOWER * THAN COIN . OPERATED MACHNES— Why Pip Motet SAVE 35% T routers Skirt* . . . Sweaters Dresses - . Suit*, Men's end Ladies' Overcoat* ........... Blankets 45 on Year .15 •55 Dry .40 Cleaning Bills! - Snow 'Suits __....... . 40 and up ."Quick" One Hour Sorvico It Needed. No "Intro Charge! 1IITDA1I econ o dry cleaners nUXfUN end SHIRT LAUNOERERS 944 WEST HURON ST. FE 2-0231 NEXT DOOR TO TRADE FAIR MtN< Cleanini In Ow PEPSLCOLA 8-o*. Bottle—Plus Deposit NEW ERA ,«*&**Vf POTATO CHIPS 69° Big 14-os. Pkg. ■These Low Prices Good Sundaythru Wednesday, Sept. 3 through Sept. 6.. . INCLUDING SUNDAY and LABOR DAY! PiiiiinrriTirhrimiBiiiirf SHOPPER STOPPERS For Monday Only Outstanding Values Especially Selected to Save You Plenty! Shop Monday and Save!1 TRADE FAIR’S 'BfGGEST MONEY-SAV/NG VALUES |For Sunday-Tuesday-Wednesday Only! OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. Closed,All bay Monday Labor Day Chrome 2-Siice TOASTMASTER TOASTER $I088 LEADER KITCHEN CORN BROOM T 79* U.S.A. * Utility Home or Anto RUBBER MATS 19* 89c Sailer ' Wire Reinforced RUSTIC CLOTHESLINE 66* too Feet CX PLASTIC m AIR MATTRESS 80-OZ. Silicone C or D Coll General Electric Melnor GLASS Ironing Board FLASHLIGHT BLANKET Oscillating Sprinkler J5'*4V Coverage . With Pillow PITCHER Pad and Cover BATTERIES Single Centre) —Twin Bed Site v\^ $139 Heavy •uty QO 66* 12 • 88* 00 00 fft Never I (A QQ Before Se Lew mm SWIM MASKS 66* SWIM FIMS99 LUNCH KITS t Pr. —With Genuine Thermos i SI 89 Bottle Complete for 1 7 TUBE AM-FM RADIO Pine Tune— " Volume— Choice of Colon $22*8 RUBBERIZED, WATER-REPELLENT COVER SLEEPING $08 BAGS 0 1 BLACK & DECKER 1 W DRILL WITH JACOBS CHUCK $ti88 ... Western- - Johnson's White Flyer STRIDE TARGETS WAX Box 135 $019 98c Valne Mm Fall Pint Size for SHOTGUN 12, 16 and 20 Gauge Target 39e SHELLS $229 Bo* BRASS DESK LAMP $229 .. ORTHO DUST RUST Buy 1—8-oz. Duster and Gat—FREE I-Pound DUST RUST S|49 Bitcell #100 Automatic SHAMPOO MASTER Bitsell22-o*. Shampoo D||IIQ i*1.39. T* Toast Master—Instant float AUTOMATIC HEATER $1088 Thermostat Safety Switch Blowsr Fan $19.95 Valus 12* RIVAL V Cjrind-O-Mat Food Chopper and Meal Grinder $JJ88 $10.95 Volut RIVAL TABLE TOP FRUIT JUICER $10.95 Value $IJ88 PERMANENT TYPE WASH AND CLEAN FURNACE FILTER ShmUp to t0 x 29 — S8C Tarh "The Bomb" Tracy" FOOTBALL OUTFIT 8g88 AUTOGRAPHED MODEL PANTS—JERSEY— HlLMET—SHOULDER . PADS—Complete TRADE^AIR OPEN SUNDAY 10 A. M. .to 3 L-M. □be STAINLESS STEEL! PATRIOT WARE by REVERE 1V2 QUART SAUCE PAN keet ropier end ev»»y—ceek. feedt falter. Awond.rlul cookware *»leel »r Severe, die maker* el world (amour Severe Were. Regularly $5.95 Other wonderful PATRIOT WAR! values! SAUCE JAN , 2-QUART SAUCE PAN *4« 10 INCH Complete SKILLET 2£ GENUINEPRESTONE PERMANENT ANTI FREEZE Limit e Cellona—Buy Haw! Sava! $16»04 SUPER KEM-TONE 3CDC V THE HOOTIM gONTIAq MXCHIQAy> SAfTOP^> sSt£3V|BER l im ~2Q PAGES ^wanBfWSCTgi ;ti $§£1 Dont CHah0e YputGlasses, It's the Picture NehraCondemns ked War Threat BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) Prime Minister Nehru told the conference of nonaligned nations today the Soviet decision to resume nuclear testing increased the danger of war. The Indian leader said he deeply regretted, the decision, saying it will permit other countries also to resume testing. All this, he said, “brings us to the brink of war/' Nehru was the main speaker today at the confer^ cnce, the biggest gathering of uncommitted nations since'Nehni himself began to advance the idea of non-alignment in World War II, President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, fresh from q .visit to Moscow, had said of Friday’s Soviet test explosion: “It is a shock for me and for you too. This shock shows! what a big danger humanity is facing.” ' Nkrumah urged ^President Ken-nedy and Soviet Premier Khrushchev id meet again and discuss their disputes. Plane Section Could Be Clue - Discover.Tail Pieces 300 Poet From Main Unit; Ponder Sabotage HINSDALE, IU. (UPI)-The battered tail section of a Trans World Airlines plane which ci persons to a fiery death in a suburban Chicago cornfield may provide an Important clue to the tragic accident, federal expert} indicated today. While Nehru and Nkrumah both j attacked the Soviet tests, their general approach to the |— crisis was different. Nkrnmah put emphasis fight against colonialism. No set- and slammed lata the earth near here early Friday. Ha 71 pasarn-gen aad crew of flw died la-sUaUy la a Minding Hash at light mat could ha aera as tar as t| miles away. Melvin