PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, MONDAY; AUGUST 8, 1960-B0 PAGES Thw Wnathar THE Horn* Edition 118th YEAR Ike Offers Bulky Program 1 but Presses for Economy Leave Katanga, Hammarskjold Tells Belgians Calb Quick Solution in tho Congo Matter o£ Peace or War * UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)—Dag Hammarskjold, warning that the world faced the issue of “peace or war,” called today for immediate and' unconditional withdrawal of Belgian forces from the Congo, including secessionist Katanga Province. The U.N. secretary-general delivered the warning in a hard-hitting speech at the opening of an .urgent meeting of the 11-nation U.N. Security Council on the Congo crisis. He had asked for the meeting. “Itoould even say that the immediate conclusion of the Congo problem it a question of pence or war," he declared. He called on the council to spell oat In a resolution that the withdrawal ohenld apply to Ka-taaga "and to all parts of Katanga/* ^Elaborating on the crisis faced by'the United Nations, be added: "I do nof hesitate to Say that the speediest pomj&t — I would evert say immediate — achievement of suA~a solution of the Congo problem is a! question of peace or war, and when saying peace or*# I do not limit my perspective to the Congo. "A- delay now, hesitation now, effort to safeguard national or group interests now in a way that would hamper the U.N. effort, would risk values immeasurably greater than any of those which such action may be Intended to protect •This applies to sH parties, first el aft to the eae which the Security Osondl has Sees Possibility of'Modest'Hike Hammarskjold’s . port to the council was delivered as various proposals were under " consideration aimed at getting U.N. troops into Katanga Province. Premier Patrice Lumumba asked the council to aend. a 10-natkxi observer team Into tbd Congo to ensure withdrawal of Belgian foroes. * Hummahskjold charged that a A Novi woman known «s “The Judge,” who police say is posing as an attorney and granting “quickie” and cheap divorces was being sought today. I ; * * An order lira warrant charging Hazel McCardle of J6T85 Wixom Rd. with obtaining money under false pretenses was issued today by Assistant Prosecutor Richard P. Condit. Condit said a Pontiac woman, who supposedly received a “divorce” from her husband for *100 from Mrs. McCardle, discovered there wan .no such divorce entered la Why*e County Circuit Court when she ehecked, Mrs. Lorraine Cumhgbsm, 33, has since remarried. ' 4 . SHORTLY AFTERWARD She married Kimble Farley If 73 S. Francis Ave. shortly after the fake decree was given her, State Police records show. Farley ia a driver for, the Truckaway Corp. Detective Thomas McPhalt, who Investigated Mrs. Omateg-hum’s complaint before the le-suance of the warrant order, ■aM a check of the State Bar of has sprang ap both la and sat-side the Conge against UJL efforts to restore order. Then, In what appeared to be a reference to harsh crittehm of him appearing in the Soviet press, he added: , ‘‘This dangerous tendency 01 sowing distrust has not been without support from other quarters outside the Congo. ""to to dr “It does not help the U. N. effort if it has to liveUdder a threat of any one—or more-contributing government taking matters toto Iff —or their—own hands, breaking away from the U. N. force and put- suing a unilateral policy.” He rendaded the council that there were articles In the II. N. charter enjoining all members to carry eat Security CauacU de- The charter says such measures may Include "complete or partial Interruption of economic relatione and of nil. sea, air, portal, telegraphic, radio and other meana of communication, and the severence of diplomatic relations." He made dear that he wanted IHgton troops withdrawn from the base of Kantian as well as from the rest' of Katanga Province. He a*U tiwrtr presence “now if1 the main cause of danger” and their withdrawal must be speed? complete and unconditional. Arab Diplomats M««t CAIRO lAP)—Diplomats of nine Arab nations met in a special sea-sion of the Arab League Council today to-discuss Moslem Iran’s recognition .of Israel. KATANGA DELEGATES — Members of the Katanga delegation to the U. N. meet newsmen on their arrival In New Tfotfcto give the Security Council their side of the re^nt eruption in the Congo. From left they are Joeeph Yav, former . AT rbWii minister of economic affairs of the Congo government; Jean-Baptiset Kibwe, head of the Katanga delegation; and Jacques Masangu, former vice president of the Congo. * Want to Know About ‘Quickie’ Divorces, Police Hunting Novi's Gal Judge' Wants All Foreign Aid Cash Made Available, With More for Latins .WASHINGTON (AP) — President Eisenhower laid before Congrtos today a bulky program ranging from foreign aid to medical help for the aged but warned against reckless spending schemes. "This truth we must take to heart: in good times, we must at the very least pay our way,” he said in a special message sent to the Senate as it resumed its election-year session. The message also will be wait- RUNNING MATES AT CAPITOL - Sen. John Kennedy of Massachusetts, the Democratic presidential nominee, and hit vice presidential running mate Sen. Lyndon Johnson of Texas pose outside the Capitol , today Just before the Senate SP HtMU. convenes lor a post convention session. Kennedy returned to Washington Sunday night after a three-week stay at his Hyannis Port, Mass., summer home. 1 Large Crowd Sees Senate Reconvene Mlehlgaa office hi no attorney by the nine of Hmsel McCardle registered In the state. A toll report of the complaint [will be made to the county and state ban, Capdit said. Condit said Mrs. Cunningham! paid Mrs. McCardle 350 dh Aug. 23, 1956 when the tulae petition lor the divorce from her husband, James Floyd Cunningham, was supposedly filed in the Wayne Court. . The balance ef |H was paid (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ing for the House when it reconvenes a week hencev In the face of Democratic, and some Republican, criticism that toe nation's defenses are growing relatively weaker in the face of Communist threats, the President insisted U. S. military second to none and will be kept that way,” Saying he was taking measures to Improve the armed forces’ readiness, be sold these may ne- 4-H Fair Opens Tuesday; Parades, Contests to Roll livestock and colorful exhibit will begin to fill alO-lacre area at M24 and Walton roads tomorrow with some 150 4-H members at the helm as the I960 Oakland [ County 4-H Club.Fair opens. The fair, one' of the county's outstanding events, will run through Satur>-----—----------- day. \ Tuesday is reptirqtion day. You! Drowns in Area Lake Help Comes Too Late to 14*Year-Old Boy at Wolverine Village A 14-year-old Royal' Oak boy drowned in Wolverine Lake Sunday afternoon as his parents watched helplessly from shore. The victim, Gary 8vafys, was attempting to swim to • raft From 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. the animals and exhibits will roll ini At 7:30 the evening show will begin with a huge livestock parade around the fair grounds. Highlights of the evening will be the selection of this year’s 4-H king and queen, said Keith Middle-ton, president of the 4-H Leaders' Council. Following this, the a a an el freckle contest wUI get underway and the bey or gfaf Judged to have the meet freckles will become this year’s freckle chomp. ■Another colorful part Iplf the first night program will be a horse parade. PARADE DAy Wednesday Is really parade day. Everyone will get into the act with a big 4-H parade through-downtown Pontiac. His parents, ,/ Mr. Oakland \mz i Drowning St., sa Ton in *60 yards 9 beach drive, Last Year te Bate: 11 toe La for hal Antique cars will be carrying some of the participants. But, for today, the eyes ef all county 4-H'ers are focused on tomorrow when they end the roaUttsof their labor will be hi ftowmansmjKqoRteats will feature Thursday’s Dairy Day. Linda Grinage, Michigan's Dairy Princess will appear at the nhsjhat day also. Manager of this year’s fair is Richard Daly of Romeo, to '>..dr ★ About $5,000 has been spent on improvements to the buildings and grounds for this year, Bleachers have been set 19 to hold come 2,400 spectators and the exhibit halls and horse barns are sparkttajg with a new coat af paint. The young exhibitors will tiave about tour times as much water In mtittary personnel-sad money. If foods are needed, he said, he will ask tor them. But national security demands congressional action (00, Eisenhower said, and called tew appropriation of the toll amount authorized for foreign aid. He noted the appropriation bill for the mutual security program, as it now stands, is half a billion dollars under this. \ DEMANDS RESTORATION ’The nation's security and our inescapable interest in a stable world demand that these amounts be restored,” Eisenhower said. The President also told the legislators he wants: 1. A 100-mill ion-dollar increase in flexible foreign aid 'funds “to keep America poised for sudden developments such as those in the Congo where a U. S. airlift and other efforts were needed suddenly and critically.” The House arid Senate foreign aid legislation now pending would grant Elsenhower 150 million dollars for this contingency fund. L A SOO mllllon dolUr authorization by Congress tor a. program ef AM to Latte America. He asked approval tor this toad by the time tite once of the ■tarts la Bogota. CMumMs, Sept, i 3. Advance approval for a food-for-the-hungry proposal which he said will be presented to the United Nations General Assembly in September. to work with this year, tififkks to} Eisenhower said this will be a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2> WASHINGTON (AP)—A big crowd —keenly conscious of the election-year drama—turned out today to see the Senate convene with the Republican and Democratic presidential nominees in the chamber. Spectators jammed the. galleries long before the 11 a.m. hour (Pontiac time) 'when Vice President Richard M: Nixon, the GOP nominee, banged his gavel to open the session. Sen. John F.*~ Kennedy of Massachusetts,' the Democratic nominee, was sitting in his regular plape in the back row. Up front, in an aisle seat, as Senate Democratic leader, was Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, his partySs vice presidential nominee. Spectators overflowed the public galleries, otanding and olttlng on the step* ns well ns crowding into every nvailnble seat. iWjlrst onto* of business, after thl opening prayer by the Senate chaplain, was the swearing in of Quentin N. Burdick as a Democratic senator from North Dakota. Burdick won over Republican Gov. John E. Davis in a special election to fill the former seat of Republican Sen. William Langer. Johnson, In getting the proceedings under way, addressed Ninon In the chair la the customary way as “Mr. President.'’ The Democratic vice presidential nominee noted the swearing in of Burdick gave the Democrats 66 of the 100 senators. Johnson spoke of Burdick’s election as having brought President Eisenhower around to his “most recent views,” a suggestion that the President had shifted on some matters since the North Dakota election. Another of Johnson's comments was that the Senate is “not going to get into a political catfight" in its consideration of legislation. Immediately after Burdick’s swearing-in, Johnson suggested the lack^af a quorum and the clerk began calling the roll. During the reti^all, Johnson stood by his seat shaking hands rith senators. Waterford Tot Hurt in Two-Story Fall A 14-month-old Waterford Town, ship boy was in critical condition today in Flint’s Hurley Hospital with seven head injuries he fell headfirst out of * second-story window yesterday. * ... * * The boy. John E. Bane, is the )n of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bane, 1718 Casa Lake Rd. * Or * State police said the fall occurred at the home of the hay's grandparents in Lapeer. The victim was transferred to Hurley from Lapeer General Hospital.' Biddle House Dedicated MACKINAC ISLAND 1*1 — The historic Biddle House, dating bade to 18th Century French fur trader days, was dedicated as a Mackinac Island monument Saturday. The home, built by the Edward Biddle family in 1780, was restored by the Society and the Federal Association of Industrial Architects. idkin$handi Public Piques Elder Powers Tearfully Says People of U.S. Already Have Convicted Son RICHMOND, Va. (UP!) — Oliver Powers, father of imprisoned U2 pilot Francis Powers, said today he felt the American people already have convicted hits son of Espionage charges. “Everytime they speak of the bey they speak of titan as a spy,” said Powers wtth tears te Ms eyes at a news conference prior to Ms departure from Richmond ter Washington. “I believe thftt is wrong,” he said. The 55-yeerold Norton, Va., rtioe repairman and his wife wilt join Norton businessman Sol Cury and Dr. Lewis K Ingram, Mrs. Powers’ physician, later today te Washington. Powers said he felt the people of this country had already Judged his sea guilty at spying and “sentence will be pawed by Khraabcbev.’’ - Young Powers goes on trtel te Moscow Aug. 17. his 31st birthday, espionage charges. NAME HARD TO The father said be W a “print- * ed” copy of the alleged confession ■on to espionage charges brought by the Soviet government after the U2 pilot waa shot down deep te Russian territory last |i(ay In Today's Press Fidel Seizes Most U.S. Cuba HAVANA HI Armed CubaniWeatem Hemisphere. He asserted I be interference in the hemi-mWttemen were in full control of the Soviet Union's offer to defend sphere’s internal affairs, mart of the American property te Cuba against aggression could not Cube today following its national!-" r Fldel Castro’s regime. The revolutionary government’s new retaliation against the United came only a few hours before the latend’s Reman Catholic hetrarehy warned against “the te-1 creasing advance of communism ia otir country.” , It ton* the church’s first official criticism of this steadily increasing Influence of the Cotnmunirt bloc on the Castro regime. million; Texaco refinery, about 4* to M million; Sinclair Oil Cooperations, about Halted FraU Co- properties, about 4# million; and 3* American-owned sugar mills worth about tM million. Some of these plants had been under Cuban government control far some time but had not been formally expropriated. Castro said that the seizures were te retaliation for “economic aggression” by the United States —and made plain he meant President Eisenhower’s slash te U. S. imports of Cuban sugar. Hqagpyer, the seizure decree did not extend to American banks. Mining Go., the Nicaro Nickel Processing Corporation, and other smaller American enterprises worth about 300 million in all. But Castro indicated these may be taken over, declaring “we can still take a few thihgk more away from them (the Americana).” The exproportated property wHI be paid far wtth SO-yeur bends at ft per cent Interest, (Continued on Page Col. 3) . bell. Powers sate the document here , a signature “but (be name was * w small you could hardly tel whose It was. “Personally, I don't believe ft was that of my aoo,” he said. Powers, his wife, Qiry and Dr, Ingram will leave New York Thursday for their trip to Moscow.. “We hope to accomplish probably roan than we will. We fetes te bring Mm back Hup ctm,” rowers sold. _____________■ "V. Tuesday Sounds Nice With Less to Bother Us The hot, sticky and muggy weather we had. Sunday is dueto change. Tuesday will be foir and cooler with a high of 74 to 78. Winds will diminish tomorrow to 6 to 12 mp h. Total precipitation ever the At 9 a.m. winds were westerly to 10 m.p.h. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a very alight cfeance of showers. A low of 55 to 60 is expected, the Weather Bureau reports. The lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. was 64. At 1 pm., the reading was 82. EMU Frosh Rolls Ris« YPSILANTI (UP!) — Easton Michigan University reported ft has admitted 1,600 new students tor the fall semester. At the same time test year, new entrants totaled 966. They Pay for Toll TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) Five youths arretted tor ringing a replica of the Liberty BeO on the state capital grounds at 1 a.m. were handed their punishment to shining up the big metal TWO TlU PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST «, 1880 Wrtwfarf Township BnamBatM _!Mm t Group Will Excnmifio sideration to banning aU parking rmUV Ink* Dnrid Ptnn along Maple IVOM should be fhr-LOO,ey “**• KOOa r,Cln en by the City Commission. Police Chief Ralph W. Maxley report# to-Results of the Cooley Labe road day in a survey of traffic con-dump investigation will be cst-gestk». amined at the Waterford Township In m attached report from Fire Board meeting tonight. Chief Park H. Smith on the prob- mUk- * * * i»m» of his department in getting Litt week 10 West Bloomfield through the caweation, he also Township residents appealed to agks for the earliest consideration the Board to dean op what they in relieving the traffic tie-upe. called a 'Tat ideated health men- ^ are to be received *£*-" by the City Commission at to- We at Blaomfleld residents night’s meeting. A proposed street lighting system for all lots In the Otter Hills Subdivision, a consideration for blacktopping Lotus Lake drive and a requested preliminary plat ap-, proval tor Rainbow Lake Subdivision Na. 2 will also be reviewed tonight Bagwell Asks 2-Party Bia . , ,-----:-----—:—— -——-------------------------pump Results Meep Hands if State Ticket DBm*, GOP to Chooso in Aug. 27 Conventions; Jtodty low Fight Flores m D. Bagwell, Republican iflftacratic leaders to bade Re-pemcanaponsored civil rights leg* isMteu in a "bipartisan agree- Bagwell sent telegrams to Gov. Williams and Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John F. Kenney, asking support of legislation offered by New York Republican Sen. Jacob J. Javits and Kenneth B. Keating. -•Mb Is too time tor metis Op affairs at bon __ promised to keep hands off to any rivalry in the Republican Pasty’s selection of a state ticket. * * it * Republicans are expected to stage contests for the offices of Attorney general, auditor general, state treasurer and secretary of state, while the Democrats, bp to now at least, have indicated they will rely an their incumbents. Both parties will make their nominations at state convention Aug. 22 -r the Republicans in Detroit and tile Democrats at Grand Rapids. x\* ★ UK ' The Detroit Real Estate Board baa in efleqt, tossed the 'controversial state antibias real estate ordinance into the political campaign. TO POLL CANDIDATES Hie board said it would poll all i sadWitrs for office on bow they stitid on It and then turn the re-■3b ever to home owners. The ordinance, proposed by the State Corporation and Securities Coqpmtekn. forbids brokers and salesmen from discriminating on race, religion and other grounds la real estate transactions. Opponents of the ordinance claim it Infringes on a home owner’s personal and property rights. State Sen. Charles R. Feenstra (R-Grand Rapids) Jias announced plans to test the ordinance in the cowls. Pemstra eald he will attorneys in an effort to keep the rue inoperative until the Legislature cm act on the matter. Hie rule, which is to go into effect A*. 14, was approved by the Securities Commission after an investigation Into the uncalled "point system’’ used to rate prospective ba$e buyers in Grome Potato. Demit. Kep. AJvki M. Bentley (E-Mlek.) prspssii that widows and swvtvwu sf American air nta shot down by “ ft || given Ml wart Bentley, the Republican nominee for U. S. aenator, said "As tar aa I’m concerned a state of war has fHpsi between us and the Soviet Union tor at least 10 years.’’ * * ’* Bentley said IS Air Force planes have been shot down in or near Russia and 90 crewmen have been either kited or listed as missing. He said the airmen left 50 widows besides other dependents who would not receive the benefits because "Technically we are not at wjr witoJtHtel*.” - -- Security Costs Climb BONN — Social - security costs now average about J154 a 'ypr for West German citizens compared with $57 in 1960. Hie., total ■m-isi . security bQl will increase by U per cent this year, to a total of $8,300,000,000. BEGINS CHURCH ADDITION — Pastor of the First Baptist Church of Birmingham, the ReV. Dr. Homer J. Armstrong, with shovel, broke ground Sunday for the start of the church’s $275,000 education building. The church is at 300 Willetts St. Taking part in the ceremony were, (from left) Famo L. Gram, moderator; Daniel Brown, trustee; Earl Bramblett, general chairman; the Rev. Armstrong; Robert Critchfield, construction chairman, and Louis Crooks, deacon. The addition, to be completed in tarty 1961, will house all children and youth departments of the church.- Soviets Ship Cargo on Sly? U.S. Magazine Cftts Mysterious Deliveries to Cuba Since June 28 Harrelgon Seeking Agreement Leaun Harrelson, president of Pontiac Teamsters Local 614, said today he refused to call an area* wide strike in the layoff of 57 mem-hers of Pontiac’s trucking industry. 'After the men lost their Jobs, some of them demanded a strike," Harrelson reported. WASHINGTON (AP -The magazine U. S. News A World Report said today Soviet ships have been delivering mysterious cargoes to Havana since June 28. In a copyright article, it added that since June 18- certain areas of the interior, Stfoh as the large Zapata swamp on the south coast, have been put off limits. The number of identified Soviet technicians who have reached ___^..Cuba through normal channels has . . •puWtifc HFA "***, the fDjj \ ill cohfer wift article added, aril at Mast 200 He saidhaTs'seeking agreement technicians and advisers known to he from the Soviet bloc are now in Cuba. Orates deliveries by the ships, the article said, ara large enough to hold parts for airplanes or rockets and "get very special care.” "Cuban longshoremen are not allowed to handle them. They ara unloaded by the Russian craws. "Bat what good would a strike have doae? It weuMa’t have lasted legally live minutes and It weulda’t have gotten the med back their Jobs.’* Harrelson said he was preparing a bid to the Michigan Motor Carriers Employers Association, which meets tomorrow morning in Detroit. under which the 57 men — drivers, mechanics and dock worker* who Ike Submits Program, Warns Against Waste Cuban Militia Grabs Most of U.S. Property (Continued From Page One) he decree said, bat there was loabt whether any payments The Weather §®@pBFi MW hi >uH«l , _ Loewi tempontsr* wrwWtai I MAII> b : Wind WlWttT • - l* ■ aiw"wU awn el T:«* ■.*. J5 »Gw fuwdet a » m» « SSSJSSiMBSlStS: Beaahea TwwwUum .....w M ».m.. With sarcasm, Castro repeated an earlier announcement that the money would come from one-fourth of the value of all Cuban sugar bought by the United States excess of 3 million tons yearly a premium price of 5.4 cents a pound. Eisenhower's cut dropped U.S. sugar purchases from Cuba below 3 million tons year, and continuation of this policy would leave empty the reimbursement fund tor American property owners. Another American property so far untouched is the big naval bate at Guantanamo, which the United States holds by a 1934 treaty. But Castro delivered a veiled threat of an attempt to oust the Americans from there. He told the cheering throng at the Havana Baseball Stadium: 'Cuba does not consider itself tied to the United States by any commitment, including warlike and military pacts.” b»r—Partly cloudy. AP nwMu COUNTED OUT — Luis Firpo. Argentine heavyweight boxer of the 1920s died yesterday at the age of 65. He is shown here when in the prime of his boxing' career. He was known as the WUd Bull of the Pampas in 1924 when this photo was taken. No Strike for Idle Teamsters lost their jobs when Great Lakes Express Co. shut down its Pontiac operations July 22 andshifted them to Detroit—would be merged tiw Detroit operation with full seniority rights. admitted he saw it Harrelaoa admit! > chance taata the canister LocM899,' or Teamster a Detroit contract with Great Lakes, would Uke the proposal. "Naturally Local 299 is going tc oppose it,*’ he observed. OTHERS LAID OPT "There are 11 laid-off men of Local 299 at Great, Lakes ri now. Local 299 is interested their fate Brat.” ♦ * it ft The Teamster president maintained, however, that "something will be worked out to help salvage Some, he believed, will be “absorbed eventually" by Great Lakes and ethers, he hoped, would find new jobs la the Pontiac area when the freight business picks up in the fall. "I’ve asked the business agents in the area to give these fellows first phanfce for any new jobs here,’ he said. ★ Harrelson conceded that Local 299 drivers tor Great Lakes are making pickups and deliveries in tiie Pontiac area that formerly Would have ben exclusively the wotkuof Local Q4 members. TEWORABY GRANGE 'But this has been a temporary situation while we are following in the cgpe,” he emphasized. (Continued From Page One) program, "whereby we and other fortunate nations can, together, make greater use of our combined agricultural abundance to help feed the hungry of the world" On the domestic side, Elsenhower listed upwards of a score of actions that he has said Congress should attend to now and not let them "go begging for months to come." , Elsenhower declared only 6 o( 97 measures he had sained last May as required by the-aatioU-al interest have been enacted Into law an far. He said Civil rights was the only major measure passed by Congress since his May 3 legislative message and that the civil rights bill had two major deletions which he hoped Congress would restore. One deletion in the civil rights measure as passed by Congress, was a provision Eisenhower asked for grants by the federal government to states to help them In efforts lor desegregating schools; A second deletion was a provision for statutory authority for the Government Contracts Committee which seeks to avoid racial dis-crimination on work done on government contracts, WWW In listing again all the measures he had asked in May, and requesting action on Own, Eisenhower said he had special comment on two—farm legislation and assistance to depressed areas. As to a farm bill, particularly to deal with the wheat surplus program, Eisenhower said "The Congress has refused to accept my recommendations and insisted upon unrealistic programs which, of course, I have rejected.’’ WWW He repeated what ha has said before—that if Congress works out some different approach from his Ideas and keeps it, "within the guidelines, I will unhesitatingly approve it" where tt was not needed and on programs that would not have benefitted three truly in need of help, "A new area assistance bill, with administration backing, was introduced Immediately after my veto. It would channel more help directly into stricken areas than any previous measure proposed. Failure to aet will deny this Although leaders have said they expect Congress to end its session before Labor Day, Eisenhower told the legislators they ought to tackle the program which he laid down and "stay on the job until it is done." "Certainly,’’ ,he said, “we cannot adjourn tiie puhUc interest. ly provide the tisaatrecttve ran-edtoa far agriculture aa long Citing the invasion by Local 299 drivers, five of the ST Pontiac workers charged Friday that Local 614 leaders had tailed to go to bat for them. Harrelson denied this. w w w "I wouldn’t call a strike — that would help no one. But we have been following normal grievance procedure. Homaa distress now. If later should be changes either la the dollar aments ar the methods used, experience will dictate the Mad Midwest Lashed by Rains, Hail; Cool Front Enters By The Associated Press Wind-whipped rains, and hall lashed parts of the Midwest today and a Canadian cool front chased summer heat and humidity out of the north-central United States. thunderstorm raked Satina, Kan., with heavy hail and wind gusts up to 83 miles an hour, flattening trees and power lines and breaking windows in homes and stores. An inch of rata fell within an hour, flooding some streets. it it it An' unconfirmed tornado waa blamed for wind damage to An outdoor theater at Joplin, Mo, where another thunderstorm dropped two inches of rain in six hours. The Weather Bureau warned that thunderstorm activity from Nebraska across Kansas' southwest Missouri plight reach Aa for aid to depressed areas, severe proportions. Eisenhower said: . * * , * For five yean in a row I have Showers and thunderstorms also recommended area assistance leg- were active in New York, Penn-islation. Regrettably I had no sylvapta. Michigan, Ohio and the choice but to veto the legislation I Chesapeake Bay area during the the Congress did pass this session.!night and on a leaser scale in the It would have frittered tiw tax-laouthsast, the southern Rockies payers’ money stray in areas I and the northern. Plains. "You can’t force a company create jobs when it hasn’t enough business for them." The Great Lakes terminal at 875 S. Saginaw St. was operated for many years by the old Blair Transit' Co., which merged witji another Saginaw trucking company to form Great Lakes early this year. Police Chief Advocates Maple Street Parking Bair Cigarettes by Any Other Name Would Be OK What’s in a (brand) name? A man behind bars believe* the answer to be his freedom, according to Pontiac police. Ha to Elgin Partoe, 09, at IT Hibbard OL — held tar Investigation of aaaaait with latent to commit murder. Partee is held in yesterday’s shotgun shooting of Eddie Womack, 25, of 257 Harrison St. ★ ★ * So far, say detectives, the only ire fact in the case seems to be that a package of cigarettes was behind the shooting. And, they say, the brand name played a big part . . ’ Seek Novi Woman for Quickie Divorces (Continued Front Page One) te Mrs. MeCSrdfe, McPhall said, when a copy of the fictitious divorce decree was presented her by the “attorney” aa Oat. 9. 1968. After being dropped off, he found $li—and the cigarettes — missing from a trousers pocket. SPOTS PACK To Partee’s home he inarched in quest of his property, he told officers. ★ * it While Partee denied any knowledge of the theft, Womack told Tpolice, he spotted a package of cigarettes (his brand) A few doors away he was ■topped by the blast of a 20-gauge shotgun. Wounded la both legs, Womack Was taken to Pontiac General Hospital where he waa treated and released. He called police. Officers found Partee slumbering in a bedroom, and a shotgun standing in a comer.' and the decree fake, and there is no such case number as 29961 in the divorce dockets of the Detroit court. Mrs. Cunningham told McPhail that die first heard of Mrs. Me-Cardie while In a Highland Park bar and that she was known aa The Judge" and had a reputation for getting fast divorces in about 90 days and for a reasonable price. Mm waa hired. The Cunninghams had been Slanted Since 1946. me snooting — not me 'I don’t know what Tm going to the thing, they said, have to do. I guess I*tt have to ■tart divorce proceedings all over again, then get married, and 1 don’t know what," said Mrs. Cunningham. Farley was at work. Csndit said Mrs. McCardle falsified the name of a non-ex-latent Judge D. M. Lots on the take decree, j Mrs. McCardle was reported by her son to be in New York “with some friends.” . Besides facing a maximum sentence of 90 days or $100, or both, Condit said she could be held in contempt of court if convicted. Partee were being driven home otrtetad by parted care. % "The changes should Oder temporary relief from the congestion that exists on this street,” te add-ad. J One problem is opposition to the removal of parking because of the convenience to customers using the downtown business district, loadey said. The annual meeting of the Franklin Cemetery Auxiliary will be l p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Clayton Currin, 25436 14-Mile Rd. Frederick Grevlin Service for Frederick Gravtin, 85, of $19 Brown 8L, was to be at 3 p.m. today at Manley Bailey Funeral Home, with burial in Greenwood Ceofetery. Mr. Gravtin died Friday la William Boaamwat HispHal, Royal Oak, after a abort tilaeas He waa a retired cabinet maker. *\>- * . Surviving are a sister lira. Wil-laim Hopson of Birmingham and a brother Harry qfDetroit. Mrs. John L. Denman Sendee for Mrs. John (Mary sum) L. Denman, 4k of 30625 Tuesday at Manley Bailey FBneral Home. Burial will be Thursday in Camden, Term. Mrs. Denman died Suqday at home. She was a member at First Presbyterian Church of Birmingham and the Red Cteas Gray Ladles. She is survived by her husband, mother Mrs. Ira L. Presaon of Camden, Tenn., five sisters and two brothers. The family requests that any memorials be sent to the American Cshcer Society. Parents of 2 GoCarters Ticketed Pontiac police handed traffic tickets to the parents of two youthful go-cart drivers yesterday. The charge — letting children drive motor scooters without an operator's license. While being booked, Partee asked Sgt. John Williams to purchase cigarettes for him — a different brand. . "I wouldn't take Ms,” Paries waa quoted aa saying. "They weren’t far me — I use a different bread. Been doing to for several years.” Officers refused to discuss cigarette brands. i The shooting — not the brand — Train Cars Painted Only-on 1 Side in Wales ABERGYNOLWYN, Wales-The Talylln railway, the oldest steam-hauled, narrow-gauge line in the world, stiQ operates between Towyn Wharf and Abergynolwyn. The engine used was built in 1866. ★ it The line has a horrid secret: since all the station platforms are one side, only one side of the cars is painted. The frugal Welsh see ho reason to waste, paint on tte unseat side. HAS HER FUNG — British hiker Dr. Barbara Moore tries to prevent a U. S. customs official from searching her belongings during a stopover at8an Francisco's International Airport Sunday after her «nlva| from Sydney, Australia. When customs officials began to confiscate fruit and vegetable* which California law doesn’t allow imported, Dr. Moore began fltag- » nwtofu inf the contraband at the agents in A rage. She said it was all she had fo eat And that she wouldn’t eat top “stuff, they serve on the plane.” Airline officials promised to gat her a basket at fruit for the trip to England. At left is Inspector Robert Davis. In the background is Inspector Adrian Bennett dotpk MUIer, M N. Officerp said their sons, ages 10; and 14, were driving the go-carts on sidewalks in the. Longfellow School area. They 'pointed out that, just as for evs and motor scoSters, driven of go-carts must be licensed. They cheeked the area on a neighbor’s complaint. The tickets carry a $10 fiha. Detroit Assn. Denounces Ban Homeowners Refute Discrimination Barring in Real Estate Work DETROIT (UPI) — The Federated Civic Association of North West Detroit, largest organization of homeowners in Michigan, has denounced the -new rule banning discrimination in real estate transacts. Clifford Sullivan, association restrict and control (homeowners/as Individuals, contrary to the intent of the legislature. Sullivan said toe rule, a result of disclosures of the "point” system iised to screen prospective home buyers in the plush Grease Potato suburbs, "will apparently prevent homeowners from fully using the services of trained real estate brokers." Tigers, Indians Change Coaches as Expected THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1060 THREE Tibet Refugees Still Fleeing Claims 1,000 E^ape Each Month; Asks Nc> U.N. Help NEW DELHI, IivHa (AP) Ptime Minister Nehru told Parliament today that an average of 1.000 ratafees from Tibet atm are entering India each month, bat he rejected Socialist suggestions that he ask the United Nation help. * * * Nehru said there are already more than 20,000 Tibetan refugees in India. In Darjeeling, a former commander of the Tibetan resistance movement denied rumors that Tibetan refugees quitting road construction work in Sikkim an «Hp. P'n8 hack into their homeland to fight the Chinese Communists. He said he believes the rumors are Communist propaganda designed to embarrass those in charge of the refugees and to disrupt arrangements toe them in India. By The Associated Press the warm summer weekend, ith Ms lure of open highways end cool lakes, lad to the traffic deaths of 14 persons Jo Middgsa. Five OVRRWIIGHTf Mamlt Van Doran says “THANKS TOAYDS I CONTROL MYWBGHT •IV. lost 10 Maud, mi tbs A yds Plan,” says Mamie. “There’s no easier, safer way to reduce than by taking delicious Ayds candy. It’s such s natural way to taka off weight" Doctors proved the Ayds Plan best safest, at a New England clinic. Prove it yourself. Lose pounds with first box. <8.26. or money beritl MUiMk M N. Saginaw —Mala Floor 14 Killed in State Traffic; Brownings Take 5 Lives da the ear Bum Ms owner without Accidents outside Michigan killed three state residents. The Associated Press count started at ( p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Sunday. Deaths included: Traffic — John de la Cruz Perez, 18, of Wichita Falls. Teju, was killed and Thomas Rios, 17, of Knag City, Tex., was injured fatally Sunday night when a truck driven by Rios struck a clump of trees on s road near Traverse City. Roger A. Sweet, 30, to Allegan, was killed Saturday night in the collision of his car with a semitrailer truck on M43 near Bangor. * ■ '# ★ Donald Schultz, 38, of Hubbard Lake, was killed early Sunday on the West Hubbard Lake road in Alcana County when a ear in which he was riding smashed into a tret. Maynard Crawford, 28, of Tal-wart, was killed early Sunday on M35 In Marquette County when his car stack a parked crane in a James E. Scrimger, 28, of Lapeer, was killed earty Sunday when Ms ear failed to make a carve and smashed into a tree to Lapeer. Scrimger had been an' attendant at the weddtag of Us brother William Saturday sight. He was a sealer at Ceatral Michigan University. He leaves Ids wife Sally, who is a daughter of Lapeer Police Chief Matthew Dougherty, and an infant son, James Jeffrey and his parents Mr. and Mrs. Marice E. Scrimger of Lapeer. John Haltlner Jr., 22, a soldier home on leave from Fort Knox, Ky„ was killed Sunday to a Chesapeake and Ohio Railway crossing Fowlerville. He apparently failed to hear or see the train and drove into the path of the engine. He was the adopted son of Tom Kane of Fowlerville. Lupes Alcantra, 21, of San Antonio, Tex., a migrant cherry picker, died Sunday when the car he was driving went out to control on M22 south of Elberta in Northwestern Michigan. The car rolled over and pinned Alcantra under the wreckage. Benzie county sheriff Jerry Felton said Alcantra had tak- HAY-FEVER Pollen Allergy Sufferers Here's good news tor joout Exclusive new "hard core” 8YNA-CL8AR Decongestant tablets act instantly and continuously to drain and dear all naaal-aiaua cavities. One ’’hard cars’* tablet givas up to S hours relief from pain and pressure of congestion. Allows you to breathe easily stops watery eyas and runay nose. You can buy 8YNA-CLKAR at your favorite drug counter, without need for a prescription. Satisfaction guaranteed by maker. Try it today. SIMMS mum.—SS N. Saginaw—Drug Dept. ear was stashed to tab In n col-listen with another cor on UJB. 1S-88, 18 miles north ef Flint. Stoto police said Ryaer, driving toons, warned the cartes ttoe to dad tots the wrang lane. Hie ear was struck on Ike driver's aide by s car driven by Jehu Howard Champagne, If, to Baste f. Traverse City. Champagne and two passengers, Marjorie Champagne, 37, to Trav-City, and Ronald Larsen, 19, to Maiden Rock, Wis., were Injured seriously and taken to St. Mary's Hospital in Saginaw, (tyxer was attached to the 17th Field Hospital Detachment to Fort Dix, N.J. ] J. C. Spikes, 33, to Grand Rapids, and his 8-yeartod son Virgil were killed Saturday when their into a tree in Gaines Township, U miles southeast to Grand Rapids. Edward McBain, 91, to Janesville, died after the car in which he was riding collided with another car on U.S. 112 sty miles south to Ann Arbor * * * Henry L. McKinley 20, of Bittoy was killed Friday night when he was -struck by a car as he was walking along a rural road near Bitely in Newaygo County. David Russell Brenner, 13, to rural Rockford, was killed Saturday when he fell from his father’s tractor ami was run over at a road intersection in Kent County. Drownings: Gary Svatya, 14, to Royal Oak, draw nod Sunday .to Wolverine Lake war Pontiac where he had Alfred J. Tousignant. 17, to Gwinn, drowned Sunday in Swanzy Lake, Marquette County. The body was recovered in 12 feet of water. Outside Michigan: Mrs. Marion Elizabeth Mullen. SI, of Port Huron, was killed Saturday in a three-car accident on Pennsylvania Turnpike six miles west to the Butler Valley Interchange near Pittsburgh. Vlkentije Coloka, 30, of Feradale, and Ftoreka Guzba, 20, to Detroit, died Sunday in an automobile accident near St. Thomas, Ont. Their car went into a ditch when a tire An analysts to nearly 500 graphite fields throughout the world shows that Austria has the purest *nd only usable natural graphite for atomic-energy production. Willis P. Warner, 16, of Harbor Springs, drowned Sunday in Lark's Lake about 12 miles north to Harbor Springs. Willis and two other youths were fishing from a boat without oars when winds swept the craft Into The lake. The other two boys managed to swim to safety. FALLS OVERBOARD Camille Valois, 50, to Champlain, Bring in Films Today —See Your GOLOR MOVIES or SLIDES Tomorrow T0NITE aid TUESDAY DISCOUNTS is SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. PHOTO DEPT. VALUES* KODAK BROWNIE 8mm MOVIE telephoto «r | cklC WIDE-ANGLE LEPO Regular $8.95 Value -EACH■ Choice of Tele- MQQ photo or Wide- flyy Angle lens. Fife MB Brownie f2.3 or ® ♦2.7 cameres. Both 7.99' $19.95 TILIPHOTO or WIOI-ANGU LINS — your choice of either lens for Argus C-B and C-4, Kodak Pony Kodak Signet 35 cameras. 0 Kodak Brownie tl3 8mm Timt Camera 49" $84J5Q Value 8mm easy roll loading turret movie earners with deluxe view- j Kodak 300 Walt 8mm Movie Projector $69.50 Value %T HdMe In Layaway finder, telephoto, wide-angla and | Btartr cootod * movie projector wit . . ] M ft. reel etpedlf. forward, n regular lens. a vent end etui preJotUf. <888 w*i FREE —8 Slide Trays with Remote Central SAWYER 500 R Hide Projector Full • remote control projector focuses, reverses, changes slides so quick, so simple —> preheats y don't pop . . •• 500 weft tamp, turbine cooling. See m your easy chair. $5.00 holds in layaway. K0DACHR0ME tsuamm by TECHNICOLOR ITOWl same fine quality aa famous Hollywood TECHNICOLOR movies . . .plea FA8TE8T-EVEK service ... St our ami LOW DISCOUNT PRICES Color MOVIES DEVELOPED 8mm R0U 8mm MAM. f 11.75 Value) HIM Value! 1.19 99< Color SLIDES DEVELOPED RpH to 20 Roll of 36 f 11.75 Value! IS2.S0 Value! 1.19 1.99 f 2 P.M. Pickup end Delivery j Genelne KASTMAN KODAK AIm AmU.huX Prints Frwa AU Popular Sisee Film Pay M' °£T Cc Grad 3 Prints Per Print S Batamd SCraR-SIZE . DATED .ne DmM Urn “ XI# BLECTRIC-ETE NOON Pickup and Delivery mm CAMERA DEPT -Mato Fleet Burns' Music Conductor Weds Chordefte Singer LAS VBGAS, Nev. (AP) -Charles lavere, 50. mUBicel conductor for the George Bum stage show, was married Sunday Lynn Evans, 38, member to the Chordette singing group. Urn tern met to May at Lake Tahoe, they said, while both were with the Borne Ac Each had been married once before to non-ptofearionala. Quebec, a seaman aboard the Ca-adian steamer Trans tn rowned Sunday when he fen overboard while the veaael was docking at the Dow Chemical Plant on the St. Clair River near Port Huron. TOLEDO YOUTH DROWNS Stephen Ejhlnger, 19, of Tbledo, drowned Sunday while on a swimming outing at Lime Lake i HOUSEHOLD DISCOUNTS Fur TONITE and TUESDAY Remorse Heavy Soiling on Cotton and Caffe Like Magic Loundry NO-RUB Added to Your WASHKR 59c Soldo Cleans like magic—all copper, stainless steel and toll Jjwf e 'Wm gentle rubbing With TREE APPLICATOR sponge win remove Urelat marks and burns. Natural Corn Straws Household Broom ______ with wira binding for .xtr. strength. Limit J. Protects Your Bneee—BOBBER Kneeling Pads 58 Reg. 79c Value __ As shown — tttxlS L UN C Inch aponx. rubber ** mm protect* the knees Unbreakable Poly Plastic Sfeaie Utility Fab ic $1.00 Value 66* 13 Vi inch square pan with full If qt- capacity. Rounded comers. Many ums. large 38-Ounce Plastic Refrigerator Rests Reg. SI Vofaa 2M 4'-78* SUM* ONLY 26 LEFT! Get Yaws Now — Famous. "SHETLAND". Combination WAXER-SCRUBBER e eCRCBS n*wre • WAXES torn a SAND DIO Exactly Am Pictured —Complete Onffils— Powerful motor with handy attachments for many home uses. Full GUARANTEE. JMMMJUal WltiTuPJBMH Shop SIMMS for DOUBLE-DISCOUNTS OPEN TONITEt 'HI 10 P.M. - TONIGHT and TUESDAY DISCOUNT SPBEE on PAINTS and HARDWARE NEEDS 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Rust Resistant METALCOVERED 20-Gal. 0ARBA8E GARS Regular 53.29 With Cover Ample size for family uso—approved for city and township pick-up. Limit 2 gorbqge cans por parson. 2" Rubbish Bemrs • GALVANIZED STEEL | Rural Mail Box' S Peer Office Approved J Al Shown ? SHU Wrought Iran # MAIL BOX POST . EAGLE Pin Tumbler Nile Lock Set Regular S2.38 Seller Fits any door, easy to insteM. yourself, no special tools needed. With 2 keys. V PAINT SUPPLIES Bungalow Iidy Mix WHITE Om-Coat Hosse Paiat ■EG. SS.SS GALLON 169 Bnigalow Porch Aid Deck Grey Floor Enomel REG. $5.95 GALLON #^99 •Readymixed battleship gitey floor enamel for concrete and wood floors. 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SALE! ic^nomi 1st Quality Sheets r 212 PiMew Cases 2^88* White MUSLIN Twin Slue 72x101 Inches ....... White PERCALE Twig Sise 72 u H PASTEL Muslim 108 inches . White MUSLIN PuN Sise SI x 108 Inches ........ Pastel MUSLINS Pnfi Sise SI u 1 Inches ...... 1M l* M 2w1UF America's best known brand -tion of sixes, materials in first prices and save. - CANNON sheets in big selec-quality bedding. Buy at these low Sale of BED PILLOWS r 2 for $3.5( . rrlkana Fsau ItitS laabao 2" MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS AMERICAN MADE Copy of Famous You'll recognize- the * famous styles when you see 'em —- pad-. dad types, c I r c 1 e stitch, floating action lacefrants, etc. LADIES' 3-Piece Baby Doll Pajama and Bad Jacket Sots $3.88 Value |98 Loose leg panties, baby doll tops and matching square neck bed Jacket. All sizes for ladies 14 to 20. Sun-Suits and Crawlers 56e $2.59 Value -EACH Wash 'n' wear cottons, snap crotch, elastic., backs etc. Sizes 6 to 30 months and 1 to 4 years. ladies' and Misses' Shoe Gay T-Toppers Guar on food WASH AS LE Ladies' Summer Bolero Jackets • * Sixes Small and Medium • All viscose Rayon with Sanco- CHoice of assorted styles end • Super finish. White only with* materials in gay colors, stripes • % length cuffed sleeves, per-, etc. For ladies and misses. • spi ration proof. iteeeeeteeeeeeteeeMMetieeeseeeMteeeeieeMi, Final Price Slash Clearance! Ladies’ Bathing Suits 394 Only 87 suits left at this pricn*^*' I960 stylas in stripas, solids, prints lastex etc. Sizes 32-34-36. only.' Jpl 111 fl ua wtm 98 N. SAGINAW —Pontiac's BARGAIN Stored T FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGtTST 8, I960 «una Cub* ’States. it a itaadMoni la-between Haiti. Jamaica and wfcfch belongs to the United only an ekctric warnfaf ' r ships bound for the Par* MmMmvitswis No Incidents Reported Negroes Start Kneel-lns at Six Atlanta Churches ATLANTA (AP)—Negro college students have initiated "kneeUn” campaign in the Sooth by attending, mrvicea at white prateetant Atlanta' churches. There have been sporadic visits in the past and Negroes in small numbers have attended Catholic churches in the Georgia capital for a number of yean. With pleasure tee announce the association of DR. B. T. BRETT with the office of DR. B. R. BERMAN OPTOMETRIST • Eye Examination • Lenses Duplicated • Contact Lenses • Prescription Sun Glasses • Safety Lenses 17 N. Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-7071 DANCE YOUR WAYTD Arthur Murray wants you to sss for yomr-eeU bow quiddy and easily you can dance end stop out on the way to wonderfulI saw popularity! In minutes, in tbs hands of Arthur Murray’s personally trained ex-—■** -*—^ Ms famous basic ajxnms. You'll dsvslop iy gay student-teacher Amur Burn; . perts, you’ll bo dancing his step, the bay to all rhythms, •elf-confidence, enjoy gay rrr-7'* partif, ibbW. new friends! Hurry in for poor Vi-hour trial lesson for ll. Studioe open daily 10 AJH.-10 P.M. Don’t delay. ARTHUR MURRAY PONTIAC 25 Eost Pike Street FE 5-9438 BIRMINGHAM 305 N. Woodward Ml 6-0500 FLINT 520 Boach Stroot CE 4-1571 Private Schools Deris Eaton Tiarit Studio Air Coaditfoeed licensee But Sunday’s move by 25 students was the first coordinated effort to cony the 6-montho-old sit-in campaign into the churches. The Negroes were accompanied by several white students. They visited six churches: First Baptist, Druid tfflla Baptist, First Presbyterian, St. Mark Methodist, Grace Methodist, and the Episcopal Cathedral of St. Philip. HYANNIS PORT. Mass. (UPI)-Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Democratic presidential nominee, Sunday named a second Michigan men to e key poet In his etoctkto campaign Kennedy named Neil Staebler, chairman at the Michigan Democratic. State Central Committee, to post of “director of special projects." No major incidents were report-I. Negroes stood outside one church that was hill, heard the service from the foyer of another, and were admitted after some talk at a third church. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., a Negro integration leader, said the “warm reception by clergy and layman" reported by most of the students indicated many Southerners would welcome the chance to rescue the church from Its moral dilemma on the race “We hope college students eB over the south will give them that chance this fall," he said. King acts as advisor to the student coordinating committee which joined with members of the Atlanta Committee on the Appeal (or Human Rights in visiting the churches. Stalebler Gets National Dem Campaign Post Quimby of Lansing had bsen mentioned as possible successor Pepi Butler as nattoaal party chairman during the July convention at Los Angeles. But that poet went to Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington. projects connected with pOrtlci-pstion ot party workers In the campaign and instructions for precinct leaden le canvassing Ike Records Program for Us* by Networks The first dikes to protest Holland houses from rising canal waters were high mounds slop which the rude huts wen built. Then these mounds Were connected to form dikes keeping rising waters in die canals under control. WASHINGTON m — President lsenhower'i message to Oongram today knot to the Capitol by senger, but the President read It at {the White House for recorders. The recording was at the request of radio end television which planned to use portions in newt broadcasts. . HYANNIS, Mess. (AP>—Denton Wether, C, Broadway columnist of (he New York Deity News for One day earlier, Kennedy had named Thomas Quimby, Democrat-national committeeman from . Michigan, ae special projects director for 14 Midwest states. Both Staebler of Ann Arbor and! WORRIED OVER DEBTS? Broodway Columnist 61, Has ratal Hoar! Attack mare then 20 years, died early today at Chpo Ood Hospital. He entered the hospital July 29 after suffering a heart attack. If m m. wuM. to p»j mr jBfwto. Mta »r l MICHIGAN CUD IT COUNfSIlOga ..a Mtoefrto. SMSMato ;m «m Mnufear Antrim. AsmcI.II.. *f ... MICHIGAN ASST! CEBDIT CraSH I r roum MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS m mutt Stoto Ba.k Bl.f. rs M SAVE—10th EARN—1st" 4 % Established In )«90 — never misied peylnQ a y It has become such an integral part of our lives that a proposal to move it to another location within the county brought heavy opposition, from both town and rural people. It is the annual occasion when our rural young folks get out and strut their stuff. ★ ★ ★ And the town and country folks get to know each other more intimately, which means a better understanding and better citizenship for both. Besides a place to exhibit the prize products of the farm, the fair has grown to be an exposition of handicraft and other features in which our rural young folks have learned to excell. In many respects they now can successfully compete with their city cousins who do not know a heifer from a colt or a milking machine from a typewriter. Whether you live in Pontiac or in any of the other 22 dties, 17 villages, or anywhere else in the 25 townships in our great county, you owe it to yourself to attend this fair. Yes, and if you are unfortunate enough to live anywhere else, it will do you good to come and learn how we do things in an area quite pride filled In doing things well ism and other forms of subversion.” He also declared that the Senator had a "liberal” voting record and "regularly deserts Dixie, is a one-worlder and shakes hands with Negroes.” ★ ★ ★ The real opposition is said to have stemmed from Mr. Kztauvxr’s committee investigations into the profits, of the steel and drug industries. Upset by the investigations of the Senate antitrust subcommittee, drug companies flooded the state with antl-KxvAuvxa literature and gave strong financial support to Judge Taylor. ★ ★ ★ Last week in what may have been the opening gun for the presidential campaign. Sen. Lyndon Johnson made a forthright speech in Nashville in defense of the whole Democratic platform and in support of the Tennessean. Sen. Kefauver’s victory in a border state strengthens the Ken-nedy-Johnson ticket, particularly in the South. Sen. Williams Keeps Congressmen in lane Sen. Johiv J. Williams (R-Del) has been successful in three more fights respecting public trust and the tax dollar. Just before Congress recessed He convinced the lawmakers that it would be to the taxpayers’ intermit (and much to their own in this election year) to: (1) Require public itemizing of both dollar and foreign currency funds spent by Congressmen and their staffs. The House finally agreed on the third try. (2) Strike out a House rider to a Post Office appropriation bill permitting Congressmen to blanket urban areas of their districts with mailings addressed to "Occupant” under their free mailing privilege. (S) Attach to a ship'subsidy bill a Williams’ rider forbidding free or cut rate travel on UJS. merchant ships by members of government. The House agreed on the fourth vote. While Sen. Williams’ tenacity and respect for the tax dollar have made him popular with the taxpayers, he may not be so popular with some of his free spending and Irresponsible colleagues. Sen. Kefauver Victor Li Crucial Campaign Sen. Ksvauvix’s two to one victory in Kentucky’s primary assures re-election to this veteran of 22 years The Senator’s opponent, Circuit fudge Andrew (Tip) Taylor is a egregationist, isolationist and » ne time ally of the old Memphis ’rump machine. ★ ★ ★ Judge attacked Kefauver’s iport of the 1960 Civil Rights Act 1 charged him with not being ag-nsive enough "in the fight we rt be<»n waging against Cbmmun- Verbal Orchids to- Albert Scbeid of IN Hlllsview St.; 90th birthday. Mrs. Charlotte forrln of Keego Harbor; 82nld birthday. Artemaa Ward of Drayton Plains;. S2nd birthday. # * Mrs. Jennie Hewarth of t Orion; 91st birthday. Voice of the People . ‘No Reason to Make Issue About Different Andrea G. Rohr ahouldn’t write auch letter*. It only show* how uninformed he ia. Aa the man aaid at the Republican cooventloa, may-bo If the new* media wouldn’t make rehgion audi an tmm. It WOddn’t be a fair on*. Maybe he waa right. Mr. Rohr dnakbi’t have meutlboed that he to a Quaker, or doeen’t he know that Mr. Nison to' one. That , could put him in the biased category also, A A A “We do not want anyone to become a CUthottc that dees ■aid, uimtog la raised msnfojas. not want to. already.” Mr. ftehr, H you want to be a Quaker, be eae, hat MA make It aa Isane with Mr. Kennedy. Aad may I add, ha a peed Quaker, aad Hve year ratigton. You do not dethle by haOttllag AAA Mr. Editor, you aure try to report the newa In a non-partisan man* ner, but aometime* your Republican leaning* show terrifically! God _ bleu you and Mr. Rohr and Ida narrow-minded, uninformed attitude. A Catholic. Parents Give Views on Children's Play In reply to “Love* Children” s] want to aay I truly dov but this 221st day of the year, with 149 more in 1900. The moon ia approaching its Hie Almanac By United Press International 'Today ia Monday, Aug. 8, the Summer Scourge David Lawrence Says: U.S. Prestige at Stake in Congress writer aounda like some of the 1 Indulgent mother* in my neighbor- lajt hood whose children are into Just ^ m0ming stars ate Mars and as much mischief aa any other but one child ia. singled out as scapegoat. As one who sees much of this and knows the child to be no more to blame than the others. I hope InS1923.hBenny’’doodm.ii wu den put on the child and for the ta*. « a*. crfn, tor The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history; In 1588, the English fleet, led by Sir Francis Drake, destroyed The Man About Town Tomorrow Night When Freckles Are Worth Money at 4-ITClub Fair 4-H Fair: What promises to bo somewhat freckled. Any youth with the freckles, Inclination, ambition and go-getlveness can bo In line to win a $50 U.8. savings bond at the Oakland County 4-H Club Fair Tuesday evening. And that’s TOMORROW evening. The occasion is this column’s third annual freckle contest, and The Pontiac Press will give that prise to the winner. The hour is 8:15 o’clock. If you have the freckles, do not miss this opportunity to cash hi oh them. There la no entry fee, and the contest is open to all young people. Just step right up when the call Is issued, end some competent Judges will pass on the entries. There may be gold under those brown spots of yours. The contest is a feature of the fair’s opening night, in connection with the crowning of a king and queen, good associates of a freckle champion. This may be your chance to share the spotlight with them. And, isn’t this a good way to establish ' a cornerstone for a college education? Remember, opportunity to knocking at your door. Two magnolia trees are reported in second blooming for I960, one by Mrs. Lento Warrington of 2482 Wlnkleman St., and the other by Charles Weaver, who lives at 9208 Dixie Highway. What large UR. city has the most shade trees? A survey recently completed by a national botanical service, a copy of which was sent me by' Mrs. Jerome Smithfield of Detroit, shows that the honor goes to Pontiac’s big brother to the southeast, Detroit. It has over 050,000 trees, with an estimated value of $80 million, which I’d say to too low. The city spends a half million dollars on them every year, to keep them in condition. The old homes in our area can be spotted by the lilac bushes around them. Many such bushes are known to be over 100 years old. In fact, Mrs. Gregory Malworth of Rochester says she knows of several clumps of lilacs still blooming every year in locations where the house wu burned nearly a century ago. That observing guy ont In the editorial room suggesta that some of these bathing suits make men’s heads swim. Several years of enjoyable acquaintance with W. Walter Smith causes me to nominate him as Pontiac’s chief world traveler. With Walt, home to Just a place to return to so you can prepare for the next Jaunt. WASHINGTON—A different type of national political convention assemblies here this week under circumstances that reflect seriously on the prestige of the United States throughout the world. At a time of crisis, at a time w h e n America boast s oi her democratic institutions, the fact is that, among persons abroad schooled in the science of gov- over, need to win something less than a majority of the seats to the Northern states and yet, by adding Its, Southern Democrats, can still control both house* of Congress. This week, as Congress reassembles, there is a novel situation nominee tor the presidency, already has brushed aside the role of Congress at the current An Advocate of Fair Play He says publicly that little can be done to fulfill the provisions of - -____. .. . the platform because the Demo- ting training at home, cratic Party does not control the “ British Ides. In 1945, President Truman ' T . .. • signed the ratification of the U.N. I am with the neighbors that charter. ”” ■ “ In 1960, Florence Qndwicfc swam the English Channel in 1Z try and teach the kids whet's n minutes, a new speed right. They dony seem to be get- for wamm_ When we lived in Pontiac some which serves to re-emphasise the executive branch of the govern- ment. ^ To observers from other coun- Lyndon Johnson, nominee of the tries where parliamentary systems - - - - , , ,, Democratic Party for the vice hi tnwHnw this will appear 0R* not t0 nave a mess of kids out in the country where the kids education mugt ultimately be just run wild. My yard to my ^ted to men who insist on leader of the Senate. CAN’T FIX RESPONSIBILITY His sponsor at "the Democratic National Convention, Sam Ray-emment, the term "responsible burn, is still the speaker of the government” is not applied to the House of Representatives. presidency,^ also the majority to be awweeping admission of the failure of the American system. ^ walk knowing, the rest to mere sheep-m* m n «» *> | ■ herding.” i Herman (Copyright'ISM) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY What is man, that thou doot Rochester Smiles system in effect in this country. It is more often described as “irresponsible government.” Thus, in the elections two years ago, the American people chose the Democratic Party to control cratic Party. Yet, for the action or inaction at the session beginning this week, there is no way at present by which the American people can fix responsibility on the Demo- make so much of him, and that thou dost set thy mind upon him. —Job 7:17. Portraits By JOHN C. METCALFE African Jungle on a streamlined boulevard . . . Monkeys in cages Man is the Jewel of God, who bn painted wheels . . . And Sen. Kennedy, Democratic has created this material world to keep his treasure in. — Theodore Parker. Since its members in the House and Senate comprise a majority of virtually two-thirds and since a few additional votes are usually available from the opposite party, even the veto of a president can be overriden. Why then cannot the major planks of the platform of the Democratic Party be put Into effect by law—or rather why haven't they been enacted la the last twe yean? Dr. William BTady Saysj Change of Life Upheaval Can Have a Sunny Side . It's okay to be intoxicated with love if it doesn’t lead to being punch drunk after marriage. Add There’s a college for waiters In the east Study up sa your arithmetic boys. * If you want to tee the house (hat Jack built, look at the prices of some (A the new homes. Lots of elderly women are still sentimental about dolls, says a manufacturer. Aad their husbands? ♦ ★ An actors’ length of time on pinto ponies . . And 11 y TV depends greatly on whether , matrons with raised eyebrows ... he ranks or to. monkey-shines of painted clowns on the afreet . . . Circus band of balloon-faced musicians . . . Accompanied by h chorus qf shaggy lions . . . Childish laughter lining , the sidewalks . . . "And long-faced adults peering beside them . . . Heavy elephants pounding the pavement . . . Like beer barrels rolling into empty taverns . . . Lovely ladies in pink tights The great Planner was far-seeing in timing human love and p**e birth so that our children can struggle through the anguish of Signed letter! not moro than or orda tone pertaining l personal heatth and hygiene, not I case, diagnosis, or treatment. will The truth is that, in actual prac- adolescence before their parents flee, the Democratic Party does are caught up in not command a majority because it is divided on such issues as "civil rights” and on many economic questions. NO PARTY DISCIPLINE 1 There to no such thing as party discipline. A member of Congress can desert his own party and suffer no _________ penalty—not even the losa of -a x|™’ ofhring hab-l committee chairmanship, whlieh ^education and his party can at will withdraw^ the maelstrom of the menopause. However, this upheaval in middle-age takes place within each of us, varying in intensity accord-i n g to constitu-i tion, heredity, his-f A rhinoceros splashing in a tank . . . Like the mayor plunging into a glass of water . . . Before welcoming convention delegates . . . And behind a second-story window pane ... A little girl on crutches looking on silently. Don't complain If yen don’t get everything that’s earning to yen. Maybe you’re lucky. * ★" ;* h A happy medium to a fortune teller who guessed right Case Records of a Psychologist: Teeth Grinding Massages Gums from him. cess taken primarily to allow members of both parties to attend their national potltleal conventions, there Is every opportunity to pan the most important provisions of the Democratic Party platform. If there is economic discontent or dissatisfaction among the Alfred, lean people with anything that can be cured by law, the party which has been in control of Congress for the last two yearn is responsible for failure to provide the remedy. If the members of the party in power do not face up to their obligations, the people presumably have a right to choose another party at the polls. WWW But in virtually all the Southern states there is no active or organized Republican Party which puts up candidates for Congress. This, too, impresses foreign observers as a weakness. The Democratic Party, more- The Country Parson —destiny. BRADY A&i It cornea at the time when our children are graduating from or flanking out of college, approaching marriage nad-or military service, seeking Job opportunities, leaving home. And these problems require oar deepest spiritual and sometimes financial Do your children grind their teeth together during sleep? They may make so much noise that they* waken others tntfte same room. The majority of sugh cases are normal examples of nature’s attempt to increase the hfodd circulation through the gums. v — for several feet. This grinding of the teeth apparently is a normal reaction and is based on metabolic needs of the gums ami the roots of the teeth. It Is conceivable that any discharge of nervous energy, an Trans the gnawing at an empty bombardment of By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE F-437: Sally L., aged 8, Is an attractive 3rd grader. “But, Dr. Crime, she grinds her parents are requiring more, and teeth at night until she wakens mQre ^ 0Xyg<^l- aiso helps carry ’away the fatigue At1 the same period, i • aging When children bite down, they massage their gums and stimulate greater blood flow to those regksis^ This, ia turn, brings up more attention, care and support, whoever may occupy the and even may show pique or in her room,” Sally’s mother inamusement if we present a facade formed me. less shining than that of the middle-aged couple in the insurance advertisement shown embarking on the luxury ship tor a year’s cruise! ‘‘Huh,’’ they snort. "What have you got to worry about? You're still young.” They have forgotten their menopause as perhaps we've forgotten our adolescence, or would teeth, if the child-guidance groups allowed us to. Nowadays the anguish at adolescence is plain American. She did this with her baby teeth till she actually feround them down. I am wondering if she may not wear off the enamel on her permanent But what Is plain about the •ext port-ef-eaZ on the veyage The old “cUmaetorie,” (Noah says: “that point la human life at which some greet change . .. tehee place ... or to said to take place.”) Obviously the men- have their problems, too. Read the statistics as to numbers of divorces granted after twenty-seven to thirty odd Life got ’em, mebbe. w w ■ No more tennis, no mors badmin- "She seems to be perfectly well adjusted and in good health. Our physician ex- products faster. TEETH GRINDERS Since this widespread grinding of their teeth at night seems typical of children, and since their permanent teeth are slowly pushing up to dislodge their baby teeth, this seems to be the medical explanation. Seme adults wtl is the same I should suggest, moreover .that such children be given chewing gum after the evening meal to help encourage extra massage of the gums before bedtime. Let them romp outdoors, too, and thus drain off their surplus However, if a child grinds Its - - DB. CRANE ,teeth and bites its tongue repeat- . , , . ■ . ■mined her recently and could ^ that you find Myd on thg ener*y re they will be more, re-find nothing wrong. puiow then you should observe laxed Antog •lumber. the child carefully with epilepsy A~*t~u' in mind. "At my Insistence, however, he gave her some worm medl-ctae, lor I remember hi the eld days they used to behove this grindtog of teeth Indicated And if they are indiaded to suck their thumb, keep their 'hands ........ oocuptod with a toy toddy bear Epilepey usually makes its onset <* other soft plaything which they at night. The child doesn’t even ^ b^ withthenL "Nothing we have done, how- know it has an attack. But next morning it. may complain of a ____ _____,________ __________ . ... — ■ Mod spots frref sea pmunsTwi h years of marriage. Old Change of over, haa stopped her grinding of on the pillow or short. goto* Wt.farts — ’------- tho teeth. : ^ Blood spots may be present, ___ . .....___. *___, ...__’ however, under the ndrmal grind- ------------- — —V------------ y”" re”*11 ing of the teeth, to you must not —„ ....... rr., . ton, no mors highballs, no mors Wore tho state dental convention ^ mMy thrmAt ^ at ^ 'SS'ih SnSu! cigarettes, no more love-making? md has nfcreadime toyarn. Hhat be forewarned and observe your W!® Ma mmmsHm T...4 sa Ji.ll mmamJt lift vflll think flhflllt JUDvf' cHUd ^'H|-L*Py # 11 * No overeating. Just a dulleyed, do you think about SaUy?” dreary plodding toward retire- DIAGNOSIS "In their mad scramble to session they could have.” Nope. Stick around and we’ll look at the sunny ride of your future. If you miss the talk to follow, send me a stamped, self-addressed envelope for the free pamphlet Thf ^ to very common tor children to grtrtd their teeth like this. All BRINto FINGERNAILS Sines excess energy in a child may be reflected in biting of its. 1 to o»! ^« ... at big pre season. savings! Whit#, laollngly M Mmw merT She lo o hease dog. A.R. Robbins, Frederica, Del... A. When thia fine dog is oat used lor its. original purpose 'at banting, some grooming problems do arise. Whilo banting, the exercise and contact with brush keep this pet relatively dean and rid of 'excess hair. But your spaniel will be more comfortable, * and shed less it hs Is properly trimmed. Show dogs are usually plucked, but this requires a special trimming .comb and la an expensive method. An electric clipper is used on most household pets, whether the clipping is done professionally or at home. We usually dip the neck and bade of the spaniel, but the underneath part of the body and the leg leathers are trimmed by hand. ' Leave at least 14 Inch of hair on hit back to prevent sunburn. After clipping, it is advisable to bathe and comb your pet to rid him of excess hair left on the skin. 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Sisas 4-16 ....69c The new rage: shag boat-neck sweaters All-wool flannel skirt with stitchod down pleats, latest colors for fall: choose gold, willow, blue. 7-14. V EIGHT wm THE PONTIAC MONPW. AUGUST 8i 1960 Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas Stephen died Thursday following 'an illness of two years. , ‘ MSS. A RYLE COX WALLED LAKE—Service for former Waited Lake reetdent Mm. Arvie (Qn) Cox. 54. of Frederic, be 1 p.m. Tuesday at Michel-ribn Memorial Church in Frederic. Burial wiO be in Oakwood Cemetery. . Mm. One dM Saturday after a brief illness at Mercy Hospital, Gnytiag. She was a member of the Higgins Lake Church of God! »dj Surviving besides her husband ■ three brothers. are daughter Mrs. EaH R. Howie Service will be held 1:30 p.m. [of Walled Lake, son George B. of Tuesday at Voorhees Siple Chapel Walled Lake, her mother, two with burial in White Chapel CMne- brothers, two sisters and nine teiy. [grandchildren./ MBS. AUBERT J. HARRIS | MRS. CHARLES D. JOHNSON Mrs. Albert (Charlotte) Harris, WIXOM — Service for Mrs. 72, of 38 East Rutgers St., died [Charles D. (Blanche) Johnson, 17, WILLIAM R. BRADFORD William R. Bradford. a,‘of 5445 Savoy Dr., died today at his home. He is survived by his wife. His body to'at ' Funeral Home. LEONARD F. HAM Leonard F. Haag, 68. of 1880 Opdyke Rd., died Friday at Pontiac General Itapital following a short illness. A member of St. Paid Lutheran Church, be was retired from the Auburn Heights Manufacturing Company. Surviving are eight sisters Saturday at her home following an illness of three years. She is survived by her husband ; one daughter, Madeline who to serving in the Air Corps; and two brothers,‘Staley in Milton, Mass., and Clarence in Salt Lake, Utah. Service will be held 11 a.m. Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral Chapel, with burial in Perry Mount Cemetery. ROBERT L. HOWARD Robert L. Howard, 98, of 6307 Barker St., died Saturday follow ing an Illness of eight months. Formerly employed by Pontiac Motor and Kuhn Auto Waah, he to survived • by A sot*. Roald of Walled Lake; a daughter, Mrs. Roberta Ryan of Drayton PlAins: three brothers, Olin in New York, John of Pontiac. Leslie in Kentucky, and one sister. Service will be held 1:30 p. Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Cemetery. of 49309. Wainstock Rd.. will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Richardaen-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Wixom Cemetery. Mrs. Johnson, a member of the Sunshine Society Workers of Wixom, died Sunday after a long illness at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Children's Aid Seeks to Protect, 'Jailed Children WINDSOR. Ont. (UPlWRto Essex county Children’s Aid Society hpa started action to become legal guardian of two of three small children who were kept in their attic for more than 11 years. The parents, Mrs. Shirley Dickerson Leach of Tecdnaelt, Ont., and atgbrd Dickerson of Dettoit, have been ordered to report* to court here Wednesday. * * • a The society to asking to be named guardian of Gordon Dicker-eon. 15. aad hit sister Glenda, 13, The third child. Constance, to 18 Also surviving are sisters Clair Hopkins of Clarkatoo, Mrs. A. W. Bidwell of NofthvOle, Mrs. Milo PetterfgUl of Now Hudson, Mrs. Ralph Bidwell -of Sooth Lyon, Mrs. Ben Hopkins of Wixom and Mrs. Forest Taylor and Sadie Hopkins} both of Pontiac. BENJAMIN A. MICHAEL HOLLY — Service for Benjamin A Michael, 79, of 209 Michigan St. will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at Dryer Funeral Home. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery. Mr. Michael died Saturday at his residence after a long illness. V . . _ .. line uum uiuo. unibuuilt, m 10 fturrtring are ^hters Mre-L,*, not wider the society's Juris-Jean Latson and Mrs. Margaret;.... 2 Cody of Holly and Mrs. Doris ja uwK * * * ^ckoff of Oscoda. s^Jacob of ^ childnn were feb* kept JS"**"** * •« Grace Hospital here. >ndmg pandch dren and three great- £5mebltlte hearing grandchildren. I .■-■■■ : ~ Scrimger, 22. of 2268 N. Lapeer the Call Gets the Crabs Rd. wIB be 2 p.m. Wednesday at I e_______ Muir Brothers Funeral Horae. BALTIMORE (D—One Baltimore Tablet Under Tpngue Quick Aid for Migraine NEW>YORK - A tablet a mF grakm headache victim can take without swallowing—it to put un- der the tongue—to said to gtvelOe heart,to the brain. quick relief. It containe ergota-mine tartrate ki a aattva-eorabte Dissolved, ft passss through the inembranes of the mouth kHsTth* venous blood and to pumped by the 'MOST satisfactory and . LEAST expensive . why to have new living room furniture... RE-UPHOLSTER YOUR WORN PIECES at budget-wise prices! SOFA, ^ $*#50 CHAIR $39^ Burial win be in Stiles Cemetery. Mr. Scrimger died Sunday in an auto accident in Lapeer. He was a udent at Central Michigan College. * w * X Surviving beside his wife Sally are son Jeffrey, his parents Mr. Shirley Hjdto of Farmington and|- ™ KateCSolE granddaughter. >peer, Richard of Califor- Deaths Elsewhere womap insisted on reaching her husbanfl when he was a patron df a tavern with an unlisted telephone number. * dr W I'm having a baby!" she screamed to the operator. ‘Tve GOT to talk to my husband." The emergency Was honored. The call went through and NEW YORK (AP) - Sammy g Stewart, TO, musician and or-t chestra leader of the early Jazz period of the mJd-1920s, died Fri-, day. He was one of the first Ne-- groes to be admitted to the Amer-g ican Guild of Pipe Organists. Tie, daughter. Mrs. Hester Logan of was • ta lntroducte« *“■ MRS. BELLE R. SEXTON Mrs. Belle R. Sexton, 58, of 28 E. Chicago Ave died Sundayat Pontiac General Hospital. She is survived by two sons, Harold Rlsner of Pontiac and S.I.C. Okey Risner in New Mexico; |nia and William bf Lapeer, sister husband was called to the tele-Carolyn of Lapeer and grandpar-[phone, ents Mr. and Mrs. Earl Nicholson “EM,” said the wife, “bring me of Largo. Fla. 'heme two hard crab*-” Give your living room s'* “lift!" With expert workmanship and quality materials we can re-style and re-upholster your furniture to *; like brand new! Phone today Fell be glad to bring fabric samples to your home. Whuah Wright 270 Orchard Lake Avenue Fer miidIhi ih*«n ckoo«» from e fleet variety ef *Mes «Nb ■ thesis.,. win I heels miefeieed $1.15 ep* Furniture Makers and Upholsterers Neumode Hosiery Shop 82 N. Saginaw FE 2-7730 HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Annette De Foe, 71, who Marred in such [silent screen movies of the 1920s "Timber Wolf’ and "One Clear Cell,” died Saturday after! a long illness. She also appeared on the legitimate stage. Her real name was Gertrude Marie Au-COO). Pontiac; three brothers, three sisters and three grandchildren. Service will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Aldersgate Methodist Church with* burial in MotkR Cemetery. The body to it Pursley Funeral Honk. SEM’SHIS W. STEPHEN • Service was held today toy Senu- i shus W. Stephen. 53, of 443 Midway St. at Davis Norton Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Employed by Pontiac Motor Division, he to survived by two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson of Alliance# Ohio, aM^ra Eliza-bet! Johnson of AtMf, Ga.; two brothers, four sisters, and 12 grandchildren. phonic jazz compositions after the style of Paul Whiteman. W * * NEW YORK (AP) — Hina A. Vogelstein, 56, former president of American MStal Climax, mining and smelting firm, former governor of the New Yprk [Commodity Exchange, dfed Friday after a long illness. He gave] up the presidency of the company last year, but continued as chairman of its finance committee. WWW WARWICK. R.I. (AP) — Frederick T. Rooks, 80, foundpr and board chairman bt the U.S. Oil Company of East Pwtfdotoa, specialists in oils far tfe textile kfdustry, died Sunday at a hospital. ^'Special xnpmo to our1 Pontiac customers**!1 "CONSOLIDATED CLEARANCE / SALE! . AT THIS CONVENIENT —. PONTIAC LOCATION... CUNNINGHAM'S! IDRU6 STORE 29 NORTH SAGINAW • CORNER LAWRENCE ★ ★★★★★★ AFTER 30 YEARS OF CUSTOMER SERVICE, WE * ARE DISCONTINUING OUR DOWNTOWN LOCATION AT 29 N. SAGINAW—CORNER LAWRENCE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, WE ARE GOING TO CONSOLIDATE TWO STORES INTO ONE TO BETTER SERVE OUR PONTIAC FRIENDS BY MOVING TO OUR NEWLY REMODELED, ENLARGED, SELF-SERVICE STORE AT 67 N. SAGINAW-CORNER HURON.* EVERYTHING IN THlf STORE 29 N. SAGINAW, CORNER LAWRENCE TO BE SOLD AT... 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Dale Pineapple Juke Pillsburys Bast Hour Maxwell House zSofflIw Tide Giant Detergent Feed Chib Cream Cheese GETGIFTS FASTER WITH GOL-D BELL STAMPS SAVE 10c 25* SAVE 12c ^ 39 SAVE „■ 10c SAVE 5c 69* SAVE 5c On 2 ^ 10* ^5 NINE GENEVA (AP) - The International Commission of Jurists, a private ttrganizetkm drawn from non - Communist countries, has published a 340-page report accusing the Red Chineee of a 10-year reign of atrocities in Tibet The commission said Sunday the Chinese Communists had killed, tortured, raped, abducted or sterilized thousands of Tibetans since invading the country in the early 1960s. * * # The report included testimony by Tibet’s spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, who fled to India after the unsuccessful 1969 revolution of the Tibetan people against their Red masters. QUOTES DOCUMENTS The publication also contained extracts from official Chinese publications. It goes back to the World War II years to ((note documents from former U. 8. Secretary of 'State Cordell Hull to the Dalai Lama. In addition there are excerpts from a personal letter from former President Franklin D. Roosevelt fo the Dalai Lama asking permission for two Army officers to visit Tibet In 1942. CbncendM accusations of Red Chinese brutality, the report says sterilization was first practiced on an experimental basis in 1967 at Omni, a town of 2,000 population in Eastern Tibet. The Dalai Lama wrote that the Chinese Communists injected Tibetan men and women or operated on them to cause impotency. WWW The Dalai Lama also reported at least 10,000 Tibetan children were taken to China and only 500 have returned. One refugee said that from 1956 on, all children in the Amdo region were taken from their parents 10 to 15 days after birth and sent to- China. Tlie report contained statements from a number of witnesses who described scenes of rape', torture and killing. The chairman of committee said so far about 30,000 Tibetans have fled the country. WASHINGTON —Eleven per Ml of U. S. taxpayers- — those earning, over 18,000 a year — pay 51 per cent of federal personal income taxes. Your Good Credit Record WiU Help You Pack ' For That Vacation! STRONG STAPLE COTTON MUSLINS! LABORATORY TESTED! PERFECTS! Yes, thqse are the famous Penney sheets your grandmother stacked in her closet with pride! Years of quality-control make Nation-Wides as fine a modern muslin as you could want! Every-inch perfect! Firm balanced weave (no weak spots')for years of wear! Crispy-cool, smooth finish. At these low prices you’ll want dozens! Buy now and save. NATIQN-WIDE PASTILS! NEW LOW PRICES! Fashion colors at prices you'd expect for white! Compare! Yellow, green, rose, blue, orchid, pink. full 81 by 108 inches, full Sanforised fitted .. 1.63 42 by 36 incfi pillow case...........2 for 78c THE PONTIAC PRESS,. MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1060 cffidnls 'flf 8m Ann which owns the ship — the four wens to over to polics. H» cnptntB was not toclnflsd to the quartet. . ,, The four are three Detroit be/ tenders and i Cleveland area barmaid. They were booked at Central police station and releeaed on bail ■mkeamsn for the San Prod-Corp., which owns the i .. ■aid % test cam would be made to the courts on the liquor question. He raid drinks had been asrved for the past four years once the ■Up got out four or five miles. The cruise ship runs between hen and Detroit. . I To ensure that a 90-ton radar antenna used for tracking satellites remains in constant adjustment, the 90 foot steel tower on which it is installed la painted white to prevent the lower from bending out of plumb under the heat of the sun. White paint reflects heat Hawaii producer » per cant oil Rome was founded in 754 &C * ha world’s ptnseppies. las a fortified vfflaar. \ I Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain For the tint _.. ___ found a new healing substance With the astonishing ability to ah rink hamerrbolde, stop itching, and rttiers pain - without anrgery. . In one hemorrhoid ease after another ."very striking improvement" was reported ana verified by doctors’ obeerrations. Pant was relieved promptly. .And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all — this improvement was maintained in cases where doctors’ observations war# continued over a period of many months! In net, results were so thorough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing state-ntents as “ Piles have ceased to be a problem!” And among these sufferers were a vary wide variety of hemorrhoid eenditione, aome of 10 to ZO years’ standing. AO tUs, without tho use af narcotics, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. Tho secret is a iew healing substance (Bto- rn. Already, Bio-Dyne is to wide use for healing injured tissue on ell parts of the body-This new healing substance is offered in sMppoewenf orofat-went form called Preparation H* Ask for individually sealed ointment with special applicator. Preparation H is sold at all drag counters. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. _________________P. 8. r»t- Off. You’ll probably have to do quite a bit oil shopping before you «tart on that vacation—clothing to bring that outmoded and scanty vacation wardrobe up to muff W needed repairs on thegcar, etc. This all takes money, that’s when you’ll find your charge account a mighty handy thing. Plan your trip — buy wiaely —phy promptly. In this inanner your Good Credit Record continues to be a, credit to you. Walton J. Hdgemo, GasCrO, father of Wayne llelgrmo. 22, tot was killed to tim tint car to drag nto the hole, was asking UOQ.OOO lot the death el Ida son, another UOO.ne for lorn of contributions which tho ion would have made to to 'parents and 1863 for funeral ad medical exponars. - * ib Richard Bonetti, 22, Caspian, driver of the cur to which HeL- Court Fight Due in Liquor Sales Ohio Officials Charge Ship Serves Drinks Hi Territorial Waton for pain and fufferfag Xhd lose of current and future canting*. Ha was critically injuipd and is still fo the hospital at Rochester. Mina. ♦ a ★ Mrs. Lester Manfrom, 43. Stam-baugh. who.also drOve into the Sole, wants 840450 for suffering mental shock, loss of earnings end of her car. Mrs. Manfrom was able to crawl out' of- the cave-in after her egr dropped into " spread the alarm. An average ntilk bottle i 30 tripe before breakage. CLEVELAND (AP) - A 1 battle was riiaptag up today over foa legal right of afote liquor agents to board tin SS Aquaiima to arrwtt four pereone they said were selling liquor on Sunday in Ohio territorial waters. A tug-of-war developed last night when Capt Morgan L. Howell ordered the state agents off John L. Kocevar, liquor enforcement agent in charge of the Cleveland office, argued heatedly with the captain on the third deck of the luxurious, 520-foot vessel. ★ ♦ * Kocevar, ulna at Ua men ai International Jurists Denounce Red Chinese PENNEY'S SPECTACULAR TREMENDOUS ‘ WHITE GOODS EVENT IS STILL GOING ON - SHOP PENNEY’S AND SAVE! To Maintain a Good Credit, Buy Witely, Pay Promptly * PONTIAC CREDIT BUREAU, Inc. The Credit Bureau? of Pentiee ' • Organized 'July 12, 2923 333 North P^ihry Street Pontltc 16, Mich. Protect Your €redityend It WUl Protect You! STURDY WOVEN COTTON! BLOCK PLAID SPREAD You’Ve .seen similar bedspreads priced much higher . than Penfity’e low tag! Resists wrinkles; stabilized for shrinjuge XontroL Beige and \ yq g, 105, . red, green; brown, blue. te by 105 iache* DOWNTOWN ONLY! 5 NEW 2-TONE STRIPED TUFTED BEDSPREAD! EARLY AMERICAN LOOP WEAVE SPREAD, ONLY Now evqn more fashionable st Penney’e low price 1 Thickly tufted viscose rayon, cotton; machine wash, medium setting. Brown, rose, gold, pink. by 105 er do by 105 iache* Every inch beautiful, end Penney’s budget-priced reversible spread i s richly fringed! Machine wash, pie-diufn setting. Bleached or antique white. PENNEY'S - MIRACLE MILE: Op4Nix Every Weekday-1 Monday through Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. PENNEY'S - DOWNTOWN: Open Every Monday and Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. All Othor Weekdays 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. PenneyS ■O. PENNEY PLUS! same quality you’ve seen for morel The season’s most — how little you pey at weight cotton woven in a pattern! Vibrant combinations ing brown! red! blue! or green! Easily machine washable*! medium set, littleor no ironing. 90-inch draperies, 6-95 pair. DOWNTOWN ONLY! 74«10I, 87ml01 The suit# were flled •gainst Hie clttea of GaMri and Caspian, Iron '’ounl.v, the Iron County Road Commission, Verona Min-Iqg Co., earner at surrounding mining property; Ptckmeds, CRYSTAL FALLS (UFD-Hght weeks ago two cars hustled out of the curly morning darkness and into a 30-feet-deep hole, more than 50 feet across, which bed opened 19 in County Road 424 on the Gas-tra-Caspian City Line. Friday, damage suits totaling more than a hUf-mtllion dollars were involving the three persons in the two care, one of them killed and two injured. COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE 719 W. Huron FI 4-1336 Kennedy, Democratic presidential nominee, visits his grandmother Sunday in Hyannis, Mass., after attending church. Despite her 96 years, Mrs, John NEW HAVEN, Conn. I* - When policeman stopped a woman for crossing against a "NO-WALK’ sign she told him, "I thought that sign was ah advertisement of the bus company.’* Quality Cleaning Since 1929 I••mart-look Imart Now you can have Give you a netted appearance end smoother focus by removing the objectionable dividing line This new bifocal, has the look of regular glasses because the dividing line is invisible. Now you can enjoy vision without annoying jump, * blur or distortion . . . and you’ll thrill to a younger looking you. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE 109 N. Saginaw St. E. STEIN MAN, O.D. Open Daily 9:30 to 5:30, Friday 9:30 to 8:30 ap mwti F. Fitzgerald sports the same rippling shock of hair that Jias become something, ot a trade-mark for the young senator, New Excuse, at Least Tm an Old Family Friend* Nab Playboy Pignatari in Princess' JHdtel Suite Room Addition SHOWN $4.10 per week SfiSspEst $1190.00 .■jkutSks. MEXICO CITY (AP) lionaire playboy Francisco (Baby) Pignatari pleaded with police that he was Just an "old family friend" after being seised pre-dawn raid on the hotel suite of beautiful Princess Ira von Fur-stenburg Hohenlohe, 20. * ★ + But no Judge could be found on Sunday to free the darling of beautiful women on three continents. and baby spent the night in a police station.. Prince Alfonso Hohenlohe, 43, estranged husband of the Italian-born princess, believed he had a round in his suit for divorce and custody of their two sms, Cristobal, 4, and Alfonso, 16 months. The sloe-eyed princess, who married at 16, said of her Spanish-born husband: "I am disap- pointed. I never believed would do anything like this. He has, not conducted himself like nobleman. He is the one who provoked the pubhc scandal.’ GRABBED AT S A.M. Pignatari and 11 men he, had hired to guard the young princessj am) her children were picked up at 3 a.nr. Sifhday by police who fought their way into the well-guarded Cristobal Colon Hotel. Forcing the door of the princess’ swank sixth-floor suite, the police] said they were confronted by Pignatari, hi trousers and shirt. The international playboy from Brazil protested that ' rushed td the suite from his own room on the seventh floor Ira phoned hint that she was alarmed by the uproar in the lobby. ★ ★ The police report said the princess was in the suite but they did not see her. Pignatari resisted removal from the hotel for two hours before he was—in his words—"dragged off by fortt." i Given-time to don A smart tropical suit, neatly starched shirt and necktie, Pignatari denied newsmen at the 6th Precinct police station that he was surprised in any state of undress. *NO ROMANTIC INTEREST ' The Brazilian protested that though he and Vw princess had often' been seen together, there s no romantic interest. ’Our families are old friends/,1 he said, adding that he has power of attorney to represent her in her legal problems as she is a itnor. The police raKNras made on'the complaint of Prince Hohenlohe that Pignatari and his wife yrere sharing quarters in the hotel.The prince said that “Baby" was paying the bills and had hired the bodyguards to prevent him from recovering his sons. * Or * . Pignatari claimed he was in Mexico on an official mission and charged his seizure was a violation of diplomatic immunity. He said it might create $ diplomatic' Earn from the 1st • Add to your savings account or open a new one by the 10th of the month and earn our hjgher-than-average dividend from the 1st START SAVING SYSTEMATICALLY TODA^ CURRENT RATE OF DIVIDEND ON SAVINGS Pontiac Federal Savings ' . HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huron St ROCHESTER—507 Main St. DOWNTOWN—16 E. Lawrence DRAYTON PLAINS—4411 Dixie Highway WALLED LA$E—1102 West Maple W.'KJ . Says a Woman Would Do Well as President MAY WE HAVE A FEW WORDS WITH YOU GALS? To YOU - the purchasing agents in the homes in Pontiac and the surrounding area, we have a message of vital interest and utmost importance. We wish to remind you that school opens in four short weeks and that means but one thing, winter is not too for away. We know that you are thrifty, truly economical in your-household budget. We know that you appreciate cleanliness and quality especially when it brings added warmth and comfort to your home and so may we remind you ladies that. . . NOW ONLY- GEE offers all these extras • • B THE TIME TO 0BDEB NEW MOBILHEAT FROM GEE 71. FREE 500 GOLD BELL STAMPS WITH AN ESTIMATE ON ANY NOMI IMPROVEMENT EXTRA BONUS! FREE 500 ADDITIONAL GOLD BELL STAMPS IP YOU CALL IN FOUR DATS Call for FREE ESTIMATES end FREE STAMPS WIFE 3-7833 COMPLETE BOUSING SEBVICE 100% GUARANTEE ON All LABOR AND MATERIAL TM* Ciorioiio if Backed by: • YEARS OF DEPENDABILITY • FINANCIAL STRENGTH • HONEST BUSIMISS PRACTICE • Aluminum Siding • Garages • Basements • Foundations • Porches • Attics 9 Recreation Rooms BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION C0. tlW.Noroo PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-MaU-rine Neuberger today said might be a good idea to elect a woman president because women] mostly are nicer than men. / * * * "1 have never heard of a woman I political leader being accused of corruption or engaging in questionable deals,” said Mrs. Neuberger, the Democratic candidate for] U.S. senator in Oregon. "Can this same standard be applied to men?" she asked. # Or e. She said the vital measuring stick for the presidency is whether] the candidate "shows a quality for] moral leadership." . The first manufacturing plant in America and the oldest synagogue and Baptist meeting house in the] country are all to 6e found in Rhode Island. Cockroaches Written Guarantee From Houses, Apartments, Groceries. Factories and Restaurants. Remain out only ana hour, No signs used. . Rex Ex CsgUT 9 Dependable automatic deliveries! • Convenient Payment Plan! No money down. Small, equalized monthly payments. No big fuel bills in colder months. • Cleon daliveriog in now modern GMC * Trucks, motor equipped for accuracy. O Plus — Holdens Rod Trading Stomps! This better quality fuel oil is so refined that it actually cleans as it burns, eliminating many costly furnace repairs. Cleanly delivered in new. modern GMC Trucks (meter equipped for accuracy) by corefully trained drivers; whose every watchword is cleanliness .and courtesy. Ncy matter where you live, Ppntiac, Drayton Plains Waterford, Clarkston, Orion, Auburn Heights, Keego Harbor, Bloomfield Hills, or the surrounding area, you, to, can enjoy NCW MOB ILH EAT frc*n GEE, as our trucks deliver in your area. > REMEMBER! LOW SUMMBR PRICES ARC NOW IN IPPICT. -Coal Users Atteatioa!- Cdll FE 5-81B1 Now! SAVE Order your coel in load Iota of two or more tons end mvo $1.50 o ton Ueo our monthly payment plan on bin fill* -carrying charge/ 1 SO PER . TON "IF YOU DON'T KNOW FUEL . . , KNOW YOUR FUEL DEALER' "T~ mM .r : rkr-- THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8. IMP ELEVEN, Bataan March Survivors Plan Reunion Friday FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) & Memories M the Bataan death march never wi^ fade for Its sur- vivors. ■ Dan C. Irwtn, one of four Fort Myers veteran of the ordeal, said same survivors art expected to journey from as far as California to attend a reunion in Fort Myers Friday to Sunday. “I think we'd have a tremendous turnout if we knew where they all were and could get word to them," Irwin said.. Irwin and his comrades were among 10,000 US. servicemen on Bataan, Philippine Islands, who were surrendered to the Japanese in 1943. Many died en route to prison camps and only 4$00 were alivf.at the end.of the war. Why Accept Less for Your Money NOT 3% NOT 3%% BUT 4% CURRENT RATE on ALL SAVINGS Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. Established 1890 FREE PARKINC IN REAR OF BUILDING 75 W. Huron FE 4-0561 GENE KELLY WEDS — Actor-dancer Gene Kelly and his bride of a tow hours Jeanne Coyne step from a plane at Los Angeles International Airport Saturday night as they arrive home from A surprisd wedding ceremony at Tonopah, Nev. She has been his studio production assistant for some time. Kelly la divorced from actress Betsy Blair. The bride is the former wife of film director Stanley Donen. Man-in-Space Work on Time rocket-launched capsules, to an tance of 200 miles down range altitude of 125 miles and a dis-lfrom Cape Canaveral. Lieoleim ION RUGS O UP TO 9 x 12 mil# I A Worehouse dUY-LO Lint7e;Ti,e 102-104 S. Saginaw (Next Door to May's) Free Forking in Rear Ha: BUY AT A FLOOR COVERING SUPERMARKETS ;______HUNDREDS Of OTHER ITEMS AT IIG SAVINGS? UNOLEUM WALL TILE •R yt* wam 21 ASPHALT TILE 9x9x‘/« Random Spottar 3%‘ VINYL-A«b«»tos TILE RiBdoB Pattern . 9x9 tech | ARMSTRONG AsnutiT mi Ecnoi-vmn itHl* salars SJSG Carten 10 p *6" 9 or 12 Foot VINYL FLOOR COVERING squara yd.’ PLASTIC WALL 1c««6 9c TILE ■ * Lifetime getiattot it catort 4x8 shoots PLY- A WOO D 9 ■•r RUBBER TILE CLOSE-OUT IjCEach CEILING TILE 9‘s U.S. Project Mercury Says NASA Still Eyes Plights This Year WASHINGTON (AP) - A top space agency official said today that the Project Mercury manned satellite program Is “essentially along the same time schedule” as was initially planned. Despite some published reports of serious lags iA the program, “no major problems" have der veloped, Dr, Abe Silverstein said in an interview. He is director of space flight programs for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Silverstein reported that everything inside the Mercury capsule fired from Cape Canaveral, Fla., July 29, worked properly even though the Atlas launching vehicle failed. The agency still plans to launch Mercury astronauts into suborbital flights this year, and into orbits around the earth next year, as nearly on schedule as is possible in any ambitious research and development program, Silverstein said. Seven men are being trained for lyaur, three or more times arc the earth, at altitudes of 120 miles. These full-scale Atlas-launched ■ missions will be preceded by sub-orbita , test Imps, in Redstone 14DIES’ or MEN’S WATCH Sot! Fine quality watches with toll 2 year guaraatoa . . . PLUS paa and psedTast, tit bar and caff Hnka tor tha ’ lac# and tarring# tor tha YOURS WITH THE PURCHASE OF A NORGE APPLIANCE DURING THIS SALE ONLYI Days Same as Cash All Norge Appliances lire Specially Priced for This Sale Fully Automatic NORGE 2 Years to Pay! NO DOWN PAYMENT! WASHED 168 Has FREE WjlTCHI APPLIANCES PURCHASED FOR FUTURE DELIVERY HELD AT NO EXTRA CHARGE 1 YEAR FREE SERVICE if AFTBUrOON U.S. No. 1 MICHIGAN EARLY WEEK SPECIALS! POTATOES 10“* 29' S BIG STORES TO SERVE YOU IN PONTIAC AND UTICA 4370 DIXIE HWY.—DRAYTON PLAINS 265 N. TELEGRAPH AT ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 750 PERRY ST. AT JOSLYN 2341 S. TELEGRAPH RD. (MIRACLE MILE) 46660 VAN DYKE AT GERHARDT—UTICA SWEET CALIFORNIA THOMPSON Seedless Grapes BORDEN'S FRESH CREAMY Cottage CHEESE YOUR CHOICE THIS COUPON IS WORTH C * on tha Purchasa Xhl of Any BAR4-QUED CHICKEN This coupon «aNd at Krtgtr'a Mirada Mila and and Tuaaday, Angait R and 9, 1960 only! inieil KROGER FRESH BAKED GOLDEN POUND CAKE I Q • I SAVE 8c EACH SAVE 7c—KROGER FRESH BAKED SLICED WHITE BREAD • • SAVE 10c - FROZEN FRIED CHICKEN. CODFISH. SLICED BEEF. SUCED TURKEY BIRDS EYE BRAND DINNERS DELICIOUS GOODRICH BRAND - PEACHES MONDAY AND TUESDAY SPECIAL—LEAN 'N MEATY PORK CHOPS • •. t 11-OZ. PKG. SLICED or HALVES FREESTONE CENTER CUTS MONDAY AND TUESDAY SPECIAL — ECONOMICAL 'N TASTY END CUT PORK CHOPS . ... . . 39* Don't Forget Yon Got These Low Kroger Prices... Plus Free Top Value Stamps. SO EXTRA . TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON AHO SI* purchase or mskhammse except •EES, WINE OS CISASETTES * Yana lira w«a„ mim ia, taaa • t Knew to Panto 1 •ntftoatom Mlaalfaa — UtoH Om Ohm =48 r\ happen af- Kroge'- We reserve the right to limit quantities. Prices and items effective at Kroger in Pontiac and Eastern Michigan thru.Tues., August 9,1960. Nonf sold to Dealers. tt?-' r i TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY* AUGUST 8, 1060 Dollar Aid Nears End VM3SHINT0N - United Safes tffiw k aid to Europe virtualy ended during (he first six months of I960. Only Spain, Yugoslavia, Iceland, and the city of West Ber- lin still get significant economic help. To convert Fahrenheit tempera-tore to Centigrade, subtract 8 degrees and multiply by five, then divide by nine. AUGUST SALE SPECIAL SPECIAL FEATURES designed to provide both • Molded Foul Robber Cosbies over 5" thick • Smooth Silent Rocking Action • Rigged Construction, Built to Lost • Made in Grind Rapids, Mich.— . As Pictired SS9.00 • Same Rocker Except Witkont Wings $49.00 Quantity Limited Ten Always Get Mere ter Yen Money at Miller's MOU STYLE! MORE QUALITY! MORE VALUE! Our Lower Overhead Makes the Diifemco FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND AVE. Report of Soccpog Juat Released Farnily Gets A on FalloutShel Test Fed He's Not Ready ST. LOWS, Ma (UP!) - Police figure rookie police dag Kjpg VI fapt ready Ear Ml final exams. King VI Mt a police officer. M n-Ct.U U>4 Wuhlns-UM Hm iTh. draws (ran Irarad by **“ MnwH , to*. Tbs MM ___________ esssrtsasb sf s WlUm,_______ IMtr that mm tws wisfci to a MMratMn radktastira falls a t , shsMsr hH* ysar.) PRINCETON, NJ. (UPI) — A year ago today high school teacher Thomas Pownejr, his pretty blonde wife and their throe smill children started the ninth day of a two-week stay In a tiny basement room. The room, 9 feet long and S feet wide, was a simulated radioactive fallout shelter st Prince-don University. The Powners were guinea pigs in a psychology experiment sponsored by the federal government. The room bad a# electric power, windows, Husk toilet or running water. Far soaking then was a candle-heated chaf- ing dtok. Far light there wm other wadies and small batteries fco eked to Waridlght bulbs. Behind a curtain was a "chemical toilet," but It didn’t "decompose,” destroy or in any way get rid of waste materials." Ventilation was supplied by a band-cranked machine connected to a bole in the solid door to the room. There was plenty of food and bottled water, but no hot water for shaving. Normal tub baths or showers were out of the question. Psychologists maintained an' around-the-clock guard over the room, via a hidden rniero- abodl. la eaae of emergency MR There Is a GOOD JOB Wailing for You! The finest employers in this area are calling upon us to fill excellent positions with good pay and opportunity. They are offering more positions now than we have graduates. the demand ior well-trained secretaries, accountants, and other qualified office employes exceeds the supply. Our free placement service will be at your service when you graduate. Fall Term Begins Tuesday, September 6th Pontiac Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence St. (Since 1896) FEderal 2-3551 Includes: • PUNS • PERMIT • FOOTINGS • BLOCK FOUNDATION • 215# ROOFING • CLEAR REDWOOD SIDING • WINDOWS PER CODE • E-X-P-A-N-D BIG AT SMAU COST WITH A 12 FOOT FEDERAL MODERNIZATION STARTER ADDITION Complete Modernizatiofl Service ROOM ADDITIONS YOU NAME IT-FEDERAL WILL BUILD IT! Take this opportunity to provide more living space for your family—the heavy, difficult and unpleasont work we will do... And you can finish your new room at a tremendous saving! NO JOB TOO SMALL OR TOO LAR6EI WHEN YOU MODERNIZE CALL FE 3-7033 FOR FREE HOME ESTIMATE Open Every Night ’til 8 FHA TERMS NO MONET DOWN STEADS TO PAT hr Free Horn# Estimate CALL FE 3-7033 DAT OR NIGHT . 24 HOUR ANSWERING SERVICE but the family tad no attar But the Powners won’t really bothered by any of tide. Instead the experience brought the family domr together, according to a report on (ha experiment Just released by the Office of CM1 and Defense Mobilization. ADVANTAGES Thomas Fawner, 31, got to know his children better in two weeks. His wife Madge, also 8. emerged from the shelter convinced of the .value of the experience. The vocabulary of the youngest child, Hilary age 2. la-creased much mere than It would have, aader normal con-dittoes. Her brother* Scott, «, and Tory, S, started taking care ef their little sister, the report said. Jade A. Vernon, university psychologist in charge of the experiment, concluded it wag a ‘‘Project Hideaway was the first case of a family entering a fallout shelter with the intent to remain confined for 14 days,’’ Vernon said. ♦ * ★ It "wag undertaken for two reasons: (l) lb determine whether a family could remain confined to a family fallout shelter for 14 days, and (2) To determine the nature and gravity ef the problems associated with shelter life," he wrote. "The first objective was clearly achieved," he said. “The family remained la the abetter for 14 continuous days. As to the problems of shelter living, noae developed with sufficient gravity to cause the demonstration to be terminated.” Vernon gave the Powners ’A’ for ingenuity in their stay in the shelter: ' . •> —"The parents wisely used the ventilator as a reward device. The children were allowed to operate it only when tifey had performed well in some way.” —A bed sheet wet by little Jailed Fireman Gets Suspension for Going to Cuba .NEW YORK (UPI) — A New York fireman who is one of Americans jailed in Cuba has been suspended from his job. for being absent without leave. Firemen Richard Pecoraro, 27, violated a department rule forbid-jding firemen to leave the United Stptes except on their annual' vacations, according to Acting Fire Commissioner George F. Maud. I Mand Friday made Pecoraro’s suspension without pay Retroactive to last Monday, the day he was due back on the job. Pecoraro* had finished his last tour at duty July 25, and extended his time off to Aim. 1 by switching tours with another flremak Watermelons are grown commercially in 22 states. TO PLEASE A MAH. CALL CAREFUL < DAN FOR FLAWLESS DRY CLEANING -Not only his velbeble clothes but the whole family's deserve Pontiac Laundry's gentle care and expert workmanship. And It costs no more to hove finer dry CeM Careful Den at FI 2.0101 Enjoy Insured Mothproofing FRfE DRY CLEANERS 7-ffosr Service of Our t Locolion* 540 I. Telegraph Reed * 2412 We# 12 MMe — Berkley fll S. Heater — Birmingham Tory was hung to dry in the shelter. “Because it dried so slowly it soon became the focurf of artistic activity.. a rather nice mural eras produced by the mother using ehUdra’s crayons.” a * * —The family discovered that ipittipg four wicks bio the candle heating the chafing dish would yield much more beat * * ' Mrs. Powner said that if the decision to take part is shelter experiment' were up to the family again, ttey’ditffl go along with the peopoaaL SPECIAL Wheel Boknico Ma i Put All Stc. IM) H 1-tMT *«0n NO JNEED TO SPEND A MINT OF MONEY—SIlOP US FOR VALUES I«orH . NEW RCA WHIRLPOOL Auntie Washers With Big 10-Lb. Loadw-Set. your own water temperature control automatic lint filter —-agitator washing action with 2 cycle timer for either regular or deli-, cate fabrics. NOW ONLY ,95 199 No money dawn and we wOl deliver and IneUIL Ate free one year service. HERE’S ANOTHER HARD-TO-BEAT VALUE 14 Cu. Ft. GIBSON 100 Lb. Capacity with Zero Separate Freezer ! TV BUT OF 1960 Brand New 17" . SYLVANIA Carrying Handle, Built In Antenna, Big 155 Sq. Inch Viewing Area. SPECIAL LIMITED QUANTITY ’138“ FREE DELIVERY - FREE INSTALLATION I M ^COOD HOUSEKEEPING^^ «f PONTIAC ’ OPEN TON1TK TIU • 51 W. West .Huron Street Shop ty Phone! FE 44956 :>.(> r-,. -I ;r>^;- the PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST 8, i960 yHXB-BTO ThgyU Be Battery-Powered Coming Up: Cordless App ances Mayes Meets Mayes in Vary Close . Contact KNOXVILLE, Tarn. (AP)-PauI ! Aim Mayes met Paul Allen Mayes as the result of an accident Of- By SAM DAWSON NEf YORK (AP) - Cordless home appliances are taking shape on the drawing boards of a number si caterers to the'electrical gadget wants of housewives and their hnahanda Electric shavers with hnnij*f» power are .already on sale along with regargeabie portable radios. Designers are taBdng of cordtese “vacuum cleaners, lamps, dictating machines, docks and electric lawn mowers. * | * * J The latest devices, some as «small as thimbles, use nickel cad--miura batteries instead of the con* "ventional once. The new ceils are -rechwrgeaftte over and over again *and guaranteed not to run down 'white not in use. - Salesmen for the new products "will stress freedom from . noyance of cords end the conven-*10000 of usage where wall sock-jets aren’t available. - But they’ll have to overcome 'the resistance of the housewife -to the higher price which the new terteo, Willard and Adda batter- lor the batteries now. The mak* I ! _ _______, than 300 stem A Gould spoheemsn predicts tot with On hoped-for expansion in tot hrmsshoid and office fields, ■etas can riaa to 13 million dollars by 1965. Makers of plugin type appli-net question It inroads an electric cord devices will be tint * dr * ickel ^mhim jMrtte _________ Even st 75 million dollars the rw batteries would ha little threat to toe convention lead add battery business, running around 835 million dollars a year. For one thing, the nickel cadmium batteries would be much too expensive for use in Present car batteries can be had for around 330. A nickel cadmium big enough tor a car would coat between 3300 and 3335. Small gadgets with small battery units offer a better field! Here’s an example of how they should its atomic power plant gst out of whack. Ammican Telephone A Tele-raph has such butteries tor standby use la the United States and rsnada. prising town because they don’t run down when unused and because they never vefi nor leak. Tennessee Gas and other natur- The Remington Rand cordless electric shaver la powered by two him cells storing enough color 30 minutes use — some two or three weeks of quick shav-ren the battery runs down, iver is placed on a charging stand and plugged into an dec* trical wall socket, regarding in 24 rs. The makers say the cells t be overcharged and are good at least-15 yean. * * dr bare are other cordless electric shaven, such as Landers, Frary A Clark’s Universal, using penlite batteries that are replaced they run down. * A. * Electric uses recharge- batteries in a portable radio, and plana a cordless vacuum ’ with these cells next year, [by power is a major use f mtmwnfg Open Every Night 'til 8 Selling Spree WITH A GIGANTIC BONUS Sabs Tax Included is All Prbssl Guaranteed 1 Full Inch Thick ALUMINUM STORM DOOR ‘There’* A Satisfied m*# o* an Federal Modernisation Customer Near You” $31.95 WHEN YOU MODERNIZE CALL PE 3*7033 , FOR FREE ESTIMATE |sre customen tor nickel cadm-battorles as a source of jemergency power at pumping ate- Hope Chest Contains Trading Stamp Boob TOWSON, Md. * - These days, no one escapee the erase. , A 23-year-old secretary planning to he married disclosed that the things in her hope cheat include 10 books of trading stamps. Allen Mayes, 26, i driven by Paul Allen 1 The man, whose names ai listed side by side to the city 4 rectory, had never met beta Been said a car driven by Paul'and are not Mated. 7^0 I ci,y wide ".Zicfi £pet DRUG STORES &>•*> i/ Delivery Coll the Thrifty Drug Store Nearest You 146 Ne. SseiMw S*. Huron St 4895 Oisie Hwy. FE 4*1549 rc 8-9677 OR 3-1281 IT TAKES A "PRO" TO KNOW! **P>slieslanel Dry-Cteuiae Md rtobAtef ef Lew MeeaT VOORHEJS “1-HOUR” CLEANERS 4160 W. Wefean of Soshobow Drayton Plains, Mich. h fraal if flrtlil Writ Sank I B-Mvla (Ms isur Como Sh . a a Yowl Save «t AAP! TOP QUALITY—COMPLETELY CLEANED-GOVERNMENT INSPECTED 11 Super-Right" Steak Sale! Center Cut RouihI Steaks Tender, Juicy Cube Steaks Tasty, Tender Chip Steaks Delicious Beef Rib Steaks IONA BRAND NEW PACK Green Beans 16-02. CAN 10< ANN PAGE FINE QUALITY Tomato Soup 10ft-OZ. ID CAN FEATURE VAdfifc-A REAL BUY! BANANAS -10 —--- • —- THOMPSON, CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS CRAPES 2 35 VEGETABLE SALE! YOUR CHOICE ABF. French Style Green Beans Reliable Cur Groan Beam Reliable Cat Wax Beans ABF Whole Kernel Corn A&F Cream Style Com Reliable Feas or Sultana Tomatoes 7 m 1*00 SPECIAL VALUE-JANE PARKER GOLDEN BROWN, SUGARED OR CINNAMON Donuts ■* 19{ SAVE 20d JANE PARKER, S INCH SIZE Blackberry Pie ..... oniy 39c A&P BRAND—OUR FINEST QUALITY Nutlay Brand —Quarters Margarine 6 ™ 89* H — AMERICAN PROCESS CHEESE POOD Ched-O-Bit »» 39c Grapefruit Juice s=*" 4 99« PINEAPPLE-ORANGE Hi-C Juice ..................Scat* KEIF THE BUGS AWAY—BRIGHT SAIL Insect Bomb % ...... ^ 59< DAILY BRAND—REGULAR, FISH, OR LIVER Dog Food ... ...............12 cani 89« SAVE AT ABF—JACK RABBIT Navy Beans........ 