Gough, Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB I safety bureau director in charge of the investigation, said he won t rut* out sabotage." Relatives Absent at Morgue, Page 3 300 feet from the main body of the wreckage. Gough said the location waa "significant,” but he declined to elaborate. overshadowed. He indicated he considered that Germany and disarmament are much more crucial, i ■ He received thunderous applause .DETROIT (API at the end of his 55-minute speech. Auto Workers Union proposed to URGES 'PERSPECTIVE’ Corp’ ** ,h*‘ “ We must look* at thing, in per- •«** ** Prom<« agree-spectiye," Nehru said. "Of curse merit which the UAW reached with we stand lor. anti-imperialism and j American Motors Corp. last week, anti-colonialism and we continue toj there waa a | the plane, which exploded with such force that aearhy residents feared aa atomic bomb had been unleashed, disintegrated In flight. Hueh a theory would explain In part why the tall section landed so far from the main bo}y.. It also could explain another mystery pussling CAB and FBI probers failure of the veteran crew to make any radio call despite the fact it waa in full direct * communication with Midway Airport’* radar departure controller and had been accepting his instructions. WON'T COMMIT SELVES But neither CAB.nor FBI would commit themselves to the sabotage or disintegration theories. In all airliner k the possibility i would not shy whether any evidence had born uncovered to Indicate the erash, worst In Chicago history and the third worst la U.S. history, had (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) [ In Today's Press I Now Job ! Kennedy eyes disarms-ment post (or Arthur Dean ! -PAGE 4. Space Secrets „ Doctors await contents of 1 Discover XXIX-FAGEp Thank You, No Oil changing soon to be 1 unnecessary—PAGE IE Big Prpblem * Why won’t people rifle buses?—PAGE I. Officials Seem Confident US. Will Resume Tests PROM OUR NEWS WIRES WASHINGTON — Russia’s explosion of a nuclear test device was expected today to hasten a decision by President Kennedy on resumption of U.S. nuclear weapons testing. Well informed officials now consider it likely Kennedy will make a decision* early next.week and that It will be to start up U.S. testing again. The last U.S. test explosions were held hi the fall of 1958. It was also learned that the administration is considering some modification of the secrecy policy covering this country’s nuclear weapons arsenal. The reason: To give the American people and the world a better idea of the amount of atomic force DOWN IT CAME — This scene through a rain-distorted wind, shield was the typical view of drivers during the damp August which continued into early September yesterday. The west side Pantile ;,tii fbst# or North Saginaw Street slips In and oti^tof focus between swipes of wiper blade, giving a fun-house ntirror view, ot a summer available to the United States for its awn -defense and the defense of it allies. The Kremlin was silent about the Soviet atomic explosion, but elsewhere across the world the blast resounded in anger, resentment and alarm. Up It Believe Part of Big Bomb Exploded war and peace la possible unless colonltlhun is eliminated, -f the African lender declared. Nehru, lecturing the delegates! riAsks GM to OKiG/oomy, Gray Profit Sharing Kept Area By MAX E. SIMON isideftd plenty high at the Did August skies seem especially 2.92 incftds. ’ ^ . I (Even more rain was recorded [by the Weather Bureau at De-roit , ,i, Rain pelted the Pontiac area on|Metropolitan Airport. The Itoreau The Unitedly of Augus(.r 31 dAyg Three oth- recorded 5.12 inches of rain, 2.5 UAW Wonts Car Giant Accept Agreement jcioudy, god gray: Reached* With AMC wcre ers were cloudy or misty. this particular crisis, what will u do so/but th« point arises that. at j ** by UAW Frwtdaul Walter V. j Keutber as the Rig t*i»t — is wel( to GM, Ford and Chrysler — be-remember todsy that everything | KHn their first weekend round of j ' we have I contended »«Mn»tend | wgMtelton* under a union threat YellOWStOne PaTK |£V6lllflQ jhOWBfS inches more than nbrmal, tut shy ■ of its record 7.51 inches which fell The drenching was way above l Augu„ o( 1M0) Picnickers and swimmers Precipitation totaled 3.55 inches, Central Asia ns reported by the United States Friday. Bid observers in Moscow expected a Kremlin .confirmation at any time. The state-controlled Soviet press built up a tremendous propaganda* campaign in an ap-effort to prepare Jhe Russian people for an official announcement. TO INDICT