2 & 19< All prices in this ad effective thru Tuesday, Aug. 9th x let Eastern Michigan AAP Super Markets THE GREAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC. £uper Markets AMIRKA'S DfpfMDABII FOOD MIRCNANT SINCE 1850 y ? TOttHTEEX THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST MWO : Pontiac Artists Have Their Day at Tel-Huron Center PmiUse Trtu Photo* A young shopper examines with interest the owl that Hazel Nauman of the Pontiac Society of Artists was working on at Saturday s fourth annual sidewalk exhibit at Tel-Huron Shopping Center. Eleven-year-old Ann C. Fitzgerald of Beverly Hills is tempted to try her hand at modeling in clay, Sketching a portrait in pastels occupies Floren Beuhre of Elsinore drive at the open air exhibition. Onlookers shopping at the busy center marvel at her use of color and line and her ability to capture a likeness. Sutuiy skies favored the artists. A quiet corner at the shopping center permits workshop teacher Ingvor Davison, of South Avery street to work with perishable fruit on a warm August day for her still life in pastels. A Feller Needs a Friend Bolster This Romeo's Ego -You'll Stay His Juliet Yet By^ABIGAIL VAX Bl'REX DEAR ABBY: I have a prot> km that is putting gray hair in my head. I have been mar-, . ried 13 years. We have four Children. My husband is a collector and is out of town ABBY * lot. Last night he came home and told me he made a date with another woman, but he didn’t keep it. I asked him why he made the date and he said he just wanted to see if he could still get a date. It had been so long since he tried. I feel terrible about this. How can I ever trust him again? Do you think he told me the whole truth? GRAY HAIR DEAR GRAY: Probably. The man who never says anything is the one you have to watch. Pump up your husband's self-confidence and he won't hove to test his power as a Romeo. Every woman knows that all a man needs to get a date is a little time, the right place and some long green in his pocket (BJit don't tell him I said so). * * * t>EAR ABBY: Why do people bother to come to church if they can't stay awake during the sermon? We are faithful churchgoers and I have noticed people who fall asleep regularly the minute they sit down in church. One man shores a little and it is a mystery to me why his wife doesn’t give him a shove. Don't you think it is the duty of those sitting near people like that to wake them up? CHURCH-GOER DEAR GOER: When people fall asleep in church, someone should wake up the preacher. * * * DEAR ABBY: My husband's brother Duane works and lives in a city 1,000 miles from here. Next month he is marrying a girl from there. We sent them a rather expensive present. We are people of modest means and cannot afford to make the trip for the wedding, but we are pitching in so that Duane’s mother and father can fly there and back. Duane knows all this. Last week we received a shower invitation ("Something for the kitchen, pkase?”) from the bride’s friends. My husband really blew his top! He absolutely forbids me to send a gift, which I can understand. However, I don't want her people to think we are as ignorant as they are. What would you do, Abby? ANNOYED DEAR AJWOYED: If my husband had ''forbidden" me to send a gift—that would settle it. It is poor taste to send a shower invitation to someone 1.000 miles away. But perhaps bride's friends might have been thoughtfully trying to include the groom’s family in on everything. Acknowledge the Invitation with appreciation, best wishes—and regrets. ★ V * CONFIDENTIAL TO "DON’S DARLING": You can be saved by the bell—the wedding bell— if you hurry. ' ★ h If you want a personal reply from Abby, write to tier in care of this paper and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. she answers ALL letters. Don't Go From Tub to Soiled Clothes 1 You really need several changes of fresh lingerie hr stay cool and fastidious during the hot season. There’s no sense in being soap-and-water fresh yourself, then putting on underthings already damp with , perspiration. Launder your just-acorn slip, panties, bra, and hose “just before you step into your bath, and you’ll always have a clean, dry set when you need them next. Loosely-woven, clean cotton is the best possible summer lingerie to put on after a cooling bath. j Think How You Look, Not Just How You Feel, (NEA) — Your choice of clothes for summertime activities should be dictated by good taste as well as comfort. Yet every summer women by the thousands squeeze themselves into inadequate bathing suits, shorts, tight toreador pants and strapless sun dresses which reveal -vast rolls of billowing flesh. Hie worst offenders are mature women but teen-agers aren’t far behind them. They appear on beaches and, worse, on the street in such get-ups. Hiey don't seem conscious of the fact that not only are they displaying poor taste, they look ludicrous. If you are overweight and your figure is pour, pay the penalty. Stay out of shorts of any kind. Stay away from strapless dresses. Be sure that your swim suit is not only your correct size but that it is modestly cdL and has a skirt. Don’t be as concerned about what “they" are wearing as you are about the kind of figure you cut in public. Hostess Probably Delighted By Emily Poet Dear Mrs. Post: My husband and I were invited to play bridge at a friend's house last evening. She had some very delicious imported candy on the table to eat while playing cards. I am very fond of this particular kind of candy but none of the stores around hefe have it, so I rarely get to eat It. When the candy was offered to me, I told the hostess that I never eat between meals but that I was going to take a piece and save it for the next day. Later my husband told me that he was shocked at fny doing such a thing and thinks my action was in very bad taste. As my husband seldom makes a fuss over anything, I am wondering if What I was was wrong. Answer: I do not think you deserved your husband’s criticism, because your hostess probably took It as a compliment to her delicious candy that you were willing to risk soiling your bag with a melting piece of It, ao that you would be ride to enjoy it later. * * * Dear Mrs. Post: When a husband Invites two business men and their wives — all strangers to Ms wife —to his house tor diliner, is his wife supposed to do anything about seconding his Invitation? If so, what? - Answer: She should send notes or telephone messages to the wives If she possibly can. If this is not possible, then the guests, should at least be reassured by the husband who should relay a message of welcome such as, "My wife is looking forward to meeting you/' Honors Tour Europe After Rite MRS. RICHARD TOEDTHARTZELL Fiancee A kitchen bridal shower at the Edgefield drive home of Mrs, Paul Allison honored bride-elect Anastasia Savvas. Cohostesses were Josephine Seeley and Mrs. William Kennedy. Miss Savvas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Azarias Savvas of Liberty street, will marry George Mulopulos, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mulopulos of Toledo Sept. 4 at St. George Greek Orthodox Church. ★ # ir In addition to the bride-elect's mother, guests at the Thursday shower were Mrs. William Gregory, Mrs. William Perrin, Mrs, Richard Tompkins, Mrs. Thomas Marsh, Mrs. Henry Larsen, Mrs. Wil-lima Hill, Josephine Bulla, Mrs. Gary Scheets, Mrs. Carr Harrison, Mrs. William De-Rousse and Mrs. Lester Mar-tindale. h * ★ Others were Mrs. Richard Lasley of Berkley, Mrs. Theodore Jackson of Detroit, Mrs. Charles Bryan, Mrs. Harold Weils, Mrs. Merlin Sanderson, Mildred Barnett, Mrs. LaVeme Selmes, Mrs. Howard Hess, Mrs. William E. Hill and Ruth Rogers of Albion. . > Care Is Costly NEW YORK (UPD — The averdge daily expenditure per day in 1969 for each patient in the nation’s federal psychiatric hospitals was 111.34, compared with 110.61 in 1968. A month’s todrthrough Eur- J ope by car follows the Satur- > day evening wedding of Ann * Osborn and Lt. Richard Toedt- * •man Hartzell. * • * * Vows were exchanged In ' 'candlelight at First Presby- * terian Church, Birmingham, ’ before a white flower-decked altar. Dr. Glen Harris read * the service before 900 guests. The bride is the daughter of file Cyrus Richard Os-boms of Bloomfield Hills. Lt. Hartzell is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hartzell of Anderson, Ind. Contour folds of silk defined the waist of the silk mist gown > of the bride. PEARL ‘FROSTING’ In deep cameo ivory, its empress bodice of Alencon lace was frosted with seed pearls. Brief sleeves and a square scalloped decollet age topped the bouffant skirt swept to side fullness and featuring a court train. Heirloom roae pointe clasped the ivory veil of silk illusion which cascaded to the bride’s waist. Her flowers were ste-phanotis and Amazon lilies. * * # Attending the bride as matron of honor was Margaret McCaul of Bloomfield Hills. Bridesmaids Mary Jane Hartzell of Anderson, Ind.? • Mrs. Robert Cummings of Fort Warner Robbins, Ga.; Shelly Scarney of Orchard Lake and Joan Moyer of Hinsdale, 111. were attired alike in bell-skirted gowns of cafe au lait mousseline de sole. Chantilly lace overlaid the molded bodices of the brides- , maids’ gowns which were designed with portrait necklines and brief sleeves. Bandeaus (Ml velvet leaves and bouquets of salmon gla-mellias completed their ensembles. - LIEUTENANT BEST MAN Lt. David Meid of Scott-AFB was best man to the bride- * groom. ★ . * + Ushering were James Lowe * of New York City, William • Hoglund of Kansas City. Lt.. William Wofford of Scott Air Force Base, Sheldon Wilde of , Anderson, Ind., and the bride’s * brother Cyrus Osborn. A reception followed the ceremony at the home of the bride’s parents. Upon their return from Europe,1 the couple will live at Scott AFB In Southern Illinois. Try Warm Bath for Good Sleep A new book, "Sound Ways To Sound Sleep’’ by psychologists Donald A. and Eleanor C. Laird, contains a wealth of wisdom on this subject which has universal interest. Among the Laird's suggestions: don’t try hard to go to sleep, since this is a self-defeating form of vigilance: experiment to find your moat comfortable position: and take A warm berth before bedtime to relax muscles and ease tension. Dr. and Mrs. George L. Spaeth and daughter Kristin of Ann Arbor, who have been visiting her father Harold L. Ward and sister Dolly of West Huron street, have left 'to make their home in Philadelphia. Dr. Spaeth will take his residency at Willis Hospital. ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, I960 FIFTEEN- Have Yon Tried Thto? Pressure Cooker Stew Starts With Pork Chops VACATIONING? Try Our Mesaanine Budget Department SPECIAL Oar *8.00 Permanent complete - no appointment necessary VERY SPECIAL $050 Oar $12.50 Permanent O Pair Wed at Central Methodist We are pleased to announce MABEL HLTMAN •has,been added to our staff Come In—Relax and Enjoy Our Newly Air-Conditioned Beauty Shop TONY’S 35* Main Floor 35 W. Huron FE 3-7186 STYLE SHOP PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER UNWANTED HAIR Removed Permanently by Short Wave KlectrolysU TREATMENT ......*4 Registered Eleetrologlst TONY’S S7 FE 3-7186 by Appointment WEAR AQUA IBOOKS Mrs. Gerald A. Ball of Rhode Island was her sister's matron at r. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Douglas Fortin, Vena Towle and Mrs. Daryl Wilson, sister of the bridegroom. tin attendants warn gawnil alike la street ta** embroidered aqua silk ergamti over toilets tracks designed with aeaqp necklines and cap sleeves. Bash wore a matching platens head band and white wrist length gloves. The honor matron carried a wicker basket with pink carnations and white Shasta daisies. Wicker baskets with botti pink carnations and Shasta daisies were held by the bridesmaids. tan. David Kovach performed ring earer duties. Following the cerstnocy a re-tption was held In the church Mutes. Mrs. Kyta. received the SO gates wearing • Inca and organs avocado sheath then with matching shoes, topes accessories and a yellow rote corsage. A white and black printed sheath dran with abort jacket and pinked rose accessories were lirt. Sweet's choice for her son’s wedding. Her corsage was ot pink roses. For travelog to esrthiiiu Mich- «*y and she pinned a corsage to her salt. The new Mrs. Sweet attended Michigan State University. Her husband studied,at Lawrence Institute of Technology. MRS. RICHARD Q. SWEET Flower girl Kathem Ban, the bride’s niece', wore a white broldered tucked organdy < with pull sleeves and a Pete Pan collar. Her headpiece was a wreath ol pink sweetheart rosebuds and she held a wicker basket of rose petals. ATTEND BRIDEGROOM Edward Plawinsld of Chicago, 01. attended as best man..Ushering were Dean Keune of St. Louis, Mo., Daiyl Wilson and Barry Gor- 300 Guests at Evening Ryerse-Pierce Nuptial Three hundred guests attended the Saturday evening wedding of Joan Barbara Pierce of Birmingham and Janies Bradley Ryerse, son of Mr. and Mis. Robert Ryerse of North Opdyke road. The Rev. Samuel stout Ol Embury Methodist Church, Birmingham, performed the candlelight ceremony in Birmingham’s First Methodist Church. Altgr flowers were white gladioli, chrysamthe-(u and ivy. The uDifferentP Look for You • • • PERMANENTS $5_ $«_S7.50 Styled Heir Cutting $1.50 Wo Specialize In CUMraa’s Hair Cutting. ANNALJESE BEAUTY SALON 80ft N. Saginaw St. FE 2-5600 (Over Tate Bakery) Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Pierce ol Mansfield street. Birmingham, the bride approached the attar wearing a white Chantilly lace floor-length gown. A rood pond flm secured her fingertip veil. She wore a strand ol pearls and held an §rrangement of stephanotis and ivy centered by a white orchid. Honor matron Mrs. Paul Curie wore a maize organza short formal-length gown and matching headband of net and pearls. Bridesmaids Betty Jo Fitzpatrick, Sandra Trathen ol Birmingham and Betty Seymour all wore short lime green organza formal* and matching net and seed pearl headbands. All attendants carried crescent bouquets of pals yellow glamellias and Ivy. - a *• Attending as best man was Bruce McClellan. Ushers wen Gary Eley, Jack Ostrander and James Jacobs. A reception in the church social hall followed the ceremony. Mrs. Pierce selected a slate with « Mrs. Ryerse, a paisley silk dross with Idea) for Kids (UPI) — New scuff «nd sod t stunt Scotchgarded leathers ttu eep their shape when wut a return to their original aottnei when dry are uaed for bogs’ ai girts’ shorn foe fall. “Step mi Bejy* fef ImfcUc • Rte Cots by Oeear I. , t Parisian Beauty 9n* YOUR CHILD PMQTMRAPMD in ■ KODAK LIVING COLOR -99‘ YOUR QIOKE-flRST PRINT ONLY IF YOU UU THEM! Money Buck Guarantee Bring Tour CMId In TOMORROW! MRS. JAMES B.. RYERSE matehlug accessories. Both planed white orchid corsages to their outfits. Before leaving for a boat trip to Wisconsin, the bride changed to a brown and white silk suit dress with n brown feather hat and white orchid corsage. She is a former Eastern Michigan University student. The couple will reside on Mi FINAL Shoe Clearance EMTIRE STOCK FAMED THIS SEASON SHOES by JACQUELINE MAROUISE aid NATURALIZER Regularly to *78.99 $ WO won’t core how many pair*, you buy ... and you'll-want Hvsrol whan you see their slim-heeled elegance In sum. mar romandn* White, pastels, lustres, patents, blonds, reds, navies. Hurry for beet selection in your size.! ‘ ? * Special Group, Rag. to 10.99 CASUALS ‘5 Glamour Gloves (UPI) — Fur-trimmed gloves figure in the fall fashion picture. Examples—ranch mink cuffs on white lbd shorties; leopard cuffs on otter color leather shorties;' rhinestone buttom on mink cuffs of blade made shorties. Ch arm Chal by Aleda HAIR BEAUTY The real beauty of any heir style depends on keeping the tresses dean and shining-bright. This moans frequent shampooing and all the brushing you can give it. Dermatologists say that washing your hair daily won’t harm it any more than daily washing harms your face. Models shampoo their heir every night to have it perfect for photographic highlights. This Isn't necessary for the average woman hut anyone with Oily hair should certainly count on shampooing two or three times a week. To bring out the real beauty in your halfwit U necesary to keep regular beauty appointments. In this way you are In-tune with the latest trends. Aleda’s Beauty Salon Ponttee State Bonk Building 26ft North Saginaw St. FE 4-8611 William K. Cowie Custom Upholstery 2S Yrs. of Practical Experience . n 4-MS7 COUPLETS WITH CUT AND SET NONE- HIGHER! COLOR! COLOR! COLOR! BACK TO SCHOOL mRNER’S* in SHIRTS 'DOUBLE in 10 smart new colon PLAY o White • Blue a Gold a Green o Brown First girdles over to oRed •Sand Beige 7 99 3 AD This Costs Less With Hollywood’s One Price Plan Carefree Haircut -A Permanent by an Experienced, Licensed Operator A Styled Set ★ Oar guarantee, a Complete Wave iplete $3.75 A No Appointment Necessary ★ Air Conditioned Comfort HOLLYWOOD Beauty Shop 78 North Saginaw Street Over Baxley’s FE 8-3566 ‘charm rr How bright you'll bo in our color-cued shirts. Shown ore just i of the fall classics you'll find Ot Federal's. Sizes 30-38. a. Dacron* polyester 'n cotton. Hal. node. 3.99 b. Dacron* polyester 'n cotton. Rod sleeve. 3.99 C. Pure silk. Roll pleeve, Dbla. petal collar. 5.99 d. Pure siRt with % sleeve. Shawl Collar. 7.99 T.M. OPIN IVIRY NIGHT TO t DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS defying, tool lest of oil, those comfy, controlling girdles and panties have criss-cross bpnds over f that hide the truth about your occasional calorie sprees. Wo have just the right otyte for you . . . Shop Federal's today for the "Double Play" that's custom-fit for your flgurel A. Girdle with slimming 2" Sta-Up-Top. Average length, white, S-M-L 8,J B. Girdle with easy zip waistline. Also matching pantie. White, S-M-L £** C. Brief with dip waistline, easy no-bind legs. White, sizes S-M-L 5*1 Just soy 'CHARGE IT at Fade rat's ITS THE FIT THAT MATTERS FOR THl SHAFE THAT FLATTERS Let evr export conofieres help you achieve a ’ perfect fit on every foundation. It's the fit that's so important to sleek fashion flattery. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 m**, .w** OFFICIALS M,naa.f .. 9r°8r»m • .V’,w;,;* _ £***» gSPS fgOHttl.... 'srzr**' Ald ,'!"2*rov«»>er »**... of Parking "veWon ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1M0 SIXTEEN The 4-H CLUBS of OAKLAND COUNTY invite you to the 1960 EDITION of the FAIR, August 9th through August 13th at the 4-H FAIR GROUNDS, North Perry Street, just south of Walton Blvd. Starting at 7:00 p.m., Tuesday evening, August 9th and running mornings, afternoons and evenings through Saturday evening, August 13th, there wilt be continuous judging contests, parades, awards, demonstrations, dances, etc. Something doing every minute. Don't. miss this the biggest of all Oakland County 4-H Fairs. Here you will see the results of the 3,0^0 project members in Oakland County. See the 4-H prize beef, hogs, sheep, horses . . . the showmanship developed by 4-H members . .. seethe results of planned gardening, junioV achievements'and hundreds of other exhibits. ' NO ADMISSION CHARGE! EVERYONE WELCOME! Carnival on Grounds! Afternoon and Evenings ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Program on Stage! Every Evening — Something Doing Every Minute! Don't Miss It! This Advertisement Sponsored COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK FEDERAL MODERNIZATION AUSTIN-NORVELL INSURANCE AGENCY, Ik. by the Following Firms • - ■'§ KING BROS. BARNETTS MEN’S SHOP BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER M. A. BENSON COMPANY, lie. CONNOLLY’S JEWELERS CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY FOODTOWN-PEOPLE’S SUPER MKTS. GEE 00AL A OIL COMPANY K. 0. HEMPSTEAD INS. AOENOY H. W. HUTTENLOOHER INS. AOENOY THE KINGSLEY INN H. R. NIOHOLIE INSURANCE AOENOY S.S.KRES6E OOMPANY J.C. PENNEY OOMPANY PONTIAC ENGGASS JEWELERS PONTIAO FEDERAL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSN. THE PONTIAO PRESS PONTIAO STATE BANK SQARLETT BlOyOLE SHOP SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME SHAW’S JEWELERS VMjRNEIS-SIPLE FUNERAL NOflE US- WALTON RADIO I TV ROCHESTER—Several items of major importance ' the Village MU face Rochester councilmen at their regular meeting tonight, according to Village Manager York. Chief among them will be a request they will be asked to make for a federal grant of'$150,000 for the ^proposed secondary sewage treatment plant in the village and presentation of plans for the town's new municipal building. Plans (or the secondary sewage treatment plant now are to enlarge the entire operation to double capacity of the present plant, York “HAVE SOME HAY” — Seven-year-old Paige Naugle, daughter of Major and Mrs. Paul T. Naugle of Alexandria, Va., offers the camel some hay- at the Ode Brothers Circus in Auburn Heights FRday. The circus was one of the high points of the community's week-long program, called "Jubilee Days," honoring the founding of a new civic organization, PABT. Paige and her family were visiting her grandmother, Mry. L. R. Naugle ef Auburn Heights. “DON’T TAKE MY FINGERS!” — Little Jimmie Edwards, 3, gingerly hands an elephant a peanut at the Cole Brothers Circus in Auburn Heights Friday. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Edwards of Auburn Heights and grand- son of Pontiac Township Supervisor Leroy Davis. Not quite sure of his courage, Jimmy dropped the peanut before it reached the elephant's mouth. The circus was sponsored by the Auburn Heights Sportsman’s Club. Hawaiian Boat Wins Orion Schools in Union Lake Par Tax Notes OK'd UNION LAKE — Scenes of Hawaii, Kentucky mountains, an August Christmas and pretty girls ad took top hooors Sunday in the annual Union Luka Board Parade. Twelve boats and pontoons took port In the fourth water parade ipomored by the Dewey Beach Improvement Assn. The parade of' boats circled the lake for an hour arid a half before they returned to the starting point and were judged and awarded prizes. WINS FIRST PRIZE First prise went to L. W. Smith of 1305 Lockland Dr. for his 30th state scene, complete with hula girls, tropical flowers and palms. A A . A ' Winning second prize was Harry Fixler of 7145 Lockland Dr. for his "Miss TOen” float. His boat wag covered with flowers and had several teenagers dressed in formats aboard. The ‘‘Martins and Coys” mountain scene took third place among the boater* for Dick Cooper and “pontoon class" received ax cooler. The gifts were donated by the improvement association. ^ Sheriff's deputies from the Water Safety Patrol directed the traffic on the lake during the parade. A * A In the past, winning water crfft have included a pirate ship and scenes from Hawaii, Mexico and Africa. Chairman of the event was Mrs. Max Morey. 3,000 Attend Service at Simpson Park ROMEO — A crowd of more than 3,000 attended services Sun-day at the 96th annual Simpson Park Cartfp Meeting, which is being held just north of here on Camp Ground road. The Simpson Park conclave, the oldest religious event of its kind in Michigan, will continue through next Sunday when approximately „ . ^ , . 4,000 persons are expected to it- Frank Gieaier of S35 Union Lake the final session of the inter-^ * denominational meeting. Ia the panto— elans, Fred Rooevear's float “Christmas in August” received first prise. It was deeorqted with fireplace, Christman tree and holly. Rose-, v—r lives at KM Lackland Lane. Judging Aas done by Mrs. Jerry Ouellette of Dublin School,' Dr. Ernest Bower and West Bloomfield Township Supervisor John C. Rehard, who awarded the prizes. A A , A The three prises tor the "boat class" winners were an outdoor grijl. a folding lawn chair, and a life jacket. The winner in the Visitors to the meeting come from all parts of southeastern Michigan and northern Ohio. Caretaker Burten Hewett said today about 1,000 people are staying on the grounds in tents, cottages, trailers and thtee hotels. State Backs $37,400 in Anticipation Tabs for District LAKE ORION — Tax anticipation notes totaling $37,400 have been approved for the Lake Orion School District by the State Municipal Finance Comnirission. ★ A , A Permission to borrow the money completes the second phase of two-year program of financing additions to the Carpenter and Webber elementary schools here. ★ A A Expansion programs at the two schools will be completed this fail, bat not la time for the open-iag of classes la September, School Supt. A. A. Reed said today. Under construction are five new classrooms, a multipurpose Yoom and an office at Carpenter School and four classrooms at Webber. dr * dr The additions, built at a cost of about $220,000, wifi make classroom space available for 320 additional students, 150 at Webber and 170 at’ Carpenter. Bee Business Booms OTTAWA •— Canada's bees boosted their total output in 1959 to 31,527,000- pounds of honey, up 15 per cent from 1956. The number of colonies dropped to 330,700 from 332,700. Now Mrs. Higelman Kay Tindall Marries brother Jack E. Tindall s» Lapeer. A reception for approximately 300 guests was held in the church parlors following (he ceremony. DBYDEN TOWNSHIP—Kay Lor--raine Tindall became the bride of Stacriey A. Hiselman Saturday nigtn te a candlelight ceremony at Ortonvtlle Baptist Church, dr ' dr 'dr The bride is the daughter of Mrt and Mrs. Paul E. Tindall of 5890 Hosner Rd., Dryden Township. The bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. Hiselman of 30165 Brentwood St, Southfield. Far her wedding, the bride chase a full-length, sequin-trimmed gown of chaatUly lace With wristlength sleeves and a sabrina neckline, ghe wore a matching headpiece wtth a fingertip veil of French illusion and carried a bouquet of yellow roam and white stephanotia tied in satin streamers. I « dr d «* Matron of honor was the-bride's sister-in-law, Mrs. David P. Tindall of Dryden Township. Brides-/ maids were Jeannine Garnett of Pontiac and Jean Tank of Orton- VlU*’ ' _ ’ t MRS. STANLEY A. HISELMAN Best man for Ms brother was Ranald E. Htenlman of Walled I The Mwiyweda, who plan to re-i^l Ushers were Tracy Sibley side hi Pontiac, art now honey-/ ml Lake Orion and the bride’s I mooning at Niagara Falls, N.Y. t Rocky Appeals tor U.S. Support of Nixon, Lodge ALBANY, N. Y. (AP) w Gov. Nelson A: Rockefeller urges support of the Nixon-Lodge Republican ticket as “the surest means of attainment of our miutuai objectives for America and all plan-kind.” ♦ A d ' The Republican governor, once critic of Vice President Richard M. Nixon, said Nixon and U. N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge offered America "a dear better choice for strong, experienced, dedicated and undivided leadership in the years immediately ahead." A d A The appeal, issued by the governor's office Sunday, was seen as an attempt to quell any impression that Rockefeller’s efforts on behalf of the ticket would be halfhearted. Boating in Britain Faces Boom in '60 Event Runs Sept 2-11 Livestock Judging Times tor State Fair Announced The livestock judging schedule for the Michigan State Fair was announced today by General Manager Donald L. Swanson. .it it it Most judging will be in the Fair Grounds Coliseum in Detroit Sept 2-11, Swanson laid. The schedule: -Horses: Quarter on Sept, 2 and 8; Belgians Sept. $; Fere herons, Clydesdfles, grade drafts, hitch and ponies Sept S; 4-H saddle Sept 7, and Arabians, Morgans and Appaloosa Sept. 8. Beef: Steers Sept. 5; Hereford*, milking shorthorns Sept. 6; shorthorn, polled shorthorn and Angus Sept. 7, and Reyl Poll Sept. 8. Dairy Cattle; Guernsey and Jersey Sept. 6; Ayrshire and Brown Swiss Sept. 7; and Heistein-Friesian Sept. 8. Sheep: Fat lambs, Suffolk, Carried ale, Cota wold, American Merino, Black Top Delaine and Romney Sept. I; Shropshire, Hampshire. Columbia, Lincoln and Karakuls Sept S; South-down, Cheviot, RambouJIlet, Delaine Merino and Dorset* Sept. 1- and Oxford, Montadale and market wool Sept. 8. ' Swine: Barrows Carcass Contest Sept. 3; Barrows Sept. 5; Berkshire, Spotted Poland China, Tam-worth, Chester White and OIC Sept. 6; Duroc, Yorkshire, Poland China and Landrace Sept, 7; and Hampshire Sept. S. ^ it it A . Poultry, pigeons and rabbits will be judged Sept. 3. SANDRA RUTH HARRISON .Announcement is made of the engagement of Sandra Ruth Harrison, daughter fit Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R. Harrison of 826 Lapeer Rd., .Oxford, to William A. Palmer of Fort Worth, Tex. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Palmer of Fort Worth. A late August wedding is planned. . . Joins Demand for Congo Unity Leopoldville Following Katanga in Proposal for Federation LEOPOLDVILLE, THE Cohgo (AP)—The government ol Leopoldville province joined secessionist Katanga today in demand-i federation of the Congo's six provinces to replace the central regime of premier Patrice Lumumba. . * Sr' * ' Belgian sources said separatist movements are crystalling in Kasai province east of Leopoldville . Equator province hi Mary Hafey Fails iii Lake Erie Swim ERIE, Pa. (JR—Miss Mary Hafey of Erie, Pa., failed in her attempt to become the first woman to swim across Lake Erie yesterday. * * * Miss Hafey was pulled out of the water, doubled up with camps, after navigating 24 of the 28 miles from Long Point, Ont., to Erie, ghe was in the water about 25 hour*. A A . A*-* Dr. Edward L. Dicola, Miss Ha-fey’s physician, said she- was in great pain during the last hour and a half of the swim. When she was lifted from the lake, she fell asleep immediately. Harbor Strap Garms CHICAGO - A University of Illinois study indicates that in fall and winter 80 to 90 per cent of all persons in hospitals, schools and large factors .may harbor strep-tocci that can^caqse rheumatic fever, scarlet fever, kidney infec-and tonsillitis Council Gels of Major Hems Crash Is Fatal to Lapeer Man Victim Son-in-law of Potica Chiaf Dougherty; Lost Control on Curve LAPEER ■— The son-in-law of the Lapeer police chief was killed instantly in an auto accident here early Sunday while a passenger in his car escaped from the mishap with minor injuries. Dead was James E. Scrimger, 22, of 2257 N. Lapeer Rd. His wife Sally' is the daughter of Police Chief Matthew Dougherty. Scrimger wait ^ fatally injured when his ear struck four trees after he lost control of It on a curve at Bower road near Nepes-sing street. Police said the accident occurred at 3:47 a.m. Sunday. * * * * Released after treatment at Lapeer County General Hospital was Scrimger’s companion Neil Reiitz, 21, of 495 S. Main St. Scrimger was the father of an 11-month-old child and his wife hi expecting another baby this month. Bird Bugging Police in This Coop Coup That was a question Pontiac police detectives pondered today after taking a burglary report. Officers received a call from a neighbor that the heme of Robert Herkimer, 418 Boyd 8t., . had been entered. Missing was a pet parakeet. FINDS DOOR OPEN Mrs.-Nora Stewart, 417 Boyd St., said she’d found the rear door open when she checked the home of the vacationing Herki- ln\estimation showed that the door hadn’t been opened. Nor had any windows been broken. Whether it’s a.burglary or a flight for freedom has police scratching their, heads. “You might say we’re up in the air over’ the bird," a detective quipped. . arid. • a a ■ a ' If tire plans nsate*!allse, the plant would have a capacity of 8.4 million gallons per day. According to the manager, the village can get up to 3D per cent of the total cost, about $500,600, from the federal government if ft can get the necessary number of points. * * * Points are based on need, meeting a required (jmt schedule and other factors. Engineers for the project are completing plans and speetflra-tioas for the sewer expansion program, after which a rate study will be made to determine how the project will be ttnureed. The State "Health Department has urged proinpU action to enlarge Rochester’s present, sewage treatment plant which is now functioning dote to capacity. POLLUTES CLINTON RIVER Officials say the effluent being discharged is polluting the Clinton River. By meeting the state’s time schedule, construct!** will begin April 1 with completion of tho project due a year later. The proposed plant is expected to handle sewer needs of the village for the next 20 years. a a a Pontiac architect Hairy M. Denyes Jr. will present his final plans for the new municipal building in Rochester at tonight's Council meetng. * . A The structure, to cost an estimated $100,000, will be built in Slone Park and is to be completed next spring. The Council will be asked for approval to advertise for bids for tire new building-Other matters to be brought up for discussion will include presentation of an offer of property by the preset^ sewer plant, stricter requirements for house moving and an ordinance to regulate parking of boats on trailers. w it it A petition also win be presented to open Second street between Main street and Easy alley. House Pet’s Far From Foul Geraldine's a Slick Chick Seek Youths Who Shot at Utica Dog From Car UTICA — A group of youths seen firing a pistol from the window of a moving car here, early today were being sought by local police and Macomb County Sheriffs deputies. Police said the youths, who are believed to be about 20 or 21 yean old, shot at a dog tied to a leash at 7880 Chapoton about 7:54 a.m. day. It was the second disturbance of this type ho* in two weeks, police 2 Area Residents Chosen to Michigan Legion Posts Two area residents were chosen officers in the Michigan American Legion at the final meeting Of the organization's four-day convention in Detroit yesterday. -A A. *. Elected . sergeant-at-arms Lewis Ward of Lapeer. Mrs. Janet Copley of Royal Oak was named president of the Twenty and Four, tilt legion's ladies aux- 8yI.EE WINRORN Suburban Editor DRYDEN — Gecsidlne has the typically feminine trait of loving to primp in front of a mirror. This would not be unusual except that Geraldine is a four-year-old bantam hen. ★ * a Owned by Miss Patricia Burton of Burton Farms,’ the diminutive fowl assumed her role of house pet shortly after she was hatched. While the - growing movement towbri) provincial self-rule threatened the stability of his young government', Lumumba himself continued his leisurely journey home. He stopped off today Ghana, whose President Kwame Nkrumah is ready to help him check the independence movement in Katanga province. WIRES DEMAND TO U.N. The provincial government of Leopoldville, which controls the Lower Congo* announced it wired the United Nations Security Council a demand for a federation the Congo’s provinces—Leopoldville, Oriental, Equator, Kasai, Kivu and Katanga, Gaston Dkxd, vice president of the province and head of the Mu-kongo tribe, said hi the cable the Mukongo “rejects the Unitarian, centralised government.” The demand is believed to have the approval of the tightly knit Lower Congo Abako party of President Joseph Kasavubu, which has been advocating federalism for some time. Kasavubu is a political opponent of Lumumba and was handed the largely ceremonial job of president when Lumumba won the premiership. A . it Belgian officials, who have been handled * roughly by Lumumba, were freely predicting his government could not last in the jace of the separatist movements. Miss Burton finds that she has one purchase to make before she introduces her newfly acquired $56,500 .Shetland pony, Captain Top-pe>;-arian open house Aug. 21. She has to buy new tufted bedspreads for the guest bedroom.. Geraldine has a particular fondness for the snowy while tufts, Visitors on Captain Topper’s Day, who will include dignitaries from the British Consulate to Detroit and the British Embassy in Washington, D. C„ plus state officials and neighbors, probably will see Geraldine watching the whole proceeding*. , She doesn't min a trick around worthy. Abandoned by her mother, who left her behind when she took off wtth her other chicks, Geraldine was hatched under a horse Blaaket in Alberta, Va. She was kept to a flannel-lined cup for a while, then was brought to the Burton (arm on Haven road where she imhiediately became a family favorite. Along with the dogs, a Dachshund » Afghan hound and two great Danes, she has complete run of the house and grounds. DOGfi ARE CHICKEN, TOO And the dogs, three-of them almost B10 times her size, know enough to keep their distance. They rhat Geraldine can do to their toy rubber rat when it is thrown n her direction. Her natural desire to become a mother became apparent when she tried to hatch a glass horse . on her mistreee’s dresser. Miss egg tram a neighbor, and Geraldine hatched “Little Edgar.” This was the first time she had •ver seen-another chicken; But Edgar was a bad influence. He liked manure piles and otifer unappetizing pleasures which his mat her, lady that whe was, rowned upon. fEdgar was given back to the neighbor. Now Geraldine lays egga with regularity, and they caa he found ia the meat unusual placet, on PRIMPING HEN — A four-year-rid bantam hen, owned by Miss Patriate Burton of Burton Farms, Dryden. looks at herself to her mistress’s mirror. A house pet, she follows Miss Burton around like a kitten dr a puppy and evea cornea when she if cajied. 'She has complete run of the house and grounds, along with four dogs, three of them almost 100 tithes her size. . \ - ■ • - * ■" ** SEVENTEEN MONDAY. AUGUST 8, HOLLYWOOD OP) — Extras MA 4-3135 BOTH IN COLOR Tmmm TOE1MA RITTER CTKEECO MASTER of the CONGO JUNGLE1 and "RAWHIDE TRAIL" Starts TUESDAY! BOY AGAINST BUCCANEER mil _ AND THE PbMfiSI ^ . EASTMAN COLOR CHARLES HERBERT-SUSAN GORDON^ -2nd FEATURE ! - Or Do They? Stones Don't Want to Set World on Fire mamnr ALONG — The Joha F. Kennedy* Washington Sunday night With the breete whip-steal a brief sail Sunday on the latt day of their ph* through their abundant locks, the Kennedys poqtconvention holiday. Hie senator left for perch in the cockpit of their sailboat Victura. Dull Time in Joil Now COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) — Muscogee County Jailers win have to find new ways of occupying their time while on duty. Chief Jailor A. F. Hearn says he had a television set and a bed removed from the jailers’ quarters for efficiency reasons and ‘‘alertness to duty.” Montgomery CLIFT Lae SBMICX Jo VAN FLEET THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST C, UWO New Typhoon Nips Formosa—Toll Light TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — The wood typhoon In eight days sldeswtped Formosa today, but first reports listed only ana r dead and a woman missing * ♦ * Heavy rains following Typhoon Trix collapsed some houses and sent thousands fleeing to Mgh ground. But the effects appeared not neiur|y ae severe ae Typhoon Shirley and its reins, h which between 104 and 145 persona died last week. ♦ dr ' ★ Trix’s rains brought more land Ides and more floods to the island. A number of American living in Taipei's Grass Mounfaiz area were believed endangered for a time, but their homes at caped damage. *' ★ *. . The main force of the typhoons with center winds of.150 miles ai —passed Into the Fen Strait more than 30 miles nortt of Taipei. It headed west toward the 0*1— mainland. EIGHTEEN to subject to approval by guild members and directors of the producers’ groups. * * ♦ It provides pay raises from $2246 a day to $2125 tor general extras. Dress aad riding extras go from $29.04 to $31.94 and silent bit extras from $61.33 to $67.41 A health and welfare fund will be set up by producers. Great Salt Lake City was renamed Salt Lake City In 1868. Hollywood Extras to Get Pay Raises * SCOOP -¥■ STARTS THURSDAY SOD-WEST^] PREMIERE SHOWING! THRILLS BEFORE * CAPTURED OH FILM! -AT THE- MIRACLE MILE DRIVE-IN THEATER I EAGLE ■RandoiphScott-I ••CINEMASCOPE i«iwCOLOR, BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER HELD OVER! Thro WED. Debbie By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Andy and Virginia Stone, who caused an international furor when they sank the He de France in their last movie, are plotting to set a forest fire for their next picture. * * * They also are waiting somewhat impatiently for a revolution in one of the Latin American banana republics as background for still another film. Strong men tremble and women hide their children when the madcap Stone* start putting a movie together. During the making of “Cry Terror,” a New York subway tunnel collapsed sending actress Lager Stevens to the hospital in deep shock. Fourteen crewmen were given oxygen by the fire department. On "The Last Voyteg” dynamite explosions had performers Edmond O’Brien. Robert Stack and Doro-Malone near nervous wrecks. FACE JAPANESE SUIT A Japanese shipping outfit is suing them over the sinking of the defunct luxury liner He de French, and the French government atm Is in a funk over the ship’s demise. Undaunted, Andy and Virginia soon will be heading to the State of Washington with a hex of matches to film their forest fire. For all tbs havoc they’ve relied the Stones are monumentally unconcerned. Virginia looks like a very pretty American housewife, and Andy could pass for a kinlyy college professor. But mischief lights their eyes when they talk movie-making. We just like violence in our pictures,” Andy said happily. ’No one has ever been seriously hurt while working with us,” Virginia added. Hume of their new MGM pie-tare (still unfitted) to one of too greatest forest lino in history. According to Andy, the Great Hincktey Fin of Minnesota ranks with the Baa Francisco Earthquake aad the Johnstown Flood. Whan he gels throng* with the movie version the fire Is liable to top them all la the disaster department. “Now that’s not fair,” Andy 1 grinned. "We’ve got the cooperation of the U. S. Forestry Depart-f ment to burn down a couple of mountainsides.” ★ h dr Virginia piped up, too, saying, ; "We’ve already bought two passenger railroad can from the South- ern Pacific, and the. Georgia Par cific is donating an engine. "You see,” said Andy with relish. We have a scene that calls for the engine and cars to plunge off a burning trestle Into a deep canyon. It’s going to be a lot of fun.” Fun it may be. But the Stones unhappily admit Insurance underwriters run at the mention of their names, especially when they talk about setting a finest fire. Bumble Bee Buzzing Causes Auto Accident BERLIN, N. H. (UPI) — The bus — not the sting — of a bumble bee was listed as the cause of an auto accident in Berlin. Francis Phair told police a bee flew into his car and the buzzing distracted him so much he rammed a parked ear. HELD OVER NOW Hut TOURS, it 7:00 aai 11:00 “FMtfcMHMJ and attack.. ml I " Ehujyrrflouits at 8tM Only South End Union Uko Id. A dm. $0e EM S-0M1 ; gJACKOAWE KAY MEDF0R0/D0N RICKIES/— ALSO ntr cuib m t Southfield for 1st -Workout The upper county stars had two workouts on Saturday and another on Sunday. la aa effort to Had the suitable positions for his 32-maa roster. Kart alternated four barkfletds aad shifted players oa the line from offensive to defensive posts. George Forrest of Birmingham, BUI Bryc,e of Waterforjd, Dick Smith of Avondale and Dennis Alix of West Bloomfield alternated at quarterback. AUx was also used at halfback and Smith as defensive back. The North squad received boost when Phil Isbell, big end*' SOUTH STARS — Three of the top prep football stars in Oakland County last Fall are now members of tip South team which will meet the North All-Stan at Wisner Stadium, Aug. 19th. Taking their physical exams .over the weekend were end John Meadows, halfback Bob Lazotte, P*ntl*e Preii Phot* both Of Royal Oak and Ron Bishop (right) all-state quarterback from Shrine. Dr. George Petroff of Pontiac made the examinations. The South is practicing at Southfield Jligh School each evening at 6:30 p. m. from Birmingham reported to the squad. Isbell had been out of town and did not learn of Ms being a member of the team until he returned. He checked with Southern Methodist officials where he will be going to school on playing in tod game. This gives the North a good kicking spectoltot. Isbell had s couple of game-whoring Held goals to kb credit last season with the Maples. A sparkling 68 by Bob Hausman led one of the largest qualifying fields in city medal play history Saturday at Pontiac Municipal Golf Course. players, several were sway and worn expected to report to drills th^L evening at 6:30. The lower county team also‘got a big boost when a couple of NocthvHle linemen were added to the squad. Ss *' All star BUI Juday aad Fred Mitchell, a pair of outstanding linemen win play with the South after accepting invitations Saturday- Coach Creekmur will have the passing advantage on the North .from Shrine and Harvey Chapman from Farmington. Larry Douglas, captain of the 1958 Pontiac Central football team, left recently for Denver, Colorado to take a job until he enters the University of Colorado next month bn a football scholarship. Colorado head coach Sonny Grandelius ited Douglas here before his departure', Dondero end, and Bob Dondero halfback, are the other all-staters dotting the South squad. ! The North team will practice at T:30 p.m. nightly at Wisner and coach Hart has a full scale scrim-jnage planned for Saturday mom- Tickets for the Aug. 19 classic are available at many locations ground Oakland County. Too Early Start Brings Fine for Texans, Chargers DALLAS (AP) — The Dallas Texans and Los Angeles Charg-ers have been fined lor starting the season toq early, American Football League President Lamar Hunt verified Sunday. Dallas was stuck for bidding a school for quarterbacks s week before it was supposed to start training. Hunt said ft wu a misunderstanding. The National Football League holds schools for quarterbacks and the AFL con-ttitution has no rule mentioning ^However, Commissioner Joe Foss fined each chib a reported Hausman's 68 Tops City Qualifiers PRESS BOX Hausman,' also low man in the prelims last year, put together a pair of 34s to head 22 who became eligible ’far this weekend's tournament under the plan to take the low V and ties. A. K. Burton followed at «9. Joe Adamcjsk * had Nr Jack Reynolds 71, Walt Latosas, Hal Daniels and Dick Rabertaoa 72, Sieve Condon, Stan Savage and Gus Kranltra 73, Carl Rose, Norm Thompson and Chuck Can- -tertiary 74, Bill Meyers, Doug and Jay Wright, Tom Thum, Buis Weaver and Sam Coleman 75, Andy Lindsay, Al Enwley and Bob Martin 76 to complete T. Hammett 79 Id Lad wig Jin Petition! 79 J. Wettlaufer Charles Barker 79 Don DeLon* George Marks 79 Tarry Kelly Doug Bergman 79 K. McCUntock Lynn Armstrong 79 R. Smiley Jim Braftord 79 MJUaah Dick Powell 79 B.Keathley Chaster llejmol “ Ken Openeer They will join defending champion Mike Andonian and several other exempt shooters in file an-nal tournament this Weekend. A field of 31 will battle it out for 1960 honors playing 36 hides with 18 scheduled each day. The Detroit Tiger* have restored pitcher Paul Foyteck to the active Bat replacing dropped hurler Clem Labtoc. Manager Jan Garden made aome major moves Sunday when be beacMd Charlie Maxwell for not hitting aad 'ordered a rent for Eddie Yoat. Wiffi Is Victor on Extra Hole Defending champion Bob Maier of Bay City won the All-Michigan International 110th Class Sailboat race Sunday at Cheboygan. Dick Schreder of Toledo Saturday took the triangular speed event of the U. S. Soaring tournament Christ White of Jackson and Sam Bayer of Grand Rapids gained bertha in the National Stock Outboard and Hydroplane meet by winning the Great Lakes divisional crown Sunday. Hie St. Clair Inn and Country Club will be new training camp headquarters for the Detroit Pistons this year. The pro cagers open drills at Marysville High School Sept. 15. A rare feat, at least, for Twin Lakes' No. 3 hole was Saturday by 13-yearold Larry Bok, 1795 Beverley, Sylvan Lake. Playing with his dad, Stanley and Fred Newton, Larry canned a 165-yard ted shot on the par-4, 365-yiurd hole for an eagle. Ht had 50 for the nine holes. - WATERLOO, lows (AP)-In a battle of youngsters, 23-year-old Wiffi Smith defeated 20-year-old Kathy Whitworth in a sudden death playoff Sunday to win the women’s Waterloo Open " " Tournament. Golf Both 'women finished with 72-de totals of 286, 2-under-par. Miss Whitworth, of Jal, N.M., fired a 1-under-par 71 on the last 18 to throw the match into the playoff. On the first hole, Miss Smith, of St. Clair, Mich., drove and then planted a 150-yard six-iron shot Just 14 inches from the pin. She one-putted for a birdie 3. Miss Whitworth, the youngest professional In the meet, 'settled ftir a boegy 5 on the 469-yard hole. The difference was $286 and a prize erf $1,247 for Miss Smith. Second-place rnodey was $961. Mickey Wright of San Di ggs of Atlanta, Ga., with 287«. They spUt $1,365. Offensive Downpour Sends Near 4,000 Fans to Autos After 45 Minutes iPORIS By BRUNO L KEARNS Jerry Perry and Danin McCord who had been defensive mainstays for the Mens for oev-eral seasons, made impressive showings as offensive tackles along with rookie center Bob Scholli from Notre Dame, and guards John Gordy and Harley Sewell. Tigers 'Anxious Says Joef Gordon DETROIT UB Joe Gord doesnt pretend to have any cure-all for a sixth place baseball team, but he believes ^e has found part of the answer to the Detroit Tiger troubles. He said the Tigers are an “anxious, tense" team. The question now is whether the new manager, who finally was rewarded with a victory yesterday, can talk the Tigers out of their bad habits at the {date. The Tigers split with Boston yes- terday, winning the first 7-2 behind ‘IvAit pitching and Jim Bunning’s five-1 losing the second 1-0 as the Red Sox' Bitty Muffett doled out only four hits. “Hie players are toe aaxtoea at the plate,” said Gordon. "They’re twining at too many bad pitches. A couple of them seemed to be relaxed today — notably Rocky Oolavtto and Frank Bolling — and the others will have to do the same.” Colavito and Bolling did moot of the Detroit hitting. BoP stored to second base after a spell on tfje bench, cracked three doubles and a single in six official trtpa. polavito had four solid singles in eight at-bats. never even got a good threat going against Muffett. The righthander, who has done a lot erf bouncing around with little big league success, did not allow a runner as IBr as third base. After winning tfte opener, i tory that followed two straight losses under Gordon, the Tigers Quarterbacks Earl Morrell and Jim Ninowski each directed the offensive unit to a touchdown and given protection in their passing effort. Terry Barr and Hopalong Cas-sady thrilled crowd, which stood five deep completely around the field, with several fine runs and the lone two touchdowns. Barr went 31 yards for one TD and CSssady went six for the ether. Hoppy, however, made a fine catch of a 29 yard pass and had 4C yards la five running plays. The pleasant surprise of the Lions' training camp thus far has been former Michigan Stater^ Walt Kowalczyk who was obtained in a trade which sent Jerry Reichow to the Philadelphia Eagles. 81 *Q«org« Hammit 82 MimHolUitti 82 ’Bill Pittman 82 *Carl Flfleld “ *H»rold Keith Chicago I Baltimore SUNDAY’S RESULTS New York 3-3. Kanaaa City 2-13 Chicago 94. Waahlngtao 7-2 ---------r cMviTand S-S Baltimore M l City (Tsllourla O-l), S p.m Only game* achedoleJ. SATVRDAT’S RESULTS Pittsburgh a San Yranclaaa 7, 19 tnnfc at. Louis A Cincinnati S Chicago 9. MUwaukii 2 Philadelphia 1, Los Angeles 1. night stntaAYW rmBats Pittsburgh 4-7. San Pranelaco 14 Vm Atm*m 84. iMtoiilsMAt-i -wnfial A OURtoi 4 TODAY* GAMES I Francisco (McCormick 194) at . I One city softball tournament moved into the championship round Sunday as two others started play. Rogers Electric gained the right the meet earlier conqueror 300 Lounge in the International League’s lower bracket playoff final by tripping the North End Rockets, 5-1. Herks and Blue Star Drive-In got rolling on a happy note In the Class D meet as did *‘C” Battery and Griff’s Grill la the IL upper bracket tourney completing a busy Sunday program. A three-run 3rd clinched the Rogers’ victory as Dale Burnett scattered six hits. North End had advanced Saturday7 on a forfeit over Pontiac Retailers as 3QG Lounge was whipping Rogers, 6-1. The Lounge buys got 10 hits featuring three by Ron Hetherington. The Lions will now concentrate Bill Hunter hurled four-hit ball, on dummy drills with.no scrim- 9 . 9 * mages planned before the Satur-j A steal of home by Leroy Parks! D' Playoffs Under Way Kowalczyk has not shown the ffleets of the leg injury he was harffpered with all during his days With the Eagles. Yesterday he ran well and IL Tourney in Finals caught three passes for 31 yards.-------------------------------- Nick Pietrosante carried seven times for 31 yards and picked off two passes for 14 yards. Morrall connected for four out of eight passes and 52 yards and Ninowski hit on four for seven and 45 yards. Bob Newman, rookie from Washington State, was the last of the three to see action and hit on one pass in five tries. After the scrimmage, Newman and two rookies, defensive back Steve Rasso of Cincinnati and Bobbie Lewis, a free agent, were released. Lions’ officials were surprised at the crowd which invaded the Vaughn road area beyond expectations. Many stayed at their places when the first sprinkle of rain started but a few minutes later when the downpour came everyone scattered including the Lions. Wilson was pleased with the scrimmage, especially in view of the line changes which were made and some of the new faces on the squad. GORDON’S FIRST — Joe Gordon, new manager Of the Detroit Tigers, finally got his first victory on the job when pitcher Jim Bunning took a 7-2 decision from the Red Sox Sunday in the first game of a doublehcader. It didn't last long however as the Tigers lost the second game. Muffett did practically all 1 three straight slnglea off Bub Brace end scored the only ran of the game to the eighth taatag oa Pete Rmnets’ doable that bounced against the wall la cea-. ter field. The Tigers trailed only briefly in the opener. Bunning allowed two in the first inning oh, an er> two walks and Frank Mai* s two-run single. Boston did not get another run* ?r as far as third, as Bunning slipped a third strike past Red Sox batters 11 times. Ted Williams,-who had a 7-for-10 mark going in against Bunning, was hitless ki four trips. He sat out the finale and settled for one hit in 10 trips during .the weekend series. Neil Chrisley got one run back when he tripled and scored on a fly ball in the first inning. Coot Veal doubled home two more in the third, and scored himself on Ozzle Vtrgil’s bloop single to cenj-ter. Four walks pushed across Detroit’s fifth run in the sixth inning and the Tigers added three more the eighth oh three singles and a walk. Tom Brewer, who was followed by Jerry Cased* and Ted Witts, was the loser. Bruce, taking Ms third defeat in the nightcap, still is looking for his first Majof League victory . The Tigers were idle today. They opened a three-game series here Tuesday night against Baltimore, with Frank Lary opposing the Orioles’ Chuck Estrada. for Herks over Universal Oil Seal, The little catcher had led off by reaching first on an error, stole second and moved to third on an out. Dick Vivian fired a three-hit-is Blqe Star blanked Langdon’s 54. Herks and Blue Star will tangle tonight at 7 in Beaudette Park followed by Universal vs. Langdon’s. A doubleheader at North-side will have "C” Battery against! Trnii Griff’s at 7 and Roadbuilders vs. i BMtoi°PP*d Buettners' at 8:30. **£*<■«• po-a - i day night game with the Browns.1 in the 6th pi^uced' a 4-3'vict^|da5^t*TpS^Sh^Td| 1 ...... —------------------------------'Rogers win, a necessary second!—1»- Ditrou * Scoring 13 fimeu in the second frame oa five safeties, “C* Battery needed only Ilk Innings to wallop the Roadbuilder# by a 13 2 coat. Griff’s trailed Buett-net’s Cleaners 3-0 but tied the count in the 3rd and added another pair In the 4th tor a 4-8 triumph. Jerry. Bantln hurled shutout ball after the opening round. 0 9 9 0 U 9 9 9 Total* 12 7 11 7 ‘ -‘lUr to 7th; h-Csssls la 7th.' . *—Nixon. V«»I. PO-A—Boston SAA Detroit 174. DP—Runnela. Bucfchn sod —Tts; Bolling, (tad and Cash) Virgil, ling and Cash. LOB—Boston A Detroit 2B—Nixon A Vial. BolUng. 3B—Chrfa- mm sr- BoUng. IB—C Ulng. YoUea. _____ akrkU 4911 VM 2b 49 19 19 19 ChrUsr If 3 9 94 4 9 10 Cub lb 4 0 99 4 0 10 Kalin* «f 4 0 99 4 9 9 9 Colsrlto rf 4 0 10 4919BoUlaftb 3 0 3 0 3 0 1 0BortorM e 3 0 00 3 0 00 manta u 3 0 99 3 13 9 BfUCO p 2 0 0 0 aMsxtriU iooo Larjr p It I 9 1 Totals Flames Hit Detroit Racer Fire, Upsets, Tumbles Delay Seatair Event game would follow at 8:30. A Class D game scheduled for Beaudette .!■ [at 7 will be shifted to Northside at Lary .... . . . - - . 8:30 tomorrow. Dn“n- SEATTLE (AP)—Flames, flips and falls punctuated the $10,000 Seafair Trophy race for unlimited hydroplanes and prompted a tentative postponement of the final heat until today. Headquarters of the American Power Boat Association in Detroit was asked to approve the postponement. - Three drivers and a sky diver were injured Sunday. The latter, Charles Kirkpatrick, 26, of Snohomish, Wash., cut loose too quickly from his chute* during an exhibition jump and fell 50 feet into Lake Washington. He suffered serious chest injuries. Mira Slovak, an airplane pilot who drives speedboats as a hobby, was.thrown 30 feet and knocked unconscious when his boat the Wahoo,' flipped completely during a high-speed turn. Driver Bob Larsen jumped from the KOLroy and a frogman leaped from a rescue helicopter to save him. Rushed to a hospital, Slovak was found to be without serious Injury. [ The boats . were running scheduled final 15-mile heat of the day when the Miss UJ5. I of Detroit caught fire. Driver Don Wilson jumped, but not before he suffered second degree burns. Officials ordered.a rerun of the beat but on foe first lap CM. Russ Schleeh, another pilot who doubles in boats, was pitched out of 'the Thriftway Too., Again fife Coast Guard helicopter made the rescue but Schleeh had escaped with bruises. Wilson had gone into the scheduled third and deciding heat with a point total of 800, earned by victories in his sections of the first two heats. He was running in third place at the time of the mishap and could have clinched a tie for first by finishing in that posi- Entered for today’s rerun were Thriftway, Miss Spokane, Breathless II, Seattle Too, Miss Burien, KOLroy I and TOO Crib. All are from the Seattle area except Miss Spokane and Breathless II, which is based at Lake Tahoe, tion. Doctoring Your Golf By DR. CARY MIDDLECOFF PATIENT’S COMPLAINT: “Either too short or too [ long on putts.” DIAGNOSIS: Reading the greens wronr. TREATMENT: In putting the ability to “read” the j greens is of great import-, ance. This ability consists largely of being able to tell whether you are putting with the grain of the green or against it. The grain is determined by the direction in which AGAINSMHE GRAIN With Miss U.S. I out, Miss Spo- 1 kane and Miss Thriftway are lead- j| ing with 625 points each and 1 Breathless has 600. Other totals: 1 Seattle Too 527. Miss Burien 469,1 S KOLroy I and Mis* ToD Crib 394. | the grass is growing; it H comparable to tne'&lain of j Cochran Gives Up DULUTH, Minn. (API-Soft-spoken Tommy Aaron of Gainesville, Ga., won the 58th Western Amateur Golf Tournament by default. 