RUSSIA RH Hi .. . [The White House planned to m- turc dip to the month’s low' olLSI dipt Russia before the United Neon the morning of August llth. Ar.d ; ti0ns .for its action, and delegates the high that afternoon was a to the Belgrade conference of slightly chilly 72. There was another side to thej weather picture; however. testing of nuclear weapons la yearl has triggered speculation H was Aug. 1243. Outdoors thusiasta .found a new; problem confronting them, however. The week«jftj saw the tempora- considerably higher than Pantiac'shng for the county's beaches August average of 2.6ft tnchgs. It flakes three ofthe month's was also higher than August total weekends, rainfall last year—which was coo-1 The only completely sunny week- still continue to struggle against rial Uni and the rest—«r by this ert- .. strike GM at I* a m. Wedm. . day unless U gets s pattern set \JjelUQed DV SllOW, ting contract there. ! 3 * At American Motors, hourly- Strong Winds [rated, union-represented produe- waiting tigfi workers will get, in effect. 15 By the Associated Press per cent of profits, after the firari Heavy snow fell in Yellowstone * * * 10 per cent is set aside for stock- "The danger of war comes near- holders. j -r and nearer by the recent de- f , * * * 1 ■ision of the Soviet government to Ten per cent will be in cash start nuclear tests. I m nbt in a 8W| fjve per cent in AMC stock. position to know all the facts un- . . _____, deriving the decision, but I know »• <*"'“TTf ‘h* (his derision make* the situation much more dangerous, and there- will attempt to »•« * * tore I regret it deeply because It tract at GM. the* try to get Ford may lead to other countries start- Chrysler to meet (I. ing teats. j Ford and Chrysler also > were ‘Aside from nuclear fallout, all j holding general sessions today due this brings you much closer to ing the no-letup bargaining will thcr verge of war." News Flashes day to France, Britain and the United Mates on the Berlin crisis. The contents were not ie public, but It they replied to notes the Western powers de- I Uvered Aug.' td. VIENTIANE, Laos (l’PI> — j Communist rebel forces atinoked two government-held enclaves [ In Northern law nt dawn today, ; a royal Laotian government | said. the UAW. * * I960.- GM s before-taxes profits, which the UAW proposes to split up. totaled $2,038 billion. In its 1960 fiscal year. AMC had before taxes profits of $105 million. GM employs approximately 325.000 hourly rated worker*; AMC 23,060. National Park and cool air Into the hot and humid sections east of the Rockies today, setting off heavy showers. Six Inches ot snow, with strong winds, forced the closing of the east and north gates to Yellowstone Friday night. Six Inches ot snow fell ot Dunraven Paso, between Canyon Village and Tower Falls, and two at Sylvan Pans, elevation I.1M feet, Inside the east gate from Cody. Wyo. The north gate leads to Red Lodge, Mont. Roads throughout the park were coated with ice and snow, the Wyoming Highway Patrol reported, and, were generally impassable. Winds were up to 50 miles per hour, felling trees on the upper passes and knocking out telephone lines to the east gate ranger station. May Visit Us Again Yes, there’s a .chance of evening showers once again. The prediction for Pontiac area is showers or thundershowers this evening, *mj| scattered showers or thundershowers likely Sunday. The t weatherman said temperatures will hit a mild low of 72 tonight and roach near 84 tomor-fhe outlook for Monday throughout the Lower Peninsula is mostly fair and cooler. From ItoU a.i II the same time nils meriting .8 ‘ >f an Inch of rain fell en the, tree. Morning southwesterly winds at 9 miles per hour will become 18 to 25 jm.p.h. this afternoon and tomorrow, diminishing somewhat tonight. The lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was fllHj degrees. The mercury bad climbed to 76 at 1 p.iti. There ‘wpA, I* sunny days ' i the l* relay and three The month’s high temperature was 9ft—on Aug. 9 and Aug. 31. Rains were respsnsiftlt tor. keeping the month's aVerifge M8Jt tem- perature Several. iegfees bitlow ormal. The average’ high last month was 1.6 degrees. That’s low considering that the normal August average high over the yeairs has been.88-' degrees. . The month's average low was 62.6 degrees, and the average dian temperature 72 degrees. Truck Lights On as Reminder to Holiday Drivers LONDON (AP) — The United States and Britain have derided against resuming nuclear weapon teats for the tips, being, qualified diplomats reported today. nations reacted with stunned protests to the Soviet explosion.