7 Aaron, 23-year-old Walker Cup [star, look the trophy Sunday when Bob Cochran of St. Louis gave in to his aching back and conceded on the sixth hole of their scheduled 36-hold final a piece of wood. The best test Is to stand behind the ball and look for “shine.” If the surface of the green presents a glazed or shiny appearance, you will be putting with the grain. Therefore the ball will roll freely, and you ihould stroke the ball easier than It normally appears you should. If the green presents a dull or non-shiny appearance, yon will be going against the grain, and will need to hit the ball rather harder. The grain also affects the amount of break you should play when putting across the grain. If the break is with the grain, make a greater allowance for it. If the break is against the grain, minimize the amount of "hill'* you play- ... „ THE PONYlACPRESS, HOWbAY, AVGUST A ,1990 NINETMN Big Crowd at Lions' ~ iSl ilk THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1060 It's B*w! It'f Fu! PUTT-PUTT fit!I m DIME BWI. ■ MUTTON mm (fiihirt M on boom Uk») M ROLES N. E. Career TstreiM* Wii>»Mlm Ow*a 1 tyi Wh> m M- Upsets in County Net Meet City Singles' Hot Finish Takes Insurance Cash Palmer's Rally Wins Again il LO Horse Show Goes On Despite Lightning, Rain Hone show exhibitors and farts aren’t easily scared off by bad THE DISCOUNTS 1.70x15 7.50x14 No Money Down raw hi Ml (wr OM tin United Tilt Service Wl Beldwle An. weather. That was true of Sunday’s annual Lake Orion Saddle Club-Lions Club sponsored affair at the community center: The shew tamed eat to be the Mfgeet at these annual events, with US heroes aa« an outstanding gallery. Al this despite a terrific thunderstorm that hit midway la the program. Lightning knocked oat the lighting system, several spectators suf- fer minor shacks and a hey rider fell off his horse. The shew was delayed far a half hear. Ohe of the topfeature* was the first challenge trophy event for three-gaited horses, won by Jena Fellows of Flint on Crissie Pea-vine. The winners: Mused •tells (II under)—Bend* rKr 8pood, ruford 51 Race Boats at Loon Lake Chap Beaten in 1st Round acU«a (U-t»)—Jo. Ferrteh, te (1-10)—C. T. Bryent. Fen-nm; ii-iA. Ms Berrlah Ttnn welkins horse—B. J. Bu»n (OK-lord) Btrsmsashlst western (1-lOt—Csrol Feldman (LO) Farads horse—Lorett* Vslsntlns (Lady Marts Nelson), Flint 4-8 horuntnthlp—Vicki Kurt (Stsr-ltns Riders 4-H) an effort to make up some of the rained out matches as result of yesterday’s downpour, pity will continue today and Tuesday in the Oakland County Open Tennis Tournament. Lssd down, rids Seek—Ctrl Bowsr isshsstsr) * )-islted challeat* trophy—Jens Fsl-vs ICrlttls PeavTne), Flint. Pontiac Driver Wins 48 Cubic Class Event Sunday iFUSSY,. ■about your car?* I Get the right muffler for your ■ intake and modal of car installed J l by an expert in just 15 nitrates at your I The first annual Loon Lake inboard regatta drew 51 contestants and a large crowd Sunday. A Pontiac racer, Henry Ball, took the honor* in the *8 cubic inch hydro dass. The expected race between he and hia son Terry failed to materialize when the younger Ball broke rod in the trial race and waa unable te compete. Finishing behind Ball were Joe Tate, Jr., of Garden City and Mike Winer of Cincinnati. It was the third victory in six races for Ball’* "Wait-4-Me,” racer he built himself. These were the results in the other classes: JSS cu. hydro—Bum Bofsrdut, Pltubureh; W. F. osrdner, Ow 'CtJuol MefcorsUdt, Trertee. — u. hydro—Id Bark. Tutor, U a, W Scott, Jr . Winter WTM, 4 Tony Lsmntls. Breckevtlle. Ohio. 329 cu. hydro—Royes Rlehsrds, Detroit; Or. rnd Rims, Detroit; John KlpUsc. Jr.. Msunee. Ohio. *8 cu hydro—Jim Clark. Park, Mich.; Dr. Mtttf“n 5 MS so. hydra Id Bsrko. Taylor. Mlsh : Check Thompson, Jr, Detroit Dr. DIME Bhermae, Trenton. MUbe mytHcr* are GUARANTEED form k Img as you own your c* . utir- Brent McCoy. Coalarow*. Ohio; Hank Bbsrwsln, at Clair Shore* Ski Claw, Racine Ruaeboet Ours* A. smith. Niles, IU.: Robert Koch. Detroit; Don Lereen, ChlcafO. open—Barrie Bryant, Fob- Waal. Btotoaro (man Ifrspl — Rnica (cOtnnla I Devisees) Barrel banding (l(-sp)—Id Wrotai (PUall ' up—Jim Wilson, Oxford, picking rrb Bryn ‘ up Harrie Bryant Bpoad. action (Id-up)—Bd Wroten. Holmans Tops in Rain, PYC Club Winners Racing in black, white-capped waters and heavy rain, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Holman and Dr. Leo Wasserberger took first place in Sunday's Pontiac Yacht Club race, Mr~and Mrs. Mack Goodwin and Dr. Ken Wood were second. Third went to Al Roualet Jr. with his crew of Al Gray and daughter Joan. PYC led the field In two afternoon races against viristfog Orchard Lake completing a two-day sweep of honors. Cincinnati originally was called Losantville pr "the town opposite the mouth of the Licking River." AFL Gridders Shine Rain - Halted Match** to Resum* Today on PCH Court* WETHERSFIELD, Conn. (AP) —Is * Palmer finish going to replace • 'Garrison finish among sports fans? Tima was when a solid way to describe • fantastic, heart-pumping, come-from-behind victory was to call it a Garrison finish, after famed jockey Snappy Garrison of another day. But the way Arnold Palmer has been winning golf prises this year, he may be the Garrison of today's generation of sports fans. Officials are notifying player* by phone today bn the times of their matches, in hopes of completing play up to the quarterfinals by Saturday in the men’s singles and doubles events. The 31-year-old Palmer, he of the strong jaw and nigged muscles, staged a spectacular finish again Sunday to win the Insurance City Open. It was almost identical to his now famous finishes that brought Mm the Masters and U.S. Open titles earlier this year and established him as the No. 1 golfer. Five strokes behind Jack Fleck, and three behind Bill Collins, with One of the largest fields la focal tennis history, started with the novice aad Junior divisions Saturday, aad sue of the big upsets tosh place In the men’s division when dty singles champion Ralph Ales, the top seeded player la the tourney, was beaten by former HlUsdale setter Bob Neff. Neff wMpped Alee in straight sets, 6-2 and *4, and he has set himself up as a strong choice for the men’s title. In the junior division Bill Caahin also pulled a surprise when he defeated one of the junior favorites Chuck Hunt, 6-1, ft* and 1M. Teammates at PCH, It was the first time Cashin had beaten Hunt on the courts. He now will face the winner of the Steve Smtth-John Roush match in the semifinals. Gerry Bunch went Into the vice finals "of the tournament when he defeated Ricky Watson, a ll-year old Rochester setter, *3. Bunch earned his way to the finals by downing Dick Levine, 6-3; Sue Fead, 6-4 and Pete Grum-bleutt, 6-1. Another upset took place in early doubles match when Hunt and Rousch, both PCH players defeated last year’s quarter-finalists, Hibbs and Barkley, 6-3, 6-4. i 18 holes left to play in the 72-bole grind, Ande caught the 1966 National Open champ on the 70th with a birdie, flnllfan joined them to a triple tie on the 71at with i sub-par. They went on to tie at 270, 14-under par, necessitating sudden death playoff for the *3,500 top prize. If Ws AawtaM Pies* istl The 38-year-old Fleck and Palmer birdied the 73rd.' A par eliminated Collins. The two survivors battled the long 74th on even terms. And then the Ml, lift-pound Amie aet tq> the kill. He hit the green 18 feet tickets Aft Tickets Between tfca 10 Yard lias* — *2-00 All Others — $1.25 OAKLAND COUNTY ALL-STAR FOOTBALL GAME Sponsored by Ike Pontiac Jeycees Friday, Ausust 19th, • Wiener Stadium, 8:00 P.M. < 0M NOW! Send cmfc, check, er nancy order (payable t* Oakland Csenty All-Star ST W. Keren St. *Im| with *#H- the cup on the par-3,183-yard 75th. Fleck was Mori, but approached within 4 feet. But while iron-nerved Palmer holed out in regulation. Fleck's putter failed the veteran. -Arnold Palmer, *3.900 Usootsr. Pa. ________ ack Fleck, 93.99# Loa Angola, ........... Bm Collin.. OJ9S Crystal River. Fla. Venturi, tl.9M GRAND OPENING SPECIAL ONE WEEK ONLY Tight Davis Cup Battle in Final Lafayette, La 91,290 Chick Herbert. 99(7.90 Livonia. Mich, Dou* Ford. 0007.90 Crystal River. Mb. Dot FtostorwsM. 1007.90 Teouesta. Fla. ..... M fto* Jr.. 00*7.90 West CalOTsTjU. 69.04-0S-70—273 SO OS 7000 274 09-70-03-72—274 49-71-7047—277 07407*40—377 0747-707*—277 70-7049-74—277 PONTIAC’S BIGGEST AUTO PAINTING VALUE! MEXICO CITY (AP) — The closest American Zone Davis Cup eliminations ever played between Mexico and foe United States winds up today with Barry Mac-Kay tangling with Mario Llamas and Earl Buchhoiz meeting Rafael Osuna. The United States leads 3-1 after a narrow doubles victory Sunday which was not decided unto the 11th game of the fifth and final set. ■ft . ening singles, MncKay, badly off form and double faulting 21 times, was beaten by 26-year-old Osuna, only Mexican ever to win a Wimbledon doubles tide. Buchhafa, a surprise choice over veteran Texan Bernard Bart-zen to represent the United States in singles, upset Mexico's No. player, Mario Llamas. MacKay will start today’s play against Osuna, foe pressure lifted by the doubles victory in which Buchhoiz and Chuck McKinley defeated Osuna and Antonio Pala-fox, 24. *4, 74. M, 74. ' Pontiac 8th jn State Swim Tournament By The Associated Press A ssrvtos chart* will ■ FE 2*1010 495 S. SAGINAW ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I The cloak of responsibility for the success of the fledgling American Football League haa been draped squarely over the shoulders of such men as Jack Spikes and Paul Lowe. If the newly organized circuit is to satisfactorily buck the established National League in the bat- foe untested rookies like Spikes and foe tested castoffs such Rowe will have to provide a top-quality brand of football. REE INSTALLATION—20,000 Mil** or 1-Yr. Ouarant** COMPLETE PRECISION INSTALLATION BRAKES! RELINED ILL WOW FORD-CHEVY ; PLYMOUTH ----------•MliUMvlTTiTj”' YOU WAIT! BUDGET TERMS We Heat Security er laterastfoasl Charga Pletes OPEN DAILY t te 7 SATURDAY 8 te 6 SUNDAY ftY APPT. $095 tie for foe entertainment dollar. They did just that as foe AFL paraded its talent in weekend ex- FE 3-7855 Spikes, former Texas Christian stalwart who was a second team AU-Amerfca selection, scored twice and kicked a pair of field goals as the Dallas Texans whipped the Houston OUeri 27-10 at Tulsa. FIRST ROUND: Orumblett def. B. Pointer •-1; Wstson dst. Roberts S-0; D. Crewford del. Mstak" •-•: othtri rSestvsd by*s or VMM default. SECOND ROUND: Suae* def. Levin* I--. Feed def. C. Fainter s-0: Orumblett def. Hans l-l: Quinn def. Meyers *-l; Wsteon def. Spednfors M; Devil def. Derrow 64; Boothe def. r •-1; Wyman def. Murphy 0-4; def. Fltenratd t-2; Becki . Seundere {-}; D. Crewford def. Jeyaer S-S; Rspperot def. Brownlns; Hslra- Lowe, a hand-me down from the NIL’S San Francisco dub, grabbed foe opening kickoff at Loa Angeles, raced 106 yards for a touchdown and the hometown Chargers went on to defeat the New York Titans 27-7. Meanwhile, the NFL’* new Dallas entry, with veteran Eddie Le-Baron quarterbacking, made j unsuccessful debut at Seattle as : the San Francisco 49ers defeated the Cowboys 16-10. The semi-finals and final* are slated for next weekend at Pon- A living championship for Maxine King and good showings by Jay and Hugh Wilder paced the Pontiac Recreation Association to an 8th place finish in the Michigan Recreation Association semi- tiac Central. NOVICE RESULTS ____ST?L________ THIRD ROUND: Buaoe def. Feed *4: Orumblett def. Quinn t-l; Wetson def. fMtoto tot; Crewford def. OM* #4; Wymnn def. Booth t-l; Andrews til. Colondo #4; Bsekmon def. F. Crewford t-l: HilrebedUn dof. Rappoport QUARTZRFINALS: Bunco dof. On®. btott *4; Androvs def. Wymsn i-2; Helrehedlen def. Bsakmaa t-l; WbtSM def. Crewford 14. 0XMIFINAL8; Bums dot. Wotson #4 sad Murphy. t-VMl Andrsvs dsf. Meddra. S-4, *4; lltnswsossr dwf. Hutchinson, •-4, S-l; Boors dof. Monnot, S-l. *4: T. finals Saturday at Breenan Pools in Detroit. Miss King, who participated In the Olympic trials earlier in the week, took Pontiac's only first by sewing 104 points in foe 1-meter springboard diving for girls. Jay Wilder was tod in the 50-meter butterfly and 5fo in the 50-meter freestyle. Hugh was 3rd in foe 50-meter backstroke. Both were on the 200-meter freestyle relay team which ranked No. 3. Other standouts were Ernie Humphries and Alex Hiller. Pontiac compiled 27 team points. Detroit dominated the meet with 319, Dearborn had 230, flint 222, Garden City ITS, Battle Creek 164, Plymouth 86, Aim Arbor 33, Allen Park 20, Midland t and Wayne 5%. O'Brien-Andrews def. Via Mel re-Mel-try. t-l. 144; Heff-DAha dof. O'Brien-Andrews. 1-2, t-l; Murphy-Murphy def TsUerclo-Teylor. 34. 1-4, t-3: Oevlnsw-Smith def. Bunee-Ceshta. l-f, 1-4; Hunt, Housch def. Hlbbs-Borkley. 6-3. 9-4. ■ Boyle def. Wensal-Hereon, 4-3, 4-4. 'd-1. Two Titles in Bag, Lafor Tries for 3rd JUNIOBB SINGLES Smith def. Nichole, S-t, s-l; Houshton It. Durey, 2-4, M, S-T; Rouseh dsf. Colsndo. (-6, 4-0; Bunc* def. Frink 14, 4, S-t; Hentdef. Andrew*, l-l, 44; SOUTH ORANGE. N.J. (AP) — Red-haired Rod Laver of Australia, with two straight grata-court tournament titles in his tennis equipment bag, tries for three in a row as the Eastern Grass Court Championships open today. def. Bvsns, l-l, t-l; aymoeu drew*. 1-2, 4-1; smith dof. .1 1-4. 7-4; Routch def Bubo*. Huot def. Murphy. 6-3, S-S; . Atau (2), BlMhuman, Olonte; Rom bore ft). Dsvls ft). Dodf*r»; Lynch (•>, Rode; Moryn ft). CMuh; Thornes fl7). Cubs; Lofkn fl). Braves: "hrUtophcr fl), Flrtlci. ■ 1 AMERICAN UMH Ocntllc 3 04). Brandi I d), W,_____ .J). FUbtr (1), Ortom; AlUtmt ftl) Sen-Atom. Slevori (22), Frtew 03). White RH Btowron (31). Tenkeoo; Romano ries at Southern Yacht Club. Moebacher and his crew MR**/ RAMBLER WAGON *1798<* BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER "lUBft&ir’ tu>. fa prefect you from blowoutt duo to hiddon brooiti and dofoct* * Ditmount all Drat and remount after thorough imido-outiido inipoctton Critt-crott foe tiros fo equalise wear and increase- milooga * Dynamically hafonca-chock front lira* fo defect signs of shimmy or bounce * Check toe-in and toe-out to pro went premature tread wear EASY TERMS ON ALL TIRES AND SERVICE EQ WILLIAMS 451 S! Saginaw St. tun — —— _ :— ——"— — mt. 1 Nationally Advarfitad * aim fir , YOUR CHOICE OP COLORS ayi^i Flat NMinmMMT :rr. \ ' m ^ ^ ’ • Semi-Clots i 1st Gal* 2nd GoL sm ad , 1 ** H • bforfor Primsr mm . .. ..... , , . -.... K.ntil, Solid Vinyl or Rikbcr Unglazad Ceramic FLOOR TILE 2V» Sq. Ft, | Nawesf Pattern* Per Sheet ^49 | ® SPECIAL SUE " Floor Covering I! SB's | Quality SALE ON PLASTIC WALL TILE 50% Off Reg. Now 2c 1c 4c 2c Ic 2 Vic 6c 3a, PLASTIC COUNTER TOPS V3 Off SPECIAL! 1 One-Coot Enamel 1 PAINT : 10 01. can ■ Ofov Aliened 1 Calm § si ASIKIU.T i TILE 4Ci 1 1 Spatter Hoary Gang# Inlaid Litaltato Til* £ I6- Quality Iff Soil Scaled Inttollotions Done by Export*- * FREE ESTIMATES ' < < WE AR! YOUR l AUTHORIZED SANDRAN | l ' DEALER In *id*—Outsid* WHITE PAINT $|69 cr TILE OUTLET U TOO Don't Bay Tort Tito Frem iti. W» BOTH lota Monoy 10S5 W. HURON FE 8-3717 * Plasty of Parking / > 1 Hears: Mew., There., Frl. 'Ml f — Teat., Wad., Igt. 'Ml tTl Ffwfiac'a Laryacf Anulreag Dealer ; THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST &, 1960 TWENTY-ONE | Chi»ox Cut Yonlcoo Luod Despite Romp by New York * By The Associated Press ‘And now tkeySw got hitting, tOo. 'Hie main rap agaiiut the Baltimore Orioles was their almost total lade of power. The experts last, spring conceded Pan! Richards’ kiddie crew had speed, defense ami pitching. But who besides (Sot Triandos and Gene Woodling were capable oi providing the long ball? . .♦.. dr . * Richards showed ’em Sunday. Tbs supposedly weak-hitting Ori-oles banged 30 hits, including six home nine and two doubles in their 8-6 and 9-2 sweep of a double-header from Cleveland. They slimmed five 'home runs in the first game to set a club record, woodling hit one. The others were made fay Jim Gentile (2), Jackie Brandt and pitcher Jade Fisher. Usher, who won Ms seventh gapie, in relief, cracked'his in tiro-run rally in the eighth that saapped a id tie. Brandt added a$ther homer, his season, in the nightcap aa Mtit Pappas spaced seven- hits for his 10th victory. Gentile’s, homers ware his 13th and 14th. The double triumph boosted the third-place Orioles to within hall a game of sec6nd and two games of the top. The runner-up Chicago White Sex whittled New York’S first- place lead to 114 games by Win- league-leading total of 137 and ring a pair from Washington 9-7 and 3-2 while Kansas City was hiding the Yankees to a split in their twin bill. The Athletics won the second game 13-3 after New York had won the opener 3-2. Detroit and Boston divided a pair, tin Tigers winning the first game 7 Tim*: 14.4 41ESTTLB—Otrlu U-1S—L. (BCI Time: 14 5 ' IXBBTYLB—Boti 11-14—N. Thwopeoa (111 Time: ST.S SXESTTLK—Olrli 11-14-0. buy IOL) Tim*: MS miarriui mm it-u n i*o«th*)— D. bum Time: M l PRXBBTYLK—Olrlr M-lt (1 len«th»t-A. Monoghen (BH) Tim*: M l BUTTERFLY—Boys IS under—C. V i ^ ' . I . .. : '■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, I960 Tags Powers Double Agent; U2 Seat Wired With Dynamite? By BOB CON3IDINE i Ivosk arid turned hit pictures over NEW YORK—The box on the to hie real bosses. thei Russians, front page of the New York paper •aid I'm covering the trial in Mow-cow of the U2 pilot, Francis Powers. Perhaps I’m not. after taking Os for $2,500 a month! and a $30,000 bonus per trip. They, in turn, beat the U2 plane a pulp and released a picture Russians. You never know why they accept you; you never really know sdv they don’t. Nor who makes the decision. I played gelt the other day at the Bollywood Chib la Deal, N.J., with a distinguished New Yecfc judge who, as U.8. attorney, had more to do with bringing the several Communist spying apparatl to bay thaa any other man of oar time- had friend Where did the friend of get such a story? Well, a CIA man told a friend •t a friend oI a friend at a party In Washington recently that Powers most have landed the plane because If he had touched the bailout button, as he Insists he did In Ms letters to Ms wife, he would have been blown up by a special dynamite charge wider his seat—a charge the CIA had la sight and sound of the world prom? But we don’t really know. Perhaps Powers will repent and ask asylum in the Soviet Union. Or volunteer to be a Russian astronaut. You never really know when the Russian mind is at work or the Russian wffl ,is invoiced. The next-to-last time I saw Moscow (it was a year ago, the Nixon trip) alt of us were given a grim time on departure. Long delays aad much seaa- alng of passports, and t general air of “Wo think yna*n escaping from our secret formula for borscht.” I returned last April with my wife aad warned her about the hard time we’d have THE GIRLS He could emerge unscathed from He is, in -addition to being tough man around the greens, an expert on UJLSJR. law. It is his belief that the Soviet military cockpit only with-outside help, court will throw the book at|the iQurce Powers, then throw out the case 1 or, rather, the defendant. P*™11? more to say. On ' . .. ’ _ ask. Why had Powers become in- “lt “ terested in having the legal serv- propa'! ices of John N. Haiard. mentioned I ganda pointand delayed a com- ^ con^onal nporta „ . passionate side to the world at the memhe?ot (he (I.P.R.) Institutei same tune. _ _ of Pacific Relations? Pmfaaps it will. Perhaps It I "Do you know that Prof. Hazard j w0°. . . spent three years in the Soviet I Union?" the. friend of a friend | Tf the U.S.S.R. were a horse,,n0. i didn’t., and I she'd drive every horseplayer nuts, see what any of it meant because there’s Just no sure way to figure her. Her past perform- ®EDS SEEM SURE ^ ance charts are a mile long, but ‘‘MM'' we still don't quite know whether « she can go in the mud, or on the day, or with the weight, or against older horses. The Judge at trial could be to favor of ae-qultal, and on vote, yet be outvoted by the south r and s brittle ballerina or they could between them sead.Pnwera to the firing squad. You don’t know. A friend of a friend Just called and said there was now reason to believe that Powers is a double-agent: that he was not shot down but landed the spy plane at Sverd- Traffic Fldw to Windsor Up 17 Pet. More U.S. Cars Enter Canada There in First 6 Months WINDSOR. Ont. W-There has been a 1? per cent increase in the number of American autos entering Canada at Windsor during the first six months of 1960, compared with 1969, but only a five per cent increase in the number of pas- I’m sure there's a lot to be told about the U% incident. One side of the topic wUl be told by Powers in court. As to now it would appear that his story may confirm every outraged charge Premier Khrushchev buried at President Eisenhower. Else why would they make it a public trial? If they weren’t sure of Powers, double agent or brainwashed, would they take the risk of having him blurt out “Dear, what else should I have put info the ‘(rid fashioneds' besides thebourbeo?" BOARDING HOUSE A survey of the cumulative port traffic figures for the six month period shows slight increases in all categories of border traffic except in bus movement, where there was a drop of slightly less than one per cent this year. Pleasure boat traffic reported for May aad June shows aa 11 per cent Increase la the number ot craft reporting at Windsor thin year aad the passenger load has Jumped by 91 per cent. According, to* the June report issued by Harold Beardmore, cob lector of customs and excise at Windsor there were 176,874 American and foreign cars entering , Canada at Windsor which was a nine per cent increase over the comparative 4959 figure of 161.907.! * * * Inbound autos numbered 269.119 in June this year compared with 262.994 in 1959. Inbound trucks numbered 13,275 in June compared with 14,418 a year ago while inbound buses numbered 1,042 this year compared with 1,032 last year. Incoming passengers numbered 1,-1 001,743 to June compared with 942,547 a year ago. wee Inbound pleasure craft num-j bered 2,106 in June compared with 1.914 a year ago and this year the number of passengers carried totalled 7.770 compared with 6,306 a year ago. Howell to Crown Maid of Melons at 1st 'Bust7 HOWELL (JTV-A Melon Maiden! will be crowned here as part of the celebration of the first annual Howell Melon Bust Sept. 3. The day is planned to publicize j a growing rural Howell industry, the production of honeysweet mel- DONALD DUCK By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner By Walt Disney GRANDMA By Charles Kahn IB • i v V 1 0 # | AW,OSB, BSTCHA IJH I know wUatM ms^H THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUOUST 8, I960 TWEyTT.TKBlE on* Rmres Was iMARkETS (Defense bates Dow. Due I. Rail: ---“'shaken by he CHICAGO m - Prices is tin Brain futures market turned down, ward today as offerings found commercial demand thin. ★; 4k * In the early dealings soybeans were off major fractions in spots. The weakness was Ascribed to reports of good rainfall over the weekend and a trade advice that the crop'now is making good to excellent progress in some of the major producing regions. * * Hedge selling weakened wheat, com and oats. Harvest was expected to become fairly widespread this week in the spring wheat belt The following are topi prices covering sales Of locally .grown product brought *® toe Farmer’s them ift wholesale package lota. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Friday. Detroit Product Groin Pricts CHICAGO CRAIN *" •;«*>’ -_ Wheat— ' Dm...... Mar NEW YORK Ift — Aircraft and missile stocks Ibst their baity gains, or turned lower, In a mixed stock market early this after- SSSKS. 1“.:::::::::.::: IS Cherries. Sour, II (U. . Cherries, Sweet, IS |U.- ^ hum **. ... VEGETABLES Beans, oreeu, mi, k .... .fc::: Br::::::: teen.. Oreeu, tali I “---Ksntaeky Wondet, ». dot. behe. ...... __ cibbije, cSjn, C*bb**e, Rea, btt...„.. Cabbase. Snrouti. ML .. ....-tonam. nh, ........... l JI^CerroU, Topped Ml...... ■ : fat I.IH4 May .............. l.llVb Lard <4raau)- 1.1544 Sep.'........lSt. i.m« o«t. ..........ie.it Cucumber., Sllccrs. I Tells lax lale \ Pl Either Sales Levy or Bite From Personal Income, Says lindemer LANSING (f*—State Republican leaders said Saturday if toe sales tax is defeated in November some form of personal income tax will result. Lawrence B. Lindemer, state Republican chairman, and Paul D. Bagwell Republican candidate for governor, told a Republican earn paign workers school Saturday that the party must be responsible and make this clear to the people. Discussing toe 4 per cent sales tax proposal that comes before the voters in November, Lindemer said, "We ewft fool the people and be the party of pepsonsibility. The sales tax increase is toe alternative to a personal income * tax and we should present it . to the people just that way.” EftUnt. to Kohlrabi. 4 Leeks. dot. Okra. pk. Onion., tra Pantoy, i Pantos, not, bob*. “ arr “ Poppers, Swoot. Ml.' Pototooo.M-lb.baf .. ~ “ - Wad. dos. I Rhubarb, doo. beta. Squash. Acorn to bn Squash, Bnttoi Toms loos. oaUtoqr. 14-lb. I Stk.:::: GREENS _____... bu. ...... Cabban. Celery, dos. .. Coliard. bu. K bSeched. bu. . bleached.' bu. Lettuce. Bibb, pk................... Lettuce, Boston. dOO................ Lettuce. Leef. bu. .. Lettuce, Head. J-dos crate ........ Lettuce. Head, bu................... Mustard, bu. ...................... lorrel. bu. ........................ Spinach, bu......................... Swiss Chard, bu. ................... Turnips, bu. ...................... Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT. AUf. t (API — Prices per pound delivered Detroit for Ha. .1;quality live poultry: besvy typo hens 1141; U*ht type hens IS-ll; hears type roasters ---- * m*. IUI: sroQ*" ________white ll-T------- heavy type youni News in Brief r t lbs. It-tf: broilers and fryers *- barred reek 1* ■ turkeys 36. DETROIT BOOS Apparently responding to publication of. President Eisenhower’s message to toe reconvening Senate, defense-related issues fell off suddenly and sharply. Fittne the message te recommend any Mg new defense spending ‘ ran winter to Wall Street's prevtdf hopes. Avco, last week’s moat active issue, sold off nearly a point on a Mock of 18,000 shares'at 15%, Ar* ft ft Boeing and Martin were down nearly a point, while Douglas, North American Aviation and Martin’'also lost ground. United Aircraft was slightly higher. The over-all market, however, eoathmed to reflect a balance between the ascertain business and International situations on one hand and the market’s good technical pooltioa on the other. . * ft .ft Ability to bounce back from the 599-600 level in the Dow Jot\es Industrial Average last week, plus the fact price recovery was accompanied by rising volume, heartened chart folloWry. Trading proceeded at a moderate pace, •ft it' Ar Steely and motors also eased, but oils, airlines and electronics were higher. Other groups were mixra. UJ. Mm), down n point la early trading, pared tote loan duoers were only slightly tower. Texaco spurted better than a point, and Standard Oil (New Jersey) wAs up ju bit. ft l ft ; * Raytheon moved ahead around a point and Radio Corp. and Zenith nursed small advances. Now York Stocks (SMrly Figure* tfUr x;-b; Burglars brake lato Olive rjett-iS; large »•«: medium Motor Sales Inc., 210 Orchard Lake Ave., it was reported to Pot* tiac police Saturday. Nothing was stolen. Navcisce Dominiques, to Nortoa St., reported to Pontiac police Sunday that an electric guitar, and amplifier were stolen from his car, parked behind 73 N.. Saginaw St DETROIT. Aug. S. (ATI — Egg fbctl Kftu............ Mid per dozen by first receiver* de- AmM&Fdv livered to Detroit Ioom to to dosen; Am Met Cl ’ com*: consumer* grade (Included U.S.I yfl,M. • white grade A Jumbo OTH^ttj.ettrs^Urge| JmNo** ", Burglars brake late BUI Speucs Rambler Sales ft,Service, 256 S. Saginaw St., H was reported to IUDM — _— Pontiac J»iice Sunday. Nothing i^«S. . > large »-40; browns inn hitt'lHti ______ 30-37 small “ B large 37V*; check* »H-« Livestock MTaorr uvistoch DETROIT. AUS. W (tf> - iWtel.-CATTLE - Salable 1.460: ttouthter steers and heifers make up around 70 per cent of run. good sad choice grade* —-—■■—"— -------■ sad choice heifer* today; cow* around stockers tad feod -•tears sad hotter* points ore eighth* •V Ini Tel S ‘ 1*1 Crk Cool . Jeans into 53 7 Jones a L «.l Kellogg M I Kelsey Hay 73 j Kennecott ; i Klmb Clk M l “ 53.1 i4 Lib M?nk Lib IS List R My .. M 3 j 8j FORD PULVERIZER -r Landscapers, road builders, and construction contractors are among the users of this new Dearborn TUBt, a general-purpose soil pulverising unit offered by Forjl industrial equipment dealers. Jt mixes soils and aggregates to a depth of six inches, as the base tor road beds* in preparation for seeding, or for lawn .renovation. PTO-driven, and attached with a thre£-point linkage, the Tillit can be used with many makes of tractors. ‘Homogenizes* Soil Ford Reveals New Tiller Almost as easily as a wife makes smooth whipped potatoes electric mixer, a tractor operator now can churn hard dirt into a smooth homogeneous layer .in preparation /for road building, lawn renovation, compost mixing or other soil fitting jobs. This is the description used by L. E. Dearborn, general sales manager of the Tractor and Implement Division, Ford Motor Co., Ttoy, in announcing a new line of rotary tillers to be sold by Ford industrial and farm equipment dealers. "1%e Dearborn TUBt to the first rotary tiller to be marketed nationwide by I full-line Implement company, and the advantages to users from a parts and service standpoint are obvious," verikeu and homogenise* the toll, burying topeOvering, or thoroughly mixing any added aggro-gates,” Dearborn said. "It is, ideal for soil cementing operations; lawn renovation, including skinning off a weed covering and soil grub eradication. “Forest managers are using the Tfllif to cut fire lanes, pulverise small brush, and maintain roads." ,ft ft ''.ft. The Dearborn Tillit is available in five models, with cutting width! ranging from 36 to 60 inches, and with, either centered or offset ldtches. The Implement is a product ol 25 years of engineering, at the Milwaukee plant of American- Marietta Corp. A Ar A Driven by the tractor’s power take oft. the Tillit engages the ground with rotating high strength tinea which dig down to a maximum depth of six inches.. “This machine literally Pul- Airline Earnings Prospects Brighten Am** SM ____ ___ ___ . Armour * Co . 30.7 Merck Atohlooa .. Itt "— * ■ *CoroV was stolen. Aa undetermined snoilt of change from a cigarette machine was stolen by burglars who broke into toe A * W Root Beer Stand. €76 W. Huron SL, it-was reported 4oPontiac police Sunday. A burglary of tho Wyman Furniture Co.. IT It. Huron St., was reported to Pontiac police Sunday. Stolen were two TV sets, tour portable record players, and three clock radios Total value of the Items was $500. A break-la it (to A A W Root Beer Stand, 218 S. Saginaw St. netted burglars $50 in change from a vending machine, it was reported to Pontiac police Sunday. Some** today brake lato the Franklin School but took nothing, it was reported to Pontiac police. Attention Eetlroosl Savo l»Mt cent on your drug and perscrlptlon needs by sjmSnl hi tomga count card. Thrifty Drug Store, 148 N. Bagbaaw. —Adv, Ivan Mutt Work Longer WASHINGTON - The average eltisen of the Soviet Union must work 1% to 21 tones as long as the typical United States worker to buy the same amounts of food, the 1a Department reports. Ivan has to work longer now than i in 1908 to buy essential mod. prvdomlQitlns; f Increased over Ik* 31 paroaot about ora: good sad <•»» active, telly —*-- staoo] 3 load. I.**-------- choice and peltod .. 3S.75: moat ankUa t M50-3I50: lew lo«l*_averjj( 1000-1300 tb ataera 3815-35A#, mttad load* jood and ctalca 1000-1100 m. atoara 3t 00-35.50; |aod to low ahttca ttoora 33.00-3S.00; mo*t choice holtart S4J0-35.lt; mainly 34.50-35 0t: mUad load. Jood utility bows 15.00-15 50: tow so to ITS bad IMS; cannar. and cutter. 13.00-told. Roq* — salabk tot; Sutah-ora as-50e tawar; aowi auady to »c lower; law Ma No. 1 SSejOSJA ISAS-| nd 3nfo0?I30 Iba. 17 50- tie. 3 aad 1 too-ooo I j tan H .16-13.50. Voalcn; salablt : ,1.00-35 00: aoad am UtHltv I stodOW — *a»ea-” JV to mak« a market. : * Lockh Alrc . Lone a C “ I Lone I C 1 Lortllard Jfl 13 Hospitalized life: lAfter Accidents Mueller Br Nat Calk R 15 : 30.3 ComgMtoup Cda Fac .... Capital Airy Cantor Cp , ■ Nat Dairy . • J Nat Oypa ... - *1* Nat Load .. • 252 ny Cantral . J Nort A Wa»t . • Jff ite Am At ... - *1-1 Mr Pac - 1D1 Nor SU FW 2 Cart Collide on Dixie Highway and Another Skids Off Wixom Road NEW YORK (UPI)—Buffeted by the crosswinds of severe competition and skyrocketing expense^, airline earnings have spun downward in recent years, the Value #r cnt* aBd released. Line Investment Survey reports. But, it adds, prospects for the industry are improving. "The Civil Aeronautics Board may be prepared to take a constructive attitude toward airline merger*.” The merger aim: to strengthen the whole industry by reducing line’s dependence on a single route. Value Line points out that greater demand for airline services should follow more efficient use of equipment and generate a higher investment return by the mkMOfe, Three persons were admitted to a. u Pontiac General Hospital Saturday *•!) after being injured in accidents. m--------P_________Ar A A S^fviT.:: &I ftf*&5sa':lS.i| Seven-year-oid Benjamin Taul-k •• JS-J 2“ A# Air . nil bee suffered a fractured teg when _ . ••*• 8 jn&pjW'C ni i car driven by his mother Mrs. ;; gj) Verna Taulbee, 35. of 337 W. Co- Ctaa to Oh Chryt--Cttla* Clark Coca_____ Oak Fata Colum Qac ... _____ , Con Edit . Fenntv. CmNOta .... 14.• Fa RR Consumer Fw . 59 7 Pratt Coli CantBak ..... 3t.4 Cont Can ..... 35.4 gkalpa D Corn Mot ..... 91 Cant Oil .... 49 gkm. Fat_ "I Rf?5ll JS ? Republic S JJj Rex Drue JJ Raya Met vema ibiudcc, oj, w mi w. w 13 7 lumbia St., rammed into toe rear ..: M jof a car driven tor Henry Kelley. g|49, of 13282 phde Hwy., Holly ■ :«:»'Towngtrin. pe...wpa attempting tot Storms Bock State With Heivy Rain By United Press International. A heavy line of thunderstorms moved 'across Central Michigan yesterday, dropping a quarter inch of rain in a live-minute period. A A A The accompanying high winds knocked down power lines in some areas, and three persons were injured in storm-caused accidentfe. The U.8. Weather Bureau Issued torsade warning* for a ate-hour period yeotorday afternoon, but no tornadoes materialised- Two persons were, injured when the storm forced a single-engine plane to crash land in a field near New Baltimore. , '"''A: A * The plane waa en route from Port Hhron to Fraser when the winds forced it down. The plane hit a fence in landing. His passenger Mrs. Alice Wilbur, 43, ROyal Oak. was hospitalized at Mt. Clemens with more serious cuts. Her condition good. . A A A A six-year-old boy ‘burned his left hand when he picked up a live wire, downed in front of his Detroit home. Otis Bell was treated at Detroit’s Receiving Hospital. Traffic lights were put eat of operation throughout a portion of Detroit’s east side. Park Fee Proposal Would Aitect Many Area Sites Fire Damages Plant Tied to 670 Project ATLANTA W-Ftte early today caused an estimated $50,000 damage to a plant under UA government contract to manufacture material for tools used in making parts for B70 Supersonic bombers. No one was Injured. Myiers Boothe, executive vice president of the Ann. Glassrock Products, Inc.) said the B70 program undoubtedly would be delayed. The fire destroyed kilns and 'tying ovens. Boothe declined to say whether the plant was in operation at the time of the fire. Investigators said 'cause of the fin had not been determined. STu.'&b Dear* Del Ed Is Dt» C Sea* Dout Alrc Dow 'Chem face Standing Lights View of '61 Imperial DETROIT (AP)—The automakers today began to reveal officially bits And pieces about their 1961 models. ■ ★ C. I. Briggs .general manager of Chrysler and Im- , parted division, confirmed the new Imperial will have free headlights, such as were used on the ex- pensive can of the 198Q’» and early 1980%. The double lamps are completely separate from the gillie. They are mounted on' a pedestal which riae^lh front of the fender. Briggs said his 1997 models will go on sale late next month. He forecast a model year sale of 84,000 to 10,000,units compared with about 18,575 during the current model y**r Nearly all of Oakland County’s state-owned outdoor playgrounds are included in the $2-a-year park fee plan which the Conservation Commission in Lansing will be asked to approve Friday. \ The Oakland County list Includes Dodge State Pafkl No. 4 (Cass Lake), Pontiac Lake Recreation Area,! ‘ft? makeTteffturn on Dixie highwaylHlghland Recreation Area, Holly Recreation Area,! in w*-Proud Lake Recreation*—• —— **4 * f ' (Area, Orton ville Recreation taa Rochester-UUca Rec-^urd ArM Ovbr ooks - -• - Slight Detail of History -BiMr Bad .. wto ^ior.. Flrestaaa ... Food Mach Ford Mot'. Gardner Don Otn Bak .,. Ota D;nam Oen Site . Oen Fds ... Qon Mini .. On Motor* O Tel * El 8S3&*:: Oenesco .... Gillette . . Ooebel Br Ooodrtch ... PS “rer hound hiH OU Intorlnk Ir . ._*43k A* ' ‘ C « toTBas Mak lM BW W - **■» Bar, 45 5 WIIMfe k Co rS!^ . .....,*nar I Twent C4n Underwood . ... Un Carbide .. . 35.5 VnFM .......... 37 • S-! UWI Air I to 8 . 31.3 Dntti Aire iuj !.:a Un On* Cp . 1671 CherrytewB St., Ltada Taulbee, 5, and Kelley. Dexter was admitted for facial cuts and is reported in satisfactory condition today- The others were treated and released. A- - A ^ Hernandez E.‘ Banuelos, 35, of 263 Franklin Rd., suffered a fractured collarbone and cuts of the face when his car skidded off Wixom road near Burnes street in Milford Saturday night. He also is listed in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital. A passenger in Banuelos' car. Cannon Martin, 26, Of 713 Duch-Milford, was treated and released. DETROIT STOCKS (C. J. Nopktor Co.) attar d«clm*l point* ar* tlftitfc*. Hl*h Low Nooe Baldwin Rul i (tear cw.- . Lk». Oil * Cbm. Co ..iilkt. Motor Co * Fontorator MU. M. Co ' DOW-JONRS AVERAGES . Net chant* . Noon Mra ... Pr*». day ... Muth'^o . Indust Ban* Util Stock* IMS h 194k.h . .sitj hi.t is4.i ayti . 3»4 111.7 146.4 r*‘ . 341.7 iNt (S3 i a? l« ..MM 1W.S Mi i • *kd.l UU M-< 1 Old Carolina Coins Rarely Seen Today CHARLOTTE, N. C - Probably the most industrious of the private coiner* who established mints in America were Christopher Becht-ler, who came to this country from Germany in 1830 with his family in Rutherfordton, N. C- There wts a shortage of coins, so Becbtler and his son August began to coin native gold. Their first coins, $2 JO and $5 pieces, ap-. peered in 1831. They added dollars >jin 1$32. . Their coins, 20-karat fine or bet-{ ter, circulated in the Southeast for many years, receiving the same, consideration as Goverriment-mint-ed coins. Few have escaped the melting pat; today they are ex-j tremeiy 'scarce. reation Area and Island Lake Recreation Area. State Parks Director Arthur C. Elmer, who submitted the plan over the weekend, said the Bald Mountain Recreation area should be considered,for inclusion at a later date. The plan call* for annual stickers for ears at $6 apiece or dally lee* of JO cent* a ear. Both types of stickers would be available at the parks. The anaaal stickers aloe would be available through 4,000 selected, bonded dealers throughout the state, Elmer iijt'v Covering 55 parks and. recreation areas, toe let would go into effect Jan. 1, with proceeds refunding an initial $5 million bond issue for state park expansion and development. . A - d One third of a million dollars is scheduled to be sped) at five Pontiac area parks. MILWAUKEE (J>>—A mural depicting tlMrcabin home of Solomon I Juneau, founder of Milwaukee, has] been seen by thousands of persons toe work was completed in I the Milwaukee Auditorium in 1944. | But not until recently did anyone notice that mpralist Thorsten Unberg placed the cabin on the west side of the Milwaukee River, instead of the east side where it really wag. An amateur historian pointed out the. error to officials. FUBUC SALE Bank JHd*.. Pontiac. Midi. SEE* US FIRST to* Land Cmtra*ta—B*al Estoto— Toil Skrttw DAWSOtt l BUTTERFIELD K. J. Daw**a. Jnbk MMM4 It Ik N. Saatnaw at. FB 3-543*—FE S-7MB halt** Approximately one-fourth of all the gasoline used in toe Untied} States is consumed on (he farms. COMPLETE DBUBANCE SERVICE ftr . - m Less Hooey A* *• Menbenhip Foot M. E. Donials TtlW ' Vara M. Daniels Hamels insurance Agency 343 W. Hani Stmt R 3-7111 67 Reasons Why H would have paid you to answer our ad a taw months ago Ln A Mossogo from U.f* NIWS A WORLO MPORT A Urn months ago, w* pu^Hsbad a newspaper ad inviting readers to accept a trial subscription to U.8. NEWS A WORLD REPORT, on * nonoy-baek gi^rantet. We don’t have room hare even to begin to summarise tbs humteuds of pages of "useful nows” you missed by not subscribing at that time. But hen, at least, an €7 examples of the way U. S. NEWS * WORLD REPORT has enriched the thinking, the planning, and the conversation of its 1,150,000 readers since then . 07 of the exclusive reports, analyses, and intarviowa that hove given our readers a valuable “inside” look at thb imgertant trends and developments of our that. I. Changes to-Expect If Kennedy Wise ia November 1 Business Outlook - After Elections aad Early *\ 8. What Experts Say about Investing hi Tedey’a Market 4. Nixon os President: Changes He Would Make I. How Election Results Can Affect Basinets 6. What Khrushchev Ia Up To New , 7. The Young Men in Kennedy’s “Brain Trust’’ g. stock vs. Bond Yields: How They Now Compare 9. Whet the ’Cl Cars WiH Be Like t If. Big Chios ia Trouble - What Can Be Dome? II. What Next ia Cuba - sad the Choices Facing UJS. 12. The Money Congress Spends oa Itself 13. State Medicine: British Views After 11 Years 14. Higher lacoaMt: A Real Prep for Business 15. Red Cold War Tactics: New Chongs After Election? 16. The Cost of Living ia the MoAths Ahead 17. Will the South Decide the ’M Election? 18. Republican Strategy: How Nixon Plans to Wia II. UJS. vs. Russia- New Look st the Balance of Power 21. Nixea aad Kennedy: Where They Stand oa Key Issues 21. U9. Spending Tread: Less for Defense, Mere for Welfare $2. Congress's New “Little Laws” That May Affect Yea 23. Stock Options Come Under Firs 24. If Yoe're Planning to Borrow Money — 25. New — New Pressure to Test A-Weapons , 26. What's Behind Student Violence Around the World 27. Oil Industry: Where “Too Mach” Ia a Problem 28. “Eye Witness to Chaos" - Report from Congo 29. What Congress Did about Pensions for Seif-Employed 30. Industry by Industry - What Experts See Ahead. 31. Who’s Helped, Who’s Hurt by Canada’s Declining Dollar 32. UJS. Farm Problem - Can This New Approach Solve It? S3. Now ia 8igkt... the Meet Terrible Bomb of All 34. The “Catholic Vote” — a Kennedy Staff Analysis 35. For Men in High Office: A Clearer Cede of Ethics? 36. "Liberals” or “Moderates” — Who Runs UJS. Next Year? 87. Rddiatien Hazards - Some Recent Discoveries 38. Where the Big Investors Are Putting Their Honey *39, is This a Good Time to Buy e House? 49. Tax Haveds Abroad for UJS. Business 41. A Look at Top Executives' Take-Uem* Pay 42 Aa the Strike-Season Approaches ... 43. A Negro’s Life ia Russia: African StUdeat's Pretest 44. “The U-2 Mtst Fly Again” - Dangers UR. New Faces 45. Where Unemptoymeat Still la a Worry 46. As Labtt Unions Size Up Iks Candidates... 47. Soviet Aid: Iraq Learns toe Hard Way 48. New “^fst War” - Russian Spying at Sea 49. Florida Boom: Is it Losing Steam? 59. Turkey — What Happens When Army Raas a Country il. What to Eat te Live Longer 52. How College Coots Are (Jdikg Up 53. UJS. Buying Power — At a Record High 54. What to Do with Your Savings New 55. Cities Where Business Is Best 56. Next Year’s Congress, e “Spending” Congress. (K 57. Planning Year Future: Advice from Top Economists 58. Lunchroom Integration: Battle Negroes Are Winning •9. How U9. Missile Strength Compares with Russia's 60. Problems Awaiting the Next President Cl. Hew to Have Prosperity Without Inflation 62. Behind the Rioting in Japan ... 63. What’s Good, What’s Bad about Oar Public Schools 64. New Roles en Getting a Veteran’s Pension 65. As Fiscal Ysar fends... New Leek st Federal Budget 66. New Weapons: Radical Changes in Our Defense •7. How to Win the Election: Both Parties Map Strategies This lifting gives you just an inkling of what you can got from tiie magazine that bring* you more nows than you con get in any other news publication - phis the “extras” which ’ make it the most quoted, most useful news magazine. Every week U.S. NEWS * WORLD REPORT bring* you ttetos you con ass, news you didn't bunt and can’t git elteivhere. The editors net only report, the newt “behind" significant happening!. They go further and seek to aneuler the queetions raised in your mind: “What dost this newt mean to met Mg work? My familyt Where it it leading?” You get almost twice as many pages of newe as in other news magazines. Five complete -newsletters. Exclusive interviews with important newsmakers. Special reports , based •a weeks and months of study by experts. Historic speeches aad press conferences reported in faU. A swift-reading rundown of current trends ia politics, foreign affairs, wages, prices, labor, science. * ’ WHY NOT FIND OUT FOR YOUR9£LF how valuable U.S. NEWS ft WORLD REPORT can ba to you in the crucial months ahead? To give you the opportunity to do so We are again making a special introductory offer. Take . advantage of it now, by lilting out and mailing tho coupon! Get 26 Weekly Issues fer SIND NO MONEY—JUST MAIL COUPON U.S. News 6 World Report 13U-U 24th St., N.W. Washington 7, D.C I want to find out ..whether your magazine sen be as metal as you say. . Please send it each week far the next 26 week*. You may send me a bill later -for the trial subscription pries of 82.67 (a substantial saving). It is understood that my 9347 will be refunded ia fail at any time- during this trial subscription if I find the magazine does not fully live up to my expectations. FOU* ADDITIONAL IUUU AT NO IXTRA CNAKUS - Cheek tare If ar. enclo*inc your cheek (or UJT WITH (M* coupon. Thu will i ■rsMe clerical end bookkeepiaa eiponeo and we'll pe*e this aa* on Vo ran by tending you 4 «..”sUM " Come fa aad Hart Your Presort GJosses Adjusted — No Chargol . “Tou Con Afford (be Vesf at Saber Optical! Why Settle ter Lessr 86Vi N. Saginaw—Across from Federal'* . 9:30 te 5:30—FRIDAY NIOHT *711 StSO CLOSED WEDNESDAY No Appoiatmoml Neeeeeary Big Stack of Bilk Awaits Congress WASHINGTON (AP) - These are some ol the major issues lac-M*. The Senate neon* noon, the House next Monday: \; * * ★ WAGE—Awaiting Senate action is a hill to increase the present U-anOeur minimum te $1.35 ia three stages by Jat. 1, 1963, and to extend eovwsf* to three to five million workers not presently included. A House-passed bill would limit the increase to |U5 end extend coyerage to an Estimated 1,400,000 employes of retail chains operating in .two or more states. I * ' * * v I MEDICAL —JTw Senate Finance Committee nag completed hearings on various proposals to provide health and emedlcal care for persona ever 65. Some Democrat* proposed Increase in Social I Security* taxes to finance the coat, an arrangement opposed by the Eisenhower administration. The administration favors a system «C federal-state grants outside the Social Security program and similar to a limited bill pass id by EDUCATION - The Hegio Rules Committee is btocktog action *n sanding to • Joint < FOREIGN AID—The Senate Appropriations Committee is expected to act this week an President EL senhower's request tor 94,185,000.-000 In foreign eld funds soma RIO minion more than voted by the ""*** . .. . PUBLIC WORKS — Awaiting Senate action 1* a $4,030,010,605 ill toiflnance flood cot* trol, river and harbor, and reclamation projects. This in about X million dollars above Eisenhower's request and 106 million more than voted by the House. I d House MU*. The House voted to limit aid to.school construction; me Senate MU would include.teacher pay. / * * ip it ^ HOUSING — The RtAM Committee atoo is blocking House be-tion on a bill to extend and expand various federal housing aid pro- DEFENSE — Congress already I* pawed a 40-billion-dol\pr defense money bill, but new platforms of both major parties call and there have been call* for additional d e f * u * • appropriations Immediately. 1 Jlmtott* sliATION-WibE^«r»^ SUMMERTIME CAR SAFETYSERVICE Your Car, Family and ftr»ofiaf$tfefy' Benefit Whan You Dial With Ur We’re Part Of Fhxstone*^ Nation-wide Network Of t CAR SAFETY CENTEIlM NYLON CHAMPIONS PRfC£D nOM 95 up i MIN, Snfoty-Portlfled cord bodloa it Husky 7-rtb Champion ’ troad design it Midi also... no quality 12 RUST-PROOFED TO LAST LOGGER! Pick Your Six* and Typa...SAVE JITl Tote-Typo BLACK* WHITT TUBIUSS 7.60*14 1495 ■ ■■ MACK WHITI... 18.50* 6.00-16 12.98 16.50 6:7005 12.9S_ 16.30 7.10-13 7.60-15 16.98 16.98^* 18.95~ 20.95 •Was tax and iKoppobla Hi. RAYON PRICES START AT ONLY lO* LET US CORRECT THESE CONDITIONS Here'* what we do Pull aU lour wheel*, jaapt , brake lininf* aad drum*. Check gratae seal* and wheel cylinden for laakage. Clean, inspect, repack and adjust front bearings. | Pull all four wheels, inspect i % Add brake fluid if nsoeraary. 5 Ad just brakM to manofacturar’* a specifications, and road test 146 WEST HURON FE 2-9251 End Catholic Munich Meeting Church Concerned Over Underprivileged Rad Menace, Religious Rifts By FRANK BRUTTO MUNICH, Germany (AP) The Roman Catholic Church'* 37th world eucharistlc fongress ended here Sunday after making three things, dear: ^ ' ★ w . * 1. the Catholic Church is urgently concerned with the necessity of improving the lot of the world's hungry, poorly clothed and inadequately sheltered. Some of its leaden see the plight of the less fortunate as grist for communism’s mill and a greater peril than nuclear bombs. * v * * 2. The Church Is more anxious than ever t(»t all Christians draw closer together, minimizing their differences, emphasizing t h e 1 similarities and healing the wounds of past religious conflicts. 3. The Church is more anxious than ever that all believers in God tighten ranks against atheistic, materialistic communism as the comfnon enemy. ♦ ★ ★ Speeches by cardinals, archbishops, bishops and prominent laymen brought out that the Church is convinced a true Christian life, with Justice and help for the unprivileged. Is the only means of combatting communism. Los Angelas County Most Populous WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Census Bureau reports that 16 counties in the United States now have populations of more than one million persons — an increase of five counties over the 1950 census. The report listed Los Angeles County, CaMf., as the moat populous with M7S.9B3 residents, tol-lewed by Geek County. Bl., wkk* includes Chleege. with *,***,*34 persons. Third place went to Wayne County. Mich., which includes Detroit, at 2,661,568 persons and fourth largest was Kings County, N.Y., where Brooklyn is located, at 2.654,001. ■The other counties over one mil-' lion wore: Philadelphia, Pa.. U 036; Queens, N.Y., 1.802.119; New York, N.Y., 1,668.172; Cuyahoga, Ohio, 1,632.267; Allegheny. Pa.. 1-622,837; Bronx, N.Y., 1.415,025; Nassau. N.Y., 1.294.309: Harris. Tex., 1.234,868; Middlesex, Mass., 1,234,357; Erie, N.Y., 1058,636; Milwaukee Wis., 1,029,289; and San Diego, Calif., 1,003,582. Worthless Vote Rejects Mixing Dallas Citizens 4 to 1 Against Integration of I* Schools to No Avail 'Berserk1 Car in Hip-Roarin' Sunday Spree \ WASHINGTON (AP) - O police, a speeding car went out of control Sunday and sideswiped another auto, uprooted two trees, bounced against seven homes, knocked down four -fences, caved In one wall, smashed five windows, cracked several concrete steps, plowed up a hedgerow, and snapped off a water faucet ★ ♦ * The car came to a halt Its .driver stepped out of the wreckage into the arms of poiioe, who held him on 14 traffic charges. He was identified as Nicholas A. Harris, 24. a medical technician with the National Bytttutes of Health. DALLAS. Tex. (AP) - Dallas residents have voted 4-1 against integration of public schools in special election that is conceded to be meaningless. ★ ★ The Dallas schools are under federal court order to. integrate. Saturday's referendum was held under a Texas law, untested as e courts, which would dele Ml to schools desegregating without a favorable vote. U. S. Dist. Judge T. Whitfield Davidson, who has ordered limit; ed integration to begin in September 1961, has said that he believes the federal courts will bold *tbe state law unconstitutional. C. B. Bunkley, attorney for the National Asm., for the Advancer ment of Colored People, said there was a “general feeling that the vote didn’t mean anything, that one’s constitutional right cannot be determined by Legion Raps 4 Movies lor Ties to Communism' DETROIT (A)-Michigan Legionnaires, meeting for the final session of their four-day state convention, voted yesterday to oppose ^he showing of four major films . they said were written in part I by Communist sympathizers. The films are Expdus, Spartacus, 4 AAA jTTT given every week , CASH „d CARS PLAY LUCKY 4 SWEEPSTAKES w a wHfc poor driver’s linens* number win 4 ways wsSS*^ # r * peer awe f 1 aerial a Get Jree Gutty Coupon IN TODAY’S DETROIT The reootutioa didn’t name either the producers Death Notices ssSLt & ifPWi srto-'iKrtr'TSi «§§£Sgt 1#, in> U- tea Run toon Mineral Bom* with Bo*. WUMam Seller Officiating. Interment in Parry Mount Pan Cemetery. MW. kte(*b tn state at the Huntoop Punarql Hama. father sit lew___ _ Mrs Roberta Ryon: dear brother at Olln, John and LtsUo Howard and Mr*. Clasata Morris: also our- aarSyprafag Curtia affletAtuc. Intermenita Parry tomruk Cemstsry Mr Howard vtli lta In atria at the Hnntooai Funeral ftoma , '■srs.ssj: door mothetof Mrs. Shlrloj Hutta: doer ataUr of Clair and ' rniis BaAsTtotem. JdraTite.T. Hopkins. Mra. A. W. WdwaOMra. Ralph SldwoU. Mra. Mila Pattsm- turvlved by ana Punarsl aarrlct will ba —-Wodnaaday. JM*J4 at ( P-“: tram atehardaaa-Btrd Pu a a r • 1 Homo, Milford, with Rat. George Naata efflctotini Interment tat Wlxom Cemetery. Mra. Johnson Mrd tomomf team. MUforl.~ skxTOi»7*ho. i, 1m». bxlle Rlanar. J* B. Chlcato Art , tr« M: door mottlOr of Harold and s i c. Ok«y toaut and Mra. Koator iHafahi Lasan: doer ala-tar at Car b a ttT Nathan aad ChorUa Stidham. Mra. Hillard Adama. Mra. Imary CaudiU and Mrs. franklin Caadlll: alia Mr-rlvad by thraa mndehUdran. Funeral servtee will be hold Wadnaa- “ i r “ with iK na aranua as boos vssssasa. Hot. Frank M. Braunac Jr. oiiicMUbs. Mra. Sertan will bt • taken from the Puralar Funeral Hama at fl:M a m. Wodnaaday to He to state at tltt church traai IS nooss unto time at cornea. lutorment In - Parry Mount Camatary. i'T * P~X 1N. AUO. 4. IMS aWT Uanu* W., M3 Midway It: ago 13: dear father of Dorothy John-ton and Blaaboth Jack too; dear Iratllor at Mama. Tartu, Hall . aad Ada Stephan. Jeailo Stovall and Haaala Tar rail: alia aurataad by 13 sraadehOdraa. Funeral -r^as waa hold today. Am. «. p m. traai the Darla-Norton _, ^ near — altjtoL Inter an allegedly suspect. But it did ■ay the Legtee would expose the alleged Communist background of the writers. ♦ * * The Legionnaire* earlier had received the praise of Gov. G. Men-nen Williams, who lauded them zealous guardians of America'i and Robert E. Lynch, who, while praising the Legion, alsyarned the veterans they face a tremendous Job to preserve the ideals of Americanism for which they fought. DETROITER WINS Elections took up much of yesterday's session as a Detroit man, Wilson H. (Bill) Morrison, 41, ' feated Patrick MaUoiy of Sault Ste. Marie In a tight face for 42nd Michigan Department commander of the Legion. Morrison, the Uth Detrott-are* C^ed 1 THX NICHOLAS « WXLCH PAM-Uy WUh to tnank thalr ralaUras, frlaada, aad neighbors for flto many aria at klndaaaa and baautl-ful floral offerings la the roc nit Moth at their Husband and Father. Special thanks to pd lua. Allan Hrichlnaoo-ate lfia Aie. Marrln Porrltt, Mr. ui Mrs. Ward Naartan for their acrrleas and Mra. Bart Nlcklat, Mat. Carl ■rocker, Mra. Robert sehlffman and Mrs. Jack Rosa, na Hlcb-olaa S. watch family. Fapiaftif Dfeacters 4 COATS FtfNBML BOMB DRATTOir FLAMS OS S-T737 Donelson-Johns Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambutoacs Scrricc. Plane or Motor FI MW Cawatary Lata 9 FIRRY MT. FARE CXMXTIRY. Beautiful g grara lot. Will Stride. E CBAFBL ■ FBAdSM At IS a.m. Today (hero were repBea at Tha Proas office to the Isllowtag 1, 14, 1*. 