- Scientists in Europe said detection of the Soviet blast by long-range American equipment indicated the Soviets were preparing the test even while they were negotiating a test ban treaty in Geneva. that Soviet scientists tested a component for one of the superbombs about which Premier Khrushchev has boasted. The White House announcement Friday described the blast as "in the intermediate range.", This would be, according to U.S. scientists, a blast with a force ranging from the equivalent of 20,000 tans of TNT up to 500.000 tons. U.S’. experts do not consider the size of the latest Soviet blast slgnilioant. They said an explosion in the Intermediate range could be used to test components essential to the McceMhd development of used to trigger the high yield blasts. MAY BE STEP Another theory, expressed by Dr. Ralph Lapp, is that the Mast may have been a step in the development of a super warhead for a Minuteraan-type intercontinental ballistic,missile. Lapp*,a nuclear physicist who is not associated with the government but makes a dose study of nuclear , weapons, speculated the [Russians may have exploded the WASHINGTON lights arc burning day and night on the nation's .highways this week with * mobile message to help keep holiday motorists alive-, The American Tracking Association Is sponsoring n “Truck Lights On for Safety" program President Kennedy was in Hy-annis Port. Mass., for the weekend, but he kept remote control tabs on the nuclear situation re- device before or shortly after they suiting from Russia’s test. I announced their intention to re- He flew to his Cape Cod home j I after the announcement of, the So- UPlt — Truck i viet explosion and a round of conferences on where the United States goes from here now that Russik has decided to end the three-year moratorium on nuclear tests. - ttou* driving. The Industry lnv|tq4 ail motorists [to }otn In carrying the safety slogan by turning on their head itail lights! WASHINGTON W — Four squadron* of U.S. FtliO Jet fight- | or attack ptaaes—totaling .about ! Tt aircraft—will fly to Europe to i Join in a NATO exercise. The | Defense Department announce- 1 ment today said the Jets would | participate In Exercise Checkmate, scheduled for Sept, tt through 14. Trafic Death Toll 989 , EAST LANSING ID - There have . been 989 persona killed in traffic accidents id Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by stale police showed today. The total for the same period test yeurj was 971. Japan Hits Soviet Test* TOKYO (D — Japan lodged u strong protest with Soviet Russia today on the Kremlin’s derision to resume testing of nuclear weapons. • T. AlUnS I l anna "Buck to Skstlns" Mltty St thr Boll* ilium Skstlni Rink. 440 W Huron (IfJWi Scut I tl J pm Old Alumni Mpootsllv l.lrom, run lor silt 194? 1955 1915 1950 Officials In WasMagtoa ladt- agatest Russia through the sume nuclear .tests. The Mast, Lapp told, may have been a test ef a trigger « aama-sw other component of a t or S HM- He explained, "with the Ameri can U2' spy plane, activities already known, and he Samos tspy-in-the-sky satellite pending. The Russians are no longer secure with their huge liquid-fueled ICBMS. . „ . . _ , . , . “Therefore I believe the Rt»- They caUed the Sovtet «f®»H,|an generals are now convinced a flat defiance of the 1958 U-N.L^ have tq replace their General assembly resolution “Of* force-yield ICBMS with smaller ing a halt to nuclear tests whUeh^ Hke wr Minuteman - but treaty negotiations were in pro-thty inKnd to .m, them with gross. The next assembly sessionj# warhead.” begins Sept. 19. j ^pp iai<) he estimates the war- AGGRESSION THEME heads on Russia’s big liquid-fueled , The Soviet press and radio were [ICBMs range up to 8 megaton. | filled with statements aimed at ' —--------------~o-------- m his truck, parked at Bagley Street and Rockwell Avenue. A camera and other Item* with combined ’ value of $125 were stolen from his car, parked at 287 Irwin Aye., John E. Phillips, 478 Midway Ave., reported to Pontiac police early today. In the design of the U>*. AM Force Academy. Another Saarinen design und : construction I* the Dulles lnte|| national Airport near Waahlngto, j D.C. He also completed before lift illness the design for the CBS skv scraper headquarters In New Yortj He recently announced that i would transfer hla archltectmf firm at 1300 N. Woodward Av| Birmingham to Hamden, Coi# this summer. J Survivors wishing to make memoriaL* send them to Yale Unlvl Saarinen's name.