17, 42, 4*. 47, 49, *1, 0*.,7*. 7*. M> *». 102, 14S, 1*4, 119, 111, FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From • ua tel pja. AU errors should he_ reported immediately TOd Praia assumes no reaps*-albiltty tar arratt other thaa to ooocal toe chargee far toot portion at the Brat ssf. tss-JSsti: s-nwe adjuctmraU will to giro* without tt. type Is U i day prarlou none* to ADVKBriSIBS rha diidooi for aaoctli tun o« trmmlaat Want Ada ---P a m. the day d or or the first CASH WART AD RATH* 4 1(0 3J4 dig I IN 9 if j ■ 2 m I IN tR 11M 4 3 IS si jo riddo tor «*o of maaderahlp, is a pSot to*——i (hr ot Detroit StTOet BaUwmy Foot IN and was Michigan vice Other state oncers: finance officer , Jame* Leys, Grand Rapids; chaplain, Thomas E. Pollard, Jack-ton; historian, Mrs. Dorothy Koi, Plymouth; and sergeant at arms, Lewis Want. Lapeer. # ★ * . The new state president of the (American Legion AuxiBary is Mrs. Edna' Schuitema, qf Holland, a past president of Gilbert D. Kar-sten Unit X of Zeeland and of the Legkn’B Fifth Diatrict. H— Wq—fi PAb » aB^TVSiwg meST Help Wanted Male ^ 6 ABOVE AVERAGE? Art you worth till a weak tar aerial typa routa work? 00 itopa Sly. car 4a| phone caccotfal. • Guaranteed till plus lap WUH weekly. Atop toarfUie opening. M»roo QR_Vtep Wasted Fiifft ',|1: 4-1 tout PfmSHSS. FOR DRT cleaning plant rifbtoitog re- ATTENTION NTOTESRSI Oeorge s Toys gOara UN i tamplt kits to WOtHwd e o ■ tn who 4M 4Mmo-riratojws I to' per weak Mop od_____ of Georgs't YOpa; hire « ^gTTOTSoutod nber of IsasngtrotWl for the B---Nto ■» -- LAND Tl 0 Florida. aoddADOL TO M Pn fno trip to other f—-HOMS iiscoa. Wo an offorfet brand tots oifts •,a‘“~mwra up ——P—MX—lpstoiilP r tales Olds ovolBSSreALL atto rofR\ppon INCQRPOR- or mm tapT AVON-ONE OP THE WORLD’S largost Cosmetic Co., has opoo-lngs for S women to Ponttig area, win train yon to averago (to to to* week te iparo time. Phono tow FE I Ugg or write Drayton Wains F.O. Box (1. BABT BITTEli WANTED at MY homo, mra jteamonattm. Cos arg*J*s!Mr S SD*T 1*1—Mi, OFFICE wuigosiMffl»r.Fs asm, COOK FOR DAY SStef. AFPLT A a W Boot Boor, us h. Form dependable w 6 m a k for child sorp. Days T to 4, IS W— 5B ritor l Ban. DENfkL AMT . SOME KHOWU odfo of typing. Would consider practical OVM. / Write . Pontiac Pros, fox No. liijtobl age. mostial etatas, exporioewe. EXPERitotam aobbsn sTeje - *mqe n «F6,*K OIRL WANTED P. tog. alary and O. . .. ■, ■■ an be kST school graduate. For - ie*al offloo. Sad '—.of sou first lsttor. Write pgattoo boMt raW'ot^^lSs* SLaSHSt SLfTSR ^oto.- Write Pontlao Press Box tousEEBEFis M*9 mm on. Mors tor homo wax wages. rt UNL _______ lUUUUmFER^LIVB IN. *to A P£\$Si. LADTES, AOl WXHt. U HRS, tomsg, but appUcant must have ability. A small offloo. ExceUent working ooadltlons. Nr appointment call PE Util.________ LADim-WITH CARS TO GIYT away boo gifts bp appointment only. PuU or port tuoo. Apply •N ojn. PUtor Quson, Ml Oak- LICKNSED PRACTICAL SUSIE for medical expiry Not. Write Sax IM. Nattod Fwoc, LADY FOR HOUSEEEEPINO. live to. OL 1-13S0 after 2:30 p.m. middleaoxd woman w.uYS in. light house work a babysitting. Moro tor horns than wages QL 1-lto*. • • Medtctii R«eeptkni6t Typing, shorthsnt to ttoit tn atgtogter. Write Pontiac Press loxlS. . ■ TEHP ,__■ «pn* Orchard Lk. NEAT, Itortt 'tonT ________ office, hours I t p.m. 3t hews per W“*-age. eto. Write Box 1 Wto*. REGISTERED NURSE FOR DOCT-or’t office. Call bet. 14 and 13 A, M. only. FE 4-MU. i 103 PoaUac „__TSD CAEN ____________ pan time, ovoalngs and week “■*1. Experienced preforrr-—-lSVm. M Interrlew Tug*, 14Vm. tn t gum. only. YaikoTWon, II S. Stg- Telephone Canvassers Mary plus oopmission son Mra you WTitr week or moro from I p.m. lo I p.m. MO’ Jack at,, till Wort Walton Bird.. Drayton IT1*— , , > “TOP notch demonetrators Now one of too ftewTinM of toys and onto toot noodsd extra mSrtML&a*t£ ■%nSnSF* Ft Mttt. u -----------EX^tRtfNCfD iN _ ,_jm ood oeorian sorrtco. f to person at S* 4 Toro vpi. ssauH i,uncn, s to. Apply in person. IOUSEEEEPER. UNDER _____ ----y^E^urd L... Middle belt Rd. PE M471._ WOMAN TO WORE NYENDfOd IN 9gra£1*11. \WAITRESS Afljjy tog. Boy pmo ten, tepo Hslp Wawtafi 8 U N FES HOUR OS MOSS FOR port or full time route work>-Lorre repeat orders. Moo or wom-tn. Write or tolephope James Barrett MM Devonshire St.. Flint. Midi. Phono CE MWI. HELP WANT» TO uYb' ON farm. Retired eoaplo pcoforred. Must know . how to food ‘livestock. horses, and ptnlos. Farm ■ li located to the Clark.ton arum Call FE 4-W31. After t REAL ESTATE SALEIMAN FULL ~iT&JS8Jsu&a& --Ary. Jfen trato Jim Wll- SMlg^ltlliridWto AV- 6top t6pK j--—I ttom fuU or part- time Weekly payoBoik. Car oec-msory. No caavasstnc. Sarah Povoriry. PBom OB Vh», WOMAN OS COUFLE'to'uVSW form ham# and art for older ly moo. Mtlfovri area. Can Tulsa MW day*. KB*wood t-tWO sven- WANTib — ASSISTANT fSAH-■aclst. SO bod hOspNat: salary aon. merit locreatet. paid vaca-Uoo, s'fk ltar# aad holidays. TOO to Director of Personnel. Mary, HosplUl. Saginaw, Emptoymeirt Afsadss 9 Evelyn Edwards write letters baodl* Ottooto. aSS 5pSf4nd ,toonhMd PBX RECEPTIONIST . 1300 yob moot ho share with ■ad appsorooss. ThU Is a awEftciffi steno -r.«n4 Nero's a position tef a got «lto real estate offloo ot-arjonos. You*u bo woiktoe largo frloadlyWomM. Aged mS4r.,,•........ rin.PV* Offi««. Aged a to to. OOPYWRItNR .TTtT. mm Recent sxporlsoco to retell AD LAYOUT ISM Oood typist, win bo trained to OeoM advertising Director. Wands rfal spjtnuoity CAs^sffi&^r^^wn Must be experienced Will MWE. Must bo Mourrie TO SwTO iwinewi MrvnSSP viigtesr *.*..».-to ■MO to on oppmliwRy for durst. Agtd M to ». - .MEN - CREDIT TRAINER Jt 132* AD .LATOuf* 11.000 nCR YEAR Musi have fornitorp layout OXpOrtWWO. A*Od 30 to 43. EVELYN EDWARDS Vocational OOUNSELDfO SERVICE jp * FIELD Representative >25 Collego Grad. proforTod. Olid 33-M. 6»Uariton »nd mBoTBmoI-- )•■* futon with outstanding na-nsnri Bra. Company Mr fur-nlshed. Midwest Employment, 4M PoaUac Mote BaST Bldg- FE SALES MM aged U-H. with to erias- Mld- yQr* m ’THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 8. 1900 TVVENTY»FIfll - ’ i—twcUwii ioi iwhgs«rvfcQ ~ ROOT R EPA3RS U Notice* and Personal* 27 spare Um« aot. Wrltt (o. •««* M(mC~HA*Alport1' - mem. * itroughino STOMS PROOFING i munmyd^rTM miairn caVatinq Alio ‘ i Wedding Napkins J'FREE" ->tgs im informal#-- „ W fenn Me W Ci Wedding invitations f* H aPJfr______________ ADOrriOKAL WIRING Atm PLUO work doo*. Call FE l-WI. A-i carpenter Ann work. SA* ud Nf euaranteed. OR 3-9741.___ A-l WALL WASHING, CARPET A Uphol. Mach. cleaned. Pft4-1077. a-’ «ARf«bteb w6iucr“NHw end repair. FI Mill. APPRENTICE !arpSStEr7 - -X me__ H^stb CABINET MAKER AND CARFBN-tet. Kitchen* io ipaetohy. PS Lje^lLD Mtkn — wmB 'CHEN Ci MSB. ■into it aat ted. H mm. CARPENTER WORK. CABINETS and addition*. fet-mi. E*ir~’MOnBrrs» needs work. FE MW OARDEN INO AND LAWN WORE WM»t nrmuoa and iEnaiafiPAmT-tat, hr th* Job or hour/PE 3-903. I JO WANTS STEADY WORK IN DEBT? IF SO LET US Give You 1 Piece to Pay v Ease Your Mind WE A»E NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS * mJ2g%'W ■*“ Beeldaephtg * Texes Id EOOn^gCTO ^L TAKE* PreMwtAldng, Tailoring 17 American Assoc. Credit Ciamic ton Michigan Aeeoo. OrodM Oewniltlfl ON AND AFTER THU DATE~AUO. aot a ijso. I win aoi be reapeo-olblo hr nr dabte contracted by any other thaa myself. Keith Mean. Wt kna, Fiaaaa. Mtah. ON AND AFTER THIa DATE Ausuat A IMS I win not bo fa-opanolble for any debt* contracted by any other than nyaoif. Robert Ensmuiger. 3MS DarM S Drl»e. Waterford, -Michigan. Rent Apts. Furnished 37 TIZZY Rv Halt Oiann ROOMS Am BATE » DRAT- tea. aim, iimBBing W S ROOM AFT., um FURR.. FRI rah oat.. Fi MB. Kwa i RboWi anD batE. PUViff eoteeaoo. child weicapM. $u per tMijMn at ffi Baldwin Are. n£a1 4-1341. If aa aaswer. PR 4-71M. | Wtd. Miscellaneous 30; I SERVICE ... ___ TREE JL_______ STUMP REMOVAL Trot tonsoval trial mla^^jot a Work Wanted Fsmde U'wSS&Httgaj&hr flH8® HAVE YOU A TYFEWKITOt. J admit machine or piece of office _! furniture or e^udpment not *“ “ • ROOKT MODERN. . CLEAN, these Items. | welcome. Also will c Alter I, F* 4-11S1. *•**!*• wiirrtt ACTIVE ABOVE THE AYERAGE . widow, excellent 4. UGHT HAULINO AND RUBBISH. PhSPQ FE 8-SSSS Trucks to Rent U^EOMSICSts i — oarages I4Y BID* FIRST - ________PE 3-78*4 I BRICE BLOCK AND^CMSy - OET MY S "gutters. ROOhWO- 2£umT mB ALL k 1N D 8 CEMENT WORK Drives, floors, etc. Jensen. FE ALL TYPES OF MODERNIZATION Jg Damp Trueu i Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. S3I S. WOODWARD nNiMU FE 4-1441 Open pally Including Banday Patathjg^^DecdfEthit ,23 1ST cu&L FAnrrhro A^rp dec- brick. ELOdTAND CEMENT work/Alaartpalr work. OB 3-1M3. colWJCT >MtdbtT3ir6 statf- lea Rusasab under, present ---------imsiOt. orating, cm ST CLASS I INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR painting, retereacez. OR 34*14. ^IFAWTOO INTERIOR. Mt-terlor. io par cant disc foe cash. Ouarantaed. Free pat. FE 4-«304. TpAiirfwo e decoratino Faaar removed. FE 4-dill._ AAA PAINTING S 2* years experience. Reasonable painting, wall wathlna. Free ei INTERIOR FAINTING. FRED FOS- TAKE ADVA1 RENTAL Ml >R HOU OF OUR TENANTS ___SES AND OR OUT OF TOWN. POOP wEFERENCEa. NO CHAROE IF WE DON’T RENT YOUR PROPERTY. WE ALSO MAX*! COLLECTIONS. R. J. (Dick} VALUET Realtor -.FE,4-3531 348 OAKLAND AVENUE Open - — - *“ J Share Liyhig Qsirtst* 33 MIDDLE AOED WIDOW WILL shin. Write Box 73 Pontiac Press. WOMAN (WORKING PREFERRED who would enjoy sharing widow • clean modern home,. FE 8-8308. Norton. VMVBoB'HM private haw and call at 88 Pirttht. ■Vn-AR E YOU WORRIED OVER' DEBTS? IX, TOUR B OIVE YC ■ TO FAY OONSOUDATE ALL 1 AND LET US C" OREFLACE V-—... BUDGET SQIVICE BUTwaVe SPECIAL. MAS CpM- plate. DOrothy s. FK 3-U44. )AINTY~MAID BUFrtSfcs -Menominee, Mrs. Wallace LOSE ’hjiMh1' g A # E b T1. ARP ^ ALL CASH or AND FHA EQUITIES If you wolMUHhr ----- deposit - ALL utilities, main floor. Private oatrunee a ATTRACTIVE 2 ROOM AND KIT-chenette, private bath, utilities furnished, near Oanoruf Hospital. Small child welcome. FE 2-4234. BACHELOR APT. --------- main floor, vary nice. FI 3-4374. BACHELOR OIRL AFT., NEAR Tel-Huroo. Vary MMSNi^jr. ary ntti,_ ______to had. Modan_ l. dinette, full bath. Utilities 1 MWMgMgMjmtM trance,' I1S.M par week. PE 84238 t forn. Private entrance. FI BASEMENT^ APARTMENT^ FMt Stove, refrigerator, gas beat, aa-rage., US par noaBTFE a-iro. WEST mni 7 ROOMS. BAm --------and washer. OR. 848*8 or I Efficiency Apartments Living nob, kitchen, bathroom, 200 i. Paddock. Flil-ins. LAND CONTRACTS TO BUiTOR ,»R KWT OR MIX 1 BTOOM. to sell, nan Darrels. EM Mill d ^room home with .baeement. lake privileges. 14 Bill of FopUac MA s-mi. LAROE LOVELY 8 AND BATH. . a*ar airport, Adult* OB 3-1843. RM. UPPER. Ml WX. M Cottage, FE 44818. need ! LAK8»IDE_ Immediate * I ________ utniriES. Lake lea. OR 84888. iAEE FRONT. CLEAN .. .... f plsasant, no drlukers. FE 2-4140 7188 W. Maple. MAyfaif M8S* |f0TEL KlTCHENEfTB AFT*. CASH FOE TOUR -----T ^ 4-3*41 Eve. FE 44118. LISTINGS WANTED We have reduced cur supply, of listings duo to recant tales. Therafoeo. w* need listings a( all tynoa of property. List with us today and two adyantaga of the preeent active market. CLARK REAL ESTATE FE 84*5 ’EES FK 44813 Q»*a net. > Sun. “NEEDED” Lake Properties . LOTS — COTTAGES - YR. RD. Buyers Galore .. A. TAYLOR. AOENCY 7138 WOHLANDROAD Or *-<30* jPBCIALIElP REALTY RPiTlCt * 8-8*48. Rent Apia. Fumiel*ed 37 AND 1 BEDROOM- ART U*7i apt, bldg Union Lake. KM 84M*. ~klCE APARTMENT, UTILITIES furnished. Pontiac. Ill par waok. _ _______ate. FE 8-W88. BOOM* — 1 dlltL~~ PRTVATE entrance WaaMt 1ST FLOOR. 8 ROOMS A BATH, children. Util. 1« William ST MS. FX 8-4184. 1 b66M kwairitrij lAp: . Private wUMMa. alas* I 5Sp EManbrth LakVjiond,___ , .,»& ♦ ..riZtS" "oSan ’ * private mlnae*. Couple Call iiHfn MS Taathtla. 8 RMS. "Edit nh- FETY- BATH . working PE W ' CHILD welaoma, *81 Hr Fwr* 1 3 ROOMS AND BATE. CLEAN ARD urtaV^Warphy t bed. adulu only. I Monro* St.. R trance, 1st flow. 38* H. Saatnaw. 1 ARP RATH. UPPER. UTHJTtta fiOTlahad. Sakoil St, rjTMMI.. 8 lib I kOOMS AFT. CLEAN fpr^ -------- NICE 4 ROOMS. BATH. , i Watt aid*. Avails 4-0424 or FE>41M. VICINITY AIRPORT. _ ___________ upper. Modern, garage 81* par week. FE 441**. Rial Apt*. Unfundthed 38 skefront apta, OR 341*4. BEDROOM TERRACE AFT. 142 Villa. Apts. 4*4 ABBBTB. FE 84*4*. 1 BEPRM.. UPPER NEAE OMT. stove, automatic oil hoot and hot water furnished. Mod am, clean. FE 2-04*8 - . 1ST CLASS 3 BOOM PUIeTTE. d bath A nitou»tl« hot watar. refrigerator A laundry (acuities “Vi (sEbaak f “* Fib* Conmr field •ttmta, to*, mo. 1 *3 bed-room nmr apt. Etlclld St . *M . mo. I Ftadroom duplex. Bpokam St. WoM nUM. 'ltS mo. FE 4-2431 — - ~M-11W. UPPER. 83* SOUTH 3 jiboiii AEP EATU. OJJPPLL : Street. $88. Adulta only. Ot 8-WM. itb iMl i». 6*iE of T*E LAMP-Tuac. Rest, water, parkhtg furnish ad Adulta. Shirley Apts. 188 K —TUB J RM. PVT ENTRAROL BATE. a&& jbC,' * uiffluss, *** “* — «SBRl. FE 8-1838 *1 BATH. Theater. FE M437. _____ l ROOMS AND BATH. 1ST FLOOR. Nmr downtown. Mot. References. Call after I pm. *-2T*l -------am ■ furn.- FE *-8i33 3 JIM. AFT. CLOSE TO TOWN. ■Hate entrance. FE HIM. I ROOMS. PRIVATE RATH.' NSW lr decorated with garage Small ^iid^j^SsKTarnSk 8ee, Apt. R-l. FE 3-Slli Newly decorated apartment with 4 rooms and bath. Children permitted. 184 par month. Clow to lebool, churches and downtown, (tool In the summertime. Ample laundry faotlltioa. K. O. Hemp-—. —■ - —----------street. rE stead. MwJ COLORED (let apartment for rent, stove, efrlgerator and beat furn.-Phone TCMM1. uppers 1*3 Baldwin, FE 4-3437 THREE ROOMS. PLUS KITCHEN and bath. All have one separated bedroom. As low as 840. SLATER APTS. M N. PARSE ST. BRICK . 2 BEDROOMS — Full ha menu, gas heat, Dccorat Hard wood • floors *73 i Nicholie *& Hargcr Co. ilh WEST HURON FE *41(3 PONTIAC. MiemOAN IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCV. 1NEW 3 bedroom ranch, ga* boat. i‘s ban*, tile floors, Clarkston. MA ^ f6r Sal» Ho—m 49 8 FAMILY INCOME NEAR DOSVH-towa wantM^pueojjUS to Wt Sad iSrtar^** up. 'fl|Masr Small bfM _ Uire lots aaar beat »T»**. (l.«M g tde Monday thin Tl**f from * to * FE MUI er FE Mt*». 2 JMPMyjpM MODERN R OM~E EiDROOMS. RATH; TltED baeement, tb acre lot. iarm*. OR Mya^yrn-^^. feBSSS1 ***■ L**'"*> ** etty 1 BEbwOOM jjMg.,_*J»rAN5 ------- -Mbaianc* yatc5y«iu.yfler> wlai tm d^'MI^VtM0*4*' ***** ♦7 BEDROOM NkWLY DECdlRAT-•d, carpeting, near commnter and schools: tl»,to* MI 4-484*._ 4-BKDRM nEwly DEC aND 2-csr t*ny **.7*0: *3,4*8 dawn. (jjartston,’ Mich. MA ~8-138l. I kOOkS. NMTk BXD 7 NIC* lot. MjiilMtl, *»• bast. fi^prto*, »fTto. *71* dBwn, »«) a rnanth. Call owner, FE *-33»7 « room Bouse, one car oa- rag* by owner. FE 841*4. 7 ro6m brick, FURNTTURi"1N-ciuded. 118* Dover, Washington 4040 GREEN LAKE RD. R*ro'» aa Meal ham* toy a small family, modern newly decorated. For Salt Houses COLORED WHY. PAY RENT? 4»j For 8hIs H»p|| f ' _ m ! Rochester—By 6wuer ' amm *iBabmm** **” ill ONLY $10 DOWN s« §m. U rTJJT sfUrtym MOTSHT— FE toto TT pin*?fl (S> Sr tot. owner bun* sell, retiring to EXCELLENT LOCATION — Nearly new, nicely finished, fully lnaulat-“* —*« Rims an about 3 basement, orlced low. , a* re*, full Requires | ON MW — Near Highland, large bedroom bam* on spacious It.. Vary good condition. W*U planned — Attached garage. Only »ll,4*o STEELE REALTY (Main Office) 1848 N. Milford Rd. between Highland AM If oM^MU 4-20*6 labooli Abu mall down parmaat. FE * r lagalr* »r oattag* St. Will consider leaae option to re-MMltNQH. A. C. Compton A Sons oil furnate. ntca lot. (90d neighborhood. $7.24* Immediate po»-sesslon. MA MW*. N* brokers *40* DN. (74 A MO. 3 BtbROOM a&x ■ i. *M, FE 8-85*7. «4M b6wH. t EEOtoOM. TILE bath, drspas. carpeting, basement gas haat. nicely landscaped, tls per cent mtg*. Or aaw FHA. Terms. FE 84488. GOOD BUY FOR 8488 DOWN total price 88,1*8 lake privileges Elisabeth Lake. Arcadia Park. FE MTT1 . Oarag*. * Suburban Living At Its Best Your tutor* home la be (CONVERTIBLE 24) III badrawms, IS baths W. W. ROSS HOMES SELL OR TRADE______ 3 Agr*a — Oaas (auTtoN SSMtoS Dorothy Snydkr Lavender THIS HOME OH KEMP U VERY good value Has large bamt.. ga* L.. bunt an toMlkjffi Sato' SSta- C. Schuett, FE &-Q458 MODEL all* 8-8 pan. Saturdays II • i p.m. fUQdaya p. a.m to 1 mi-------------,_______ — Completely furnished twapt decorating. For only 1.M4 with 14*8 down gndgfs pur month; ar aa .your own lot far gl.Mt Road te Hutchins ar rarawertb f ouulty FRUIT J > Oakley Park Road I HAMMOND LARK. I RM. RANCH I ('«°a"urv.by TT?”". flof T!taf W*T??!LAD *r »•>"*• *•» sC&Wfi?MfwVu7 toeattoua Ramm^roatr------f---- STEELE KEALTY jatno rkohtb: . | (Main Office) -->rd Rd betwaaa Blah- Milford. MU taT ^arg* living. Lake Frlvllagee: Lovely toe*- _____Frlvllagee brick heme oaky three yea I large living room with baauu-*11 fireplace, family room, din--r- larm-tlsed kitchen I ?ilh 134* N. Milford Rd. katwt Und and Iffiftrir ww.! OB e . dwk. Three lari* bodruoma. 11,300 DOWN. 8to PER MO. AT 4V> per cant 3 badrm., almost, new. Frtv an Judah Laka. Bacrl-1 fler. builder uaada money, MY | 241*1 ■_____________JR* hatha, cedar ilil. pad drapes, two car attached K*V: Available Augu»t LAKEFBONT. t BEDROOM^ NJEW m?isr’A&rs1,ft»TO LOTUS *LAKE WATERFORD Small boss*. 1 bedroom. -Lake privileges. Call afternoons. OR 3-9582. NEW 3 BEDROOM HOME. RENT or rent with option. FE A2*7f. $9,250 Sbedrobm. aluminum sided ranch-—._ (u]i baaomant. oak —ts aad formics S-to/w-^ garage. Largo streeu. CHEROKEE BILLS; Sis room brick . carpeting - attacked • base-paved _____ bedroom. __________ ■ fruit- dlnlug, breakfast root - 1 FETtoM. WHERE BETTER HOMES Big, Bear will bufld maUon” Ask for" deroff. Big Reaj^OeaatrustloB Co. style, tacludes ■-------------— flcxirs. birch eabtncts aad formica etountar tana. Du —mdlto OEOROE R. IK1-------------- Golden Opportunity For a secure future to a bam* of o buy. Lovely 3 b RENT 01 h option to I ools and trnnamutatton. Dixie I [ Darlsburg Rd. area. Open and Sun. 13 to 8. FE 4-MM | 8 bedroom brick ranch, lull bsmt,. large lot. paved. In exclusive Bailee Wood* Sub. JEROME BUILDING CO. 8-84*8 altar 8. Rent Lake Cottages 41 $9,500 at. 8H4ar garage Many < i features. 124.4*0 os. 1^ . j NO MONET DOWN LOVELY 3 BEDROOM RANCH lorn* with 1* hatha, newly dee- 31] Weet Huron Street Phone FE *4441 EVMFB 1-4114 RUSSELL YOUNG REAL ESTATE * BUILDING fE 2-3*84______FE 4-320 LOW DOWN PAYMENT Ideal for small family to Ibis Mat, laat like new. 8 bedroom tome, Excellent suburban location rtth Sylvan Laka privileges. Only JACK LOVELAND 8 Casa Lake Rd. FE 8-4171 'WET FAT BEET? ■ style of brtafe LOW DOWN PAYMENT available July IMh. AT LAKE CITY, CALL , tile bath birch cup-1 - RUSS MCNAB ART MEYER An A GROUP OF BUILDERS WE offer low prices through volume purchases on custom Quality Built" homes - Mi plana. We'U secure mortgage. No obligation. S*A O I N A W BAY on Williams Street. No chil ■m or pets. Dawson A Butter field. 11H N. Saginaw. Phone Monday thru Friday from I to ». FE 2-443* or FE V7*g». only, store, refrigerator and U SMALL HOUSE. MODERN. THREE ROOM UTILITIES FURN- 1. West aid*, FE 4-44*1. UNFURNISHED 3 RM. A BATH. *14.6* a waok. 118 S. Merrlmsc FE 84818. UPPER. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. FE UPPER FOUR ROOMS ARD BATE Rent Houses Furnished 39 heat.' UtUttfa* paid. MIddlaiged couple or lady. FE *4881. BEDROOM NEAR CLARKSTON. ATTRACTIVE MOpBjtN. LAKE front, year aroand. EM 8-31*2. NKWLY FURNISHED LAKE Bayport only SSJmllei irons ruotlac. 4 bedroom moder-summer home, excellent ear beach rent by week, month i season. Owner, OR ***** LAKE COTTAGE FOR RENT, 1 beat, 3 bedrooms. screened porch, large _______ sbttnu. Available, Mat 3 weeks la August and Labor Day. *** par week. FE d-Slto. BUB STOP SLBEPOfO ROOM FOR . private entrance. 174 State. US RTOI from all attracilee rm. DOOR, LOI n i-1m Fur Rent Rooms . 42 VERY NICE CLEAR SLEEPING room. 3* Norton. ______________REAS..______________ rat** for pensioners, as Cottage St.. FE 3-8814. Apply ton. — Apt. E-3. !, private homo, dose k d 3 fellows. After 8 FE 8-1388. A Downright Steal $600 Down, $65 Mo. lie. 2-bedrm., neat aa a Mb. Full ath. oil furaace, roomy Utah., _iorms aad screen*. Lee. tot. fenced1 yard, alee lawn sad chad*. fffi.^ttoa'-t be'asleSp _ Harold CRed) Franks 3M3 Union Lk. Rd. M Our biggest bargain ■ST. .......... this rank, EM 3-330t ________________jment. tai JRf Oek floors, corner Mcrnmac and Hollywood. Builder. FE 84818. BARGAIN c'BEDROOM HOME IN Rochester. Family IT^OR _____ NEAR ________ - aad Bath. lVk ear garage, tot, tl.Mi dawn, easy OB 3-44*8. Eariata jmr point, only. , BEDRM. HOME, jash Shown by np-E 4-4107 after 4 p m BY OWNER. NIGS 8 BEDROOM heme, basement, gas bant, take iuta? er will rent. EM 3-3IH. BACK TO SCHOOL Specials OREENLAKE. YEAR AROUND , home, lakefront excellent schools. ------Evenings * “~ Roomg with Board , 43ti ONLY THOSE DE8IRINO VERY i l-Famlly Income! close to down- X. PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE « S. Street____ NA 1-8flt LAKEWOOD VILLAGE room, fireplace. 3 baths, lit car g*ra|e. Ill' of lake frontage. Cole-Easlick Restricted Communities EM 84to*______________MO 4488* _____tort* tot. 1__— „—T I^ thu nice noma for approximately 1240. Bay *B 4le per coal land eontract Oet rid ef these landlord blue*. Vacant and w* win show rEmMU OEOROE R IRWIN REALTOR ’ . fleers np and < Zoned Commercial 10x20* tt. tot. Ena 3 bedroom modern bom* with gas heat. Reasonably priced at fl.440. CUCKLER REALTY WHITE MIDJLB STRAITS, BY OWNER. - privllsgas. UvfaagdMR 14. Raised flteplac celling. UtoabM to by 1. Urtng room _______ ..replace T- bered celling. Kitchen 14 by Bath to by 1. tiled. 3 bedroc 13 by 14. Water eattoner. after g. SM 3-4431. storm* and screens. Near schools, shopping caater. Lake privileges. gl.OM dn.. small mo. pnrmnts. Call owner OR 3-4944. No Sun. MOYDtO TO CALt#. MUST s: t. 4400 A Nothing Downl ■ bath set, starter NEAR ST. MICHAEL’S Auburn Heights off Churchill Ed., ibedrwm, fireplace, basement, furnace. 41.444 with (444 down. PONTIAC REALTY 31 BALDWIN ~ FE M27I BROS. P HUNTOON LAKE Her* 1* n toveiy I bedroom an brick reach Rama featuring: modern ranch type living. You will Ilk* thit* real plastered wall*, n* beautiful blfikBre-place in lb* living room, lb* extra larg* doubt* closets and t ceremjT ^ ----I ^ * i bathroom and th* SWIMMING Located tat Ctarkatou on 8 tor. Lera* older bam* to I*B| condition. 1 tots* n ElViAtau \?.V are. Atom bath heua*. bvkd wh priced at only 431,(44 with terms, lee this at ancell ITTLSt m aad .flaw-it. breeh and • with terms. GIROUX NICHOLIE. 4-0317. (iJoTm i ROOM A BOARD WITH OR W.TKU p«rt mu. nabisHS rv i.isu LAKSflioilT HOUSE FALL AND "" ___i. IMH Oakland Are. FE 4-1444. ___ROOMS. RjEASON-BIK BOARD wtatoT^ceupMcy, flreblac*. ini »«’» BRICK RANCH More right la. .Fsyments -are ! 4724 DOWN North City AttracUv* 9 room hois decorated throughout. & HARGER CO. a aewly - Includes j WIST SIDE toes. Air-conditioned pertly furn. ROOMS. YEAR around. Fantto* LakeTOR 8-8138. PONTIAC . MILFORD AREA. — Detroit. Modem lake house. Fully furntobed. 8 Available for tost* month. RR Sept to Jana, 2-4341, Detroit WATER FRONT!3 BEDROOM ranch. Completely farnstbed Rent Houses Unfurn. 40 I-A-l RBRTALS 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatic Beat — Full Baeement WILL DECORATE $75 PERMONTH FE 4-7833 844 EAST BLVD. E. AT VALENCIA 4 BEDRM. HOME. OAS HEAT 340 Ootog. FK 4-7874,______ ROOM HOUSE. REFRIGERATOR and etotc furniahed. Ha children pete, 884 month. 147Vb Wall «M* Labs. 8 batlu. I rm. Carpet. FE 4 bedrooms! Hb * *— Haftbern Ttoeerta* 10 ACRES. 7 ROOMS, m BATHS. ^ Rent Stores "x 46 ULTRA - NEW STORE 8. WEST side. FE 8-3144 bedroom home t .. neges -full basement. ________ heal. 3-car garage. Larg* tot. |74* DOWS Bread new 4-room bun basement, plastered Rent Office Space 47 3RD FLOOR. • ROOMS OF OF-fie* spec* all or part. In Wart of downtown area. Corner loce-tion. Lawrence aad Ferry Streets. Fonttoc Com unity Finance Com- pany. Call John Lee. NEW OFFICES-WEST SIDE. FE 8-3144 OFFICE 8PACE FOB RENT FOR personal services. W1U decorate * to salt Can FE 8d888 OFFICE OR DESK SPACE FOR rent. 8184 Kttabelb Lake Road. LA LINGER REALTY OR 4-4481 Open t to I 1431 Williams Lk. Rd Open PUn BRING THE FAINT -------- Drayton Plains Area Ideal family home. Include* cai peted Using room, large fansll room, attached garage, alum, eld tog, tort* lot (4 x 144. eomplttol fenced. Priced right 413.444 - 4 Room frame home. Excellent • * “ - garage. iBoua* ____________ s In *be semen t i Priced 418.404 with 43.64481.__________________ . terms. Cell FE >2441 BY OWNER, THREE BEDROOM Ith basement, w**l of new grade aad toutor high school*. Price 815.400. approx. II304 down te FHA mortgage. Call FE 8-2*3*. By. Owner—$600 Down 8 bedroom brick. iVt per ' ' mortgage. FE 4-4511._ BRICE RANCH. 3 BEDROOMS. meal. 814.88*. 444d. I BEDROOM; LABOR. LIVINO room, etedern kitchen, auto, gat heat and hat water, t ear-gang*. Beautifully laadaeapad and t does, MffitUee 7- AttttttkWe RnOtfrs 88* W. Yale, off Saldwta , Hurry I Mb 3 toft , Rent, option to buy R*Ut money—applies to cert Vacant new 3 badrm. beta** • wim Mg nwiBl win tab* ymff home to tend# E 44433 Eve . TO 84118 3 BEDROOM WITH LABOR Living room aad dining are*. Plastered walls, oak floors, deuele closets Utrengimut.- Birch eup-boards, shimnlum elding. »lu- mlnum storms. autsmaUe oil bent. 1881 built Term* avall- h: c. newingiIam CORNER CROOKS AND AUBURN FE 4-SMS UI» 8-8)18 OR 3-8381. I 88,7*4 down. if GWHli_ — miorea — tome# 0B R**4 Boule-row. vA" 11 ' --- LI 44874. S menu C*U LI >1441 evenings. ge*< by, vacant _Cff9Bb*M building^ nlce^nclj^berhood aad BEDROOMS. sement. >11.31*. OR 4-404S i. t-sedRoom^ low Tt 3W DOWN PAYMENT. lU basement, free*! yen COLORED. TAL, UpiHIWMHMil story, lull basement, fenced yard, tile ftoor. eecant Sept. 1st. FK SMB BEDROOM OQRNER LOr This delightful f room modern ranch type home, 3 bedrooms, til* bath, gat heat, garage. 81754 h 11.81 HOSPITAL ROAD Large lot. Brick hem*. AH targe rooms. Full basement. Alio n staall rental prep-erty nt the raw. Asking 111.!** with unbelievable term. DWIGHT STRUT St. Michael’i fere’s n very Ua* 3 family tn-ome. A wonderful Mg apartment or your fiRtlf Plus a 8 room 1 tile both ‘ '-----* ffti 3 bedroom frame t Terms. WEST SIDE lot. Just light appointment. ^Colored 8 bedrooms, bath, gas heal, gang*. Inrg* tot. WILLIS M. BREWER JOSEPH P. RXIBZ. SALES MOR. 86-94 E. Huron St. FE 44111 AFTER 4:34 ' PE 9-9938 Of ES MIR OOEMAW ROAD. LOVELY > room home with 3 nice bedrooms nod tiled bath up. Located la Indian Village bf owner. FE 2-4472. PLANNING TO BWILDl Wt will build e complete 3 bed- all brick ranch (lb lb "toll basement. On ----- only (11.444, 8ee "JIM" WILLIAMS FErRYFABK. 3 BEDROOMS. AT-700 batones. MS per maaih. OR Rocliester—By Owner schools and shopping OL 1-1444 ■-it^iTii*r SYLVAN YliXdSi. 3 AeGrooms basement, garage, gas beat. FE KAMPSEN MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE A FIND — Custom buflftt bedroom bi-tovtl on beautifully toaSaempad extra — large tot. Carpeting, > ledgerock flrplaces, grater softener. family teem, reereattoa room and donbto ear garage are cellent ■ dawn pnymeat. Owner will sacrifice to cash. Can ato* be tM to onaUfled buyer with no money down. Arrange-remffiM— *-----------*- ftjgftlt . location, tb ear garage. Terms. miry for th# dtoorUKtoattos buyer. PxaoranUc view of to* taka’. Featuring 3 bedrooms. 3 bathe, numerous built - Ins. Batfhaus*.' family room aad orer 149 ft M S?rS Realty & Building Co. \ FE 4-0921 9411 BUSABRm LAKE EOfUb I TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS Ft Sole H—ses 4 STOUTS Best Buys’ Today - For Sale Houses 49 KENT EetaMUhad is 1010 I* FAMILY - Mod.no Incom. for the price of * sing I* MW. Well' . Shiny SO NICK T» cm* homo to white I room horn., **•* •ubttrban Jocotlon on Mi .,otcro lot Lately carpeted living ond dining room rim . >«7kl| kitchen, finished Sooted kroon.teny. attached garage. shaded book yard ■With not door trill Mr mart enjoyment 113.300 orith farm. Uovaty U a 4*30 DOWN -r Otr of Pontiac Bedrms, full both, full bsmt Baldwin school area Walking din-trance to downtown. Total price only 27,0*0./ MACKDAY LAKK AREA - I rat., tuod hoik, largo kitchen, rail han't. Tot! boot. 3 ear tarofe. lake privileges. Double Idt. *12.308 CLAKKSTfy ARK* ilion 1 sued hL,------ S& .'fas J . Now at 113,2*8. UPKEEP FREE Ideal bene tor folks that like city living ond dee bus worries. This lovely brick having two. bedrooms, full baaoment to nestled on beau* ttful fenced loo*scaped yard. 'Outdoor borbecae, storms : * ted screens, oil tgrooee and I . gas hat water beater, dust few steps from Joslyn and . . bills eteP- Terms to rvipon-aibit party. Warren Stoat, Realtor n N. Saginaw -FE 3-21C21 Open tm I N V I east SUBURBAN - Neat as a pin describes Ibis ranch type home Picture windows, tiled bath, on beat. Brtoaawav to attached ltt ear gurage Nlee lo-Kow “1T Floyd Kent Ine., Realtor Jtotf Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph F* *8133 — op*® *»•*-Free Parking For Sale Houses 49 MUURFUt LHTINQ SERVICE O'NEIL khom*. Unbeatable e< MODEL don McDonald LICENSED BUILDER OR 3-3*37 HAYDEN AUBURN HSIOHT8 W» Terme. I f i bedroom, gae furnace and water I heater, dean. s BEDROOM HOME Off Joalyn. LeBarwT— 1 LAKE FRONT. , til*00 Terms. MICHIOAN. 1 1 BEDROOM HOMS. Tennyson St. New gas furnace. *40* DOWN Flue Mtg. Caste FHA. ; GRAND ! Opening "Candlewick foods'' ADDITION BRAND NEW N LAMPLIGHTER” 50 FT. Ranch Home — 1,209 £q. f?. -J Full Price ' $12,780 | i $94 Per Month INCLUDES PRINCIPAL _ INTEREST, TAXES, INSURANCE j —Built-In Lunch Bar -Brick planter la Foyer; -Wall papered kitchen and bath —Master bedroom suite with Private lavatory. , Acre Late — Favud Streets - Central water -IMS ft. Living room -Double died wood closets DIRECTIONS: North an Joslyn I‘A. Mile; UNION LAKE AREA. 3 Bedroom home. Very clean. Law Down J**c“hAYDEN, Realtor M E. Walton FI 8-8441 Open Even. Eua. 1 to s P.M. j CLARK DONELSON PARK. ROMAN* i brick. Four bedrooms. 3 full baths, 18x13 ft. living room. Ledgerock [ Carpeting Wall ta wall la the living, dining area and hall. More than a decoration la the lag burning fireplace la tec living room, TSt kitchen hue Made at birch cupboards and nice table space. The Piaster bate Is ceramic tllcd with built tat vaattp,. Jpjr-fIff 1 room. High and dry basement with lota of room far recreation, toe heat. Lake SrivUegec. Flap Lake. Uu-■r IBM FtM terms. WATKINS LAKE privileges Vestibule entrance, large living roam, full dining room, kitchen and 8 lovely big bedrooms all at on. floor. Finished recreation room. Oarage — Here It a home you eaa be very proud ta call your awn. Term*. L A R P E I . BEDROOM home. 23V living mam. family alia dialog room, If kitchen with ample cupboards. Oak mars, plastered walls Tiled recreation area la-the basement One beat JUet % block to bus atop. Priced at lie,CM. *1.400 down, and fit per monte. 41.500 DOWN an this 1 bedroom, neat and clean home . situated an a corner lot 13 x 1*S West suburbia only . 18 minutes from downtown. Near the old’ swimming hole, or you could fish' In the river from tee back of ytuf’ let. 410,5*0 is- tea ARB YOU RENTING* AND fust waiting ta cava enough ter your down payment?" - at 1240 total cost. You must have a good Job. These homea will be shown by appointment only. GI lots* of room IdF the- Bssement. stake* cool beat. 2 ear garage. 2 tote, plenty of shade. 111.400 Just mortgage costa down. RLyVvNEIL. Realtor asement. attached M2 South Telegraph f LAKE FRIVILBOKS ON BEAUTI-1 fal Cedar Island Lake. Five rooms - ^:Etejj|'I|yin8 M “MM ace slantei , lull basei "Lamplighter” - Dlorah Bldg. Co. -FE 2-9122 "EaiMcrt ed National Bernes"_ TRADE ’58 YELLOWSTONE TRAIL-ea v>d l»5o Chevy for small ^e ledge-basement. large rec. rn wm brief fireplace. 13 ft. I brick veneer front, needs aiding on back part of bouse. - Huron River runs at back of lot. with | easement across the road, Into, Lake for swimming. Oaty 18.000 j with It OOO down, balaaet on land contract, v. ______rally decorated_____________ ulate. bow vacated, ready for you to mote la upon rioting. Terms. 18.180 HURON DARDENS. Six oOms, 3 bedrooms, full basement partitioned. to teat n kitchen_______ an apartment. i built la r garage. CLARK RKAL ESTATE Prime Location . . Near Jamea K. Blvd. Lake. I and park privileges -and wtater tea tor aU. 3 bedroom ranch brick - SHARP CONDITION! flood tiled bedrooms. WEBSTER LAKE ORION — OXFORD Long Home Hideaway—secluded wooded area la heart- at Oran-ptan Rill near Lake Orion. 3 • balcony bedroom*. 3 story fittest me fireplace. Fully modern, approximately 3 acres at beautiful scenic land. Lake prtvUeiee. 412,38b with easy terme. Owner transferred —y muet tell attractive new 3 bedroom brick ranch home, IH battle, combination kitchen and family room, ledgerock fireplace. 3 acre* of beautiful lawn. Bordared on 2 aides by Faint Crack. Many more attraeUfo features. $38,008. Walters Lak* — Now 3 bedroom cottage type home with Bring room, kitchen and bath, well constructed Heavily wooded area. Lake prtrilagee t black. $1-.888. 83.088 down. t. A. WEBSTER, Realtor OA. 8-3133 * ateat. call TO Desirable . . . Family homo - beautiful 100s150 h. lot with garden area, lawn and flower area, way ana six roomt and bate. On# bedroom It tl.8 * *1! Attractively -deco- COLORED 1250 WILL MOVE YOU WTO attractive 3 badroomr ranch b la tec St. Joe area. Spie span inside. Fail basement with „_____I. This nearly 1 located oa a corner tot cue I x 148 deep. Imedtate poa- $500 DOWN North 6f Clarkston 2 bedroom. Flattered. Oak floors. l>i ear garage. Lake privileges. Blacktop street Full price only 17.300. Call tor an appointment at pace. This Is-a bay. Immediate possession Bo settled before “i"0* CLARKSTON Real estate, inc. • 5004 s. Main st. -“^s“ -* I: Sunday 13 to 4 » 4-5831 MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE I ARRO For Sale HoKaeo ANNETT walklaa dlriaaeo to Ftebcr Body. Has nvtea rm . bod-ra.. kltebea a shower bate. NOW ill furnace. Nice let. N NORTH OP CITY - Hear new grade school. 3 bedrst. 1 door home. Move right In. ccsheat, low faxes, total price 47,508, year terms. N 3 LOTS — PrtvUeteg oh Elisabeth Lk. 3< bedra ranch. Flrapuie# la Uriac . rm, full bciement. ail boat. Lot 130 X 138. 3 car Stt. garage Low taxes. Pun price 413,508. terms. ranch. Carpeted living rm. wMh Roman *-*-*■ *‘“i—“*• I breeaoway, S car parage. HW baseboard r beat Undecapod lot 188 208. 138.088, mtg*. terms. SYLVAN LAKE FRONT Widow must cell, home too ige, English Maaor noon on M ft of beautiful beach Slate floor entrance, step da. Bring rm.. tpg burning ftyeplnce. dining rm.. carpeting. paneled library, kltebea, breakfast rm.. powder rm 2nd floor 4 bedrms. fireplci heat. 30> x -24 living beamed celtlag, Ige. natural fireplace, apacioue family rm. with flrenjace. rec. rm. ~‘tteter~ ** g 38 swimming _T j pci-___ „ Ideal ter family hoUfo .. entertaining Many personal items lari, at 888,880. terms. ROY ANNEfTT INC, REALTORS 38 E. HURON ST. Open Evenings 8 Sunday 1 • < FE 8-0466 'SMITH” NEAR EASTERN JR HIGH with natural fireplace. MARMADUKB By AateM. & Lcening 4-FAMILY -h Brick jaccmd. v Fhjte, * units. Excslleat laeetlaa. Hew gae temaeec and a raal money Sdt*!mdTSt XrTmJr. S pulMiteltey ta mu wan cate $4,488 down. BATEMAN REALTY^ 3fW E,9M8Br*ffc TB44m U PAIRLY NEW APTS^ON TON-CT 3-4108 "Here's a list of things you 0 family'. Bach apartment hat lta own bath It heating unit 831400. Terms. TED MCCULLOUGH REALTOR ARRO REALTY (143 Cbto-EUaabeth, Kd, FE 5-1284 FE 4-3844 Span 8 a m to $:M pm. ALL DAY SUNDAY SHARP. 2 BEDROOM HOME -PULL BASEMENT - GAS HEAT - 1 Vs OARAGE -L A RO E WELL LANDSCAPED LOT NEAR WISNER AND LINCOLN JR. HIGH - LOW DOWN BATEMAN REALTY MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE 4-FA>lftY Brick Income. Pour $ room unite. Excelled! location. New .gat furnaces end a real moneymaker. You can live In one unit and let others make the payments. Easy ta any with oaly 84,200 down. INDIAN VILLAGE And only 8428 down plus mortgage cotta. Freshly decorated inside and out with extra nice kitchen. Pill basement, garage and etote to Webster School. You wlU be surprised tor only 118,888. SYLVAN LAKE Oa tea lake. 4 bedroom brick aad something different. 3 fireplaces plus outdoor grill. Recreation morn. Hot watew heat. Carpeting aad Tbermopane windows throughout. Parch aad tun dock, overlooking lake. 310 ft, deep lot with ally sewers and—beet ef all—new and modem. Built In 1884. One of our MOST deal fed arena. Fw Ssls Houses_49 ^mST WIDEMAN • 8 room; brick ranch, 3.bedrooms, master bedroom, 13 X IV. Living room. 1$ X 13‘. PA all beat. Excellent condition. Beautiful landscaped tot. Anchor fenced back yard. Furniture may ba purchased. . WATKINS LAKE ROAD Attractive 3 bedroom borne, featuring ateat front. Cedar vestibule with ejaset. Oab floors, plastered walla, recreation room, all boat. Pina Knelcd breeseway to attend m car heated ga-rbge. earner let. 48x188 ft. Ponced garden spot. HOME IN EXCELLENT REPAIR. WASHINGTON PARK 812.288. FHA TERMS takes tela excellent 2-room, 3-bedroom home. Featuring living tlon space. FA gas heat, porch. INCLUDED IN PRICE: Bendlx washer, water softener, plane and drape ribs LET US SHOW YOU THU. SMITH-WIDEMAN i REALTY 413 W> Huron OPEN EVES. FE 4-4526 p.-> J . ■--I-.-.: 1-1 'BLTY SELL TRADE | MILLER > INCOME 2-FAMILY — 3 Jb bote , down, furniture Included. 4 up everything separate. * clean Income tr - - monthly. Priced For Sal* Houses GAYLORD ealv 22M sbr asro. m **• WM. A. KENNEDY . REALTOR 424 R.^jEHJ^______ Plenty of*8antiat-*S»88i tecame B3738T DUPLEX —$14/50 Ideal-ter toveetmmst or rattro-meat. I teeiuy etde by side. PtSTentrances. Sylvan Lake artv-Ueges. Let 881* Au*». Mti. Each unit baa L.R, large kltch- Bsa*-1 For StOe Lsko Proparty 81 8 ROOM LAKBPHONT HOME IN Waterford Township arm, 4 beg- at 112.080. Deal direct cr. Harold Scott, 1888 OR l-TMg, For bbtow s NICE MODERN STOREJ8 Sj] Highland, buaintfi block, wni Mi ibot rtpalr »bop. R.csMcbU rent or lets.. Steele realty . (Main 0«k») 348 N Mllterd Rd. .between Hlgb-Uiwl A Milford, MU 4-384*. Watkins Lake ano M59 1$ bMrte lteipjijyT run* neat Ink# to humroy. a good tacaam or tevoctmcat. On-er IU, must coll. Lorn-then $8,088 *** Saginaw Street» 2 itorce. J-4 room apartments, aempiete set of shoe shop euulp- ment Owasr retMng. A good in-veatment. Only IlCOfO. Tpu. Paul M. Jones, Real Est. U3 W. Huron ft 4-2228 *____» »-mi 7«' LAKEPPONT LOT. TERMS, bedrooms siding. IV, pririloges. - Wolverine : d ej^elty We? 11 b aluminum lit FT. FRONTAGE ON WALTON, running 318 It. back to good lake. Terns PE SMC LAKE LOTS 21 288 ONE-THUID Acre 22C do, 332 mo. 28 mlB. to Pontiac, FE 4-4888. U Still-LAICS SHERWOOD -Beautiful tri-levri model F»w ua for Inspection. Build HHHH.. BN price *8720 with excellent terms. Owner will consider trad*. Call Rudy Rle tor information on this property. FIVE ACRES Six room- home with three bedrooms, new two ear garage, fireplace, auto washer, new wall to wall ear-, peting A drapes, f a n e a d yard. Built In 1284. This Is Just 8 beautiful borne la the country and priced at 225,-000 with terms. Call Leonard .James, MY 3-10M. STIPES' DELIGHT Your wife will enjoy tele beautiful kitchen 10 x 17 with late of cupboard space. ____ ___j completely decorated throughout. You must see tel* lovely 3----- Priced at only I terms. Ask tor Harry Crate MY 3-3784. 41000 DOWN PAYMENT , Two bedroom ranch home, clean A cute. lVfc ear Scrag*. Incinerator A garbage tr----- mfaterge Iet CaM disposal unit. 1 Betty Ford> O 0-3037. 1* ACRES Rochester 'area, large 4 bedroom home. Family sice kltebea, large . Brine room, — porch, recreation room HOYT LIST WITH Humphries^ !LAKEFRONT BEAUTY 410.000 — If you're looking to VriT^toMrot r >■ FE 0-1800 | *3 H TELEGRAPH OPEN 1 FE 2-9236 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE HAGSTROM LAKE FRONT COTTAOB *87 acre private laf-furnished including BROWN Large 1 bedroom modern bungo-1 you con afford vestigato tbl* Aluminum li stone tided. PamUy ly landscaped. Call for showing. I 'INCOMF. price at 8^1,700. SURPRISE! 3 bedroom brick. Schools i most next door.' Paved str* and. lercg well-landscaped 1 only 8 years md: Extra sharp anil a home you would he proud ta own. Surprise—Only |12.503! OI RANCH 3 bedroom ranch Located on 2 ver: carpeted living k full Vestment, nlcg lots. Lar*e ____On I - Completely ] ... HR full basement. Oa* ft Oak floors Alum, storms ■mHBHHHMHU screens. Large tot and rear Is I fenced "All “«*'? i NORTH SUBURBAN — OI —- “2373 Will Handle very neat 2 bedroom ranch v biich All »iuTlne°end! ^ C~U. your food, low down COLORED — Large Arm modem I home on Prospect. "Excellent condition." Pull basement- Furn. — Newly deeoratod. Large lot. Only YOitf WON'T BELIEVE Tt - 31 bedroom lake front cottage on I West i ^ HAom Carpeted livlog room toman brick ftreptefc. IJb c tue bathe. Largo family attached hear garage. All Ituated oo' beautiful land-tot. 88 a 168, Idcaf loea-to priced right. ctoceta. fleamlite .$•* .tigt SELL OR TRADE — Large Cape ' fltwptecc. lull bath aad half Wyle j.bedroom home with 1 hate. . earpattat. large family vaB-to-wa!l carpeting. Full base-room. Idee! beech for children, j ment jfvw gas furnace, alum, a bom* you should ace to ap-| (torml glum, aiding, two baths, predate - large 75x20$ ft rot. Excellent 1 neighborhood Price only 111,500 WUi seU on tormt or trod* for cheeper home or toad contract: ! HOYT REALTY i 22$ 8. TELEGRAPH j FE 3-0*4$ " menu. Twe apartments plus 2 rooms 1st floor. Why not be your own landlord. 3-ear garage and glasaed-to porch. Better SEE THIS TODAY as H ts too good to last long! Oaly — with BEDROOM BRICK — West Suburban. Not too far out. Carpeted living room, 1 fireplace "fixtures Included," very attractive kitchen, atom- storms and screens. Pull basement, family ---------- 2-FAMILY INCOME -— 2 b bath down nlabed. 3 A bath t furnace. This u a ■ only 27,220.28 wt West Side mostly fur-. New get aiker generous CITY NORTHSIDE — A spotlessly clean 3-bedroom older homo in excellent condition, new 3-car garage, new roof, new tiding and MW hot water beating system. A good buy — 112,500. ^ William Miller Realtor FE 2*0263 078 West Huron Street. \ Open I to 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE IRWIN NORTH OP PIKE STREET 3 bedroom bungalow with lull basomoat, tile bate, fenced yard. Using room and nail carpeted. This boms has new heating plant, ft Matt *“ * — priced a NORTHERN HIGH AREA 3 bedroom borne with fun base-meat. 3 car Sfrage, oak floors tod plastered wells. A-l condition with nice shrubbery. Reduced Pried lofaft at *8.3*8 with $1,088 down. Can't bo beat at this price. .......I Priced a GEORGER a treat number of \ more. Just call either of our offices and the salesmen will gladly give you all the wtarmatton you -wish and also show them ta you. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD, R*aUof 13* PIKE ST.. PONTIAC 2 PUNT ST, LAKE ORION FE 4-00*3 MY 3-3131 OPEN EVE MINOS TILL 0 P.b Rent, L’ss Bms. Pro* S7A as » na.u—» 040 per month. Inquire 371 Baldwin. « -8-1*81. M««qrtoLMH» jutjeJftS^JSPXw Signature-^ ?if "fi-wSr* OAKLAND Lo«n Company 383 TnntUn r-'» ml BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN borrow up to |SOO Pontiac — Drayton*Plate* UBcn SSSdi Lk^ irm laebs m. mjmim Borrow with Coafidencti GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance Corporatten of Pontiac "BUD' No Steps to Climb Only $1,000 Down * Bedroom, west_____suburban. bath, large front porch, berry bushes, strawberries. Total price 47.44,08. HURRY! Elizabeth Lak/ Estates ivileges d span 2 bedroom "Ce-uar make" ranch style home, with automatic gas heat and hot water. 3 car gar., paved drive -- Features carpeted ^ Uvlng utility room, Storms and screens - Insulated. Priced at 81L42*. x. a reel eulle. do yourself a favor Look todgyl “Bud” Nkhohe, Realtor 48 Mt Clemens 81. FE 5-1201 After 6 p.m. F*E 5-8004 NOLLY- NDLPORp ASIA. IT owner. Neat 3 bedroom ranch home. Paneled and carpeted living room. 1 acre. Comer lot. , Paved rood. 73*2 N. Milford Rd. ME!rose 7-21*1. For Sale Lots 54 CLARKSTON ESTATE LOTS, $*X 380. Near everything, paved •tneta, H mile new Chrysler blfhway. 11,4*8. 818 down. 81$ maatiL PI 8 mwT U $-7711. Builder te Broker inquiries wtl- 8388. PR 2-4388. AND, LOT. . WINDING PAVED STREETS A protected community when you can -tetild your homo and ba assured of It* future value, tu * 1*8 ft. Low ac JL88S. . LADD’S, INC. 43*8 Dtoto Hwy. OR 3-1331 LAKE ORION. S LOTS, 72x148. IN new subdivision Wllltem Sobank. MY 3-1341 ar MT 2-lf“ Waterford Hills Estate A tew choice tote toft. Average 108 x 388. Good drainage. Meal location. Herbert C- pavis, Rltr, >j 2-4811 HAGSTROM it unit motel. Restaurant a Oas station tn Northern Michigan. flood corner location. AU new equipment. 848,888 down. RESTAURANT In busy northern resort town, excellent equipment. 252 Vtf1"1 HAGSTROM 488* m2hKtoTRd- '»**•>„ PONTIAC OR 4-0358 SUM MOVIE CAMERA OR DRUM cot ter tape r»a**dii. MA 2-1388 ■ 13 INCH TV, |I3. U INCH. COMB. *38. Trad* for wcU pump or what. MA 8-1357 after 4 P-m. M PT BOAT. 3* Hif MOTOR and ekta with traitor for a good used motorcycle or *4*8 cash. MT 3-3128 CT MT H413. ’55 UNOOLN. HARDTOP. BEAU-Uful shape, WlU taka trad*. PE “LET’S TALK BUSINESS’* -Hardware Ben’* • hardware with nice Uvlng quarter* that can •tart rm^m fei road tes success. 86,880 down buys property, ftxturos and Inventory- The only other, thing you need Is ambition.1 Ahoy Boat launching sit*, livery dock, gaa pump, restaurant aad 1 apartmet* an 3**Yeet of flna toko frontage with late of parking. Well established bat WMh plenty tt - potential. This South Oen-esee County lOCatiS* 1* priced at **#,•** an terms tint win surprise you. MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LANDMEMER. BROKER ATTENTION COLORED. 4 BOOM (ssr amd tap* recorders. FE dining i I differ! i cult*. WUi pay DELUXE ELECTRIC DRYER FOR DBSOtb 1*47 Rard-tof. SHARP. Trad# ter land contract, or 44M. LATE MODEL CARS AND CA8H for your toad contract (where you bn*o sold property). K. J. Yaw Wite CKteMM. . OXFORD LAKS PRIVILSOBB. NEW 3 bedroom, full boaomont bam* soar grade school. WW accept car. truck ar hcucctraUcr at down payment. Mclatoch. LI 3-448# fronton U 8-33*7. REPBIOERATM V J ’ wTt SMALL BUSDORS SUITABLE FOR acreage or cabin ur north. OR S Telegraph Rd. - FE 4-1283 3-8888. ,RK AT OUR FRONT DOOR r Sryai—rtf* Meal for retired e decorated, now carpeting. fuU below reproduction costs. Largi basement paneled rMreatton brtck rtnrcn myle home with fui room, solid brick go- basement. Oil Ac Furn. Two fire rage, close to bus and stores placet. Oak floors "Exceptional!: North cod. Urge rooms." Two lot*. Laki ■ ■ privilege# Only 817.28*. Eas] HUFF BRICK RANCH HOME terms. Needs landscaping and rev Templeton Sylvan Manor 3-bcdroom brtck ranch, new enr-pettef. 3-car brick (arage. Cyclone fencing, carport. Priced for quick talc. Shown by appointment K. L. Templeton, Realtor 331 Orchard Lk. Rd FEr4-4l*3 After « pm. FE 3-87*4 other finishing touches. full basement, recreation carpeting, master-bed room privateaatb. the kitchen is the show place ef thin beautiful :tSL ““ ‘ fireplace*, j LAg£ FRONT — In beautiful Jayne I Sub. Lnrgc 3-bedroom Yijk Can Have* Immediate possession *f th room. 3-bearoom home ea Auburn Hriftita On a lot 1 for the tow price of 28.W8. 8 brick rancher with • ) .neighborhoods.' LIT WITH Only laMf*" ivileees lull both, Priced ____ U stall shower. grivitegee an Sylvan ' TU W. Huron Phone PE 4-1M7 ^'r.UBT With ua — For fast »*: flcient service WE BUY, --j rrvto, Pon- t: H. BROWN. Realtor 288 Elisabeth Lak* Bool Ph PE >3284 or FE 3-4818 , MULTIPLE USTUtO SERVICE Oakland Lake F I 4 rooms, part basement. I an t acre of good Ian l right at 47 05$ i You’ll Never Forget I The day you bought this 3-1 roam home, modern kitchen., i 1 living room, tell basement. . _ - ear enrage- On n wgU-landccancd tot. U minute* from town. *7.8*6. CRAWFORD AGENCY 23* W. Walton nC 8-338* I to* £. run* MY J-1143 Vai:U-Way|.GILES TRIPP Realtor Oakwood Manor: Spacious 3-bedroom brick with attacimd 2 car garage. Extra largo living room with fireplace ond n restful scenic view thru Anderson therm optne picture windows. Built-In kitchen with dinted urea. fVt ceramic bath*. Multitude of closets and storage space. Full basement with pcneK this o_________________ landscaped ground — la Ucgcc. -Call may l Also lakefront homos. FOR GOOD BUYS AND VALUES i'i room bungalow ecopod l Pontiac throughcL.. . plot*. Only I Lsitate • SYLVAN VILLAGE tached garage; l'i tote. 1 block from lb* lot*, natural fireplace. ill bcacment. Storms hroughout Full price l. Balance at *7* per ■ R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor ’ iFE 4-3531 348 OAKLAND AVENUE OPEN * TO * SUNDAY U TO ( Lakefrottt- Only 111.720 for this 3 bedroom homo. Full basement, automatic oil host. Nice glassed te and heated back porch. Oettid, b# made a third bedroom. Ufft 70x38$ lot Hurry on this one. tt won't last at tha price. • 3 Bedrooms 12.32* tor this * room bun-, ettow andTji ear‘garage located te Waterford town-«hlp A^ceu cc 3 lakes. 3 Acres 1 bedrooms and den Large . at ft. carpeted living room with natursl fireplace. Pull basement radiant beating . gTaai. Ptos * 2H enr *V ■ghed garage. Owner might Income Property 50 23,08* down. Per colored. 4M Orchard Lake Avenue, inquire 173 Baldwin Avenue, PE Eli, Partridge IS THE "BIRD" TO SEE \ APARTMENTS r"garage. |lS.3W and worth consider " trad* GILES REALTY CO. MULTIPLE 331 BALDWIN JtYE A M. - 8 P.M . U8TINO SERVICE KEEP YOUR EYE ON Cherokee Hills f , , Watch this new west suburban ! community' grow. Discriminating people ere selecting sites mw for custom quality , homes — Sec for yourself. Drive out Elisabeth Lake Rd. to Scott Lak* Rd., turn right 3 blocks to La- CarlJV- Bird, Realtor 281 Community Ntijl.^ Bank Nidi. MAJOR OIL CO. HAS SEVERAL I servlet stations ter !***•. Odod potential business Financial assistance available. PE- 4-1IM after 8 p.m. EE 4-8203.' . OAKLAND AVENUE PftONTAOB FOR - BALE. LEASE OR RENT. — 7$ FT. PRONT-AOE 12* IT. BEEP — » X 3* BUILDING — IDEAL MR CARS BALES ETC. REASONABLE RENT. Only 31873 With 8128 R. I. WlCKRRSHKte 7188 W. Matia MAyteir i-iis* LAK* >RIY. ' *1* DH., tf~WEl Schneider, MA 4-1283. For Sate Aciyfs 55 3 ACRES M2* CAW. SASHABAW . R Scymokr Lk. Rd. arcs., MY 3-31li._____ 30 ACRES. ROLLINO TO LEVEL. 8338 par I" “* , ACRES, GROVE LAND 1380 ft front, croak,’ good Make oiler, will trade. PACE Rcatty OR 44238 _______Builders HAGSTROM 11 ACRES - Near White Lake t eludes implement bldg. 34’ X 4 - Only *1.10* down , HAGSTROM INVESTORS - BUILDERS FIFTY acres. Novi Village. Make oner. ma mw;___________________ down. Oflod TME. Xooatod Wl gravel road. Sabool bus. a nal buy for oaky SUSS. *20* down or MSN rath. Owner Cell MU 4-T4IT avo*. or* Sunday. For SsIc Fsyns 56 CLARKSTON AREA 1SH acres, ate* bulMIlE*. *41.30$ ttmT Good buy for oountry estat* hin a r Investment. TIM Oak. .Partridge1 iHHE ai Sad _ ____ Well constructed brick 2 bedroom bouse wsi s walkout M4MMS8. A used tractor and excellent chicken bode* Included to price. You'll net be dtenpputetod when you inspect this property. KAMPSEN REALTY > ASSOCIATES 1 I AND SUthDWO COMPANY lOlr ^E 4-33*1 1 3411 Ellmioetb ui! Rd. PE 4-4*31 WATER SOFTENERS TO RERT or Mil. *3.50 month. OR 3-33*0. Mitchell Distributing Co.____ we sutTaell-tiSape-rePaIr SWEEPERS. MOWERS, PANS. BARNN8 H HARORAVES. PE 1-81*1 Open San. $ 30-7 p.m, TU W. Huron Partridge IS THE "BXRD’VTO SEE TORCH LK. RESORT MS' of randy beach: 7 pictarcccua modern eottaget around specious pork *• and lot* tt expansion room. Unusually fine 6 room ranch borne, natural fireplace — hot water heat. 040.720 with Just 115 000 down" WILL TRADE. MUSIC! MUSIC! Practically Cm aaly record and TV shop ta this lively Oakland County town of 3,8*8 Popal*tie*. 'IMr modern Jeon windowed ■Mg M 8 It. 88J288 ptea «te*> ter a vary thing. Will TRADE. Partridge BU8tNE»aS%£uO^ MICH ■J88 W RURON PE 4-3821 STANEARD STATldN AND* butidteg^^Rof Brown. Lab* Orton. SERVICE STATION .FOR LEASE. Oood potential. Ftbass call bt- WILL TAKE HOU8ETRAILER Oft SMALLER ROMH — As part payment oo tbl* ate* home In EltsSbOth Lak* Estates. 3 bedroom powtbilttte*. fireplace, plastered walls, abb floors. Ante, aidtec, garage.. Large tot. Only LVkSoQ REALTY • PE 4-83*3 Ooad potential. Ftbaae call between I and 5 FE 4tet*l, After * 2-1448. Pure Oil Company Trampoline Center Own and apantt# a N mat Bounce Center ter a* tow at 84.8N. Latte promt* — tow txpenae. No experience necessary Writ* Sale Und CcntracU ID LAND CONTEACTS TO JMTT OR to sell. Earl Oarrela, EM 3-3*11 or KM flgiM. Money te Lein 61 ■ iLiceni|jd Money LOANS 88* TO 22N BAXTER A UVINOSTONR I W. Lawrene* St. PE MW WILL TAKE TRAILER A8 PART payment an Sylvan Tiling* TE 2 s- . k WILL SWAP OR SELL - FREE A clear corner lot. ten* grivitejejL For Strie Clothlnf 64 skirt* 32c, ahoet He. 377 ISES 13 IT Baldwl ShIs Howyhold Poods 65 MODERN SOFA FOR BALANCE Ml 872.N. larga foam gatbtOB aad team nMtfwit. Ortelaally 1 raid for 23a A *te*l. Terms Bedroom -putfltting Co., 47t3 OtMTOraytenPlatei. LABOR WHO CHAIR. ROUND ■teat rates cabinet, rouhd timing (tbit, extra tong colonial bed. choct sad princess dlrimgr. lip, holstersd rocker, dnw Tr i • day men, electric roaster, ro-tleeerle. flwteb Iryer. PE 2-1837. SET MAPLE BUNK BEDS, COlT (Mt ***, Refrigerators, tidvoc aad washers, all sixes 412 up. i pteag lldrlSte Wtth spring end mattress, excellent *7g. ChUferobe irjrer *3 435. betutifui cedar Urate *iir living! room rwT 41*. ironing board*, tebtec draeaars. chests. terap* cad ebalrs. Alao new bed- Har|tU louse" l« W Cara. 1 (law »avag*d; _______ wcSow vinyl tabte. (78. OR I PIECE UlNINO ROOkTTurfE" buffet needs reflnlshing. 44s. 3 Piece sectional, tilkLiStiry tab' 41*. tWB leather' end iablra. 27 each. OR I PIECE MLVES, ORAY BBDRM. dttpK will.. (Imp, ..tguirara bed. Urxt ebaet. I vaaity lama*. All far 21P.M. Pav aaly N weekly Pmittn Furniture. u Oreharo THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, I960 TWENTY-SEVRy Silt HknMlij Goods M * FORMICA. STEP TABLES. M ““ ' J**PK 93 Mch. One w. s. km mn. VJNOROOM butt*: _ |M IwmiB and chair. • UMat nalcklni fjswdi’a FunJture. O Orchard 9fl2 Felt Base Rugs $3.95 «?AB. soon PAINT GALll.M Vinyl Linoleum, Yard 79c ,*6®. *AI"T.Oal. |3.50 » X 13 REVERSIBLE ROOS. I1I H 1 mUmv WafcedflH ‘— Tweed raga, nan : J46 M; Bus pod*. $.„. ™ Furafturw, 48Qrck*rd Late IMHHMI1, .... . ms'm 17" Teletone . ...... §39.99 Sale Ho9»ol»M Goods 68 f refrigerators . Consumers Power Co. 28 W. Lawrence tEPRIQ, Mi, 'InAKPAST bet I other set* to choose f «£} iiSk qn»so#£ m Wed ”u.*b»t°. Lk . R_d TK only • month. Coat M.lt new. MMS. Open • to. I end Sunday 94940. Wlgg’a. |« W. Httroa BL —■—'---------1—nii&iifi Fecial txis rugs, ' imIM ifi- "nrpet Woodward at Square l below Ted'e. PB 3-7701. _____ dalra . electric range, . Ilka new SM.Nl • SUMS tt.Prtflda.re re-frlgerator, eicellent condition MW OB wringer waanil lop shape IM.N; Norge Mtamum washer a yaws old 96M6 Pot the best see 0M first. Obel TV k Appliances. Ml Elisabeth Lake Ed. Open » to » dally. PE UMI. ABOUT ANYTHINC1 TOO WANT fn HOME CAN BE ■PM___AC . jr-, — I_____i dept. Tor < bargains. Hi TWr, sen or trade. Chins - end look around, t acres of parking. Phone PE $-9341. OPEN MON. SAT. I TO 1 S£Vtq» 34 MONTHS TO PAT 4 miles B. of Pontlsc or I E of Auburn Hsights on Au - TILE AND LINOLEUM M WHOLESALE (f PAINT INSIDE-OR OUT8ID1 S3.M 1ST OAE-lc IND OAL. Vinyl, 9,12 ft.....59c j 'Telling Tils lfxlS . sq. ft. kllLtnoleum Bugs ..... $3 Mica" Oenulnc .....sq ft. I Plywood ........... aq. ft. Plastic Wall Tile ... le Eavestrough and Outtar » ft. i * ^ W* . ... $3 ta ei as Whtt Tito ..... Me “BUYLO" OUTLET TILE OUTLET 1M g, BAOINAW PE 4-3 A-l APPLIANCES REFRIGERATORS .... Renewed, Serviced. TVS . .,.......... Rebuilt, Ouaraattsd. TAKE OVER PAYMENTS i O E. AUTOMATIC DRYER. Floor sample, aaMMlifiK' JMW warranty, lo tbs. capacity, lull pries $139.18, $1.50 par wash. OBOE AUTOMATIC WASHER, used 3 months. Porcelain top, suds saver, 3 eyelet. 3 speeds. Looks like new. New I year war-ranty. 11.11 par weak. O.E. TV. 31 In. front tuning, front speaker, power tranoforaiw. New warranty, pap 43.75 per week. AMANDA UPRIOHT FREEZER, SITS. Call OR 3*9603. ANTIQUES AND ALL TYPES turn, sold dally. MY 34521. A TREADLE TYPE SINGER SEW-Ing machine, $30. H. 8. Wentworth. 1338 Holland Avenue, Blr-mIngham. Michigan. MI 4-0070. Square tub Meytag ......... $99.96 Oas refrigerator ......... r““ Hot Point Refrigerator...... Frlgldalre Wash*' rebuilt ... i Crump-Electric. 346$ Auburn tlae. PB 4-3973 or PL 3-3000.______ BOTTLE OAS STOVE AND TABLE top water heeler. Roeg. OR 3---- BEAUTIFUL 8INOER 8 E W _ _ machine, blond console, button holes, blind stitches, etc. With WRINOER WASHER 4 rig sag. Pay balanca. 100.48 or (rigerator. — tiJOa month for 0 months. A chair 410 “ A A Product*,. OR 3-9781.--------- -------—A x.)c- BUILT IN OVE&S AND COOK WYMAN S____________ im complete Une of gas and USED TRADE-IN DEPT v 'electric. 41M.lt and up. R B. gas WATER HEATER................I Muiru Electric Co , 10M West REBUILT WASHER .................. 1 HUTon__________ ,________________[3 PC. UPH. SUITE O.E AIR ‘ CONDITIONER, de ------- a rial buy at lift year for I34I.M. 13.71---““ only). Pay 13.71 watkly. GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE I Sj Cass. PE 5-6128 TRADE OAS RANGE POR ELEC-an rang*. R B. Munro Electric 1000 W. Huron, USED TVS I10.M AND UP. COL-—| TV, RCA.JITS^ *- din and Awl., r. Huron. PE Used Trade-In Dept, . Buffet ........... $14.94 China ...... ....... Sit SI Desk ........... 01S.M SSSEW CA TV Console, 31“ Mahog. 1139.50 THOMAs ECONOMY 3SI 8 Saginaw PE 3-Sill Ft S^ MIiciInidm 67 For Sale Miscdlamoiis 67 CARNIVAL HARLEY DAVIDSON A-l. PE f I registers, OR 3-4440. ANCHOR FENCES BATHROOM' FIXTURES. OIL AND ■aimr fm | boiler. Hardware. *'.Mp PAINT WTIH EOTON — AVOID blister and p«aL due to moisture fABWlCE'S, MTS OROIARb LE. iINOER SEWINO MACHINE, equipped lor buttonholes, designs. cU$3T40 or SI per mo. Capttal. _____SPECIALS! fa water beater. HEJfS jjesmstt quarters Opdyke Mkt. PE 6- BULMAN HARDWARE 3S4S ELIZABETH LK. PE 8QT71 OPEN DAILY TIL S: »». Panel*te counter (Mu tie ag ft 3S gSl. bet water Mter. $47-IS. 1 year warranty, mi saSEMlet $18.18 with trade. Many Other Sergalas in New lad Used Building Materials FREE ESTIMATES PEA TEEMS SURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES CO. , 5340 Highland Rd. (M-SS1 OR 3-70S2 Special Paneling Offer | A panels Ve" mahoganv V-groore. D grade 44.10 escb I Sag panels. V«” mahogany V-groovt, C grade tl.30 each MS panels, ‘^''mahogany V-groove pretlnlshed 17 00 each Oak Flooring Salect red ...... 1331 M No. 1 Mplion ........ OISS Si No. 3 Common ........ 0130 M No, 3 .Shorts ... ....S 90 M Bolens — Wheelhofse Tractors and Tillers Power and riding mowers. Jacobsen, Yardman and Toro, I models of riding mower*. Selection of used equipment, We service what we tell. EVANS EQUIPMENT 0107 Dlne Hwy. Ve" 4x9 Natural A.-3 . PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO May.besien at 37M.Jaaaa s BID ROOM CHU1 OP DRAWERS sit "sMnmii ' is 00 iS.hm^2SiJ‘nhU.5eu. woopTOfSiN. set ::... sS:S ^ WOOD MM METAL BEDS . BABY BUTOY_»10 BATinNETns i. 135 Man? other Items. Everything must be sold regsrdltts of price. 444 W. South Blvd. *between Ro-Chester and Llveraols. UL 3-4403. BIG FREEZER REPRIO ft NICE_________I_______________________ stove. sOoTllO da. PE Ad^OS. Mine. wflTdp monagrams. but-BRANO NEW WROUOHT IRON tonhbles. designs, etc. JUSV^ hy STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS wjHfwyebwd ....■-•-•1141 SxlxW Pegboard .....04-M 4xlxS Plyscore ... 04.48 10(48 33-ft. Rock Lath . » .99 4x1 Plasterboard .... $1-25 Burmeister - LUMBER COMPANY 7840 cooler Lake Rd. EM 3-4171 Open S e.m. to I p.m. dally Sunday 10 aim, to 3 p.m. CEDAR CHEST 118. VRIOIDAIRE 135. youth bed complete 013. May Tag Washer S25. 4 pc. bed-room suite 149 50. Pontiac Resale Shop; 13 N. Cass Are. Open 0:10, Closes 0:00.____________ It W. PIKE ONLY WESTINOHOU8E DRYER AND nnd|i tractor with Iterator 135. ■Metric sieve washer MS. cultivator w* 140. Wringer SIS. PE bunk beds completers a springs dialing.'Yours for only M7.5# ... ............. Pearson's can he handled H mi no. Ca Furniture. 42 'Orchard Lake iAve. tol PE t-CAIB^POR 8M_ALL ^RADIOS. Capl- Antiques I OLD NICKELODEON. 6?A HIFIj TV End Radios 66 PHUMHH. d ll INCH PHILCO CONSOLE MA-l Meytag washer Oil. MApte hogany. In excellent condition. * _________ for only ISO. Pall PI 3-3377. CONDI- ’IT RCA PHONO HI-FI, EXCEL* *Sttd. IE 3»**“* Olbson refrigerator t50 „ in stock lor tmmeaiaie delivery No Monty Down — JI M nor'weak LITTLEV FURNITURE * AFPL. OUT DUl*. Drayton » OE 3-05S»| PR IOIDAIRB E L k CTlf clothes dryer Like mw. Ml, Riverside Or. --------------- -jnr I ir. guarantee We purchased • truck M8E Save Up to 1150 ea these brand new 1940 models. Payments as 1MU as MAS wk. Goodyear Service Store, 30 S. OL nmZr Snntl.. fT Lim Seyeral gbdtt used softeners -gheese *—i. Name your price, cuiugen water Conditioning, 031 Orcherd Lake ltd. . For Sale Miscellaneous 67 JOB VALtELY Summer prtoes...,/IAple FREEZERS - NOROE FREEZERS 1 Chest and Uprights . New models slightly scratched or erete Marred. Models at big dls-ceunt^rto, years to pay so days same as cash WAYNE OABERT 131 N. BAOINAW PE I 1ZXRS — UPRIGHT FAMOUS IV brands, seratohed. Tsrrlfte lea SIMM whU* they last, phone orders please, Mleldsan jrescent. Ill Orchard Lake OREEN SOFA AND CHAIR ISO. mtomMtmgMtomftito^AMMjftiA cheap. 4JNCH SOIL PIPE s FT. 13 98 SA^X^PL&MBIftO SUPPLY*'** S. Saginaw ' PE S-llM g CASEMENT WINDOWS, COM-Platt with storms and screens, t*e. oecd- reasonable-OR 3-SSS3. 14 USED OLA88 BLOCKS, STEP ladder, wheelbarrow, cross-cut saw. iledg* hammer, etc. PB 3-81M. . S3-OAL ELEC. HEATER. S4S.99. tO-tal. auto, gat heater, 444.95. Cab. sink* and fittings. tit.SI up. HOOVER CONSTELLATION. JHTH attachments, like new, 423.10. PE 8-8713. WAYNE OARERt . 131 N. BAOINAW PE M1M IRONRITE 1RONER. *ROVB TO yourself that Ironing time *»* be cut In boH wiS ease Rent ss Ircnrtto A day. PE 4-3473 cramp comfort pennies Electric KIRBY VACUUM CLE A N E E very good condition. Balance 17230 orOQ.30 a men_thtoT;i year. A A A Products. ON 34701. HObSE POLL OP FURNITURE ■ —offer. MA * ' !«tCondition. AontWy paj' $7. nnlvsrsel Ce. PE 4-QOW LAROK ' CRIB AND MATTRESS, brand sew, ft8,M. Pearson s Pur-nlture, 43 orchard Lake Ave. prtgldalre automatic MpSf, MhSWRmituw' 'csirrr,^ • M$fllo7 mOIT mS/ nwaaer! Items. STneW scfu tod USED 125 000 BTU OAS FORCED air nnSee MO; 1 used 44.000 BTU gas forced air furnace MO: 1 used (40000 BTU oil forced air furqace 1110: 1 new 100.000 BTC gas forced air furnace 1184; Used 330 gallon oil tank 012: 1 50,000 BTU oil space heater 435; 143.0M BTU oil wall fttmact 445 All completely guaranteed. Ace Resting h Cooling Co.. 1734 N TriUtoms Lake Rd. at M-5S. DO YOU HAVE A PAINT OR decorating problem 7 colors to choose' fr__ or egterlor. see our wall paper Berry Bros. Jelled Magic ao-drlp ’OAKLAND FUEL A PAINT SEWER AND DRAIN 8UPPUE8 SEWER PIPE “ plain pip* ..........S .38 ft. llipMU pip# ........ $ .49 It. «'* sllpaeal pipe ..$ .TO ft. T LjErMRBIS1zE8 IN STOCK ft' C°mPU^linfkTi?EmUla‘ P' thin 34" in stock drain tlto CAC .....S .1I *»■ irmT^nT* ... _ short pieces for egtsnslons *— lumps and grease traps - - . IS SO es. i’Sgrstsi By J)kk Turner Fir M| H—nTnlkri S9i Bolts and Acc*ssorks 971 Wanfd Uem| Cara lOf reward;- LET US SELL YOUR TRAVEL trailer er MaaOe tome far y We fca*8 JMMto'kQyMB'____ for everytoma from is ft to ft. ROLlY MABIRE A COX< SALES. 1S31S Holly Rd.. Bel VACATION TRAILERS- Plate Traitor Sales and Raalal. HNS North Impost Rd.. Oaiord oa VACATION TRAILERS ’is aow Tratltr-Btomr. Apache campers. Sato or rent. Car- top earners. Make rotervattoM now. P E. Howland, OR 3-14M. Rent Trailer Space BIO BA VINOS ON NEW ’M BOATS N. Opdyke PE 4-3341, BRAND NEW SPACES PONTIAC Mobile Heme Park. PE o-stos NORTHWESTERN TRAILER PARE . 30*00 oinm we Read. Lara* trailer ipsees. Hew. modem laundry. Peaturtag miracle soft water. Ptttered water to *n trailers Spaces to 080 and up. Corns ‘ ■I whaf changes can de. im-pgi2* p „ _ 81 ft. eaala deluxe express skiff, fully equipped, M.TM now tilt*. Mercury motors, parte aad service MAZUREK MOTORS & MARINE SALES Woodward at South Blvd. FE 4-9587 with hardware. 018.M up. Perry Service toe.. 4130 Highland Rd. 90! CENTURY IS PT. INBOARD. '41 1 model, tow time. 41040. with Alloy traitor. Cell EM 3-0961. CLEARANCE SELlT! R ski toot A Mg twin Evin-rlectrlc start reedy ' $714, A-l used ntetoi 30 HP. Your MSes POR EXTEA CLEAR USED CAR Quality Motor Sales ‘ ORCHARDf RD LAKE PE 3-ltol ST’lSp*' See M & M Motor Soles ‘ Economy Cars Used Aata Part* IM 'from ( PARTS FOR SALE. UN PACKARD ■ Lake. For Sale Trucka 103 8AILPISH 8UNPISH I FT FIBERGLASS BOAT ~ TON PICK-UP CHEYV OOOD rubber, ^ speed Irar— ‘ * Iraasmtostoik MA Ants AccHiorin 91 COMK IN AND PRICE OUR /nun Aticisoncf___wi . bkabon close out kpeciai 1 ISM It eu. ka. TJt Bm. UA VSL OR “Oh, We don’t have to announce anything! I told everybody We were engaged months ago! ” 3 1003 OLD8MOB1LE PENDERS. 430. OR 3-0786.___________ For Sale Tires 92 SEASON CLOSE OUT SPECIALS i . Outhoard Motor Repair I AUBURN ROAD SALES A SERVICE . $3.44 ft. Bait, Minnows, Etc. 75 TABOTT LUMBER Water proofing B.P.8. paint, glass Blacktop Driveway Need repaint save 44 on the cost, call your Advisor. FE 4-4*44 lumber. Reasonable prices. 1925 . Oakland Avt. PE 4-4594. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE Everything to meet your oeeda. Clothing Furniture Appliance, lift WEST LAWRENCE Car PARTS FOR ’44 TO 'M MOD-el*. Royal Auto Faria. 1139 Mt. Clemons, Pontiac. CEMENT STEPS. READY MADE, all site* Splash block, door sills, chimney vtap, Ponttoc Pre-Cast 8t^£ Co., 44 W. Sheffield. FE TAKE M LOOK AT THESE PRICES! Birch 44“x4‘x8*-2-l Orade .113.90 Ptr V«’x4'x9 A-D Grad* 9 3.7$ F7r 'V'xfrt' C-D Shop $3.88 Plr %”x$'x8' A-D ttiep $6.09 PLYWOOD DI8TRIBUTOR8 37$ North CSSS FE 3-0439 COAL FURNACE, OOOD COND. 3 storm windows. PE 4-4447. CASK WAY WORE BENCHES AND PICNIC tobies, shop load*. OR 3-6033- WHILE THEY LAST —COLORED steal S ft. bathtubs, lit. C Thompson, 7004 M49 west. YAEORR CEMENT MIXER. OR 3-7440 Machinery 68 FOR SALE Parmall-H. cultivators, plows, $404, P*rmall-BN, cultivator A plows, 4404. Allis Chalmers-B cultivators Sand, Gravel and Dirt 76 Ml. black dirt. Loaded and . Hvered 7 days a Week. Also fill send 4M Lochaven. PE 4-141I. AL'S BLACE DIRT , TOP' AfrtL. Sale Farm Produce EARLY WHITE PEACHES STATE TIRE SALES 403 8. Saginaw 81. -PE 4-4587 I LOOK' 750x14 BLACK TIRES. ALL — name brands. Off new cars. S14.30 plus tat and exchange, o/. Stale Tire Sales. 503 S. Saginaw. °° I FH *•4413 Of PE^W*!___________u STANDARD BRAND NEW TIREK tr.rt. In nil General Safety TlrtS. off. Slack or —-------... __ excellent candt- i. 3445 Union Lake Rd. Or call EM 3-3668 after 5:31 1184 Vlnewood Whn'ee "HARD TO FIND. BUT EASY TO DEAL WITH" DAWSON'S SALES 1-1 TOP- SOIL CRUSHED STONE. Sand, gravel, fill Lvlt Conklin. PE 8-1118 or PE 8-8S73. 1-A SPECIAL: 10A STONE. $3 YD Over sited stone. $8 yd. Beach sand, 75c yd. Plil dirt, 30c yd. Peat, rock and sand. 01 yd. 90-40. 01 .SO yd. American Stone Pre-ducts. 0334 Saahabaw Rd.. Clarks, ton. MA 5-3101. 3 5k YDS. BLACK DIRT OR PEAT Prompt delivery, OB 3-0044. BLAC* DIRT A FILL. FE 0-0877______________ FILL DIRT LOADED OR DE-llvered. PE 0-4301- CHOICE FARM TOP SOIL. OP 'all kinds 5‘, yards. $10, „de-llvered, PE 4-8588 also, loading. ORAVEL, SAND A TOP SOIlT processed rock, PK 8-3817. Robert Clark. 1010-M-87 Fenton, ORAVEL, SAND, STONE. PILL — |ig4g ■ —* dirt. Black dirf •»» •»'' KM 3-3304. EM Michigan, Main 8-9378. PITTSBURG M. I PT. BRAKE. S * Mnghin*, “ “ spot welder. OR '3-4048 i LARGE HENDRICKSON TANDEM axle. Heights Motor Sates. 3f35 Do It Your pelf 69 'Gravel land for lease. _________ OA 8-3034 j CRUSHED STONE, SAND. ORAV-el. Earl Howard. EM 3-0431. KNIBBS LANDSCAPE TRUCKINO Peat, top toll fill sand gravel A stone aggregate. Prompt service PE 8-0700, PE 4-3040. LOADING A1 ..PEAT MOSS. DOUBLE SINK. COMPLETE $28.40 with trap A grade. FE S-4712. Montcalm Supply. 140 W. Mont- \calm.______________________ ELECTRIC. LIGHT FIXTURES, ALL ] t- .1000 destras. pull i ____________hmu tan gto*. Michigan Fluorescent, 303 Or-chard Lake Ave.—1IX POR SALE, HARDWOOD TOP work benefats, S' long, 30" wide, 44 and up, 071 First St. IE 5-8749 Call after 3:30. FREE STANDING TOILETS 818 05 Double bowl sink ..........I 5.85 74-ln n. lengths....... K soft copper ft. coil ....... l bath set* with ti .488 94 polishers, hand senders furnace vscuurit cleaners. Oakland Fuel A Paint. 430 Orchard Lake Ave. i PE 5-dl50._______________ Sale Musical Goods 71] 4LTO SAXOPHONE POR SALE, I •humus. Mlddlebelt and Square Lake Road. FE 3-47W cr 3-4833. LOADING DAILY PILL DIRT 30c - ....... .......£2to $ tuare Li 2-3019, UL Beardslee Sand 1 ED WILLIAMS 481 8. Baglnaw at Raeburn OOOD USED TIRES KUHN AUTO SERVICE to. Huron____ PE 3-1218 Auto Service 1 93 Sale Farm Equipment 87 J 138 CLEAR CEDAR PBNCI POSTS. ! many already treated. OL 1-7400. . , REAL OOOD SELECTION OP garden tractors. Roto TUlers and lawn mowers. HOUGHTEN & SON , CRANKSHAFT-CAMSHAFT GRIND. 53* N. Main, Rochester, OL 1-0761 wohlfetl Dee, 3374 Telegraph. COMBINES — NEW AND USED — PE 3-4007. ________________ “eh3r- n- NA ''***• °r' CRANKSHAFT ORINDINO IN THE ■toayuie. * ___:___ car. Cylinders rebored. Zuck Me- DUO TIRES AND WHEELS FOR chine Shop. 33 Hood. Phone PE Ford tractor, 874. OB 3-7440._ g-3083._ FORD TRACTOR WITH FORD SAFETY SPECIAL. FRONT END front end loader and Sherman We Service and Sell BOLEN TRACTORS AND TILLERS WHEEL HORSE TRACTORS LAWN BOY MOWERS TORO MOWERS JACOBSEN MOWERS YAM MAN MOWERS CREDIT TERMS PE 4-0734 FE 0-1(13 KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYEE WANTED: USiED MOWER OR Ford tractor. Call OA 8-3387. Auction IK. 88 i. Located 12 miles a alignment. Front 45 per mo. Eddie Steel* Ford, Inc . 2705 Orchard Lak* Rd, Kee-iSYhftor. Sale Motor Scooters 94 CUSHMAN XAOLK. EXCEL- SEA NYMPH ALUMINUM BOATS LARSON P1BEROLAS D1NOHY 3 4 )'/, HP EVINRUDE MOTORS CAR TOP CARRIERS-WE CARRY TRAILER PARTS, TIRES AND TUBBS. ALL ALUMINUM DOCKS AND BOAT SHELTERS. MARINE HARDWARE AND PAINTS. HARRINGTON BOATS YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER 1889 8. TELEGRAPH PE 2-8033 EASY PAYMENTS AVAILABLE NEW CAR-TOP BOATS. 000. NEW else. Troll motor, new elec. 40 h.n. In carton, dtocounted. Lai I _Retort, Pontiac Lake._i OUTBOARD 7Ml JOHNS CN. Like new. »134. MI 7.-0S30 " OUTBOARD REPAIR SERVICE I BY FACTORY TRAINED MECHANIC FOR EVINRUDE, JOHNSON. MERCURY. SCOTT | SPORTSMEN'S HEADQUARTERS '60 CHEVROLET Ply Urae. radio andPh**t*r*lpuU* equipped. Red h white tlatob. $AVF. $200 UNDER DEALER COST Crissman ROCHESTER OPEN EVES TILL 0 OL 3-0731 ATTENTION Heavy Duty Truck Users INVENTORY REDUCTION 11 New '60 Ford F-800* and F750s -------the Double stoplight Open 7 day, a week MY 3-4511 LAKE ORION REFITCH — BALANCE — WELD l3~~tl64 OR I A}! Site* Carried 3:0439;--------- _* 24-HR- PROP. POX OO-BOY CART. EXCELLENT Free Check 1959 ALLSTATE, N east of Brighton on Orand River Egpreaaway. then 3 mltoa east on 13 Mile Rd. and 31k miles north ‘ 31034 Haggerty Rd. 34 Head Simple! WHIZZER MOTOR Track Rabbit Cara. - ----- iww iswOm," Pike Phone PE 3-8309 Boata 1 Wood glaaa and alu Bgl “ leed-Llner, Barin' Mirror PRICE? i ?E^,R! They Have To Go Holatcln Dafr fresh Or to milking CLEARANCE Ivblte er colored Factory 2nd, - Irregular, SAVE PLUMBING BOTFLY 173 S Saginaw PE 4-3100 __ _ ___| FOR SALE 330 GALLON FUEL OIL _T«l_Huron, tank. FE 4-0781.___" ----- OE BOILER «T COMPRESSOR — Cheap. 130 ban mediums!** accordion. eicellent condition -Cheap OB 3-3140. nell Grand Completely 1 ditlened Including new . tun This Orand Is the egcaptl Price Includes delivery. Only |1 Beautiful upright plane, down, with mirror. Only O’ Mahogany^Sptnet piano, ttkt n GRINNELL’S 37 a. Sagtaaw fr 3.7 AUGUST SAlF LOOK! Bulldozing, any die Jeb. ne move time. Cheek bur rates by lob of hour. Also dragline and dump tfUC W°FE 4-6595 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply. Sand, grnval ft dirt. Cemtnt, mortar, trucking ft 111*. OR J-1434. ARD ORADINQ. TOP SCHL, fill-gravel, ate, PE 8-3443. OR LIOHTINO "^GARAGE d66r§ Factory aeconda. all atandard sites m stock from 114 end up. Electric door operators, folding closet doors and disappearing stairways. Wa give eitimaUs on gang* remodeling*. BERRY DOOR SALES Open from I to 5 Neon on Saturday______ 371 8.' Paddock PE 3-9103 HOT WATER HBATKRS. 19 OAL, Oas. Consumers approved, $99.40 FE 9-1949 Percussion $999, Cenn Rhapsody 29 note foot pedal 41*09. Koehler ft Campbell $494. Morris Music, “ Telegraph Rd, across from H furon, FE 3-04*7. BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR, BY factorv expert. CALBI MUSIC OO. 1* N. BAOINAW_____ P 4-4323 EDWARDS HAS MADS A SPEC; Wood. Coal and Fuel 77 Wood, 3 cold. *17 Pal. FE 8-9131. Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78 PURCHASE OP BONOO DRUMS RBDUCTTONS EDWARDS FREE Imperial Dlshmaster wl nww Conn Electric Organ ft Clark Plano Limited time mug. MORRIS MUSIC 34 8. Telegraph Rd. PE 3-9597. Across from Tel-Huron. if Story For Sale Pets 79 2 WHITE COCKER PUPS 3 MOS old. 1 beagle 1 vr. eld, end 1 red Cocker ljr. eld. All Mato* ere $11 ea. 6338 Oullek St, Clark-stea. MA 4-1993. 9 jM bACnsHUNDS AT STUD. Puppies, Jamor's, PE 4-443I. ARC REGISTERED COCKER SPAN-tols. r« 4-33*7- - AKC REGISTERED DACHSHUND pup*. OH 3-37*4. 1 BEAUTIFUL AKC REGISTERED e Pupa. <28. 1 lng and nil bred artificially. Ex-eepttomally good herd of dairy eowa, some registered. Many cows 1 milking from 40 to 70 lbs per dey. 3 unit Condy milker near new and complete Milk cooler, etc. Quantity ear com, 909 bait* hay. 1941 Ford Truck - 13 ft. tod. nearly new motor. John Deer* A tractor. John Deere B tractor and cultivator — also No. * mower. No. 390 com planter. 12 A combine. Case tractor spreader on rubber. Good corn binder and silo filler. 4 Bar rake, rubber tired wagon. 9ic Raymond fealty. Prop. Bank Terms Floyd Kehrl. clerk. Ed Oottschalk. Leo Johniou - »BC-tloners. Phone Hcwtu 1010 1957 H D 165 CC 1659 BjBA Side Hack 1957 Trl Cub Maria# Hardware-Paint j Oakland Marine Excth [ 391 8. Seglnew _PE 8-4191 | WEST BEND MOTORS ! A COMPLETE I SELECTION OP USED MOTORS I. i AND USED BOATS ..MAKE US AN OFFER NEW AND USED TRUCKS IN STOCK' WATCH POP OCR AD fflRUJDAY Open Dally » l lor Retail ft Purchasing , B & B AUCTION 9099 DIXIE HIGHWAY PRAYTON A1b»OPPWO CENTER For Sale Hous* Tratters 89 TV. ALUM. HOUSKTRAILER. IMS ANDERSON TRAILER. «rr choose from. Several used trarel trailers, and used mobile homes to select from. cEifp"1 dr{;yer.w*holly ma-RINE AND COACH SALES 15210 Travel Trailer aince 1933; Oaar-■ • " - ■ see them aad set at Werner Trailer Huron. (Plan ‘ n demonstration at Werner T PONTIAC CHIEF room fixtures, new metal cupboard doors 40c, formica top*, icresn, 24c. gas hot plate, apt. ala* stove. Basement wlndowe, must dear bldg- H4 Futnmaa befors 5:30 p.m 53 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, Vr ten trailer. Mlsc. stanu and screens. 149 gallon all tank. Trailer axto and..3 wheel, FE 3-4338. ALCOA ALUMINUM Combination DOORS,, GUARANTEED 1 FULL INCH THICK Aluminum comb, doors. Regu-tarty priced *3*.M; yea pay $31.95 FEDERAL Mcxiemization I A M T? 1°?!? EpRY DAY .Plenty of Tree Parking On Our Lot HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN EX- FREE KITTEN TO aI OOOD HOME cettent condition, best reasonable _FE 5-0696 offer totes. EM 3-0626 __GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, I PIANO TUNING^OBCAR SCHMIDT AKC. 693 ColUer near Joslyn. j MYNA BIRD, FINE COND. ft * •rgan.°3 menu*.. new Detroiter Lerger window area, more storage apace. Uniterm temperature control, superior construction and beauty ot design. A price you want to paw at a deal you rarely 1959 B8A 250. Scrambler 1949 BSA Gold'Star ..... •• 1949 BSA Golden Flesh .. 47 1958 H.D. FLH Clean $7 HARKLESir , SALES ft SERYICT 2113 8. Telegraph FE 5-14 ------ prom Miracle Mile HARLEY. *78. ; *4*4 ' CAN BE 81 OR 3 1*4^ AU-STATE. J tlto o» LIGHT HOUSE INN. GLASTRON F1BERGLA8 - PROP SERVICE MARINE SUPPLIES MICHIGAN BOAT SERVICE. INC L HICKSON. INC HURON PE MU*. 1*60 P ARIL LA MOTORCYCLE. 14'k I — 'is* then 600 mile,. Sacrifice for *434. aluminum ■ 1(40 TRIUMPH MOTORCYCLES. Andereon Sales ft Strvlee. 330 E. Pike PE 3-9390 SACRIFICE ‘40 HARLEY. SHARP. best offer taker -OR 3-1434 | THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS *99 HARLEY 194CC . •96 MAIOO 350CC .. •53 HARLEY 7* ... .. I SPECIAL it discount on all _ _____ __ flberglae boats OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 399 Orchard Lak* Are. ________PE 3-99*9 the One and only 19974 Bodt Repairs IN THIg AREA k PROP SERV | ROTS MOTORYCLB SALES 309 W. Montcalm Harley David eon galea ft Service ~ For Sale BWycks Transportftt’n Offered 1001 ENGINE AIRLINER. LOB AN-) UA'V.Ve.WlV’- •« FORD * ....... York. MO. i^niTSarvlto7ne. OR *0i0r ' -1”4 - ----- ---------- P1099 AND | '5* DODOl | EASY TERMS —SPOT DEUVERY Ask . for Truck Dept. FE 5-4101 I 'Cy' Owens TRUCK MART *w °*kland Avsnua — PeeOlae I For _Vt$ 1 TURNER I TRUCKS PICKUPS Bonnie's Prt veaway PE 3-79(9 I'lUCE OOINO NORTH PART IN EXC. COMO, II YR8. OLD. 39 In. steal furnace with Handley Brown gat conversion unit — will heal houaa 34 1 32 PE 4-0245 IDEAL LAWNMOWIR GRINDER Perfect condition^ ; ___ OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE LAUNDRY TRAYS, FIBEROLAS, $21.88. S3 gal. hasten, eleetric. Cash and carry. 10 year glass lined, «n.M. O. A. Thompson, to ** »»*t. LAVATORIES COMPLETE. I34A9 Value. $14.89; also bathtubs, toilets. Mower stalls. Irregular*. Terrific value,. Michigan Fluor*•-393 Orchard Lk. At*.—1. DELIVERS ” ft lbs. pre ______ :PUMP, gallons per min sure, eft9.es. i 7099. M89 toest _________ MEDICINE CABINETS. LARGE tV mirror, slightly marred. $3.94, large selection of cabinets with or without light*, sliding doors. buy*. Michigan Fluores-I Orcherd Lk. Are.—39. r AND USED FURNACES. OAS POST LIGHTS. PORCH LIGHTS, wrought iron post*. $19J9 value, 19.96. Complete selection Ughts all *—— —*— Michigan : Ml Xri PIN BALL OAMES POR RECRE- agaln, 7,-lnch. 7 cents * foot; 1-lnch U cento a foot, 7$ pound water tested. O. A. Thompson, 7999 M6P. West.________ ___ RANGE ROOD AND PAN. COPPIR-tene. $34.49. Romex wire at 3c per ft. HtoUr cable ne. O. A. Them peon. 799$ MM Weet. .timet*. Save to* _ New pertoUe*. ..... l5dJS?yy£M up R*W 4 -- “ . jmal 1 floor (Me. l*r$e 3 deer safe, Perbe* Printing and Office suooly 41$ E Prank St. Hr-, mlngham. MI $-1019 around corner tram Turner Perd Bale,, Our Drayton Plains stem Carrie* new and Used typewriters and adding machine*. Next to Pontiac- State Bank. 4400 Dixie, OR >117. grriiL1 SHOWERS ' COTPLETE with faucets ead curtain 9to$8 value. 934 49. Lavatories eompleu . with faucets $14.99. toilets 931 49. ** ? BOB HUTCHINSON Mahogany grand piano, new fl —v ivories, completely IHHtoMMipii 3 years Gallagher Music Co. I E Huron _____FX 4-0591 terms. 6303 DeUwood at Maple-erert oft Hatchary. Williams Lake. PART COLLIE ft PART POODLE puppies, $8, QA 9-3997.___________ THOMAS ORGAN PERFECT CONp. SPRINGER tTAHTXL REG. PUP- OR 3-3710 call after 9. ' ‘ too*. AKC. PE 2-2903. ______________ TUNING AND REPAIRING. 34 TOY POODLE PUPPIES. PROM, Tice, all work guarsn-to^fto|lfl||totot|fb factory trained men i# Hwy. O | J. oi Pontiac ... _ . Open 7 day a week EZ-KAMPER Kto*CcSr^1°fod7y‘,Ur 3399 E Rochastorlsd’ UL »-4to<1 after *■ ’EM 3-3*73 way. PE wtd : RIDERS TO USED BICYCLES. |5 ft UP NEW I tourl. leaving Wed , hikes, 134.*5 ft up. Over 100 to | 5-SS53 _ choose Ironh'-jacnrletfs Bike and : ... , 77;-------J Hobby shop. 20 e. Lawrence. Wanted Used Cars 101! FE 3-7*43 ________I ——— ^^—r---------- ' Rn.l, A AiYM.nrir, 07TOP BUCK-JUNE CAR. TRUCK. 1 Doais « Accessories v/ ; tontiac waste pe a-«t>s j DEPENDABLE USED CARS I HARDENRURO MOTOR SALES ! Caveat Pike__________FE 8-73M ] , I HldlTT FOR LATE”MODEL . ELhWORTH ft BEATTIE. MA 4-1400 ™ PANELS l+3 POINT « ■$T FORD 6 Cyl , courier. '$7 FORD . i i ! v-9. real nicei ’RFtlMx.. - .. ijssr V-i. verv very Ate* 1 ;'41 FORD 1 1M V-* 13 Ft. Welkin H P. OUTBOARD. LOOKS A in, good. Weight 33 pound, V irful trolling. «p**d» to 12 mi icriflce for 443.40. Call FE 3-1 Ei FOOT YELLOW JACKET SET up for skiing. Like new 34 bp. 1 eleetric Johnson. Cover, battery. 1 AVERILL'S Need sharp late models for Calif. | TOP DOLLAR STAKES 2620 Dixie Hwy Jacobson’s Trailer Sales and Rentals Ya-Ee-Shun-Ett, smallest **U- JfA *° contained travel trailer on the >130. FK_»-3M3.----- market. Trotwood. Mar King, r—Ud “ ••Prank” and Tour-A-Home. Tra trailers, our speclelty. Pert* end 3-9434. service, hitches and overloads In-1 JJ poor KLOIN PLYWOOD BOAT 1 3-PT PLYWOOD RUNABOUT, i 4 Ft. FAMILY SAILBOAT. SAILS I 1 good condition. OR ! 'fcALW^I&L— 11* N. Saginaw PE 4-8332 ] Sale Office. Equipment 72; ALL MAKE TYPEWRITERS AND adding . machines. Rebuilt and guaranteed. 3 Corona portables 417.50 ea, 3 Remington Standards $17.89 ea. 3 Remington portables into *a, 3 Revel Uprights MI.M ea, plus 50 mere, from $17.40, Call U 9-3944 or come to 3839 Yorbo Linda Dr . 1 block north of 13 MU* on the west side of WoodwardTR's a little farther __but you'll rave a tot to money. adding Machines, prom $3$ CA8H REOI8TERS FROM $44 PONTIAC CASH REGISTER 337 8. SAGINAW FE $-$$91 NEW ft USED OFFICE MACHINES Typewriters. $(4.$4 up: edSlng machine,. $93.40 up; comptometers, 174.44 up; duplicators. 191.44 up; photocopy machine,. 12*94 up; dictating macblnes. 4159.50 up. General Printing ft Office Supply. 17 Weet Lawrence ^ y. FonSto FE Ml35. WANTED GOOD HOME POR KIT- e with children. Cheap. Dogs Trained, Boarded 80 training, trimming, Britton* and Poodle stud service. OL 1-08*4. 300 8 AND CATS BOARDED. Burr-SheU. 37* Telegraph. Fq. buy new er factory jrebutit e Hay, Grain and Feed 82 ALL TYPES OP 1ST CUTTING Hay. WU1 deliver. OA 3-217*. Far Sale Livestock 83 • YEAR OLD SORREL GELDING BROOD SOW AND BOAR. CALL OR 3-***9 er MA HT43-BEAUTPUL BLACK AND WHITE ponr. *3*9. PE *toS«. BEAUTIFUL * B L A C^ TERN. Wetter. Exn. rider OA 9-3117. Oeldlng 9 years old. OL 1-1973- YORKSHIRE BOAR POR HEAVY service. OA 8-2»lS. Wanted Livestock 84 Clemens. Howard 3-4333._____ SMITH - CORONA 'STANDARD typewriter. *34 PE 8-6683 _ _ Sale Sporting Goods 74) wanted to buy -----— — ---------------------j calves. PE 4-4339. OUNS - BUY. SELL. TRADE. Maolev Loach, 19 Begley. _ OCNS MODERN AND ANT1Q1 -j repair ■« LUTli Complete b*_ disappointed^ tri jour reser-1 wlth control,. $300______ Lk. RawL, DraytonPlatoa, OR ll^raOLAS^ NOR-E R ft FT rtT; BEDROOM 19 .TT«3B. ^ood^.^T wlto trailer. Over 43,000 equity. Will MereuiT. Oator trailer, take good furniture or $500 end r $.gTM or OL 1-0943 vou toko ov,r payments. PE 14 px PISHINO BOAT. s-3396. .. ________________ h.p. Mari'- *v“ Evlnrude ARE YOU OETTINO THE MOST FOR YOUR CAR7 — WE BUY — _________> ..... ... 411*5 ^ Too, t Ft. body. Ilk# now! _ 49 FORD ........9 799 F400. 9 Ft body, now motor 53 DOQOE ........ ..... I 996 3-Ton.l* Ft. body. With 3 spued, 93PORD .. . • .... P40Q ‘ 12 Ft. Body ft Tars. _ II DODGE ^ I 5*3 3-ton. 1* ft- body, tarp aad Uft l/FORD ,, 'F9. 14 Ft. body. 3 spued, real “JRT«AnpD?PX V Get Our Price OVER 75 NEW AND USED TRUCKS DONT TAKE A U VE BEEN TO 1. Martin Motor, $100 ltfa h LLOYD Oxford Trailer Sales WHERE QUALITY COMES FIRST See the large —— ** wide* In 49' to I., ■ — room. Small trailers, toe. Good selection to used all sixes. 11 x-aiiv. ---- - to Lak, Orton on M34. ltM CHRIS CRAFT. W on Uiti | MOTOR SALES W^lK'TSBOARD wrm'233 8 Saglnsw PE 3-9131 H ^---- * MUCH AS *60 FOR JUNK AND bottom. Cbsap, MY . MY 3-97'... WHERE QUALITY COMES FIRST SHORT'S MOBILE HOMES good Sportsman. 151 ATTENTION around- Tsndam t SALES AND SERVICE hitches Installed. Need all types bottle ^ trailer,. Hours 9 weekday. Closed Sunday,. 3173 W. Huron •_______________FE 4-9743 top. Mark 31 WE’RE PAYING TOP .5$$ DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS Glenn’s Motor Sales I. Huron St. FE 4-73 TOP DOLLAR Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad motor, controls, and Dude trailer, com- 952 plete. 11,391. Terms. Kelly’s Hardware f 1994 Auburn Ave. at Adams Rd. J cart wanted’ lor out state FE 3-6611 1 dZalen Hr J. VAN WELT 4449 Pile Hwy. Ph. OR 3-13M IN STOCK TURNER TRUCK CENTER Call Mr. Bob Butler MI 4-7500 Bargain Gearance .SCOTT MOTORS AND SERVICE CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 93 E Waltou Open 9-9, FE 9-4499 BOAT INSURANCE ONLY *3.99 per word. $199. Ranees hi. Agency. FE i ponti/ 3-7913, FE 4-9378. ____ and i Buchanan’s Boatland I i]',*rbpc i Evlnrude 16 H P. Obergla* i COUPE Bgjdl||te" , 40 H.P. 3 DOOl trailer. $1649. New 4 Sde Finn ?r?*'5?_86jA few pennies emil, 374-8- Telegraph. MM | —...... — iWURE YOUiTvAUIAiLEa. LOW-; - Migrate,. Hanaen Agency. FE [ HUCKLEHCTHT__i8WAMFt CTEI. rr. HOME OROWN GLADIOLUS. cut and* needs in The Pontiac I flberglaa boat,. 4434 : 4114. Rood 440, steel i a. 994. 9999 M99 West. I CHEVROLET 14' VANETTE; , j paint 9 new tine, booetar we need iMisjrffaC”*' 100 j '51 Ford Pickup »4.ton . UH BUICK8 ! '41 IpU Pickup, l ton ..... . . M99 • CHEVROLE f8 ECONOMY CARS 31 AUftyWf oat every kind of good. | ’49 tj TON CHEYY WCKUF 4a y style* ' _ 4-Km. ' ", DODGE '44 PICK . UP.J _7V$ PT. WAOON81 . ~ INVERT1BLES SET or lSy HANDED OOLF cluba, 3 wood*, $ Irena and nutter. L A R O E COtWYAT*D SLUE-Exceilent condition $3# cash Call berrtea. 390 Ime* Road, after $. P» $4433, 1 mere*. EM *A99*. , Press Want Ads. FE 2-8181 BOAT SALE CLOSE OUT ON ALL j boata and motor, Lon* Star. ( Penn Yen and 9*» Roy boats ! AND SPORTS CENTER. 14314 _____ HOLLY RD , HOLLY, ME 94TO. TE 4-0444“* TOP DOLLA PAID , , IEROME "Bright Spot" Doo-wbttoa. rubber like GMC' Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS TWENTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AtJCtlSt 8, 1960 "O.K. ...TRUCK SPECIALS 'm pord h tan p*mi • Cyl Radio * Heater Titled to ■ flit Royal Blue point. Low mlle- H OMC »» Ytfn Pickup n.m • Cyl Radio * Heater. Royal . Crown Sapphire *4* CHEVY tk Ton Panel W Heater and atyaalt. Dark I •N FORD H Ton I HCSm 1 Too Stale NORTH HAS M 1960 COMPANY CHEVYS 2-Doors 4-Doors Hardtopo and Wasona Demo. I Ikr $1695 North Chev. Hunter Bled, at * WoodwWd Are. Blraanghnn _Ml* WJLJ'KS'iTtf'Si MONEY DOWN. Aaaume payment at *8 65 per mo Call Credit Mar. Mr Park.atkO4.1S00 Harold Sale Gars 'JMlDAT SHIFT* By Frank Adana HASKINS DEMO SALE 1040 Cherrolet Impale 3-door, hardtop. T4 engine, powentlide. radio, heater. wiltawnU tires. Beautiful solid White finish, ■anl HASKINS CHEVROLET •55 FORD t Ten Panel ./. I B V* — Renter end alinali. Mot - ‘men paint. Ptnriile! Was |1M - NOW M00 - Eddie Steele, 2700 Orchard Lake Rd FE MM».____________ '55 CHEV. STICK 8 This la V Be lair, no ruit. perfect , engine. -Full price tCtt. No cash 1MS CHEVROLET 2-DOOR, RADIO _„j.j /£7.rdM *nr month. No I ^ «»»*«»— A«am ittvi v am r Ui i .Matthews- rEf per ■ rf . AT AUBURN 11PM CHEVY g DOOR POWER - 1 glide, like new, P» 5-3458._ CHEVY DELUXE 8-DOOR. ---- ------- pE 3.7543 H Hargreaves VALIANT _ HEATER, absolutely no MONEY DOWN, Assume payment of *23 33 per mo. Call Credit Mgr. Mr Parka at MI 4-1588. Harold OAKLAND COUNTY 8 LARGEST CHEVY DEALER -631 OAKLAND AV E. PE 4-4541 1148 FORD! A PICK-UP. 81H. |aOK 1888. 1 TON POND pick-up 4 -speed transmission, KSd coa—name . Tfe FORD. -« RAH El 1«54 OMC 1 TON »——-■— 'ton trench. 4450. Jot Male’s Bert-' ice EM 3-4B7. 1 OMC *s TON PICKUP. OOOD “““ cond. MY 3-5531. 714 gsarwss *«**?> .CONVERT., NO TOP] CHEVY ■» - OftIC CAB andTctuSm. .ftand tlrea. rwasenakle. PI 5-7*48. 8 TON MACK U YARD DUMP boa. EM 3-481*. SCHRAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT ■mm Pixie Hwy OR l-iai Auto Insurance 104 XLARKSTON , MOTOR SALES ■58 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-rertlble 250 HP motor. Auto, trans. Power steering. Power brakes. Radio A heater. 11,008 miles. 1 'owner car. 82385. BOB FROST, INC UNCOLN-MERCURY mi taw 1858 CHEVROLET a-l». BEL-AIR One owner. EM 3-8115._ 1151 CHEVROLET 318 3-DOOR 8E-dan. 8 cylinder engine. Power-glide, snow crest white finish, good whltewaB tires. Stock No. I5M Only <004 NORTH CHEV-ROLET CO 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE.. B1RM1NORAM. Ml 4-2138. 55 CHIVIE 3 DOOR. WILL TRADE PI 3-31 I CHE VIE. BEL AIR. POWER i heater, | Fer SdJt Can 10* 18M UNCOLN 4-DR. REDAN. PULL power. 40.888 mile cor. Immaculate condition, *1188. BOB FROST, INC UNCOLN-MKRCUBT > ________mi dam •58 LINCOLN PREMIERE COUPE. , rust. DavlahOTTME 1-4131. 42 MERCURY 4-DOOR. 8TAND-ard Irena. Radio and banter. 8184. LLOYD FjarlibGwK 106 REPOSSESSION 1188 Oldsmobile. 3 d*er, beantUul surer end wklts finish. PWlf p«»« 4546 833 per smSS. Pint NP ment due Sept 15th. Soansh needed. Ring Hr. BUM. Ff 4-18*8. Lucky Aute Selte. 1M B. —jgg.-PLYMOUTH 1881 BID CONVERT-lkM. Bhef»rit Jll •v _ * Clarkson Motor Sales Sa>gJ5aBTn*gt'iS! ■m MEacuBY oovfjatau — Automatic transmission _____________ Radio Power iteetjne. Very mileage. Mew BOB FROST, INC LIBCOLN-MERCUBY 144 MERCURY 3-DOOR SEDAN With Merc-O-Metlc transmission. Beautiful whHa and greats finish. A alea ear IhtsSdhtoH Stock No. 1431-S. gggg. NORTH CHEVROLET oaTioeo 8. WOODWARD AVE- B1RM1NORAM. Ml 4-3138 il MERCURY CONVERTIBLE. eaaaUent eendltlee MY 3-48*1. 5* MERCURY MONT. RADIO. A heater. BtO. condition. 8388 full price. Ill per me. Can Mr. White Credit. Manager wi.. aSso s«U| m g. ftaglnaw Clean-up Sale i Power atoirtn*. Power brakes For Sale Cara * H» ’60 FORD 4 dr. RAH Pull powsr. 5,00 actual mllet. Priced far baloi dealers coat. Lew as 800 da. SCHUTZ. MOTOR INC. .. ., 013 8 Woodward • . ■ MI 8-1410 J0 1*88 PORD CUSTOM. STANDARD shift. V-8, good condition. »4»5. V frarrtT ffl-WI r.l... r.u. sw mmi FOR MOST CARS . <20 FOR 8 MONTHS PE 4-3538_________Eras, PE 3-4353 Fordga and Spt, Cars 108| j;** JIM AUSTIN HEALT SPRITE Be?u' Roadster. Xxc. cond. white. red Bare! Upholstery. >1450. FK 8-1331. I /NDT CSIEI OARAOE SPECIAL-; HASKINS) DEMO! SALE 1831. Priced at 31318. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1088 S. WOODWARD AVE. E1RM2NOHAM. MI REPOSSESSION 1858 Chevrolet, Sitopr, beautiful emerald green finish. HN full price Only <32 month. No cash needed. First payment due September 15th Mae Mr. Bine FE 4-1004 Lucky AMO Sales. UJ S, iaemaW. •55 FORD CROWN W- RADIO and heatsr. Enc. condition. 810 per mo. with no down payment. Call Mr. Whlta Cr^.Manafar. Etna Auto Oalaa 118 S. Saginaw ’59T-BIRD Solid let Bet White. Pull power 12.000 actual Spare never used. You wouldn’t find msny like this I SCHUTZ MOTORS IRC. 012 s. Woodward »w» MI 0-1410 30 1JS4 JAGUAR. EXCELLENT CON- HASKINS I____ ’56 CHEVROLET ESS- BEL-AIR 4 DR. MEDAN. V-8 Pow-flnlsir. I erg)td( trans Rsdlo end heater. 1 W-WaU*. beautiful Two Tone! Not n mark la er out! 1945 •Crissman ONLY $695 YanCamp Chevrolet. Inc. MWeid MU 4-6225 SPORTS CARS NEW AND U1ED\ HEALY. MO. SPRITE [tjkswagis Neely SBbCGHTEX & SOX M, N.Maln. Rochester OL 1-4141, 1BKX A DEMONSTRATION Rim —T^Vespa 400’economy Thankless a it!* 8. Ttlegn ^PE 5-2454! Ki FACTORY BRANCH ’57 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4 DOOR Radio and heater, automatic transmission. $1495 CPONTIAC RETAIL STORE - ROCHESTER ' Ipe'n Nites Mil™ | OPKN KTES-Ttaj-_OLW721 | Dodge Dart $47.43 PER MONTH DELIVERED | ALL STANDARD FACTORY equipment plus MunK FEDERAL TAX. SALES TAX. 1 LICENSE.. TITLE, AND CRKD-— LIFE INSURANCE. John J. Smifh L FE 3-7954 " '• 88 MT CLEMENS ST BEHIND THE POST OFFICE _Large selection op station i mm UHETT ^DEL^a.^ ypook. For Sale Cars , wanna. AU makes and modala n‘ '.JJ lWte 1S8S. As tow a$ 8885. 1 RlEEtoa K 'BOB FROST, INC. •s' UNCOLN-MERCURY _____ •* Convertible Specials: I '5* Chrysler power. •WOsils. radio * heater. tipHa. *^ ALL OTHER PRICES CUT. * .e fccONOMY CARS, 33 AUBURN | *: REPOSSESSION 1960 CHEVROLET^ ‘57 DE SOTO FIREOOMS WITH POWEll. BDt-mIngham trade la. A rani nice ear! No money down and payments to SUIT. SCHUTZ t!3 8. Woodward . »'hj«« Ml 8-7418 JO 8-8133 'if FORD OALAXIX VICTORIA hardtop. CaU after *;» P_“ HA lJUl Weldon Rd.. CUrkston. ‘KT PE 4-100*. Lucky MUST AH*"BUICK CONVERTIBLE. BEST) •iWMSS. PE 5-5014_________________ sdlo a Hgater, 34.000 Actus Miles Spmlsss ln_A Out rr BE BEEN TO AFPRECU $1095 Crissman ‘14 FOIU? STA-nON WAOpN. O Diiicmcr Radio and hooter. Exc condition. With no money down *205 lull price. >14.pst mo. Cell Mr. White Credtt Men-aeer. | MlU 8 Saalnew CAR PATMXNTB TOO BUIOTp some? Come In and see us snd help you adjust to a test DON’S USED CARS in MM Laks Orion w,yraJ? Sales ‘ lit B. Sngtonw -FORD id Car *55 FORD a DOOR $595 'Cy' Owens 830 OAKLAND AVENU1 PE 8-418L-. . . Ii57 PORD V-8l jjOOR. RSPJQ 8 heater. absolutElt NO MONET DOWN. Assume payment of 12*15 per mo Calf Credit Mgr. Mr. Parka at MI 4-1500. Harold Turner Ford. For'Sale Cars 1061 Starohlef 4-Dr. hardtoj '54 FORD 3 DOOR $395 'Cy' Owens 1050 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE I passenger wagon. Ford-O-MaUe, power steering, sberwood green with otmatolee wood peneling. Stock No. MOO. Only $14*5. NORTH CHEYROLET CO., 1000, S. WOODWARD AVE- BIRMINO-HAM MI 4-2135. - op. Hydrnmat-Power brakes. . Whitewalls. Rlch- 54 PLYMOUTH I PASS. SPORT BUS . MS OH- 043.01 PER MO. BRAID MOTOR SALES 1300 Plymouth 4 door. VWU price MM, Only 031 month. Ho cash needed- First paymot due Sew tember 16th. IBng Mr. Bing. PE ,ggg PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR - RADIO * HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume psymenl of tll.M per mo. call Credit Mgr. Mr Parks at Ml *-7M8 Haro!d Turner Ford.___________ ,1M1 PLYMOUTH BKLVEDERK 3- '58 PLYMOUTH OVERDRIVE ONE OWNER! 60-Day 100% Guarantee • $1195 YOU OLD CAa DOWN Jack Cole Inc. I8N W. FONTIAC. JWAI1 . wm MKE . MA^4*1 lilt PONTIAC, < BOOS^nCBe lent condition. Phone OS 3-1S38- door hardtop. Automatic transmit- 52 V-l engine, power ataerlng. brakes, anay eye «■— w— finish. 34.000 achwl ■ , owdr. Immseulste. Stock .... 1460 Only $1005 NORTH CHEVROLET OO. 1000 • WOODWARD AVE B1RMXNOHAM. Ml *-3|M —PORD DEAL ERA-1 Used Csr shopping Center '57 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE $895 'Cy’Owens HAUPT PONTIAC 1M7 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR 8SDJ V-8 engine, stick (1317 Sty I finish. Eatra clean. Monk Ho. MM. Only *005. NORTH CHEVROLET jpoap, sob. REPOSSESSION 8188 full price. Ho cash needed Pay only 811 am. Due Bopt. 15. Rite Ante. Mr. Bell. PE 1-4538 , 108 E. Bled. S. at Auburn CLARKSTON’ one mUe north of U.8. 18 ' Open teas Until 8 MApla 8hM8» 57 PLYMOUTH. 3 DOOR. SEDAN, □learning blue flnteh, new walls. Can bo handled W* m<"TTO°M,*OWt. INC. OS S Main. Milford. MU 4-m» 1050 MERCURT MONTCLAIR. USED CARS. 888 TO 1888. MONEY DOWN QUEEN AUTO power SALES 111 S. SAOINAW, WILSON pontTac-cadillAc oeM Birmingham Trades 1350 N. Woodward BIRM1NOHAM . Ml 4-1030 BY OWNER day aadaa. Kf OLDS M HOLI-new c-— 83.150 , , 8-4883 Rater Oerate- •50 PLYM , 3-DR. REPOSSESSION M full price. No cash note ay only •—* SPEQAL: SI Olds M Holldsy coupe. Power I steering. • Power brakes. Only 81088. HARDENBURO MOTOR BALES > Corner Cass and Pike FE 5-13*0 Open Eves, ’111 8 list OLD8MOB1LE CLUB COUPE, RADIO ft HEATER. HYDRAMAT-1C. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 838.71 per mo. Call Credit Mgr. I Mr Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold REPOSSESSION MM Plymouth hardtop. V-8, automatic, beautiful white flnteh. Putt price toot No cash aeodad. Pint payment due September 15th. Ring Mr. Bine PE 4-1MS. ’ucky Auto gales, lM S. Saginaw-. .. 1057 PLYMOUTH STATION WAOON Beautiful black and white, excellent condition,^ low ^mlleage^^ finance. Private owns-3 or OL 1-0131. a PLYMOUTH THAHSPOHTA- Plttr^jgrsg^ REPOSSESSION No eash ntrite. pnjnyuw* 1M s. snginnw || PONTIAC STARCH IBP 3-DR dlUon. OR ’59 PONTIAC 8C 4 dr H-T Has all the eatras. a real real nice oar I We are nroXto offer this beauty for 13.3*6. Any old ear or 83M dn. Sank rates to outt. ^ SCHUTZ w-walls. in. MpIMniu WNn Jg mm rou i FACTORV BRANCH ’58 PONTIAC STARCHIER SAFARI STATION WAOON Radio * heater. Nydra-mstlc. PfWWT Otlirtil., brakes, seat, and windows. $1995 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 3-7954 MOTORS INC. 113 S. Woodward . MI t-W» JO M^PONTIAC CATAUNA CON’T ~p$NTIAO WAOON C*305 OR ka over nnymonte, FK 4-wi. REPOSSESSION lit* Pinttoi. I M: jwjtf seeded. BeautlfW Oto* S5F-HL finish. i vtw*. y !j w-» — iym«nt_ due aepumner^ if 8. Saginaw. Iff) PONTIAC HAhDTOP. RADIO ft HEATER. HYDRAMATlCjAB-SoCctelT no mSocy down_ Assume paymjMa Of 81J.8* ms. Cali Credtt Mgr. Mr. Parks at nitwit. Harold Turner Ford. NEW PONTIACS AT TREMEN-dous discount. Do not Mil to too US before you I Kecgo Sates tes & Service _ ,w Harbor ’t0 PONTIAC, 3 DR. HARDTOP. 3151 Hlllcrest, Highland, iiteh. White Lake. _______ •51 PONTIAC. BONNEVILLE. CONV-1 owner, rod. Loadod. ntoo. Pul* Gorman. 3300 Elisabeth Lfc. BILL SPENGE ''rambler- WILL ACCEPT Ouns. outboards, boats, refrigerators and appliances, ate. On our new MM Ramblers nr nay good used ear as pwrt payment. 3M R SAGINAW Dodge Dart $47.43 PER MONTH DELIVERED ALL STANDARD FACTORY EQUIPMENT PLUS..HEATER, FEDERAL TAK. SALES TAX, LICENSE TITLE, AND CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE. John J. Smith list PONTIAC 3 DR. HARDTOP. Power steering, power brakes, now auto, trana- I no. old rub-ber. Vary good motor but front end la smashed Maks me an e«er. See car at MS Oak. Roches-let or Call OL PdflW. ________ M BONNEVILLEJX3NVERTIBLE. •harp and loaded. . J. C- Harden. 83 Oakland. PE 4-W400 or PE Ml 10. wagon. V-g engine. FOrd-O-l ,— Power, steering. Stock Ho. i«48-Priced MW Ot SUN. NORTH CHEVROLET OO- ISMS, WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI 43138. _____________ MM PONTIAC, OQLD AND WRITE. _j_______i hcHf.mitlr WmK WMW, |WW« ----------• , - broket, dual ipaed wipers, saf-t-trset aile. foam cushion, and other extras. 83.4M. 1% 8-i847. '57 OL08 4-DOOR M. LIKE NEW condition. Was 41.405 - ..Kbw. priced tar quick sale at 11.300. fiddle Steele. 3188 Orchard Lake „ PORD ETA. WAOON. 4-POOR. V-g, <80*. Dealer OA 8-3103 '57 FORD I. PORDOMATIC. RAH. — —-ji sharp! Call Joes Cars, sSjn^stsssMi ncPmoney down. Assume pay-manta of 838.18 por mo. Call Cred-It Mgr., Mr. Parka at MI 4-7I08. Harold Turner Ford. .."It'PORD PAIRLANE REPOSSESSION 84M Putt Pries No «Mh.»^»j' fV -o. ,Du« 8«PL IV ‘raTrER.' Ano II Pdi^,PAIRLANE 0. AUTO-matlc tranT — Buckskin Tan Original factory -r-,—_________paint. Was MM - NOW 8488. Eddie Steal*. 3708 Or-ehard Lake Rd. FE 3-3530.___________ MM PORD PAIRLANE ' dor sedan. V-8 engine, Pord-O; Matte, radio, heater, whitewall tlrea, power brakes. Stock No. .N°^oSrHsE»Vn ______ can ph d-im. STATION WAGON MM OMC Suburban staUon war on. V-8. HydramaUe, po w e r brakes. 1785. Wlff's. 24 W. Huron 81. PE ‘ -•Mi BUICK 4 DR . RADIO ft HEAT- :ftsf I PE.OPEN EVES. ' ROCHESTER ’60 FORD 3 DOOR $1695 1955 BUICK 4-DR. i very sharp black Super. Radio. [ Powergltde. ———tog fall pow- Walls; Turq 2&£!Li'Cy' Owens dlo. heater white- : ^ , • exceptionally food c irquoise finish $1095 :^8 APTO NORTH CHEVROLET l.'SI BUICK ROADMA8TER. 4450 1008 8. Woodward Are Birmingham --------- MI 43135 -JTO Collier tm BUICK RIVIERA 4-DOOR _ REPOSSESSION mmmm H Chevrolet convertible. V-l. ). WOODWARD! automatic Pull price *435 Only OAKLAND AVENGE FE 5-4101_____ lM* FORD PAIRLANE 4-DOOR 8E-dan. v-4 Engine, Pord-O-Matlc, Sea green finish, steak No. 1338. Only 1005. NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1000 I. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-3135. MM PORD PAIRLANE 500 2-DR. Hardtop. Fully equipped. Must —| I this ear — rr----------—— ’ 11405. f appearance. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-2735. T REPOSSESSION JUS Bulck. 4 door. MIS full price { So 831 month. No cash needed. • "First payment due September 15th i" condition. 2 Tfugg Mr Bing. PE 4-1804. Lucky | r.d(0 hestei '**fi Life of Riley. 2:00 (2) Medio. *(4) Queen for a Day. (7) Day In Court 2:30 (2) House Party. (4) Loretta Yocng. (7) Gfde Storm. (2) Susie. 9:96 (2) Father Knows Best. (4) Wells Fargo. % (7) Bourbon Street Beat (9) Swing Gently. 6:69 (2) Talent Scouts. , (4) Peter Gunn. (7) Bourbon Street (oont.). (9) Swing (cont). 6:99 (2) Spike Jones. (4) Theater. (7) Adventure in Paradise. > (9) Messer’s Jubilee. 16:66 (2) Comedy Showcase. (4) (Color). Esther Williams. (7) Paradise (cont). (I) News. SOUTH BEND, Ind. (API-Military and civil authorities were to decide today who has Jurisdiction hf a prank which resulted in the drowning of an Indiana National Guardsman. Police said five Guardsmen had admited throwing Sp. 4.C. Walter R. Van Vickie, 34, Sharpsville, in- 16:96 (9) Telescope. 16:19 (2) June Allyson. (4) Esther (cont). (f) Ted Made. m News. 16:46 (9) Movie. Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, "Keeper of the Flame." (’42). 11:06 (2) (4) (7) News, Sports, 11:96 (7) Flight. -11:66 (2) Movie. Leslie Howard, "Devotion." CM). 11:66 (4). Jack Paar. 11:66 (7) Showcase. TUESDAY MORNING 6:96 (7) Funews 0:50 (2) Meditations. 6:16 (2) On the Farta Front 7:66 (4) Today. (2) TV College. (7) Breakfast Time 7:66 (2) Felix ft* Cat 8:66 it) Johnny Ginger. 8:lS (2) Capt. Kangaroo. 8:96 (7) Stage 3 6:66 (2) Movie •(411 Married Joan. 9:86* (4) Exerdae (7) Exercise 6:91 (Iff I Faye Elizabeth. 10:00 (4) Dough Re Mi. (7) Divorce Court 16:36 (9) Billboard. 16:89 (9) Ding Dong School. -(4) Play Your Hunch. (7) House of Fashions 11:69 (2) I Love Lucy. (4) Price la Right (7) bis five-month walkout for more money. TV Actress bn't Curvy but Hat That Certain French Something—Sex By VERNON flOOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPD — (he stands only 5 feet tall, weighs a scant 92 pounds and has as few curves as a 12-year-old boy — but she’s French and as sexy as Brigitte Bardot. * ★ "Ah* g’wan,” you say? Just wait till televiewers check diminutive Annie Farge (pronounced Far-zshay) in a new TV comedy series coming up next October. f Though limited to English, Annie gets her message across the minute she walks Into a room. as a ballet studio, they’ll' 1st bygones be by- gones. But if you’re no lodger profitable to them—watch out!” Of course not,” he said. "Listen—if It means money for the "This sort to nutty thing has happened before aad finally Some- Yesterday's a la carte menu to discussion programs included to addition ABCs Open Hearings; toe CBS show Face the Nation and NBC’s old standby, Meet the Press, minus the peppery producer Lawrence Sptvak, although he was introduced by mistake, in absentia, by a moderator so accustomed to his preeenct that he automatically thought he was there. Louis S. Sisto, executive vice president to tha company. . Edd is watching out for Edd, and he reported that he got most of what he wanted during hie holdout—“You give a little, you take a Uttle.’’ At least his standard of living Is improved; he recently bought himself a new Jaguar. "And guesa what happened," he moaned. “I had It four days and left it to a hotel parking lot. When I came out, the front end was smashed in. Whodunit? A parking lot attendant!” Visit to Home Town Finds Peace, Quiet By EARL WILSON ROCKFORD, O.—May I corract some false Impressions which have been maliciously circulated about my lovely home town, Rockford, better known as "the Paris of Mercer County"? X discovered a smear campaign alleging that Rockford’s shrunk In size. '★ ★ t..- This to a dastardly lie. Rockford haan’ shrunk in slxe. It Just doesn’t have as many people as It used to. in size, It’s Just the I ■In France Set to not necessalre to be a peen-up girl to be sexy,” Annie explained with a gamin ’A student group to New X«k City has already promised that they will do *10 tones as well as the students in San Francisco’ should the committee come to that city." A young pig can be called either a shoat or a piglet. --Today's Radio Programs-- w» esiw (i#o) mmt <«st) g.ftO-WJR, MOWS WWJ, M*X0_____ CKLW. V«e Enron «:3*—wffl. neiaw D»t* wja, ooojt h WXYZ, JM Mcjgon CKLW, MUM ssisss. iiia—wrov, aonmnut* ■lah-wKWjwp a** 9CKLM?^bowU* 9:30—WJR, WM*. Btport wjbk. sum WJBK. Brat. tArinwr WIVN. Ulltw 11:9*—WJR. Motto WWJ. Motto TO D*wn WLAR. WoodUag %nw. CUnKritra. WKI. BreUlMt Cluk CKLW. Nrat, DtriS WJBK. Nrat, Mi WCAR. Nen Mtrtm TUMP AI MOSN1NO WPON. Laik 9:99-WJK. Vole* ot A*rle WWJ. JT9, Rnbjfto ?BVwz’ ssir&n WPON. fcrtf Mrs 9:1*-WJR. J*U Bsrrto CKLW. MUV M9C**0 19:9*—WJK. Bail XaM WWJ. «MWt Mon* WJBK. Mon BaM 3,99-wjr. mn Mae* me WPON. Nm 0099T mWBt ItWfc-WJB, Ttos tor Motto 1:3*—WXTX. N.S*. Ml RAIS- **•**!_ TLBSDAT tflMCOM tnnf: *jwh*, jwfu WJBK. Tr*m*-C0ptor 13:9*—WJK. BtOJL P»m iff Nov*. Niliart 9:99 -WJR. OlOtolS. 0*99* ., WWJ. BSV9> ltob«t* CKLW Not* DOfM Slat aar^-v sos wm Mom K*n wxvx, *m.>wwv CKLW. M Job wcar, 9m, Port* wpuK *m UmU Utsa-WJR. TUo* Oil mu* wwj. rosso* CKLW. JS* V*a l:S*-WJR. Shiwei»o wwj, Movra, Haiti **feMWTiaa, CKLW. Im Dnvloo ■ WJBK, Loo . “Frenchmen like zee women wix, uh, zee full figure and wiz zee small measurements, too. As long as we are women they like us. And no matter how we look, every French girl is aware of zee fact that she is tres feminine." STICKS TO HER STORY Annie’s short cropped red hair gpluhes over her hazel eyes to windblown fashion. Her elastic features instantly flash whatever thoughts she’s thinking. At lunch at DesUn Studios her thoughts yte mainly with toe day’s script to "Angel," which the GBS-TV airwaves Oct 6. SiSS-CSLW. 8 •*tbr«»k 9:9*—WJP. Nows . pKLW. Sooti• Daria /%9K Now*. Loo WCAH. Now*. Iona. Krnl 9:99—WJR IIBill CKLW. NO fI, E wean, sport* Bat perhaps yea haven’t had the geed lock to travel frem Dayton, O., to Pert WILSON ' Wayne, IntL, nod discover this Jewel ef the plains nestling peacefully on the St. Mary*l River, beautifully decorated by a well-worn sign exclaiming, “Rockford, Ohio, Home Town ef Karl WOsan, Columnist." Before coming out here again, I phoned from my Now York office In Time* Square to ask Postmaster Blaine Van Tilburg about the population. it it it Suddenly I heard Long Distance tittering. "The Rockford poet office doetal have a phone," She said. She proposed calling the Rockford police department to ask for the postmaster. “Go ahead call the police department!” I said. A woman answered. "Is this the Rockford police department?” Long Distance asked. "It's his house,” the woman said. "When will the polk# department be m?” X* D. asked. "H4T1 be home for his supper about 5:30," the woman said. X know the police department well. He’s a nice fellow Rimed BUI Cay-wood. Eventually I got. Postmaster Wan Tilburg, whom I asked about the no-phone. "It we had a phone,” he said, "we’d be answering It all day taking calls from people asking If they had any malL It made aenae! The populatien,' down frem around 1,566 to 1,266, shows that Rockford has licked the curse ef bigness. Rockford remains serene, thoughtful, and free ef aex crimes and gangsterism. himself a remarkable campaigner with Ms landslide re-election victory in Tennessee last week and that religion will be a “factor’ but not an “Issue" to the election campaign. Also that the Army wants to establish a base on the moon if the Air Force ever gets there and that there are 100 prlma donnas to the Senate and therefore Its sessions should not be televised or .the session never would end and Sen. Kennedy and Vice President Nixon would not have a She portrays a French bride married to a typical American (Marshall Thompooa) to the sit- The bUdni bathing suit problem, fur instance. "I cannot understand why xey make laws against wearing bikini zoots hero,". Hie complained prettily. "How con a girl get tamed all over? In American bathing zooto you only get your arms and legs in As son, no?" Army Gat Mask Better WASHINGTON — The Army to toning troops hi the Padilc a new gas mask, lighter than the Wqrid War & model and offering protection agatoit all types of gaa and BOSTON (UPD—Ai nesses whose Cuban assets wero confiscated by the Castro goverw-ment will eventually be invited to return by a Cuban government, ~ 1 to an official to the United Fruit Co. day in seistog all Americas a#> sets in Cuba wm net unexpected Slow-talking Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., and his rapid-lira cohort, Sen. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., both discussed the session to Congress that opened today, politics, help for the aged and more politics. Other programs featured the mUltory, with Lt. Gem Arthur G. Trudeau, chief of research aad development for the army, •a CBS, aad Bear Adm. William F. Raborn Jr., director of the Polaris missile program, firing away an NBC. The comments of the VIPS on the TV griddle yesterday added up to a great and sometimes frightening fund to information for top viewer. Among other thingi, this member to the audience was informed that Sen. Estes KeFauver jawved seeslwia last 1 United Fruit's property to Cte included two raw sugar mills, sot industrial railroad, two shipping ports and about 200,000 acres to land, including 90,000 In cane sugar. Tha Cuban holdings represented about 5 per cent to the company's toal business and land assets. Sisto said he thought the Cubans would be unable to operate the complex holdings alone. “It*f a big, mechanised operation and you can’t malte it work through the collectives in a matter to mote,” Sisto said. Stop Indigestion ■t seu-mTSy’fwfeMNtiS** !uSSkSUtSSti ALUM. SIDING J f eAwnm** */f JOE VALLELY Ask Down Papent on Civil Rights Plank NEW YORK (AP)—The p__ dential candidates to both jwrties have been urged to prose for bipartisan civil rights legislation during the special session to Con-ires. The call for a “dawn payment’ i the Republican and Democratic civil rights plaiiks came Sunday from the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, representing 30 civic, minority-group and other organizations. Conference chairman Is Roy Wilkins, executive secretary to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "Both parties,” said the conference, “have adopted strong civil rights planks with substantial «re« to agreement between them. W ask both: parties for an August down payment cm these planks as an earnest to their intention to execute the planks in full during the next administration.” SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests Free Parking at Roar of "Opto Cvm. by Appointment1 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. RCA Color TV SALKS and SERVICE a«7 Tne tv ni* A TeWnIiIh CONDON'S TV M S. Tsharoph Va 4-9194 ItrM fnm M 0*91 c##i £ The People ef Ooklend County Who Never Finished HIGH SCHOOL ★ ★ ★ I’m glad I grew up here. In a town that worships God and reveres loyalty. Rockford motorists are steadfast In I allegiance to auto manufacturers located In the Toledo-Detrolt area. In Rockford, a foreign car Is one that was mads over In South Bend. And If the people In New York, Chicago and Los Angeles think Rockford is funny—I wish X could print what Rockford thinks amout them! AT HOME IN SPARE TIME •v .........................nm............... THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N.Y... Stripper actress Sherry Britten's recovering from mononucleosis; she’ll do "Guys M Dolls” ... Eydie Gorme gave up her Washington apt., moved bock to *. Y. preparing for Steve Lawrence's Aw discharge next month. KARL’S PEARLS: These days when your wife says she’s gonna surprise you with dinner, lt may mean that she’s found a new restaurant. WISH I’D SAID THAT: A local fellow budsta he lent a lush —hut he’s the only person who doesn’t see Anything unusual •hoot the Tnrer Of Ft*. HATS SARI* RROIH1R. P. O. Bki 1999 Alias Park. Hkkln* sws bm tmv Pan as-p*c* m*h s«kMi Bmaue THB PPNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, I960 I Minds In « B>[ Manganese was first discovered I in 1714. I 78 NORTH SAGINAW ST. U TV1SPAY ONLY SUPER SPECIALS AT OAXLfY'S FRESH GROUND REEF CHOICE CUTS SHUCK ROASTS Meaty Clift BEEF Roasts 20 BRISKET BOILING BEEF IP* ARM CUT SWISS STEAKS 49c Races Disagree Quite Argeeably Foe Gives Ice Water to Negro Pickett; They Will Put Off Boycott OKLAHOMA CITY. Okla. (AP) —Oklahoma City’* quiet battle over segregated sating facilities continues today between poised Negroes and pdlite restaurant owners.. / * But a proposed boycott of all downtown businesses was called off by the local chapter of the National Association for Advance* meat of Colored People. A spokesman for the Negro organisation laid the boycott was befog delayed at least a week at the request of the Oklahoma (Sty retail merchants association. Focus of the struggle Sunday wag Adair’s Cafeteria on a busy thoroughfare a few ^blocks from fob state Capitol. Some 29 Negroes in their Sun-. day beet stood patiently under • broiling sun chatting with each' each other and occasionally with white pairing as the latter walked padt a doorman to dine. ‘•'it ★ iT Ralph Adair, owner of the cafeteria, made sure the demonstrators stayed outside. He also furnished them foeweier and said i I have more patience than they do.” Oklahoma, a border state bo-tween the South and West,. has failed to show violent emotion since the Negro demonstrations which started here in August 1968.- The initial '‘sit-ins"* slacked off after several lunch counters and cafes dropped their color bar. * * *, The demonstrations were newed Saturday by the NAACP Youth Council after failure of a special committee formed by Gov. J. Howard Edmdndson to reach agreement with some restaurant owners who refused to. admit Negroes. ■ a?. ‘ ■'} gmmmngBap BRAND NEW WHITE AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG CONSOLE Of Ipsof Control • Cfo*-R#***»«"t • Ssws Forward • Dsmt. Mendi • Ssws S* Buftom • Sows Rtvent • SmbioifsH AotowUcalhr • Zip Mg*. OvttcssN Sosnu FULLY GUARANTEED Free Homo Demonstration FE 5-4049 *98“ a CURTS APPLIANCES With Cabinet d Accesories 1077 W. HURON factory Aolborisod Whit# Dealer Open Monday sod Friday 'til t F.M. AFTER HOURS OR I-*702 Crop Prospects 'Good' for Russ But U. S. Agency Not Backing Red Papers on Optimistic Claim WASHINGTON (UP!) — Soviet newspapers have described 1960 Icrop prospects in Russia as "good."' n * * * T The U. S. Foreign Agricultural Service doesn't go along with that Characterization. FAS said the Soviet description may be aa “optimistic generalisation.” The agency added that an examination of weather and crop reports for various regions of the Soviet Union indicates that prospects are perhaps not much better than average and that “fair’' might be a more apt description. The soviets probably are basing their more' optimistic forecast on the premise that the warm, dry weather during June accelerated crop development which had been retarded earlier by a late, cool spring, FA& said. Says Collegian Propagandized Paper's Charge Denied by Ousted U.S. Student —He Had Magazines MOSCOW (AP) - The Communist youth newspaper Komsomol Pravda says American exchange student Edwin Morrell, $9, left slanderous, anU-Communtot literature in the rooms of fellow students at Moscow University. Morrell, another American and three British students were accused of trying to ferret out Soviet secrets and of carrying on an$Communist activities. All five have left the Soviet Union. * * * . Morrell at his. Salt Lake City, Utah, home told reporters Sunday the only reading material he had left around his room was Time and New York Times, which he subscribed to. He said Soviet students used fo come to ids room to read the two publications. Last week, another Soviet newspaper, Trad, said Morrell was expelled for espionage. Morrell called this a ridiculous and untrue statement. ■The U. S. Embassy in Moscow denial the charge, too, and said Morrell was expelled from the university because of a dispute over a thesis he $aa writing crashed iqto a drive-in restaurant Sunday. „ ^ Sharon Evan Hein, 9, daughter of the proprietor, was knocked the floor with these gooey items dumped on her: Komsomol Pravda claimed Morrell Was openly critical of the Soviet Union and a constant agitator at the university. He was always posing, provocative questions to Russian stu-i," it added. Air consists of about 79 pep cent of nitrogen by volume. * Smothered In Chocolate Fudge Girl Becomes Sundae INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP)—I Orange and grape drinks from An Army truck, Ms brakes failing,! broken 9-gallon dispensers; root beer and a cola drink from 2lb-gallon containers; cherry and chocolate sirup from %-gpUon die- Worst of all was a.gallon of chocolate fodgo which covered her1 I and face and got Into her eyes. •» . •«, “There was so match sirup we didn’t know how badly she was hurt.” said Sharon’s father, ledter Hein. The independence Hespttal emergency staff swabbed the mess oft Sharon. “The girt wasn’t hurt,” 'ah attendant said, “Bat we sure had a cleaning fob to do before we found out.” Airmail postage was originally 24 cents an ounce- Travelers Car) Borrow Depot Umbrellas Free KASSEL, Germany—Umbrellas can be borrowed free by travelers at Kassel’s railroad station, but they must leave a 51.25 deposit and pay 25 cents a day if foe umbrella is not returned the same day.. This is foe first city in West Germany fo provkte^ris service. Rail officials are watching the experiment and may extend foe “cjov-' i other cities. Thinkof It! *29” LAUREL V ELECTRIC BLANKET : % *HIGH QUALITY e GUARANTEED e AUTOMATIC . YOURS WITH THE PURCHASE OF A THIS OFFER LIMITED! BUY NOW AND SAVE! HAMILTON AUTOMATIC GAS CLOTHES DRYER Hamilton features exclusive Twin Air-Stream drying; the big difference in clothes dryers today. Dual Cycle-Set Timer, gives two separate drying cycles with automatic wrinkle-free periods. Fabri-Dial is mgrked in actual fabric types. Sun-E-Day Lamp gives clothes the fresh smell of summer sunshine. Double-Pass Lint screen is easy to reach, remove and cfean^ Satin-Smooth Drum won't snag clothes. HAMILTON DRYERS PRICED FROM ONLY FREE INSTALLATION CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY LAST DAYS of Desperation Clearance Sale WHILE SUPPLY LASTS: M0NDAYTUESDAY-WEDNE50AY BARGAIN CENTER MUST IMMEDIATELY CONVERT SUMMER STOCKS TO CASH!! *1MLOO 4-SPEAKER MOTOROLA HI-FI......$105.00 *130 White 60-Gal. LP. GAS WATER HEATER * S6J0 * 7.00 3-WAY FRENCH LAMPS ......... .* 3.50 * 90.00 EMENEE ELECTRIC ORGAN ,.......*4111 * 29.95 GOODYEAR VAC-ETTE............S 12.00 *166.00 OLYMPIO HI-FI Mi RADIO.......» SUPER BARGAIN CENTER 1052 West Huron SI West «f Telegraph Rd. V IN ,TH1 HU RON CENTRE •. 7 *■ Open Evenings Yil 9 Open Sunday 10-4 / '* i W# Aeaerre (A# Might to Limit Qeeatifie# i The Weather V V> »• w«*»«r fcnu rimiH (Malta Pat* }> THE IPONTIAC PR Mimm 118th YEAH ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MIcSlGAX, ^IO^DA\V ACGuit"8, 1960—30 JPAGES . 0KITED mm IKTCTKATIONAL Ike Hands Congress Bulky Program Fidel Grabs Most of U.S. Holdings Utters Warning Against RecklessSpending Plans HAVANA (AP)—Armed Cuban militiamen were in full control of most of the American property in Cuba today following its nationalization by Fidel Castro’s regimj. The revolutionary government’s new fetalia- came only a few hoifrs before the island’s Homan Catholic hierarchy warned against “the increasing advance of communispi in oui country.” It wu ths church's first criticism o( tilts steadily increas big influence of the bloc on the Castro regime* * Prime Minister Castro and his ministers made plain that they stood firmly vyitb toe Soviet l'n-ion at an economic and military ally, regardless of what other* Latin American governments might think. Foreign Minister Raul Roa clared that Cuba would reject resolution the Organization o American States, at its meeting opening Aug. 16, might adopt protesting Soviet interference in the Western Hemisphere. He asserted the Soviet Union's offer to defend Cuba against aggression could not WASHINGTON (AP)—President Eisenhower laid before Congress today a bulky program ranging from foreign aid to medical help for the aged but warned against reckless spending schemes. “This truth we must take to heart: in good times, we must at the very least pay our way,” he said in a special message sent to the Senate as it resumed its election- year session. The message] also will be waiting for the House when it reconvenes! a week hence. In the face of Democratic, and some Republican, criticism that the nation's defenses are growing I relatively weaker in the face of Communist threats, the President insisted U. S. military power Candidates Starched in Old Holes By The Associated Press All the principals in the big second to none and wUl be kept' political- drama of 1960 perform that way." Saying 1 today in roles they would Uke to was taking measures leave when 1961 comes wiling VACATION'S OVER — It’s back to work for President Eisenhower, shown Sunday at Quonset Point, R. I., leaving the presidential yacht Barbara Anne after the trip from his summer White House at Newport, R. I. He is followed by his wife, granddaughter *r ntiiiu Barbara Anne and a security agent. His ship was given a Marine escort to the Quonset Point Marine Air Station, from which he flew to Washington. * i improve the armed forces' readiness, he said these may ne-cesnistate "a modest Increase" In military personnel and money, if funds are needed, he said, he will ask for them. 'around. be interference in the hemisphere's interna] affairs. MILITIA TAKES OVER Castro got out of a sick bed dra-j tically to announce the_ seizure of $770 million w-orth of American-owned property before a cheering crowd of 50,000 at the Red-tinged Latin American Youth Congress] early Sunday morning. Parades, Contests Galore Set for 4 Fair This sick look is giving way to the slick look in Cuban politics. Fidel seems unusually haggard in his traditional rebel beard, white Raul, just back from a trip behind the Iron Curtain, has abandoned his scraggly tangle. Even the pony MR is gone. It Raul gains power, still other leaders may be unbearded in their dens. Public Piques Within hours armed militiamen began moving into the plants that included the Cuban Electric Co. the 300-miUion-dollar subsidiary of the American and Foreign Power Co. of New York and the largest single investment in flip Island. A ranking official of the firm told a reporter "w^ don't have access to the building." Other major Americas businesses nationalised included the Caban Telephone to.. In which the International Telephone A Telegraph CO., haa a 27! j-mll-Itondollar equity; Standard Qil Now Jersey refinery, about 70 million; Texaco refinery, shout 43 to so million; Sinclair OB Co., Livestock and colorful exhibits | Antique cars will be < will begin to fill a 10*acre area at]some of the participants. Opdyke and Walton roads tomor- _ . , . row with some 150 4-H members! But* ,or tod*?' the at the helm as the i960 Oakland j County 4-H Club Fair opens. 1 The fair, one of the county’s outstanding events, will ran through Saturday. Tuesday la registratio# day. Fngn 10 Alta, to 0 p. tn. the animals and exhibits will roll in. At 7:30 the evening show will begin with a huge livestock parade around -the fair grounds. operations, about f Highlights of the evening will be the rejection of this year’s 4-H king and queen, said Keith Middle-] ton, president of the 4-H Leaders'; Council. United Fruit Co., properties, about 44 million; and SS American-owned sugar mills worth Elder Powers Tearfully Says People of U.S. Already Have Convicted Son Some of these plants had been] ]under Cuban government control] for some time but had not been formally expropriated, j Castro said that the seizures were In retaliation for “economic aggression" by the United States —and made plain he meant President Eisenhower’s slash in U. imports of Cuban sugar. RICHMOND, Va. |UPI) — Oliver Powers, father of imprisoned U2 Dilot Francis Powers, said today he felt the American people already have convicted his son of Espionage charges. \ "Everytlme they speak uf the hoy they speak of him as a spy." ■aid Powers with tears la his eyes at a news conference prior to hlo departure from Richmond for Washington. "I believe that is wrong," hr I which the Conservation Commission in Lansing will be charge of the refugees and to dis-j *• come this "year’s" freckle champ. asked to approve Friday. rupt arrangements to care for] 3. Advance approval for a food- AMtofZa p-r. a* p«* of sticker, would be Everyone will get ^ the act Mthl _ • - able nt the parks. The . parade. PARADE DAY town Pontiac. However, the seizure decree did not extend to American banks. Mining Co., the Nicaro Nickel Processing Corporation, and other smaller American enterprises worth about 300 million in all. But Castro indicated these may be taken over, declaring “we can still take a few things more away from them (the Americans)." TJke expropriated property wilt be paid for wtth 64-year bouds at k per cent Interest, the decree said, but there was doubt whether any payments will ever be made. * Youth Drowns in Area Lake The 35-year-old Norton, Va., shoe repairman and his wife wijl join Norton businessman Sol Cuiy and Dr. Lewis K. Ingram, Mrs, Powers’ physician, later today in Washington. Powers sold he fett the people if this oouatry had already Jbdged Ms son guilty of spytag and "senteuce will be passed by Khrushchev." ** Young Powers goes on trial in Moscow Aug. 17, his 31st birthday, on espionage charges. With sarcasm, Castro repeated n earlier announcement that the money would come from one-fourth of t>w-value of all Cuban sugar bought by the United States excess of 3 million tons yearly a premium price- of cents a pound. Elsenhower’s cut dropped U.8. sugar purchases from Cuba bdofcr 3 million tons for this year, and continuation of this policy would leave empty the (Continued on Page 2, CM. 2) NAME HARD TO READ the father said he had a "printed"'copy of the alleged confession of his son to espionage charges brought by the Soviet government «tar the U2 .pilot was slfot down drop in Russian territory last May powers mid the document bore | signature "but the mum ««s so small you could hardly tefl "Personally, I don't Mleve.lt was that of my son, ” he said. Powers, his wife, ©try and Dr. Ingram will leave NeW Yorit Thursday for their trip to* Moscow. Fire Damages Plant lied to 670 Project ATLANTA (R-Fire early today caused an estimated $50,000 dam* age to a plant under UA. govern-meat contract to manufacture material for tools used In making parts for B70 supersonic, bombers. No one was injured. Mylert Boothe, executive vice president of the firm. Gtawsrock Products, Incsaid the B70 program undoubtedly would be delayed. The fire destroyed kilns and drying ovens. A Boothe, declined to say whether the plant was In operation at the time of the fire. Investigators said cause of .the. tiro had MB been determined. a crying' Manager of this .year's fair Richard Daly of Romeo, of all 1 About $3,000 has been spent c 4-H’ei are- focused 1 !improvements to the buildings and' IPrime Minister Nehru told Par- when they and (he ! grounds for this year. . results of their labor will be In | Bleachers have been ret UP •toi nament today that I hold some 2,400 spectators and the ,rnm | exhibit halls a»d horse barns are! But national security demands congressional action too, Eisenhower said, and called for appropriation of the full amount authorized for foreign aid. He noted the appropriation bill for the mutual security program, as it now j stands, is half a billion dollars under this. 1,0001 DEMANDS RESTORATION Month;! “The nation's security and pur a L m 11 k.i u I ; inescapable interest in a stable ASkS NO U.N. Help world demand that these amounts be restored," Eisenhower said. NEW DELHI India (API —I The President also told the legislators he wants: Tibet Refugees Still Fleeing For the first time since the national conventions, the public can see all top candidates at work io the jobs they had before their nominations. Nehru Claims Escape Each Vice President Richard M. Nixon, the Republican presidential candidate, presides over the Senate as Congress reconvenes for an unusual session. 1. A 100-million-doUar increase Following this. too spotlight. |nvE*rTn '"IMOP refugees from Tibet sXarel^^riTS^ f»"2u^ exhibit halls aqd horse bams ente>ring India each month, but he developments such as those In the Showmanship contests wUl lea- sparkling with a new coat of pamt.Lj^ Soeialis) suggestions that wto Tti s airlift and iWe Thursday’s Dairy Day. Linda The young exhibitors will have^ ask thc United Nations for ^eM^were nred^d sud£n-Grinage, Michigan's Dairy Prin- about four times as much water].. I lv snH critLsi I v" cess will appear at the fair the: | to work with this year, thanks to thfrp are already y ic y^. dty a1*0' a new pump. ~ | more than 20,000 Tibetan refugees] The House and Senate foreign in India. * aid legislation now pending would In Darjeeling, a former com- grant Eisenhower 150 million dol-mander of the Tibetan resistance Jars for this contingency fund, movement denied rumors that Tibetan refugees quitting road construction work in Sikkim are slip-] ping back into their homeland to * j fight the Chinese Communists. Nearly all of Oakland County’s state-owned outdoor i He said he believes the rumors| Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts, the Democratic presidential candidate, takes his familiar seat in the rear of the Democratic side of the Senate. BECOMES MAJORITY LEADER Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, moves into his post as majority leader of the Senate. In New York, Henry Cabot Lodge, the Republican vice presidential-nominee, takes part in a Security Council discussion of the CMgo crisis as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Park Fee Proposal Would ', Affect Many Area Sites freckle contest will get underway I playgrounds Rre included in the $2-a-year park fee plan I®. * 2. A SOO mllllon dollar authorization by Congress for a program Latin America. He | asked approval for this hind by ] the time the economic confer-‘ of the American republics ] starts In Bogota, Columbia, Sept. ine coagreoaional session may have a significant effect on the fall election. It begins with a prod from President Eisenhower, who returned to Washington Sunday night after a month's vacation in Newport. R.I. Elsenhower rends a special message to Congress outlining what legislation he thinks it should enact. FAVORS DEFENSE BOOST Kennedy said he hoped the mes- big 4-H parade through down- Area, Rochester-Utica Rec- reation Area - Lake Recreation Area. State Parks Director Arthur C. Elmer, who submitted the plan] over the weekend, said the Bald Mountain Recreation area should] ]be considered for inclusion at later date. in September. MACKINAC ISLAND OB - Thel Eisenhower said this will be a historic Biddle House, dating back|pro*ram. "whereby we and other - to 18th Century French fur trader fortunate nat,ons caa- together, parks. Thc aanuat days, was dedicated as a Mackinac gr!?te,r u“ com* or. rconril also would be available Islar)d monument Saturday. Thel^,"*d ^cultural abundance to ana ISianai through 1.030 M-lectej. bonded home ^ by the Edward Biddle i^'P fced the hun6ry ®f the world J dealers throughout the state, El- ]fami|y in 178o, was restored by * * * mer said. |the society and the Federal Asso- On the domestic side, Eisen- Covering 53 parks and rccrea-ciation of Industrial Architects. bower listed upwards of a score ion areas, the fee would go] ------------— !of actlo|» he has said Con- ] into effect Jan. 1, with proceeds1 Arab Diplomats Meet 1 ! grc‘* ,hould attend -° "°w and 'refunding an initial $5 •« ■ 11 < «m • .;aid will be presented to the! *a*e would include a proposal to United Nations General Assembly j"0061 defense spending. bond issue for state park expan- CAIRO (AP)—Diplomats of r sion and development. Arab nations met in a)special res-] Eisenhower declared only 4 of Help'Comes Too Late to 14-Year-Old Boy at Wolverine Village Russians May Cause Trouble 14-year-old Royal Oak boy drowned in . Wolverine Lake Sunday afternoon as his- parents watched helplessly from shore. The victim, Gary Svafya- was attempting to swim to a raft about 144 yards from shore whoa ho cried for help. Oakland* Dntning Toll in ’60 and. Mrs. Svalya of 2713 Clawson St., saw him go under about 75 yards from the beadh on Laguna drive, in Wolverine Lake Village. They screamed forhelp. Shariff’s Deputy J a ek Miller, who was I patroling Ihe lake, heard their crie* and summoned fellow Assisted by police from Wolverim Lake and Walled Lake. hour later. Ionia Fro* fair Opens IONM (UPI) - The Ionia Free Fair opened here today. Fair officials predicted a crowd, of 55,000 would turn out to view the opening day parade. Other attractions include a rodeo, harness racing and auto racing. Thd fair Will ran through Saturday .' The plan calls for annual stick- One third of a million dollarsjsion of the Arab League Council 27 measures he had named last ere for cars at 42 apiece or daily is scheduled to be spent at five today to discuss Moslem Iran’s! May as required by the nation- , car. Both I Pontiac a recognition of Israel. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Kennedy, who had Spent three weeks planning his campaign and resting in Hyannis Port, Mass., said: "I do not think there is my doubt that the vigor which Khrushchev has displayed around the world is due to his conviction that the balance of power is shilling to the Sino-Soviet bloc." Nixon, after a 11,384-mile campaign tour by plane, returned to Washington Saturday. He passed up a chance to rest and spent four hours working in his Capital office looking over all major MMs that Congress may take up during the current session. U.N. to Consider Katanga Moves | Johnson, tanned from the Tax-]as sun, remarked that "we >vfll have a productive and constructive session." UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) -jTwp rival proposals may be put before! the Security Council today Bt U N. troops into the pecos-sionist Congo province of Katan- Waterford Tot Hurt ]in Two-Story Fall Diplomatic sources said Ceylon and Tunisia probably would introduce a resolution specifying that the. 12.dffl-miir U.N. force in the , Congo will not intervene in internal conflicts. ’ A 14-month-old Waterford Town, ship boy was in critical condition today in Flint’s Hurley Hospital with sevtre head injuries suffered when he fell headfirst out of a second-story window yesterday. The aha would be to assure Katanga Premier Moiae Tsbom-be, who soya ht* own troops will fight If the II. N. forcer tries to come in, that toe- U. N. force will not try to bring too province under the "control of Premier Patrice Lumumba's cent ml Congo government. The resolution by Ceylon and The boy, John E. Bane, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bane. 1718 Cass Lake Rd. State police said the tall occurred at the home of the boy's grandparents in Lapeer. The victim was transferred to Hurley from Lapeer General Hospital. «v of venue uuce ana wauea uwef sue resolution uy wjim aim they-recovered' the boy's body^sfo Tunisia also was expected to call for ‘‘withdrawal of Belgian troops from alt the Congo. In Today's Press Indications were that the Soviet Union might Introduce a resolution of its. own, or amendments to the Cbylon-Tunisla resolution, to authorize U.N. units to use apy forte necessary to get into Katanga. Soviet Deputy Foreign Mlol •ter Vastly V. Kasaetaov told a \ (Continued on Page 2, Old. 6) Katanga delegation to the U. N. meet newsmen on their arrival in New York to give the Security Council their side of the recent eruption in the Congo. From l^ft Rsey are Joseph Yav, former minister of economic affairs of the Congo gov- ernment; Jean-Baptiset Kibwe, head of the Katanga delegation; and Jacques Masangu. former vice president of the Congo. Comics ........ County Newo . Editorials Markets Obituaries ... Pot Doctor . Wmm WAS THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST 8, I960 Bagwell Asks 2-Party Bias Stand ft) Keep Hands Dff State Ticket 3&eim, GOP to Choose ^Ot Aug. 27 Convention; lUealty Law Fight Flares U. N. in Dilemma on Katanga Course (Continued From Page One) ‘ reporter Sunday he had not yet decided whether to Mbmit a propoooL But la Moscow the Soviet Communist newspaper Pravda said the Congolese wanted the Security Council to “iaaoe aa airier to the UJt. forces for the Immediate libera' Urn at Katanga from the Belgian MRy The Associated Press 3ll D. Bagwell, Republican Smrnatorial nominee, has nrred jcratic* leaders to back Re* nsored cirl rights leg-11 Hon in a "bipartisan agree- mstu ^•Bagwell sent telegrams to Gov-Williams and Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John F. Kenney, asking support of legislation offered by New York Republican Sen. Jacob J. Javits and Kenneth B. _Keating. -This is the time for action,” Bagwell said. "Bypassing civil •rights legislation at this time will * Be .Interpreted by the people of Miehigan as monumental Insincerity.” fOri affairs at home, Bagwell promised to keep hands off ini way rivalry in the Republican Wrfy's selection of a state- ticket. Republicans are expected to sta^e contests for the offices of I StJomey general, auditor general, state treasurer and secretary of state, while the Democrats, up to now at least, have indicated they will rely on their incumbents. • Both parties will make their, nominations at state convention Aug. 27 — the Republicans in Detroit and the Democrats at Grand Rapids. The Detroit Real Estate Board has in effect, tossed the controversial state antibias real estate] ordinance into „ the political campaign. TO POLL CANDIDATES The board said it would poll all candidates for office on how theyl stand on it and then turn the result* over to home owners. ■ The ordinance, proposed by the Ef Corporation and Securities (mission, forbids brokers and] Wrteamen from discriminating race. in real estate transactions. [today sentenced taxicab bandit * * * * [Frank w strachan of Detroit to I “But wh*‘ S*0*1 wouW * *trtke Opponents of the ordinance claim „ ___________ . p . have done? It wouldn't have last- i, iSes on a home owner’s]15 lo 30 yeare ta Jackson Prlson ed legally flve minute, and It pwwnnoi and property rights. State] for armed robbery. j WOuldn't have gotten the irien Sen. Charles R. Feenstra (R-Grandl * * * | back their Jobs.'’ ^plds) has announced plam to Strachan. 24. hari nothing to sayl Ham,l9on ^ he was preparing |ojHERS LAID OFF test the ordinance in the courts. [before hl, sentence, which was pre-’ bid to the Mlchigan Mot0r Car-1 FEENSTRA SEEKS DELAY ' “ . Feenstra said he will confer with I that he had "a very serious record [meets tomorrow morning in De-| The Day in Birmingham Police Chief Advocates Maple Street Parking Ban propaganda barrage from Moscow indicated the Soviet Un-also would press to make Tshombe bow to Lumumba1* government . and would oppose anything that would keep the Katanga independence moveent alive. Dispp’ches in Tass, the Soviet [newt agency/ repeatedly called| Tshombe a Belgian puppet. TO DEMAND INVASION The council meeting was postponed until noon today so that a delegation from Lumumba’s government could attend. Vice Premier Antoine Gixenga was expected .to demand that the council send U.N. troops into Katanga immediately. BIRMINGHAM - Serious com ■{deration to banning all parking along Maple avenue should be given by ths City Commission, Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley reports today to a survey of traffic coo-teflon. In an attached report from Fire Chief Park H. Smith on the problems of his department in getting through the congestion, he also asks for the earliest consideration in relieving the .traffic tie-ups. Both reports are to ha received by the City Commission at tonight's meeting.. . Aa a first step, Moxley meat-meads the eBmlmttea of parking on the north side of Maple BEGINS CHURCH ADDITION — Pastor of the First Baptist Church of Birmingham, the Rev. Dr. Homer J. Armstrong, with shovel, broke ground Sunday f(ftThe start of the church's $275,000 education building. The church is at 300 Willetts St. Taking part in the ceremony were, (from left) Fa mo L. Green, moderator; PmUm PrtM no. Daniel Brown, trustee; Earl Bramblett. general chairman; the Rev. Armstrong; Robert Critchfield, * construction chairman, and Louis Crooks, deacon. The addition, to be completed in early 1961, will house all children and youth departments of the church. Strachan Gets ,|15 to 30 Years Storms Rock State With Heavy Rain By United Press International A heavy line of thunderstorms moved across Central Michigan yesterday, dropping a quarter inch of rain in a five-minute period. The accompanying- high winds knocked down power lines in some areas, and three persons were to jured in &orm-caused accidents. The U.S. Weather Bureau Issued tornado warnings for a six-hour period yesterday afternoon, but no tornadoes materialised. . T^wo persons were injured when ence from, or unify with, the jtbe storm forced a single-engine Congo. plane to crash land in a field Kibwe said the referendum j New Baltimore, would show Katanga’s people are The plane was en route entirely behind -Tshombek govern- port Huron to Fraser when the ment. He told one reporter Ka-j winds forced it down. The plane tanga's -4,000-mrn army is strong] hit a fence in landing, enough to’beat Lumumba's, which he described as "none at all." government flew In Haaday night. Finance Minister dean Kibwe told newsmen be would ask the United Nations to "declare a moratorium" in the dispute over Katanga’s future, await the withdrawal of Belgian troops and then supervise a provincial referendum on Independ Harrelson Seeking Agreement No Strike for Idle Teamsters Mural Artist Overlooks Slight Detail of History j MILWAUKEE «-A mural depicting the cabin home of Solomon Juneau, founder of Milwaukee, has I Leaun Harrelson. president ofilost their jobs when Great Lakes j at least some of the jobs" of the S." "JjL" wt^TSmpSTto Escapee j Pontiac Teamsters Local shut down Hs PoB-lPtmtiac men. JtoMitoa^ASorium to 1944.1 Some, he believed, will be “ab- But not until recently did any- sorbed eventually” by Great jone notice that muralist Thorsten Lakes and others, he hoped. Unberg placed the cabin on the would find new Jobs in the Pon- west ,ide ot the Milwaukee River, ttae area when the freight bnsl- instead of the east side where it little chance that the company j ness picks np in the fall. really was. An amateur historian I or Teamster local 2»9. which has “fVe asked the business agents Pointed out the error to officials, a Detroit contractwtth Great ^ the area t0 give these fellows -Lakes, would like the proposal. ** chance for any new jobs' • _ | “Naturally Local 299 is going to]here,' he said. No Incidents Reported [oppose it," he observed. | * * ft i .....;■ Harrelson conceded that Local , , 299 ‘drivers for Great Lakes now jeeded by Judge Adams telling him [tiers Employers Association which I j^ai ^*2 Grei LakeTright ‘ ^thTKmiS^rea tiSt ‘foSS! [that he had “a very serious record [meets tomorrow morning to De- now. Local 299 is interested in w, ... .1 The pilot. Harold 'McGuire, M, of Warren, was treated for minor cuts and released. His passenger Mrs. Alice Wilbur, 43, Royal Oak, was hospitalized at Mt. Clemens with more serious cuts. Her condition was County Jail ____________________ ________________ OAkk.ru 'today he refused to call an area- tiac operations July 22 and shifted sentenced tor KODDery |wide gtrjke ta^the layoy of 57 mem- them to Detroit-would be merged of Taxi Driver bers of Pontiac’s trucking industry, into the Detroit operation with full) I "After the men lost their jobs,|sen*ority rights. But Hsrrelson admitted he saw A six-year-old boy burned his left hand when he picked up a live wire, downed to front of his Detroit home. Otis Bell was treated at Detroit’s Receiving Hospital. Traffic lights were pat oat of ope ration throughout a portion of Detroit's east side. The heavy rainfall Wasrecorded at Detroit’s Metropolitan Airport. attorneys in an effort to keep the I as you present yourself to thisltroit. j their fate first." ' 1 worif onlocaMlf memben!y fule Jgpwpittoe until tl*court ttot sentence.” v * * * * *• * . , 4 ';] lure canact on the matter/The strachan pleaded guilty July He said he is seeking agreement The Teamster president main- TEMPORARY CHANGE jjdc, which is to go into effect| ^ ^ >rnled r0bbery la the theft under which the 57 men — drivers, tained, however, that “something] "But this has been a temporary] Vyg 14. was approved by the A .( 4 o( froni a ,axi dr|Ver mechanics and dock workers who [will be worked out to help salvage situation while we are following Securities Commission after an to tap,| -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------—•-----[normal grievance procedure to tbe| vestigation into the so-called "point) system” used to rate prospective home buyers to Grosse Pointe. Michigan Negroes Start at Six Atlanta Churches street from 4 to * p.m. "We would further recomnjend the removal of an parking on the north side of Maple between Bates and Southfield,” Moxley continued 1 his report. \ ' - He said meters are instilled on Maple between Bates and Chesters streets and that parking is allowed born 6 p.m. to S p.m. just west at Chesters; The parking ban, Moxley said, would permit two lanes of prattle to start forming Just east of Bates aad move west when the signal changes, wtthont being restricted by parked can. "The changes .should otyr temporary relief from the congestion that exists on this street.” be add- . ed. One problem Is opposition to the removal of paridi* because of the convenience to customers using the downtown business district, ~loxley said. The annual meeting of the Frahklto Cemetery Auxiliary will be 1 p.m. Thursday at’the home of Mrs. Dayton Currin, $843114-Mile Rd. * >• C Frederick GravUn Service for Frederick Gravlto, 85, of 579 Brown St., Was to be at 2 p.m. today at Manley Bailey Funeral Home, with burial to Greenwood Cemetery. -Mr. Gravlto died Friday In William Beaumont Hospital. Royal Oak, after a short macro. He was a retired cabinet maker. * * * Surviving are a sister Mrs. Wil-laim Hopson of Birmingham and a brother Harry of Detroit. Mrs, John L. Denman Service far Mrs. John- (Mary Jane) Lj Denman, 44, of 30525 Tuesday at Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be Thursday in' Camden, Tenn. Mrs. Denman died Sunday at home. She was a member of First Presbyterian Church of Birmingham aad the Red CreOs Gray Ladles. >■ She is survived by tor husband, mother Mrs. Ira L„ Presson of Camden, Tenn., five sisjem and two brothers. WWW The family requests that any memorials be sent to the American Cancer Sodgty. [case, Ike Submits Program, Warns Against Waste foetvett. Rep. Alvin M. Bentley fion ^ about ,5 taxi holdups. ^ trusty to the county jail, j he escaped March 23 to a deputy's , _ . . He was nabbed May 1 after.^P Men shot down by Russians ne j dragnet of policemen cornered him gfoea fall wartime benefits. asleep in a home under construc-' Bentley the Republican nominee ] tion after he had forced James for U. S. senator, said "As far asjspiaU, 52. of Detroit, to drive him fm.concerned a state of war has]to a desolate area in West Bloom-rotated between us and the Soviet field Township. Strachan then shot Union for at least 10 years." iSmall to the back when he tried to ** * * * escape, Small told police. • Bentley said 16 Air Force planes * * * . have been shot down to or near Strachan escaped from the coun-Russia and 90 crewmen have been ty JaU where he had served about either killed or listed as missing, two months of a six-month sen-He‘ said the airmen left 50 widows jtence for passing bad checks, besides other dependerits who -----;------------ cause “Technically we are hot «Cuban Militia Grabs war with Russia.” (Continued From Page One) Ike Records Program Jor Use by Networks Most of U.S. Property 1 Page One) He said Civil rights was the only major measure passed by Congress since his May 3 legislative message and that the civil rights bill had two major deletions which he hoped Congress would, restore. One deletion in the civil rights measure as passed by Congress, was a provision Eisenhower asked for grants by the federal government to states to help them to efforts for desegregating schools. A second deletion was a provision for statutory authority for.the Government Contracts committee which seeks to avoid racial discrimination, on work done on government contracts. he emphasized. “Some arrangement between Local SM and >14 will be made before the cue is over.” ] Citing the invasion by Local 299 drivers, five of the 57 Pontiac workers charged Friday that Local 614 leaders had failed to go to bat should be changes either In the [for them, dollar amounts or the methods ] Harrelson denied this, used, experience will Briste the j ★ dr * * adjustments te he 1 wouldn't can a strike — that {would help no one. But we have Although leaders have said they been following normal grievance expect Congress to end its session procedure. ATLANTA (AP)—Negro collegel The Rev. Martin Luther King students have initiated a new Jr., a Negro integration leader, kneel-in" campaign to the South said Ufa “warm reception by derby attending services at white gy and layman" reported by most! protestgnt Atlanta churches. {of the students' indicated many "Unfortunately, there’s not t before Labor Day, Eisenhower toid the legisiators they ought to can be don# In a cue tackle the program which he laid ^ down and “stay on the job until it is done.” . "You can’t force a company to "Certainly," he said, ‘‘we can- create jobs when it hasn’t enough not adjourn the public interest."]business for them." The Great Lakes terminal at 675 There have been sporadic visits to the* past and Negroes to small numbers have attended Catholic churches to the Georgia capital for a number of years. ★ ★ ★ But Sunday’s move by 25 students was the first coqrdtoated effort to carry the 6-months-old sit-in campaign into the churches. The Negroes were accompanied by several white students. They visited six churches; First Bap-Druid Hills Baptist, First Presbyterian, St. Mark Methodist, Grace Methodist, and .the Episcopal Cathedral of St. Philip. Southerners would welcome the chance to rescue the church from its moral dilemma on the race Midwest Lashed by Rains, Hail; Cool Front Enters No major incidents were report-Saginaw St. was operated for ed. Negroes stood outside one j many years by the old Blair Tran-1 church that was full, heard the sit Co., which merged with another [service from the foyer of another, [Saginaw trucking company to form and were admitted after soml Great Lakes early this year. ] talk at a third church. 'We hope college students aU over the south will give them that chance this fall,” he said. King acts as advisor to the student coordinating committee which joined with members of the Atlanta Committee on the Appeal for Human Rights in visiting the churches. • ★ * * The decision to start the "kneel-1" campaign was taken by the coordinating committee during a three-day meeting at Atlanty headquarters. The group is composed of Negro sit-down leaders and was started at a Southwide student conference at Raleigh, N. C», to April. Parents of 2 Go-Carters Ticketed Pontiac police handed traffic tickets to the parents of two youthful go-cart drivers yesterday.' it w * The charge — letting children drive motor scooters without an operator’s license. Citations were ironed to Ra-dolph Mtiler, M N. Aaderron fit., aad Pro Backatakas, t« N. East Blvd. Officers said their sons, ages 16 ind 14. were, driving the go-carti on sidewalks in the Longfellow School area. MUST BE LICENSED They pointed out that, just as for cars and motor scooters, drivers of go-carts must be licensed- _ . ____., . reimbursement fund for American WASHINGTON W - President; t I r . ... I Eisenhower's message to Congress p^y “ In listing again all the measures By T(le Associated Press today went to the Capitol by mes- BASE STILL UNTOUCHED [he had asked to May, and re- Wind-whipped rains and hail senger. but the President read it at | Another American property so duesting action on them, Eiscn- j iashed parts of the Midwest today the White House for recorders. [far untouched is the big naval [bower said he had special com-!and a Canadian cool front chased The recording was at the request base at Guantanamo, which the ment on two—farm legislation and ] summer heat and humidity out of of radio and television networks [United States holds by a 1934 assistance to depressed areas [the north-central United States. ] which planned (o use portions in treaty. But Castro delivered a] As to a farm bill, particularly | A thunderstorm, raked Sniina.! news broadcasts. [veiled threat of an attempt to to deal with the wheat surplus[Kan with heavy hail and wind] • — loust the Americans from there. Program. Eisenhower said T“c|gusts up to 83 miles an hour, flat-1 » i He told the cheering throng at Congress has refused to accept my j tening trees and power lines and] TlWeather the Havana Baseball Stadium: recommendations and breaking windows in homes and I ne weuiuei '•.•o*, does not consider itself upon unrealistic progranu which, jrtorM An ^ o( raln fe„ wfthto r«ii u. s Writktr Birr» Rrp..ri tied to the United States by any °7 course, I have rejected. [Qn hour, flooding some streets. roStiac aKP'TiciXTrr — ohm [ commitment, including warlike * . * f , ** A * ————* " I He repeated what he has said An unconfirmed tornado was bUmed ,or f* dama** to an’ ideas and keeps, it “within the guidelines, I will unhesitatingly approve it.” I] SO Miami Ben »t bo H Tl MIlvmttM *3 S4 , AF Fkalafai jLJLiJSforiroL 8 « COL-NTED OUT - Luis Flrjfo, M 8 Smalm ?s u Argentine heavyweight boxer of si tt pBiwton 7t 57 1920s died yesterday at the « 63 Phoenix 1*6 M, _ ' TS 47 PUU "The Ooagrero should promptly provide the constructive remedies for agriculture so long and so urgently needed,” he sold. As for aid to depressed areas, Eisenhower said: "For five years to a row I have recommended area assistance legislation. Regrettably I had no choice but to veto the legislation Congress did pass this session. It would have frittered the taxpayers’ money away in areas where it, was not needed and on programs thfti would not have benefited those truly in need of help. “A new area assistance bill, with administration backing, was introduced immediately after my veto. It would channel more help directly into stricken areas than ir65“T1/?s‘Toi„"h;rei“’ ■>— p™— Failure to act wffl deny this S 7?] Wild Bull of the Pampas to 1924 j ** **{ when this photo was taken. outdoor theater at Joplin, where another thunderstorm dropped two inches of rain in six hours. The Weather Bureau warned that thunderstorm activity from Nebraska across Kansas into southwest Missouri might reach severe proportions. ♦ ♦ Showers and thunderstorms also were active to New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio and the Chesapeake Bay area during the night and on a lesser scale In the southeast, the southern Rockies and the northern Plains. EMU Frosh Rolls Ris« . YPSILANTI .(UPI) —i Eastern Michigan University reported it has admitted 1,600 new students for the aints. Clean brushes with turpentine. Limit 1 % In. Wide — 60 Yard Roll * ALUMINUM] Wax treated paper j for floors and fur- ( MASKING TAPE 66’ *1.19 Roll 96 North Saginaw Strept T pH For masking window panes, • Round tubular aluminum legs, rub-mouldings' etc. while your paint- • comparil? 'for™home] office, shop ing. Limit 2 rolls per person Always, end we mean always c buy—don't pay more than Sknme 1 prices anywhere. Shop tor Tonite and Tuesday Specials here’' to* page 3 end other un-advertised vdhtaA SPECTACULAR LOW PRICES! 1st Quality Sheets White MUSLIN Twin Size 72x108 Inches r White MUSLIN a j Full Sise 81 x 108 |* White PIRCALK Twin Sue 72 x 106 Inches . t White PIRCALK 0% < Full Sixa II x 10S 1 Inches Man PASTIL Muslins 72 x 106 inches 199 White PIRCALK 0% 1 Full Site II x 108 1 2 for 88* 2 for 110 America's best known brand —-■ CANNON sheets in big selection of sizes, materials in first quality bedding. Buy at these low prices end save. Sale of BED PILLOWS MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS AMERICAN MADE Copy of Famous Ladies' You'll recognize the famous stylet when see 'em — padded types, circle stitch, floating action lacefronts, ate. LADIES' 3-Piece Baby Doll Pajama and Bed Jacket Sets $3.88 Value ]98 Loos# leg panties, baby doll tops and matching square neck bed jacket. All sizes for < ladies 14 to 20. Sun-Suits and Crawlers 56e Wash 'n' wear backs etc. Sizes < years. eeeeeeVeieaeeeeeeeeeeeeaaa Ladies' and Misses* Size* J eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeo Guaranteed WASHABLE Ladies' Summer Bolero Jackets Choice of assorted styles and materials in gay colors, stripes etc. For ladies and misses. Sizes Small and Medium -All viscose Rayon with Sanco Super finish. White only with Sfe length cuffed sleeves, per* spiration proof. Final Price Slash Clearance! Ladies’ Bathing Suits 394 Only 87 suits left at this price— I960 styles in stripes, solids, prints lastex etc. Sizes 32-34-35 1 only. 98 N. SAGINAW —Pontioc'i BARGAIN Store *> M THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOXDAY, AUGUST 8, I960 JTKJ! iSJTtoS'JS Business Could Be Still Sweeter, Though Cuba which belong* to the United Strifes. It has no human inhabitants; only an electric wanting ‘t for ships bound for the Pan-i dual. (Advertise menu SKINNY? lit skimp thin and underweight because of poor appetite or poor estinc habits Uks Mewleper WAjp CM. Pwtsea peecds and Inehasaf Srm solid Beeheriiwi—y Scilt.yASWdSI 2nd Foreign Aide Diets Don't Cripple Sugar Sale MkOtmSHu WASHINGTON (API—The candy people are >very much conscious that the' American people are weight conscious. ★ * * But the popular drive to trim off fat isn’t hurting business too much, in the opinion of a member of Industry men interviewed the National Candy Wholesalers Association convention here. “It's a factor, but I believe the An importer of hard candies said his company's sales had increased and he believed the American manufacturer was doing more business than he did before. wjuia waduiaa. Hwwdc^^eStada« to j industry is combatting it," said "Diet js only will power," said SvdMr. Grt?cwvoTBawATa-oHct |ari exhibitor of chocolate candy, the importer, Jack M. Kurshan We re not directly suffering." |0f New York City. “I'm on a diet myself and I have a piece of candy every night.” He claimed he had lost 7 pounds in 3 Vi days. [ A colleague said he had lost 10 pounds in five years of working for the company and he ate candy twice a day—right after dinner and just before breakfast. The bubble gum men were all miles. "Out sales, grow as the child population grows,” said one. have a rotating market." With pleasure we announce the association of DR. B. T. BRETT with the office of DR. B. R. BERMAN OPTOMETRIST • Eye Examination • Lenses Duplicated • Contact Lenses • Prescription Sun Glasses • Safety Lenses 17 N. Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-7071 DANCE YOUR WAY TO Mi Arthur Murray wants you to »«a for your-oolf how quickly and easily you can dance and step out on the way to wonderful new popularity! In minutes, fit the hands of Arthur Murray’s personally trained experts, you’ll be dancing his famous basic step, the key to all rhythms. You’ll develop self-confidence, enjoy gay student-teacher parties, make new friends! Hurry in for your %-hour trial lesson for $1. Studios open daily 10 A.M.-10 P.M. Don’t delay. ARTHUR MURRAY PONTIAC 25 East Pike Street FE 5-9438 BIRMINGHAM 305 N. Woodward Ml 6-0500 FLINT 520 Beach Street CE 4-1571 Private Schools Studio Ail Conditioned Doris Cat on Trar is said he was convinced Prime Minister Fidel Castro was a Commun- ... __. , .. , . , 1st and that he could not serve other member of Cuba's foreign^ a Communllt service, Ignacio Bustillo Garda, Increased sales or not, a pamphlet distributed at the convention urged the candy men to get behind a new public relations drive to tell the candy, chocolate^ and confectionery story. INCREASE IS SLOW "Candy consumption has in-j creased slightly in recent years,1' the brochure said. “But this in*| crease has been far below that of almost all other food products. It has lagged frighteningly behind] the growth in population." ■ h h ■+ It said the American public] should be told “the facts about! the wholesomeness of candy, chocolate and other confections, and the importance of these foods as highly nutritious and pleasurable] component* of the A m e r 1 c diet." ft w a An exhibitor of dietetic candy] and sugarless chewing gum re-| ported sales had increased "something enormous" over the past six years. Army Group in Convention AUSA Beats Drums for More Money for •Ground Forces WASHINGTON (API - The As-1 sociation of the United . States Army, convening in the midst of a campaign year in which defense major issue, is beating the drums for a bigger role and more money for the ground forces, a a a The AUSA begins today its three-day annual convention with an expected 3,000 persons—including retired high ranking officers now able to speak out their personal views in a forum de-;igned to advance the Army's) cause. a a a The basic idea of these conventions. says the AUSA frankly, "is to dramatize and publicize the aim* and objectives of the association.'” This year the emphasis is on what it calls "the vital, need for faster modernization of the Army." a a a Two years ago the Army asked] the Defense Department to in-iude in the military budget a] program to start a 15-billion-dol-J lar, five-year Army modernization program. The budget funds prodded since then have been substantially short of that goal. With| new administration coming next January, the AUSA is pushing the modernization effort in speeches, ound-table discussions and hardware exhibits. The speakers' list includes Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin, who retired to a private industry post from which he is free to wage his mpaign for modernization, airlift and changes in the military high command method of administration. Also on the list is Wilber M. Brucker, who has been secretary i of the Army for more than five years. Brucker has supported the ampaign, but in more restrained fashion than some of the profes-l sional zealots. Report 7 Africans Killed During Congo Elections BRUSSELS (AP) — Newspaper reports say seven Africans were killed in a skirmish during recent elections in the U.N. trusteeship territory of Ruanda-Urundf in East Africa. ★ * ★ Elections were held for the past few weeks in the Belgian-administered territory on the Congo’s eastern border. Generally candidates of the Bahutu tribes defeated those of the Watusi tribesmen, who traditionally are the masters of the Bahutus. the trade attache in Bonn, has resigned, a spokesman of the Cuban Embassy disclosed today. ★ * * Bustillo went on vacation July 12, one day after Cuban Ambass- BONN, Germany (AP) >— An- ador Eric Apem Montoro re- Broadway Columnist, 61, signed to go to the United States. - In resigning his post, Aguero Oil was struck on Jan. 10, 1901, at Spindletop, Texas. The great Lucas well came in with a roar, according to the American Petroleum Institute. At Its peak, It produced 100,000 barrels a day. Has Fatal Heart Attack HYANNIS, Mass. (AP)—Danton Walker, 61, Broadway columnist of the New Yoric Daily News for more than 20 years, died €•*%►• today at Cape CQd Hospital. He entered the hospital July 29 after suffering a heart attack. 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Now even more fashionable at Penney’s low price! Thickly tufted viscose rayon, cotton; machine wash, medium siting. Brown, rose, gold, pink. EARLY AMERICAN LOOP WEAVE SPREAD, ONLY Every inch beautiful, and 'Penney’s budget-priced reversible spread i s richly fringed! Machine wash, medium setting. * Bleached or antique white. so hr 108. 96 by 108 IncKm PENNEY'S - MIRACLE MILE: Opan Every Wt.kd.y-Mondoy through Saturday 10:00 AM. to 9:00 P.M. PENNEY'S - DOWNTOWN: Open Every Mondoy and Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. All Other Weekdays 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST i. 1W0 MAKE OVER PACES Seek 5500,000 in Hole Crash Two UP Cities, County, Mining Firms Sued in Road Disaster Mather 8 Ch. *wrw ot the Buck Mm la OMfatt. adjacent to the cave-la. Walton J. Helgemo. Gastra, lather of Wayne Helgemo, 23. who w as killed to the first car to drop into the hole, was asking $100,000 tor the death of his son, another $100,000 lor loss ot contribution* which the boo woukb have made to his patents and $983 for funeral and medical expenses. CRYSTAL FALLS —Eight weeks ago two cars hurtled out, of the early morning darkness and into a 30-feet-deep hole, more than SO feet across, which had opened up in County Road 424 on the Gas-Ira-Caspian City Line. Friday, damage suits totaling lore ’than a half-million dollars ere involving the. three pe-sons in the two cars, one of th-m killed j nntj two injured. r. The Milts were fiVd against the cMles of (tastra and Caspian. Iron 'ountv. the Iron County | Read Commission. Verona Min-I Ing - Co., owner id surrounding I mining p r ope r ty; Pfckand*. Richard Bonetti, 22, Caspiaa, driver of the hr to which Helgemo was riding, asked $261,500 for pain and suffering and of current and future earnings. He was critically injured and is still the hospital at Rochester, Mina in Liquor Sales Ohio Officials Charge Ship Serves Drinks in Territorial Waters CLEVELAND in«- H* Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H suppositories or Preparation H ointment with special applicator. Preparation H is sola at all drug counters. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. _________________*iu». v. a r»< o- In addition to the bride-elect's mother, guests at the Thursday shower were Mrs. William Gregory. Mrs. William Perrin, Mrs. Richard Tompkins, Mrs. Thomas Marsh, Mrs. Henry Larsen, Mrs. Wil-lima Hill, Josephine Btllla, Mrs. Gary Scheets, Mrs. Carr Harrison, Mrs. William De-Rousse and Mrs. Lester Mar-tindale. ★ ★ ★ Others were Mrs. Richard Lasley of Berkley, Mrs. Theodore Jackson of Detroit, Mrs. Charles Bryan, Mrs. Harold Wells, Mrs. Merlin Sanderson, Mildred Barnett, Mrs. LaVeme Selmes, Mrs. Howard Hess, Mrs. William E. Hill and Ruth Rogers of Albion. THE PONTIAC PRESS THE PONTIAC PRESS, SEVENTEEN MONDAY, AUGUST 8, I860 Rochester Council Gels Bundle of Major Items ROCHESTER—Several items of major importance i to the village will face Rochester councilmen at their regular meeting tonight, according to Village Manager Paul York. Chief among them will be a request they will be I asked to make for a federal grant of $150,000 for the ~ ; " “ ♦proposed secondary sewage treatment plant in the vil- Crash Is Fatal |to Lapeer Man |lage and presentation of I plans for the town’s new {municipal building. | Plans (or the secondary sewage I treatment plant now an; to enlarge the entire operation to double ca- Victim Son-in-Law ofjgy ***+*• Police Chief Dougherty;: Lost Control on Curve LAPEER — The son-in-law of] the Lapeer police chief was killed] instantly in an auto accident here] early Sunday while a passenger If the plans materialise, the | plant would have a capacity of 2.4 million gallons per day. According to the manager, the ’illage can get up to 30 per cent of the total cost* about $500,000. escaped from the mishap Ilf0,n the *«kral government if it with minor injuries. Dead was James E. Scrimge 22, of 2237 N. Lapeer Rd. His wife] Sally is the daughter of Police P< Chief Matthew Dougherty. ah get the necessary number of jpoints. "HAVE SOME HAY” - Seven-year-old Paige . Naugle, daughter of Major and fyfrs. Paul T. Naugle of Alexandria, Va., offers the camel, some hay at the Cole Brothers Circus in Auburn Heights Friday. The- circus was one. of the high Pontiac Pron Phot. points of the community's week-long program, * called "Jubilee Days,” honoring the founding of a new civic organization, PABT. Paige and her family were visiting her grandmother, Mrs. L. R. Ngugle of Auburn Heights. "DON’T TAKE MY FINGERS!” — Little Jimmie Edwards, 3, gingerly hands an elephant a peanut at the Cole Brothers Circus in Auburn Heights Friday. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Edwards of Auburn Heights and grand- son of Pontiac Township Supervisor Leroy Davis. Not quite sure of his courage, Jimmy dropped the peanut before it reached the elephant's mouth. The circus was sponsored by the Auburn Heights Sportsman's Club. Herimger was fatally injured when his car struck four trees | after he lost control of It on a , curve at Bower road near Nepes-I sing street. 1 Police said the accident occurred! jat 3:47 a.m. Sunday. are based on need, meet-■quired time schedule and [other factors. Engineers for the project sre completing plans and specifications for the sewer expansion program, alter which a rale study will be made to determine bow the project will peer County General Hospital was {large Rochester's • present sewage , wrimger's companion Neil Relitz.j treatment plant which is now func- Hawaiian Boat Wins {Orion Schools | Event Runs Sept 2-11 Mary Hafey Fails 21, of 4% S. Main St. Scrimger was the father of an! ill-month-old child and his wife is 'expecting another baby this month. in .. . | i n it ti i ni/'j Livestock Judging Times in Lake Erie Swim Union Lake rarade lax Notes UK a [fQState Fair Announced UNION LAKE - Seems of Hawaii, Kentucky mountains, an August Christmas and pretty girls all took top honors Sunday in the annual Union Lake Board Parade. Twelve bouts and pontoons took part In the fourth wrater parade sponsored by the Dewey Bearh Improvement Asm. The parade of boats circled the lake for an hour and a half before they returned to the starting point and were judged and awarded prizes. WINS FIRST PRIZE First prize went to L. W. Smith of 7205 Lock!and Dr. foP his 50th state scene, complete with hula girls, tropical flowers and palms. ★ ★ w Winning second prize was Harry Fixler of 7145 Lockland Dr. for his “Miss Teen" float. His boat was covered with flowers and had several teenagers dressed in formal s aboard., The "Martins and Coys" mountain scene took third place among the boaters for Dick Cooper and Frank Giesler of 2325 Union Lake ltd. In the pontoon class, Fred Rosevear’s float "Christmas la Aagust" received tint prise. It was decorated with fireplace, Christmas tree end belly. Rose-veer lives at Btt Lockland Lane. Judging wae done by Mrs. Jerry Ouellette of Dublin School, pr. Ernest Bower and West Bloomfield Township Supervisor John C. Rehard, who awarded the prizes. ★ ★ The three prizes for the "boat class” winners were an outdoor grill, a folding lawn ’ chair, and a life jacket. The winner in the 'pontoon class” received an ice cooler. The gifts were donated by the improvement association. Sheriff's deputies from the Water Safety Patrol directed the traffic the lake during the parade. * ♦ . # In the past, winning water craft have included a pirate ship arid scenes from Hawaii, Mexico and Africa. Cha|rman of the event was Mrs. Max Morey. 3.000 Attend Service at Simpson Park ROMEO — A crowd of .more than 3,000 attended services Sunday at the 96th annual Simpson] Park Camp Meeting' which is being held just north of here on Camp Ground road. The Simpson Parl^ conclave, the oldest religious event of its kind in Michigan, will continue through next Sunday when approximately 4.000 parsons are expected to attend the final session of the interdenominational meeting. Visitors to the meeting come from all parts of southeastern Michigan and northern Ohio. Caretaker Burten Hewett said today that about 1,000 people are staying on the grounds in tents, cottages, trailers and three hotels. State Backs $37,400 in Anticipation Tabs for District LAKE ORION — Tax -anticipation notes totaling $37,400 have been approved for .the Lake Orion School District by theftfate Municipal Finance Commission. tsiSh to borrow tfte money' completes the second phase of a wo-year program of financing additions to the Carpenter and Webber elementary schools here. ★ * * Expansion programs at the two schools will be completed this fall, but not In time for the opening of classes In September, School Supt. A. A. Reed said Mpy. Under construction are five new classrooms, a multipurpose room and an office at Carpenter School and four classrooms at Webber. * * *• The additions, built at a cost of about $220,000, will make classroom space available for 320' additional students, 150 at Webber and 170 at Carpenter. The livestock judging schedule i for the Michigan State Fair was announced today by General Man-jSwi ager* Donald L. Swanson. of Erie, Pa., failed in her attempt to become the first woman to swim Dairy Cattle: Guernsey and Jer-]across Lake Erie yesterday. Most judging will be in the Fair Grounds Coliseum in Detroit Sept. 2-11Swanson said. The schedule: Horses: quarter on Sept. 2 and 3; lie Iff am Sept. S; Percherons, Clydesdale*, grade draft*, hitch aad ponies Sept. I; 4-H saddle Sept. 7. and Arabian*, Morgan* and AppalooM Sept. >. sey jjept. 6; Ayrshii Sept. 7; and Holstein-•Yiesian Sept. 8. Sheep: Fat lamb*, Suffblk, Cor-riedale, GotxwoM, American Merino. Black Top Delaine and Romney Sept. S; Shropshire, Hampshire. Columbia, Lincoln and Karakul* Sept. •; South-down, Cheviot, Kambouillei, Delaine Meriho and Dorseth Sept, 7; and Oxford, Montadale and market wool Sept. 3, Barrows Care Mis* Hafey was pulled out of the water, doubled up with cramp*, after navigating 24 of the 28 mile* from Long Point, i Ont., to Erie. She was in the I water about 25 hour*. * * * Dr. Edward L. Dicola. Miss Ha-, fey's physician, said she was in great pain during the last hour half of the swim. When she Bird Bugging Police in This Coop Coup That was a question Pontiac police detectives pondered today after taking a burglary report. Officers received a call from neighbor that the home of oil meetng. Robert Herkimer, 410 Boyd St., j # had been entered. j The structure Missing FINDS DOOR OPEN Nora Stewart, 417 Boyd itioning close to capacity. POLLUTES CLINTON RIVER Officials say the effluent being discharged is polluting the Clinton River. By meeting the state’s time schedule, construction will begin i April l with completion el the ! project due a year later. | The proposed plant is expected to handle sewer needs of the village (or the next 20 years. ★ * * Pontiac architect Harry M. pgnyes Jr. will present his final [plans for the new municipal build-Rochester at tonight's Coun- lifted from the lake, she fell St - sh«’d found the rear Beef: Steers Sept. 5; Herefords, Sept. 3; Barrows Sept, milking shorthorns Sept. 6; short-1 shire, Spotted Poland China, Tam- horn, polled shorthorn and Angus Sept. 7, and Red Poll Sept. 8. Bee Business Booms OTTAWA — Canada’s bees boosted their total'output in 1959 to 31,527,000 pounds of honey, up 15 per cent from 1958. The number of colonies dropped to 330,700 from 332,700. Now Mrs. Hiselman Kay Tindall Marries Rocky Appeals tor U.S. Support ol Nixon, Lodge T ALBANY, N. Y. - Gov. I Nelson A-. Rockefeller urges support of the Nixon-Lodge Republican ticket as “the surest means of attainment of our mutual objectives for America'and all mankind." The Republican governor, once a critic of Vice President Richard M. Nixon, said Nixon and U. N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge offered America "a clear better choice for strong, experienced, dedicated and undivided leadership in the years immediately ahead.”___ worth, Chester white and oid Harbor Strep Germs Sept. 6; Duroc, Yorkshire, Poland Chiba and Land race Sept: 7; and] Hampshire Sept. 8. CHICAGO — A University of.Illinois study indicates that in fall and winter 80 to 90 per cent of all | „ .____. ,, .. ..'persons in hospitals, schools and flight for freedom has police of boats be jJd oi sSTS3 lar*e faCt0rS m8y h8rb0r 8cratchin8.their heads. to cost an esti- a pet parakeet. jmate purchase to (API—The government of Leo-j Ion the spreads where the tufts are noticeably missing. Visitors on Captain Topper’s ake before she)Day, who will include dignitaries acquired {from the British Consulate in De- poldville province joined sionist Katanga today in demand-, ing a federation of the Congo'sj0^ bantam^hen. six provinces to replace the cei tral regime of Premier Patric Lumumba. •- $36,300 Shetland pony.-Captain Top-jlroit and the British Embassy Belgian sources said sef movements are crystalizing in Ka-I I Owned by Miss Patricia Burton jof Burton Farms, the diminutive fowl assumed her role of house •atigtlpet shortly after she wAs hatched. n open house Aug. 21. s to buy new tufted bcd-| the guest bedre ] Washington. D. C., plus state offi-als and neighbors, probably wifi aldlne watching the whole Geraldine has ■ness for the snowy [and there are exten icular fond-|Prorm*inK8( white tufts, She doesn't r Eve 'birth j province east of Leopoldville worthy. Abandoned by her in the! who left her behind when she look off with her other rhleks, i hatched under a in Alberta, Va. Ortonville Baptist Church. The bride it the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Tindall of 5890 < Homer Rd., Dryden Township! The bridegroom's.parents are Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. Hiselman of 30165 Brentwood S#, Southfield. For her wedding, the bride chose a full-length, sequin-trimmed gown of ehnntlliy U»re with wriatfengtk sleeves and s She wore a matching headpiece with a fingertip veil of French Illusion tad carried a bouquet of' yellow roses and whitestephanotis tied in satin streamers. Or ★ * Matron of honor was die bride’s sister-in-law, Mrs. David P. Tindall of Dryden Township. Bridesmaids were Jeannlne Garnett of Pontiac and Jean Tank of Ortonville. The appeal, Issued by the gov--nor’s dffice Sunday, was seen _.i an attempt to quell any impres- ..... »* . c c- sion that Rockefeller's efforts on at Utica Dog |YOm LOT Equator provin northwest. While the growing movement] Geraldine i toward provincial self-rule threat- horse blanket ened the stability of his young . ... . government, Lumumba himself , was §|P a riann/> in<’, continued his leisurely journey ,hcn was brou«h! home. Be stopped off today ini‘® ,hc B1l"',°n far™ ®n. Havt>n road Ghana, whoa* President Kwame^1*’? she 'immediately became a Nkrumah is ready to help him]lam',y fav®n,10, , , , • , check the independence move- Along w ith the rings, a Dachshund A JT , Jment in Katanga province. !:,n AfShan h1ound and, ,w0 «"»• A group of youths! * K ]Danes, she has complete run of pistol from-the win-j WIRES DEMAND TO U.N. the house and grounds. n Seek Youths Who Shot Boating in Britain Faces Boom in '60 LONDON fUPI) _- In Britain, as ill the United States, boats are booming. ♦ h h Boat tqakers say 19fiQ will be the biggest boom year yet in Britain. The .National Boat Show early in the year reported orders four times as great as last year. . British boaters traditionally give pride of (dace to sailboats, but power boats and outboards are gaining in polularity — 13,000 British outboard motors were sold within Britain last year. UTICA - . seen firing . ......... .... o_______ dow of a moving car here early The provincial government ofIMW.„ . .... TIM, today were being sought by local Leopoldville, which- controls the| \ ’ Lower Congo, announced "IT Has Aad “5f .?**• tbree °lthe wired the United Nations Security Council a demand, fpr a federation of the Congo*? provinces—Leopoldville, Oriental, Equator, Kasai, Kivu and Katanga^ Gaston Dioni, vice president of the province and head of the Mu-kongo tribe, said in the cable the Mukongo1 "rejects the Unitarian, centralized government.” The demand is believed to have the approval of the tightly knit Lower Congo Abako party of President-Joseph Kasavubu, which has been advocating federalism for some time. Kasavubu is a political opponent of Lumumba' and was! With no point of Britain more than 75 miles from the sea,'1 and {with a1 variety of /rivers,, cffnals The newlyweds, who plan to re-jand jother inland waters to dxwke MRS. STANLEY A. HISELMAN Best, man (or hi* brother was Rpnald E. Hlaelmaa of, Walled . ...—„ - , Lake. Ushers wore Tracy Sibley j side in Pontiac, are now honey-from, boat *| Lake Orion and the bride’s Imoonfng at Niagara Falls, N Y. ^ ' see everyone jm .Brit'aintas a potential customer, illary. police and Macomb County Sher-f’s deputies. ■ * Police said the youths, who are believed to be about 20 or 21 years old, shot at a dog tied to a leash at 7680 Chapoton about 7:54 a.m. tor day. If was the second disturbance of this type here in two weeks, police sakL 2 Area Residents Chosen to Michigan legion Posts Two area residents were chosen officers in the Michigan American Legion at the final meeting of the organisation's four-day convention In Detroit yesterday. ** * Elected "sergeant-at-arms Lewis Ward of Lapeer. "al-, most 100 times her size, know enough to keep their distance. They see what Geraldine can do to their toy rubber rat when it is thrown in her direction. Her natural. desire to become a mother became apparent when ■he tried to hatch a glass horse on her mistress's flresscr Miss Burton promptly borrowed an egg from a neighbor, and Geraldine hatched "Little Edgar.” This was the first time she had ever seen, another chicken. But Edgar was a bad influence. He liked manure piles and other uvuuntriii ui Luiuuiuud aiiu wasi ’ . . , , . , ... frowned upon. Edgar1 was givbn back to the I of president when Lumumba won], the premierahip< Belgian officials, who have been]neighbor' Mrs. Janet Copley of Royal Oak handled roughly by Lumumba, | Now Geraldine lay* eggs with iwas named president of the Twenty were freely prompting his govern-1 regularity, and they can be found I attd Fouf, the legion's ladies aux-jmerift could not last in the face in the most unusual places, on j I of the separatist movements, r.Btl.r mu -*»•:<• PRIMPING HEN — A four-year-old bantam- hen, owned by Miss PAtricia^ Burton of Burton Farms, Dryden, looks at herself in her mistress's mirror. A house pet, she follows Miss Burtott around like k kitten or a puppy and even comes when she is called. She has complete run of the house and grounds, along with four dogs, three of them almost 100 times her size. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AVGUST 8, i860 Business and Finance MBI HMMHMMKmHSMNHHM Michigan GOP j markets (Market Defies Tells Tax Tale I The following are top prices ] covering sales of locally grown jproduce brought to the Farmer's! Technical Rule Market by growers and sold by L «r Rite From Personal jQuoUrtfoiw are-furnished by the trading started the week L or Dire rrum Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of ular fashion early today.- Income, Says Lindtmer Friday. Detroit Produce LANSING UP—State Republican; leaders said Saturday if the sales tax is defeated in November some form of personal income tax will ow5L,kbu. result Applet, Red Bird, bu....... Lawrence B. Undemer, state Re- &£ 5SSSTK: publican chairman, and Paul D. ff &....... Bagwell Republican candidate for cant^upe*. bu. .......... governor, told a Republican cam- gjj"**; g*& \\\\\ ;;;;;; paign workers school Saturday that Pe»ch«.< Red Htven, bu the party must be responsible andj vegetables make this clear to the peoplp. Beans, orten. rut. bu....... ■dr -e O i Beans, Green. Hound, bu. Beans. Kentucky Wonder, bu. . Discussing the 4 per cent sales mans Roman, bu. tax proposal that comes before the ^“'betas' "" voters in November, Lindemer j ■**»»• Iit0*y*ed- ^ ........... said. "We cant fool the people cibSas*. ” and be the party gf repsonsibllity. clbbSsi' ntd.T'ti!u' The sales tax increase is the cabbane. sprouw. bu. alternative to a personal incomeIcSrrou1 ^ppSd^bu tax and we should present It to|Owilifj»w»r. . the people just that way." Icrion* Although advances ran about • even with declines in number, most gains were stnall contrasted losses running to a point and more ::*”S for some key issues included In ' 5 popular averages, | jJ| This belled the market’s favor-! i.Doj able technical position, due to ' * j5 higher prices on rising volume ■ T.'se late last week. It reflected, however, the uncer-.. ti.25 rtainty oyer the business and inter->!* national situations. 1 m Trading slowed to a moderate £ £; pace after floor brokers cleared i ittjup the weekend accumulation of ■ ^orders, which caused the tape to til run late briefly, . eoi | Cfl*rjr. Pascal. J'i Grain Prices m Down n point or so were such i»j leaders as U.8. Steel, Interna-; i.tj. tional Telephone, DuPont, West-222 iugkouse Electric and t'.S. Gyp- . i ssjfc I . 1*21. ] • • Opening JSSPlbi ■ Iniani 705. Kohlr. 3.S! Chrysler, too, was off more than lie a point for a time, but later pared - > 22 U* I083 t0 a slight fraction. FORD PULVERIZER - Landscapers, road builders, and construction contractors are among the users of this new Dearborn Tillit, a general-purpose soil pulverizing unit offered by Ford industrial equipment dealers. It mixes soils and aggregates to a depth of six Inches as the base for road beds, in preparation for seeding, or for lawn renovation. PTO-driven, and attached with a three-point linkage, the Tillit can be used with many .makes of tractors. Homogenizes* Soil Ford Reveals New Tiller “&U-: . URi May . i lls Lard idrumsi— . Mitt Sep. 7>. “ 2j3, Parsley, -ooi bctu .. 37 Pepper,. Csvcnn*. pk. .n%PbSPMri, r-1 — ., . .. .___. .1 Almdst as easily as a wife makes! verlzes and Hbmogenizes the soil, i2£2SSL£S-SSSJ •?“* poa«- i».» News in Brief Pepper*. Sweet, bu Petetoe*. SO-lb. b,| Radlehe*. Red. dot fUdUhei, Whit*, d Rhubarb, do*, brh* Squ**h. Acorn. <4 Squash, Butttrcup. Squash Butternut Squash. Ital.. " — Souaih. Summer. V* bu. Tomatets. outdoor, 14-lb Turnip*, do*, beba...... Turnip*, topped, bu..... Burglars brake Into Oliver, Motor Sales Inc., 210 Orchard *“*" > Lake Ave., it was reported to Pon-jcabbue! celery, doe.’ tlac police Saturday. Nothing was gjjjj{J; Stolen. ;Endlr*. bleached, bu. Navclsco Dominiques, it Norton lRi^r*bu. W**Ch*d'..bU' . SI., reported to Pontiac police Sun- S^n^o*. day that an electric guitar and Lettuce. Leaf, bu.................. amplifier wefe stolen from his car, |uttuM'. Bead! bud°’ . criU.. .‘parked behind 73 N. Saginaw ^ • j Sorrel, bu. '.............. Burglars brake into BUI Spence spinach bu Rambler Sales & Service. 256 bu\ .. Saginaw St., it was reported to! Pontiac police Sunday. Nothing! Poultry ond Eggs > « renewed strength with General Dy-. 3 75 j namies up a major fraction and - ‘ J* Boeing advancing slightly even !! loo, though it was trading ex dividend. . .to • >M Meets, motors, rubbers and ; 35* farm machinery makers were • {»! lower while raUs, oils and air-loo i lines generally were higher. Util- ; 3 jo itles were mixed. j Lionel continued in demand with .olio a gain of more than a point while ‘••J;fast-moving Polaroid spurted about LM 4. s 50, »•** Also moving higher were Radio l.io'Corp., American Telephone, Union f JJ Carbide, Illinois Central, Texaco J ti and Schering. New Yorlc Stocks electric mixer, a tractor operator now can chum hard dirt into a smooth homogeneous layer in preparation for road building. oughly mixing any added aggregates," Dearborn said. "It is ideal for soil cementing town renovation, compost Loreto mSU am osin L. E. Dearborn, general sales man-. ; using the ager of the Tractor and Imnle-j Tillit td cut fire lanes, pulverize small brush, and maintain roads. Airline Earnings Prospects Brighten NEW YORK (UPI)-Buffeted by the crosswinds of severe competition and skyrocketing expenses, airline pamings have spun downward in recent years, the Value Line Investment Survey reports. But, it adds, prospects for the industry are improving. "The Civil Aeronautics Board pray be prepared to take a c strnctive attitude toward airline mergers." The merger aim: to strengthen j the whole industry by reducing a inches, and line’s dependence on a single route. ment Division, Ford Motor Co.,I TVoyJn announcing a new line] S^eaKr!! Tillit is available 1 JS°*tZ JST £ ]* *°ld ,by|in five models, with cutting widths Ford industrial and farm equip-from ’x t0 - - ment dealers. I with either centered or offset! . . . "The Dearborn Tillit is the hitches. first ratary tiller to be marketed ------------------ VaIu vpars nf pnAuseoniU ture Co., 17 E. Huron St., was «»«?• consumer! grade (Included U.8.< < While grad* A Jumbo 38-73; extra Armco 8t! ‘3-0; large I* “ —JjjagL*'"'"'' * 73 3 Kenoacutt ,5 3 Klmb Clk M l *[“£ « 22 * Lo/ Glass ! Mi* Milwaukee plant of American- Mar-|> JJjjiettaCorp. Foreign Radios Gain ' Towyn Wharf and Abergyno!wyn.| NEW YORK — At the start of i ..... _ | „ „ (The en*uie used was built in 1866.ji96o there Were 165,667,000 radio ! SB Driven by The tractor's power] * * . * . , _______ !«** h> *•» «>« counting the • ^jftake off, the Tillit engages the line has a horrid secret: (United States, its territories, and « iSr&Tt i. Ti j^ with^tb^ hlS7^ngth 8ince a11 the 8tatk,n P'*ttonn8 Jre Canada. This represented a i gJ SJ;tines which <,!Zi a ^ t Sr" Si" ? * * St3 Lou A Nash 4S S Mack Trk artin Co r 8 per . _ . ,__________________ ______3,1)0,000 (see no reason.to waste paint onsets, was in Communist Eastern' "This machine literally pul- the unseen side. I Europe. reported to Pontiac police Sunday, large a Stolen were two TV sets, lour por- f'jSiMn! extra'farm* :ubrSarge table record players, and three is: medium 33: amaii »: grad* B check* clock radio*. Total value of the ** 4‘**‘ items was $500. ! .. , . Livestock A break-la at the A * W Root Beer Stand, 218 S. Saginaw St.,; _____Detroit livestock netted burglars $50 in change from p a vending machine, it was reported choice maw* opened the w*ek »t«*dr — *2 2 May______ .. 30 7 Merck 23 3 Merr Ch k S v If.S Mpl* Mon ... . 44.3 Mum MUM Someone today brake Into the,----Franklin School but took nothing,IUSW-'tow”too’wS^%a£ii high it was reported to Pontiac police. £?**•. •»* .«"»*•. »“• |- PH__________________a high choice and mixed high choice and prime 933-ir i lb. iteen 18.75: load high choice , „____________ f_____t___j) prime 1253 lb. steers 25 54: moot cl— needs by sending in for your dig- rtuja*a iSm to • *”^2 Coca ca count card. Thrifty Drug 8tore, 5nou ^^ .t-rs 37 *^25^7 ■ fiS 148 N. Saginaw. —Adv.jard^ steers 20 00-22 00: utility Mueller Br .. Murray Cp .. Mat Mae ... Nat Ca*h R . Nat Dairy .. Ca! Pack Calum *h ... zo.j ur; 7,—— Campb goup .. 57 2 {•*{ gjg NT Central Nor! a We* ».l \14 Killed in State Traffic; Drownings Take 5 Lives Cda He .. Capital Air Carrier Cp Cater Trae Che* A Oh Chrysler . Svc . ' 44 > P»c O * I ' Pm A By The Associated Press j Jerry Pelton said Alcantra had tak-■ The warm summer weekend, en the car from its owner without ! atil! with its lure of open highways and permission. “ IjCOol lakes, led to the traffic deaths io$.4of 14 persons in Michigan. Five] M.3 morp drowned. Stung Detroit Minister HMHRHPHL high choice 534 lb. helter* 35.50; moct choice 500-5f0 lb. ! heifers 34M-25.25. mainly 14.5*S5 00: ConN ■unujoitr F Jonfbak . Coot Cm . Cost Mot . Coat Oil .. Copper Rng ,___ H „j choice bettor* 23.0------- _ . ■ a . , _ |standard heifers 18 00-21 50; utility half- ReDorted Out of Donaer •» ts.00-11.50; mixed cutter *m uumy rUMBU ^ ® offering* 15 00-17.00; utility CO** 15.0* ' 16.00: esnner* and cutter* 13.00-15.0 . DETROIT —An Episcopal utility bun* ii.oo-2o.50; cutter bun*|Krti,-rsm minister who is allergic \o >*“ —* ^.'^tdu :. stings was reported out of danger steady, prim* 1200-35 00. high prime di* c Se*g 36.00; good ond choice 25.00-32 00: Doug Alrc loaay. utility - and standard 19.00-25.00 cull Doer Cher Doctors at William Beaumont down to 13.00 , Hospital. Royal Oak. said Rev. u2mT2^hUher*»i»ughteT*Mies!steed! Howard Mcdintock. 53. was rest- ^etvo'c- *nd^ pCme rnr^J ing comfortably and was respond- igmlb' i,nih<'5i00 most goof ing to medical ion. spring lambs 18.50-r " 02.3 Panh Eol . 35.1 Param Piet . 15.0 Parke Da . 93 Ponnty. JC 24.9 Pa RR ... . 59.7 PjP*1 Cola . • 39.4 Pp"r .. Ij S5S? D .:: • ,, Phlll Pet ’ 1 - , Proct AO ' st i Pure OU ... ! RCA RtmlbUo Stl IS I 5? 2" Reyn Met DuPont 102T SroTllle Mf . Accidents outside Michigan killed * three state residents. The Associated Press count start-s ed at 6 p.m. Friday and ended al ? midnight Sunday. Deaths included: Traffic - John de la Cruz Perez, 18, ol { Wichita Falls, Tex., was killed and Thomas Rios, 17, of Knox City, JJlTex., was injured fatally Sunday 36.7 Might when a truck driven by Rios 2s!o struck a chimp of trees on a road 54 s-near Traverse City. Pvt. Steven R. Hyser, to, who lived at Swarts Creek In Genesee County, died Sunday when his car was slashed in two la a collision with another car on U.S. WUUs P. Warner, 16, of Harbor Springe, drowned Sunday in Lark’s Lake about 12 miles north of Harbor Springs. Willis and two other youths were fishing from a boat without oars when winds swept the the four-way highway and skidded Into the wrong lane. His ear was struck on the driver’s side by a ear driven by John Howard Champagne, It, of Route s, Traverse City. Lake near Pontiac where he had gone swimming. 18-88, is miles north of Flint, craft into the lake. The other two State police said Hyxer, driving ■1-—----■-* *- —-*—*-—*-* alone, crossed the center Une of boys managed to swim to safety. FALLS OVERBOARD Camille Valois, 50, of Champlain, Quebec, a seaman aboard the Ca-nadian steamer Transtmam, drowned Sunday when he fell overboard while the vessel was dod$-~ . ing at the Dow Chemical Plant on Champagne and two passengers. the S, ciair River near Port Hu-Marjonc Champagne, 37," of Trav- ron McCIintock, who is allergic to *r».» ra.- r, bee slings, W354stung several times t«r. utility and low standard with Time . Not .south .o goebel », ithaca. N Y. — More than 7m |van Work Longer Cornell University students from 78 nations are regularly present- WASHINGTON — The average ing thousands of recently issued citizen of the Soviet Union must foreign stamps and stamped en- work 1*2 to 21 times as long as velopes to disabled men in Vet-the typical United States worker crans Administration hospitals, jto buy the same amounts of food, They call their organization the the Labor Department reports. Iv-Slamps for Friendship Club and an has to work longer now than claim it's the first of its kind, in 1928 to buy essential food. '* > Btd 011 c*i . 4 StdOUInd . » • aid Oil NJ ,. I ? Std Oil Oh . X Steven*, JR . 1 1 Stud-Rick . ; ■ swift u Co . gig Tfnn Oo* ... 7 Texoaui!! 2 4 Textron .... 0.5 Tlmk R Be*r 3.3 trontsmer . •9.4 Twent Cen . 0 • Underwood . 1.7 UnCorblde . * " Un Roe ... with a semi-i*erious,y and taken to St. Mary’: ■ Bangor. Hospital in Saginaw. Hyzer was attached to the 17th Field Hospital : 313I Donald Schulte, 28. of Hubbard Detachment at Fort Dix, N.J. - ^ 7! Lake, was killed early Sunday on J. C. Spikes, 32, of Grand Rapids. ’ 20 41 the West Hubbard Lake .road in and his 6-yeqr-oId son Virgil were ; g* | Alcona County when a car in which killed Saturday when their car n * j he was riding smashed into a tree, crashed into a tree in Gaines • i*« Maynard Crawford, 28. of Tal-|TownshiP. 11 -miles southeast of * 43.3 wart, was killed early Sunday on j Grand Rapids. - ** J M35 in Marquette County when his Edward McBain, 9i, of Jones-. 41 car struck a parked crane in a jville, died after the car in which he “i}4: construction zone. Un o*> cp . ; Harr . . Nick ... ; Paper : Stiver 1 Us Steel ..... 1 US Tob ...... Upjohn , W**t Un Tel . We»tg ABk Weatc tl .. 1 Wilson A Co ; wool worth .. James E. Scrimger, 28, of Lapeer, was killed early Sunday when Ms c*r fulled to make s curve and smashed into a tree in , Lapeer, fiqrimger had been an i attendant at the wedding of his brother William Saturday night. ] He was a senior at Central Michigan University. was riding collided with another car on U.S. 112 six miles south Ann Arbor.,, Henry L. McKinley, 20, of Bitelyi... c . , . ... ■ was killed Friday night when he Sunday ln “ “tofnobite accl- Stephen Ejhinger, 19, of Toledo, | drowned Sunday while on a swimming outing at Lime Lake near Hillsdale. Alfred J. Tousignant. 17, of I Gwinn, drowned Sunday in Swanzy Lake. Marquette County. The body was recovered In 12 feet of water. Outside Michigan: Mrs. Marion Elizabeth Mullen, 51, of Port Huron, was killed Saturday in a three-car accident the Pennsylvania Turnpike six miles west of the Butler Valley Interchange near Pittsburgh. Vikentije Coloka. 30, of Eemdate, and Floreka Guzba, 20, of Detroit, 1 car as he was Free Standing Lights View ot'61 Imperial Old Carolina Coins Rarely Seen Today DETROIT (API—The automakers today began to teveal officially bits and pieces about their 1961 models. . . it it ir C. E. Briggs .general manager of Chrysler and Imperial division, confirmed the.-new Imperial will have free standing headlights, such as were used on the expensive cars of the 1920's and early 1930’s. The double lamps are completely separate from the grille. They are mounted on a pedestal which- rises ln front of the fender. Briggs said his 1967 models will go on sale late next month. He' forecast a model year sale of 24.000 to 26,000 units compared with about 18,575 during the current model year was struck by walking along a rural road nearl Bitelytn Newaygo County. • David Russell Brenner, 13, of! [rural Rockford, was killed Satur-j j He leaves his wife Sally, who is day when he fell from his father’s' a daughter of .Lapeer Police Chief | tractor and.,was run over at a road Matthew Dougherty, and an infant intersection in Kent County. [son, James Jeffrey and his par- Drownings: • : ents Mr. and Mrs. Marice E. _ ^ . . (Scrimger of Lapeer. . Gary Svafya, 14, of Royal Oak. John Haltinnr Jr.. 22, . «,ldl.rl ■» »«■»«*» 1 CHARLOTTE, N. C. — Probably home on leave from Fort Knox, (the most industrious of the private Ky-. was killed Sunday at a Ches-; coiners who established mints in'aPeake ®nd Ohio Railway crossing America were Christopher Becht-jin Fowlervllle. He apparently ler, who came to this country from felted to hear or see the train and Germany in 1830 with his family,drovf into the path of the engine, in Rutherfordton, N. C. [He was the adopted son of Tom There was a shortage of coins, Kane of Fowlervllle. [so Bechtler and his son August Alcantra, 21. of San An- began to coin native goldt Their toni*. T*x-. 8 migranj cherry pick- j [first coins. $2.50 and $5 pieces. ap-[er- d*cd Sunday when tW car he peered in 1831. They added dollars)wa* driving went out of control on in 1832. iM22 *outh of Elberta in Northwest-! Their coins. 20-karat fine or bet- *rn Michigan The car rolled over! ter, circulated in the Southeast for “"d Pinned Alcantra under the j many years,- receiving the itamejwr*c*ta6*- Benzie county sheriff [consideration as Government-mint- I Rublic sals cd coins. Few have escaped thej >how11trio^?ni melting pot; today they are ex- au*u»i '», i*oo *i'ooi rontuc suT* trcmfly. scared." | dent near St. Thomas, Ont. Their SEE US FIRST for V«nS CwUssIs-lwIJitsA • luturtn**' ^ Isvulnuils DAWSON T BUTTERFIELD E, J. (tenon. Joha lltt N. S»*ln* ------(-fl S-70S5 COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE Ftr Ltis Money Ni Membership Fits M. E/ Daniels Vsra M. Daniels Tims Saniela Insurattre Agency SS3 W. Him Street ft 3-7111 67 Reasons Why it would havo paid you to answer our ad a few months.ago W-A Msssaga from U.S. NIWS A WORLD RIPORT tei A few months ago, wra published a newspaper ad inviting readers to accept a trial subscription to U. 8. NEWS A WORLD REPORT, on a money-back guarantee. We don’t have room here even to begin to summarise the hundreds of pages of "useful news” you missed by not subscribing at that time. But here, at least, are 67 examples of'the way V. S. NEWS A WORLD REPORT has enriched the thinking, the planning, and the. conversation of fta 1,160,000 readers jihee then ... 67 of the exclusive re- -ports, analyses, and interviews that have given our readers a valuable "inside” look at the important trends and developments of our time. v , 1. Changes to Expect If Kennedy Wins in November 2. Business Outlook — After Elections and Early tl 3. What Experts Say about Investing in Today’s Market 4. Nixea as President: Changes He Would Make ‘ 6. How Electkm Results Can Affect Business 6. What Khrushchev Is Up To New 7. The Young Men in Kennedy’s "Brain Trust” 8. Stock vs. Bond Yields: Hew They New Compere 9. What the tl Can WiD Be Like 19. Big Cities la Trouble — What Caa Be Dene? 11. What Next is Cuba — and the Choices Facing 17A 12. The Money Congress Spends on Itself 13. State Mediciae: British Views After 11 Years 14. Higher Incomes: A Real Prop for Business 15. Red Cold War Tactics: New Change After Election? 16. The Cost of Living la the Moaths Ahead 17. WiU the South Decide the ft Election? 18. Republic an Strategy: How Nixon Plans te Win 19. UJS. vs. Russia — New Look at the Balance of Power 29. Nixon and Kennedy: Where They Stand on Key Issues 21. UJS. Spending Trend: Leas for Defense, More fqr Welfare 22. Congress’* New "Little Lews” That May Affect You 23. Stock Options Come Under Fire . 24i If You’re Planning to Borrow Money — 25. Now - New Pressure to Test A-Weupbns 26. What’s Behind Student Violence Around the World 27. Oil Industry: Where “Too Much” Is a Problem 28. "Eye Witness to Chaos” — Report from Congo 29. What Congress Did about Pensions for Self-Employed 29. Iiidustry by Industry — What Expert* See Ahead 21. Who’s Helped, Who’s Hurt by Canada's Declining Dollar 22. UA Farm Problem — Caa This New Approach Solve HI 23. Now in Sight... the Moot Terrible Bomb of All 24. The "Catholic Voto” — a Kennedy Staff Analysis 25. For Men in High Office: A Clearer Code of Ethics? 36. "Liberals” or “Moderates” — Who Raae'UJS. Nest Year? 37. Radiation Hazards — Some Recent Discoveries 38. Where the Big Investors Are Putting Their Money 39. le This a Good Time to Bay a House? 49. Tax Havens Abroad for UA Business 41. A Look at Top Executives’ Take-Home Pay As the Strike Season Approaches ... 43. A Negro’s Life in Russia: African Student's protest 44. ”Tho U-2 Mnst Fly Again” - Dangers UA Now Fscso 43. Where Unemployment Still Is a Worry 46. As Labor Unions Sise Up the Candidates ... 47. Soviet Aid: Iraq Learns the Hard Way - 48. New ”Wet War” — Russian Spying at Sea 49. Florida Boom: lo it Losing Steam? 56. Turkey — What Happens When Army Runs a Country . 51. WJtot .tf Eat to Ijive Longer 52. Hew College Coots An Going Up * r M. UJS. Buying Power - At a Record High 54. What to Do with Your Savinga New' 53. Cities Where Business Is Beet 56. Next Year’s Congress, a "Spending” Congress ... 57. Planning Your Future: Advice from Top Economists 56. Lunchroom Integration: Battle Negroes An Winning 59. Haw UR. Missile Strength Compares with Russia's 66. PraMeau Awaiting the Next President 61. Hew to Have Prosperity Without Inflation 62. Behind the Rioting in Japan ... 6A What’s Good, What’s Bad about Our Public Schools 64. New Rales on Getting a Veteran’s Pension 65. As Fiscal Yoar Ends ... Now Look at Federal Budget 66. New Weapons: Radical Changes la Onr Defease 67. How to Win the Election: Both Parties Map Strategies This listing gives yon just an inkling of what you can get from'the magazine that brings you more newu than you can gat in any other news publication - plus the “extras” which make it the moat quoted, most useful news m|g«^ne. / Every week U.S. NEWS 6 WORLD REPORT brings you newt you eon woe, newt you didn't know and can’t get elsewhere. The editors not only report the newt "hqMnd” significant happenings. They go further and seek to answer tko questions raised in your mind: “What dost this newt mean te rtf My workt My family! Where it it leadingT Yon get almost tseico as many pages of news as in ether news magazines. Five complete newsletters. Exclusive interviews with impoytint newsmakers. Special reports baaed on weeks and months of study by ex'perte. Historic speeches and press conferences reported in fuff. A swift-reeding run- • down of current trends in politics, foreign affaire, wages, prices, labor, science. • WHY NOT FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF how valuable U.S. NEWS * WORLD REPORT can bo to you in the crucial months ahead? To give you the opportunity to do so we are again making a special introductory offer. Take advantage of it now, by filling out and mailing the coupon! M 26 Weekly Issues fer *2!Z ! SIND NO MONEY-JUST MAIL COUPON UoSe News & World 1366-86 24th St„ N.W. Washington 7, D.C. 1 went to find out whether year mag sains can boas useful as you say. Plsass tend it each wssk fer the next 86 weeks. You may und ms • bill later for the trial subscription price ef *2.«T (a substantial saving).' It is understood that my 88-67 will bs refunded in full at any time during this trial subscription if I find the magazine dost not folly live up to my expeo- "O.K." TRUCK SPECIALS • paint. Low mlle- Royal ’SI CHIVY H Ton Panel .. • Cylinder 4-speed transml Tire* like bow. Crown b| tlmab. ‘M CHIVY I Ton Stole v... 11.095 VI Hydramatie. Titled to Chev-rolel Motor {Me. Heater and signal!. Solid Green paint. 'll FORD tfc Ton Panel ......I 2N ■ VI -m Heater and llgnale. Men Green paint. I Yard box. Hydramatie. Red a Matthews- Hargreaves OAKLAND COUNTY’S LARGEST CHEVY DEALER 631 OAKLAND AVE. -___FB 4-4547_ 17 CHET CONVERT KXC.OOKD. v-8, ltd., tram.. RAH. Call FE 2-822f. NORTH HAS M 1960 COMPANY CHEVYS 2-Doori 4-Doon Hardtopa and Wagoai Demo. Ha. S (or $1695 North Chev. 1954 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR. RADIO A HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Asiume payment of $1.65 per mo. call Credit Mgr. Mr. Part* at iti 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford. '55 CHEV. STICK 8 This la a Belalr. no mat. perfect engine. Full price 1695. No cash needed. Only $37 per month. No payments till Sept. 15._ life Auto Mr. Bell FE 0-4539 190 I. BLVD. AT AUBUKN MS DOOR. FOWER- gllde, like new. FB 5-3458. 1953 CHEVY DELUXE 2-DOOR. Bargain Nice car. FE 9-7142. H. Riggins,_______________________________ FOR SALE 1950. 1 TON FORD jplek-up. 4 speed transmission. good conditiqh. $600. MU 4-4817. •53r~FORD. PICK-UP, EXCELLENT RAH. EM 3-0081. S. Conway. 1154 OMC 1 TON WRECKER ASH-ton wench. MM. Joe Male's Serv-lce EM :MBTr •52 OMC Vi TON PICKUP. GOOD running COM. MY 3-5121. 774 Sumet Drive. Lake Orion. 1141 OMC CAB AND CHASSIS. good tiros, roaaonable. FE 5-7I4S. 5 ION MACK 12 YARD DUMP SOX. EM 3-4S70. SCHRAM TRUCKS AND EQUIPMENT 2539 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-120P[ * Auto Insurance 104 AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE $8.26. Brown’s Agency. EM 3-6358. “ CLEAN RECORD ' P L., P.D. AND MED. FOR MOST CARS 120 FOR 0 MONTHS FB’ 4-3530 Evea, FE 2-4353 Foreign and Spt. Cars 105 VALIANT See It At CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES I Main 9t.. Clarkston MA 5-5141 I Out where the tprerbaed la low. I THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST> 1960 For Sale Cars By Frank Adams I HASKINS DEMO SALE IMS ChevVolet Impels 2-door. baidtlW. V-g engine. powergUde. radio, heater. wbRSWU tlrei. Beautiful solid white flaleh. HASKINS CHEVROLET gtM Dixie Hwy, at M-ll. Clarketon MAPI. 5-5071 Open Nltea ’tU • 90 CHEVY 4 DOOR HARDTOP. Economy I. Radio and Heater, PowergUde. Wat 1799 - NOW 65M - Eddie Steele. I7M Orchard Lake Rd FE 2-2529______________ 1955 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR. RADIO A HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO . MONEY DOWN. Assume payment ot $22.32 per mo CaU Cr—•'• Turner Ford t MI 4-7500. Harold .. CHEVROLET IMPALA CON votttMo. ' trans. P ring. Power _____________ eater. 11,000 106 ISM LINCOLN 4-DR SEDAN. FULL newer. 4MM mile car. Immaculate cendlttea HIM. For Sals Cars 106 For Sole Cara 'AS PLYMOUTH • PARS. SPORT SCR 195 DM . $46 07 FBI MO. BRAID REPOSSESSION 1656 Oldsmobile. 2 doer, beautiful •liver end white finish. Pull price BOB FROST. INC. | UNCOLN-MERCURT f needed. RUM Mr. Bing. FE 4-1096 ______ MI 6-2200 Lucky Auto Sales, IBs Saginaw. 50 LINCOLN PREMIERE COUPE. PLYMOUTH 1957 RID CONVERT- no nut. Davlsburg. ME 7-4UI. Ible. Sharp. 11,095. ■52 mercury 4-door, stand- Clarkson Motor Sales urd Irani, Radio and heater. $195. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER J | Mala St„ Clartston T MA M14I MOTOR SALKS 232_S SAGINAW_______PE MI31 •54 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE -Automatla transmission. Radio and heater. Power ateerlng. Very clean. Low mileage. — MS trade la — MM. BOB FROST. INC H UNCOLN-MERCURT | 1954 MERCURY 2-DOOR SEDAN j with Merc-O-Metlc transmission. | Beautiful wbRe and green finish, ■ A nice ear throughout, stack No. 1421-B. $695 NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 10M 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM MI <-2735 ‘17 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE^ excellent condition. MY 3-4081- wtr OVERDRIVE ONE OWNER! 60-Day 100% Guarantee $1195 YOU OLD CAR DOWN lack Col© Inc. dlttonj' OR *Wh '•m pontiac canan-AR.' 4 DR. H/T. R list I-MM. Sfanager. King Auto Salat 111 8. Saginaw ■59 PONTIAC S.C. POLL PWR. rote color, 913 Boston. FB 5-5842 FACTORY BRANCH *58 PONTIAC MOTOR SALES ,-------- CASS AT PIKE ST. FI 2-6168 REPOSSESSION omii ™ i<®*shasa: . - • ■ - ■ • -- No cuh needed. First piyaent REPOSSESSION dua Bawltinber nth. R& Mr. r.Arv?r, s: tember isth Ring Mr. Bing, FE hardtop, sharp. Make offer 8401 4-10M Lucky Auto Sties. 1*3 8. «!»». Dr . Drayton Plains. OR Saginaw: ■ J 3-58 E Radio * price. 117 per mo. call Mr. White Credit Manager . King Auto Sales • 115 8. Saginaw Clean-up Sale | I960 Pontiac Demos [ > 4-Dr hardtop. Hydnaat-i INI PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR RADIO A HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payment of I17.M per mo. Cull Credit Mgr. Mr. Parka at MI 4-7800. Harold Turner Ford. 1957 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 2- I door hardtop. Automatic tranimia-tlon. v-8 engine, power steering, power brakes, easy eye glass. 2-tone finish. 24,000 actual miles. 1. oWhr. Immaculate. Stock No. \ 1800 Only 11005 NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 A WOODWARD ■ BIRMINGHAM. ’59 PONTIAC SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. t 4-172119i2 s Woodward BOB FROST, INC. UNOOUMOnCOM ________MI 6-2300_____ 1950 CHXVROUtT 2-BR- EEL-AIM One owner. EM 3-0115. 1M7 CHEVROLET DO 3-DOOR BE-dan. 6 cylinder engine. Power* gHde, —m «4-<*h ‘55 CHEW 2-DR- > REPOSSESSION 1291 full price. No each needed. Pay only 117 mo. Due Sept. 15. RUe Auto. Mr. Bell FB S-4539 109 E. BLVD. AT AUBUtM 1949 RED CONVERT.. NO'TOP. 8180.MA 4-1104________ _____Only MM. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 10M 8 WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-2736. 'SYCHEVIB 2jDOpR.j WILL TRADE glide, rSBPBS Dorris Rond.________________________ 55 CHEW BEL AIR. EXCEL- I ' condition. Fries |Mi. PE | For Sale Caps 106 ~~ '69 FORD 4 dr. R I I Full powef. 5.000 actual miles. Priced far below dealers cost. Low at IM dn. SCHUTZ For .Sale Cars ’54 FORD 3 DOOR $395 Starchlef 4-Dr. hardtop. Hydramat-k Power steering. Power brakes. | Radio, heater, white walls, sierra Starchlef 4-Dr. hardtop.. Shell tone Hydramatie. I Cataiina Sports , Radio. Heatei | mond grey. Wtutewnlla. Rich- I FORD CUSTOM. STANDARD blit. V-8. good condition. 9485. ’ karris, ft 1-2700._________________ 4-2271. I HASKINS DEMO. SALE 1957 CHEVROLET BEL AIR CON-vertlble. V-8 engine. PowergUde. White with red trim. Stock No. 1827. Priced Ut $1279. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRM1NOHAM. MI 4-2730.___________________ REPOSSESSION n$0 Chevrolet, 2 door, beautiful emerald green finish. 1595 full price Only $32 month. No cash needed. First payment due September lith. Ring Mr. Bing: FE 4-1000 Lucky Auto Sales, 103 8. , Saginaw, II PORDs CROWN £ ___RADIO Exc. condition. $11 -) down payment. Credit Manager, ’59 T-BIRD Solid lee Box White. Pull power ----1 actual miles. Spare never You wouldn’t rind many Gy Owens uattpt ’ 130 OAKLAND AVENUE XJL Ui 1 *57 PLYMOUTH CONVERTIBLE $895 'Cy' Owens 030 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 1-4101 | 1957 PLYMOUTH 3-DOOR SEDAN! & IMS FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 9 passenger wagon. Ford-O-Matlc, power steering, sberwood green with simulated wood - paneling. mi 4 ’ll FORD. 2 DR. REPOSSESSION till full prlc*. No cash needed . Pay only 111 mo. Due Sept. II. Rite Auto. Mr. Bell. PE 8-4538 109 E. Bivd. S. ut Auburn_ 1957 FORD 2 DR EXCELLENT condition, 1750. OR 3-2713. « CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE. •8. PB, PowergUde. RAH. FE 140 Corvnlr 4-door- sedan. i-wergUde. radio, heater. White-all tires, deluxe equipment, imfort and convenience group, sautlful red and Ivory finish. MOTORS INC. 913 S. Woodward B’wm Ml 0-7479 ->0 *■*”» HASKINS 1959 AUSTIN MEALY SPRITE Roadster. Exc. eond. White, red upholstery. $1450. FI 5-1221. ANDY C8IKT OARAGE SPECIAL-1st on domestic and foreign, can. PE 4-60U1. 772 Baldwin Avenue, Pontiac. .______________. 19*4 'JAGUAR. EXCELLENT CON- CHEVROLET 1960 Austin healy sprite. . „ „ . « 19 000 miles PE 4-3319 1*751 Dixie Hwy. at M-ll. Clarketon —--------’STlLOTD----'---- MAple 5-5071 Open Nltes ’til 9 Model 900. 3-dr., radio and ! tone light blue and white. I ONLY $W5 I YanCamp Chevrolet. Inc. Milford____________MU 4-823$ SPORTS CARS NEW AND USED HEALY, MO. 8PR1TE ’61 Volkswagen FACTORY BRANCH itic tranamlssion. $1495 SsswiomAe- ’56 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR 4 DR. SEDAN. V-8. Poe ergllde trans Radio and heatei w-waiis. beautiful Two Tone! N< a mark In or out I $945 Crissman ■Dodge Dart $47.43 PER MONTH DELIVERED John J. Smith SCHUTZ | WILSON ’ll FORD. RADIO AND HEATER, exc. condition with no money i°oW%!l Mr'inSto CrAM-KlnV^AtR? Bafe” II* »• Baitoaw —Ford dealer— A-l Used Car Shopping Center '55 FORD 2 DOOR $595 'Cy' Owens 630 OAKLAND AVXNT7K fi a ““ PONTIAC-CADILLAC .CLEAN Birmingham Trades . 1350 N. Woodward PONTIAC; CLARKSTON M-ll one mile north of U.8. 10 Open Evee Until I ____MAple 5-5500__ 1050 MERCURY MONTCLAIR. 4 Dr Fully equipped with power steering A power brakes. 12115. j BOB FROST. INC | UNCOLN-MERCURY ____Ml 8-2200 ‘17 OLDS CONVERTIBLE VERY clean. Wllljrade. FE 5^0120. BY OWNER 1M0 OLDS 08 HOLI-day sedan, like new Complete power A equipment. 83.150. Phone FE 4-3501^or FE JL4583 or see SPECIAlT: 58 Olds 81 Holidi ■58 PONTIAC CATALINA CONV. i — —iring and brakes. RAH ___ 61850. FE 2-7966._| PONTIAC WAOON, 8390 OR ' take over payments. FE 4-4941. REPOSSESSION 1955 Pontiac. 2 door., No„cash needed. Beautiful blstk finish | $245 full price. Only $17 a month. | First payment, due September 15. | I960 Ring Mr Blog. FE 4-1100. I Lucity Auto Sales, 193 8, Saginaw. ’59-rPONTIAC TRI-POWER CATA-Ilna eonvartlble FE 2-5302. 1953 PONTIAC HARDTOP. RADIO A HEATER. HYDRAMATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of *}* 08 per mo. Cell Credit Mgr Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold ffurner Ford, j NEW PONTIAC8 AT TREMEN- i dous discount. Do not fall to see us before you buy — “"tom_bohr. inc. I Kcego Sales & Service 120 8 Main. Milford, MU 4-1715 Keego Harbor____ USED CABS, too TO 1500. NO ’60 PONTIAC, 2 DR. HARDTOP. MONET DOWN QUEEN AUTO Ventura, blue, power ateerlng I SALES 17) 8 SAOINAW. I and brakes S2.S75 or beat otter i ■ 1 ...1,1 ........ I 3811 HUUrett, Highland. Mich. White Lake. '59 PONTIAC. BONNEVILLE. CONV , | l owner, red. Loaded, nice. Bud Gorman. 3300 Elisabeth Lk. Bd I 1055 PONTIAC 2 DR. HARDTOP, j viuia. rbi. ina wubqvwb. $1995 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 3-7954 65 MT CLEMENS 8T BEHIND THE POST OFFICE BILL SPENCE "RAMBLER” WILL ACCEPT . Can be handled i 11495 Power brakes. Only , HARDENBURO MOTOR SALES Corner Casa and Pike FE 5-7311 Open Evee. ’til 9 '56 PLYM . 2-DR REPOSSESSION 1615 lull price. No cash neede Pay only $37 mo Due Sept. 1 Rite Auto (Mr. Belli FE 8-40: 108 B, BLVD AT AUBURN REPOSSESSION 1958 Plymouth hardtop, V-8. malic, beautiful white finish, run i price $995 No cash needed. First payment due September 15th. Ring Mr. Bing FE 4-1006: Lucky Auto Selea, 113 S Saginaw 1917 PLYMOUTH STATION WAOON nmaiitlful hlarlr an4 uhlfp svr.pl. auto- offer. 8ee BIRM1NOHAM '52 VICTORIA. MUST S MI 4-1930 $29.75 per TARB I ^Rochester OL1V791] DEMONSTRATION RIDE in, me new Vespa 400 economy H&KLBBB SALES A SERVICE Y128 B. Telegraph FE 8-3414 vajStte, ford Step delve with deep trim box. 415 I. Frank St.. Birmingham. Around I .torner Irom yurner Ford Sales. For Sale Cart 106 RETAIL STORE; SCHUTZ LAROB-BBLECTION OF STATION 1M> CHEVY DELUXE. 3-DOOR, •wagoag. All makes and models Jer» nice ear. FE 1-1142. H. -{Ml to IMS. M w* at MM. Ki|«ins.__________________ BOB FROST, INC I960 CHEVROLET I UNCOLN-MERCURY Impels convertible, full power, | Ml 6-2300 All and PM radio. Exy Bye glaaa I ----———---------- —- the extras. Official’s — $2995 'Convertible Specials: '3# Chrysler > power. ’it Che vie. radio A heater. ’SPFerd. -ALL OTHER PRICE8 CUT. ECONOMY CARS, 22 AUBPR1 REPOSSESSION NORTH CHEVROLET 1000 8. Woodward Ay* Birmingham _______MI 4-2731 ____ ’57 CHEVROLET lAuto .Sales. 193 S. Saginaw. I 1983 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, BEST) «Sffer takes. FB t-8014, WWIOK SPECIAL « DR . NT •RAH, dyne White walls. A-l shape FB 2-4004. ________ SfB'Ol&E « DR . RADIO A HEAT-*«r Auio trans No money dn. I1 iR8. . • kuio m neater, ji.wu ac September 15th. Miles Spotless In ft Ou a L1!?*’ Vu*9 MUST BE SEEN TO APPREt $1095 Crissman ROCHESTER. 912 S. Woodward E'haa MI 0,7478_________.___JO 0-8728 ■m fordIoalaxie victoria hardtop. Call after 4:10 p.m. MA 5-2451 Weldon Rd.. Clarkston '14 FORD STATION WAOON. I passenger Radio and heater. Exc condition With no money down 1295 full price. $14 per mo. Call Mr. White Credit Man- Klng^Auto Sales__111 B Saginaw GAR PAYMENTS TOO BURDEN-some? Come In and see ua and let ua help you adjust to a lees expensive ear. DON’S USED CARS $77 M24 Lake Orion. MV 2-2941______- JOE’S CARS. FE qpeN EVES. ’TIL 9 OL 2-1721 ’60 FORD 2 DOOR $1695 1157 FORD V-l. 3-DOOR^ RADIO ft HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payment of $29 75 per mo Cell Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner, Ford. ________ •80 FORD ST A. WAOON. 4-DOOR. V-S, 1095. Dealer OA 1-2782. ‘87 FORb 6. FORDOMATIC RAH, W.W. Real sharp! Call Joe's Cars. , PE 3-7931._______ ___________ 1953 FORD. 2-DOOR. RAH, IN good condition. EM 3-4310.___ 1950'FORD IUNCR WAOQN, RADIO A HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 128.76 per mo. Call Credit Mgr.. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7100. Harold Turner Ford. WARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI j '60 FORD ’58 FORD FAIRLANE REPOSSESSION $408 Pull Price No each needed. Pay only 137 a mo. _DUe_Jept. MONEY DOWN. Assume payment of 1503 per mo. Call Credit Mgr Mr. Park* at Mi 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford. FORD FAIRLANE g. AUTO-matte trans. Original factory Buckskin Tan paint. Was MM -HOW MM. Eddie Steal#, 27M Or-chard Lake Rd. FE 2-2828, 1957 FORD FAIRLANE ”500” TU-dor sedan. V4 engine. Ford-O-Matic, radio, haaMr. whitewall tlras. power brakes. Stack No. 1338-B. Only 5908. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S.’WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-2735. •jo FORD PAitRLANE 2-DOOR. 4 new tires. Call PE 4-1201. STATION WAGON 1850 OMC Suburban station war on. V-S. Hydramatie. power brakes. SIM. Wlgg’s, 24 W. Huron — FE 4-1234. FORD 2-DOOR. 1958 CHEVROLET ___y 2-door sedan. I PowergUde. radio, hei walls. Turquoise finish 4<:0:ess $1095 exceptionally godd care. Will be! .glad to demonstrate this one. -^L,’. ADTO ^235.1 XORTH CHEVROLET ’$» BUICK ROADMA8TER. 1450. •1573 CoUler. USt BUICK RIVIERA 4-DOOR hardtop Blue and white finish. Come in and ask for stock No. 1442. Only $1015 NORTH CHEV pLET CO. 1000 3. WOODWART 1000 S_ Woodward A 'Cy' Owens *20 OAKLAND AVENUE ___PI 8-4101 lllg FORD PAIR LANE 4-DOOR 8E- Only MM. NORTH CHEVROLET 5?eL1 BIRMINGHAM. MI 44 ARP •272$. Rlrst payment due September 1! Rmg Mr. Bing. PE 4-1000. LUO Auto Bales, 193 g. Saginaw, HARDTOP. RADIO ft DYNAFLOW. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. A»-Mjme payments of 117.09 per mo. an Credit Mgr Mr. Parks at MI 4r7500. Harold Turner Ford. •58’*BU1CK 2 DOOR HARDTOP. ggaflow^ ^RlrH^^whltewalls, very ItmkmcK. kj.. vbrt clean. excellent. 7011 Cooley Lake Rd. A CenWay-^^m NO CASH NEEDED ie Sept*ml FE 4-1006 % PONTIAC m AUTO • BROKERS •PflfS CARS. BOLD * CONSTONID" 12*9 Parry at Madison -PE 4-01M 60 PONTIAC GftTAUNA 4~iDR. II Bulek special 4 dr. Hardtop. Dodge Dart |$197S Includes frix radio And all eiandmd factory equipment. Bale* tax and license extra, RAMMLER-PALLAS REPOSSESSION 1156 Chevrolet convertible. V I. automatic. Pull price MM. Only (Baft needed. Plrr* . —- ig. pt III II lUilmn BP ’85 CHEVY. I OWNER. OOOD condition. 3 door, power glide, radio, heater. 1498. OR 3-02M BOB FROST, INC. UNCOLN-MERCURY ____Ml 6-2200 HASKINS DEMO SALE ’ 1160 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-door —■an with V-S engine. Power-le. power steering, radio, heat-whltewalle. Beautiful tur- ______ DR. SEDAN. < CYL. Automatic trsnsmlsslOn. Heater. 3,700 actual miles. HIM. BOB FROST. INC. LINCOLN-MSRCURY MI 4-2200 it53 FORD RANCH WAOON. RADIO A HEATER, V-S. ABSOLUTELY NO/MONET DOWN. Assume payments of 112*7 per mo. Call Credit Msr Mr. Perks at MI 4-7500 HaroMTumer Ford. Was 1999 - No* c " “IS - Eddlo I FE 54177 lots* finish. Bevel HASKINS CHEVROLET VNEED A FINANCE-FIXER? Order Classified good job. FE 2-8181' is the Wont Ad nftmber! Best Buys "Better Deals" ’60 CORVAIR ....$1695 ^CHEVROLET $1575 ’57 CHEVROLET $995 ’56 FORD WAGON $ 795 '55 CHEVROLET; $ 595 ’55 PONTIAC ’....$ 495 ’54 CHEVROLET $295 ’53 CHEVROLET $ 951 OVER M OTHER CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 4278 DIXIE HWY. I DRAYTON PLAINS LLOYD 232 8__SAGINAW FE 2-9131 FORD STATION WAOQN. 1154 Country Squire. I cylinder, fordo-rnaUc. RAH. Ills. 1470 wise $2075 PLUS SALES TAX j LARRY •; JEROME —ROCHESTER FORD DEALER - , -FOR MORE THAN 35 YEARS--A OOOD PLACE TO BUY- 166 Main St., Rochester OL 1-9711 OPEN EVES. I rS9 LINCOLN PREMIERE, PULL power. Cloud silver. 18,000 Ml. car. 13495. _OLD8MOB1LE CLUB COUPE. RADIO A HEATER. HYDRAMAT-IC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Assume payments of 129.75 per mo. CM11 Credit Mgr. Mr Parks at Ml 4-7400. Harold Turner Ford. ’17 OLDS 4*DOOR 88 LIKE NEW condition. Was 81.405 - Now priced for quick sale at 11.388. Eddie Steele. 2705 Orchard Lake Rd. FB 2-2520_ 1 HASKINS DEMO SALE :,n*Ai other accessories.; HASKINS | CHEVROLET | LARKS terrific deal* now | FACTORY BRANCH ^65 PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR Radio and hcator, auto- , M FORD CONVERTIBLE. BEAU-tiful snow shoe white offset with black nylon top. was 11000. -Priced ~----- ■“ PLEATED interior. 6 CYLINDER WITH OVERDRIVE. RADIO ft HEATER RECLINING SEATS. WHITEWALL TIRES 2,800 MILES. DEMONSTRATOR DISCOUNT! | Suburban ! OLDS-LARK 592 S. Woodward. B’ham MI 4-4485 Superior Auto Sales 550 OAKLAND AVE A CHOICE OF 50 CARS. NO i FAIR REFUSED. NO MONEY ! DOWN, NECE88ARV_ \ Weekly Special '56 Ford V8 j CUSTOMLINE 4-DR. I $595 AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO. HEATER RUNg NICE AND GUARANTEED HOUGHTEN & SON 1 IS N Math. Rochester OL 1-8761 1I*0P O NT I A C CONVERriBLE Pali power. Solid white ... 13988 IMS Butck 3 Dr. Invieta hardtop. Full power ......... 12295 till Pontiac 3 Dr. sedan. Hydra-matte. Radio ft boater ... 11495 1154 Chevrolet 2 Dr. sedan ... t III IMS Bulek 2 Dr. sedan. Red ft white ............... I Ml 1187 Dodge 2 Dr. hardtop. B*d ft white. Automatic transipls- ^ ISM Studebaker Lark 4 Dr. |UM IMS BUlek LeSabre 3 Dr. Hard- JEROME BRIGHT SPOT ’59 PLYMOUTH 4 DR. SEDAN. LOW MILEAOE 1 REAL NICE AND CLEAN! $AVE '58 CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERTIBLE. BLACK WITH WHITE TOP PULL POWER ! REAL SHARP AUTO! . $AVE $2095 Ipontiac RETAIL STORE1 FE 3-7954 68 MT CLEMENS ST 1EHIND THE POST OFFICE "DEMOS" 1960 Pontiac Bonneville j CONVERTIBLE power tteerlni ft brakes, new ear warranty, ! 11.000 discount. 1960 Ambassador STATION WAOON, power steering ft brakes, new ear warranty, 11.000 discount. Russ Johnson 1 . Motor Sales | LAKE ORION . MY 2-2871 MY 2-23811 OK USfeD CARS TAYLOR'S CHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE Open Evenings MArfcet 4-4&01_Wallfd Lake Dodge Dart $47.43 PER MONTH DELIVERED ALL STANDARD FACTORY. EQUIPMENT PLUS HEATER. FEDEHAL TAX. 8ALE8 TAX. LICENSE. TITLE, AND CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE. John J. Smith OLIVER -BUICK WANTS YOUR DEAL WHY? BECAUSE WE WOULD LIKE T HAVE YOU FOR A CUSTOMEI WHY? ^m°MakebUmir°an r at 330 Oak. Roches- I OL 2-2727. IS BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, •ham and loaded. Si 995 J C ! Harden. 42 Oakland. FE 4-0405 or i FE 8-0110. ________ 960 PONTIAC, OOLD AND WHITE, radio and heater, hydramatie. , white walls, power steering and brakes, dual speed »4pers^ $al-t- I other extras, |2.495.Cra 5-1947 | 1955 PONTIAC 2 DOOR REPOSSESSION $295 Pull price. No cash needed, i Pay only $17 mo Due Sept. IS. Rite Auto, Mr. Bell FE 5-4539 ____109 E. Blvd. at Auburn_ j 1957 PONTIAC STARCHIEF. W'w” PS. P.B., low mileage. Extra clean. $1375. Call OR 3-1100. ! 5049 Dwight, near Pontiac Air- ! Dodge Dart $47.43 PER MONTH - DELIVERED ALL STANDARD FACTORY EQUIPMENT PLUS HEATER. PEDERAL TAX. SALES TAX, LICENSE TITLE, AND CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE. John J. Smith DODGE, INC. 211 S SAOINAW_FE 3-7055 *58 RAMBLER Custom 4 dr. This black beauty with a red top. one of the nicest cars! Tf vou have 1M0 or any old :ar. 140 per month. Call Schttts. SCHUTZ IlSr srai >-.'*453. 100 E BLVD. AT AUBURN 0 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON- j XMmionaf5yW*c!ean!*nRea» , ' FE 1 Ramblers Ramblers Prices slashed discount. AH ‘*VR&C RAMBLER ___ Super Market COMMERCE RD STATION W ___ _____ RftH. ReesoL PE $-0233 ______ REPOSSESSION 1055 8tudebaker. V-8. itic* cash needed First payment September IS. 1M0 Ring Bing PE 4-1008. Lucky Auto 183 S. 8nglnaw__ 1*48 STUDEY CONVERT. ruet. quite good, *M. MV 3-1611 1958 8TUDEBAKER 4 DR. SEDAN. Economy apecial! 87M NO WELL. WE FEEL THAT WE CAN BEST HANDLE YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEED8, BOTH 8ALES A SERVICE TO YOUR COMPLETE SATISFACTION — ASK YOUR NEIOHBOR, AND THEN YOU WILL UNDERSTAND WHY WE HAVE BEEN TOUR $1295 4 BUICK 2-DR WITH D-PLOW -| —AI. SHARPIE! $995 VROLET 2-DR. WIT AOE. MANY EXTR $895 CK CONVERTIBLE, Ut! $995 VMOUTH CONVERT., CUS- , $1495 1959 Plymouth 1 '55 CHEVROLET STATION WAOON 8TEERINO AND BRAKES. LIKE NEW IS THE ONLY DESCRIPTION ON THIS 8. BUICK DEMO’S ’58 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE WITH FULL PWR BLUB WITH WHITE TOP. ONE OWNER! REAL CLEAN IN A OUT $2895 ’56 MERCURY $895 '55 OLDSMOBILE 4 DOOR HOLIDAY ’’M" WITH FULL POWER. RADIO ft HEATER $895 HQMER HIGHT uKAiiuiN ruuwo t wATAnp Dixie. Used Car ... J19I9 «« JEROME I BRIGHT SPOT CASJ5 AT J ORCHARD LAKE AVE. $1995 Suburban I OLDSMOBILE j 592 S. Wodward, B'ham MI 4-4485 . SHEP'S | MOTOR SALES '57 FORD 4-Door Hardtop .. With Power. ’57 CHEVY Wegon 4-Doar 8 *51 CHIVY B-AIr 4-Door PowergUde. ‘11 FORD F-Lane 2-DOor 5. Save 1960 POXTIAC $2995 , I960 DART.............$2495- Ploneer 4-Door Wagon. Standard transmission, a cylinders, radio and heater. - Her# la real 1957 BUICK ....$1395 2-Door Hardtop. Dynaflow. radio. heater and whitewall tlrei. 1957 CHEVY ...$1495 1956 DE SOTO $ 695 2-Door ^ H a r d t o^p. ^Automatic 1957 CHEVY ...$1095 4-Door Sedan with PowergUde. Radio and heater. Clean as low miles. 1959 FORD .....$2195 Oalaxle 2-Door ^Hardtop.^Poj»r Malic. V-8 engine and white- 1957 FORD...........$1095 Customline 2-Door Sedan. Lots 1959 POXTIAC $2595 nSlio^hetUr, power steering and brakes,^ whitewalls. Red 1959 CHEVY ...$1495 Biscayne 2-Door Sedan. Standard transmission. 6 cylinders, radio, ^heater and whitewall 1959 CHEVY ...$1895 Imp*la 2-Door Hardtop. Standard transmission. € cylinder, radio and htater. Red and white finish. Real sharp. 1957 MERCURY $1195 SHELTON POXTIAC - BUICK ROCHESTER Across from Xe\V 'Car Sales OL 1-8J33 - OPF.X TILL 9 P.M. OR LATER Closed Wednesday and Saturday at 6 P.M. .-•K-i-