th« Weather r*M. (ItaUlh r*|t S) ,imh YEAR PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. PlfiBRUARY 4. llHil —26 PAGES Her Candidate's a Shoo-In 1 Wj-i Largest Man-Made Satellite PRETTY TIRED - Both these woitls accurately describe Republican party worker SaUy Ihorn ot Detroit as she takes a minute out Irom hectic convention preparatibn to massage No Life Said to Be Aboard Giant Vehicle Improved, Multistage] Rocket Used, Soviet | Reports Claim ! From Our New* Wire* MOSCOW—Russia today jlauBctuid. a 7-ton Sputnik, a weary foot. She is one of many party workers largest mfo-imde-Satck^,. who spent most of Friday preparing a downtown +llte ever Bwtt into space, Detroit hotel for the convention. |Tass announced. The Soviet news agency! V' Galoshes and Gloom in Gotham Van Peursem Head State's GOP DETROIT - Oakland County's ielegatlon playing a key role, "icorge M. Van Peursem. former speaker of the Michigan House of Representatives, was assured elec- tion today as Republican state chairman. Just before the convention formally opened at H a.m. at Cobo Hail, an Oakland County (18th Con- gressional District) caucus voted Intosh averted what appeared cer- State GOP Neutral on Con-Con DETROIT » — The Michigan Republican convention today was advised neither to endorse or reject a proposal for a consUtutional convention that will go before the voters in the April 3 election In a surprising move, platform drafters put down attempts to submit a resolution supporting the proposal to rewrite the 5.3-year-old constitution. Despite part)’ endorsements at ' l»5M and I960 eonventions, the recommended platform plank at Tiida.V'’* meeting merely "anticl-pates" a favorable vole for the constitutional convention. The waleied-down stand was ar af>parent attempt to placate conservative and rural elements in the party who have strongly opposed any sweeping constitutional revision. The resolution urged Republicans to seek out strong candidates for a convention if the proposition carries in April. It also went on record for Republican support of “the basic soundness of our constitutional system" at a convention. * ♦ ♦ The proposed resolution touched off heated debate among the preconvention resolutions committee members. Nearly half wanted outright support of a constitutional convention. by about 90 per cent to support to Van Peursem. Oakland’s 149 vatet U the largest single bloc In the esn-vention. Then, the 14th congressional dis- congressman. Stiles is a Giand Rapids real estate man and m^-aged Paul D. Bagwell's campaign for governor in 1958. The decision by Stiles and Mc- that it was throwing its 78 Votes to Van Peursem. Robert J. Mclntoch said be and John R. Stiles. Van Peursem's principal opponents for the $21^000 a year job, then announced they had decided to withdraw from the race. Gordon E. (liable, Ypsilanti attorney, withdrew earlier. Meletosb told newsmen he and Htiles hind^ ttielr decision to withdraw In the Interest of pariy harmony. They said it was derided “over a cop of roffee" only an hour or so before the eonvention was scheduled to HH^esaor to red rhairmaii Lawrence R. Lindener. McIntosh is a former Port Huron Area Cage Picture Scrambled Around A topsy-turvy evening of high school basketball took place in Oakland County last niglit. ' * * ♦ St. Thedertck won its first parochial title in 19 yean by defeating St. Benedict 42-37, and I^RK tiac Northern moved within one game of clinching its second straight Inter’Akes championship by whipping Waterford, 75-52. Pontiac Central’s Saginaw Valley hopes ended as Flint Oantral ' Chiefs tt-48. lold Kennedy Friday Night Sputnik Shot Report Come to White House OS Intelligence Info WASHINGTON (APi - President Kennedy received a U. S. intelligence report in the middle of the night Friday night of the latest Soviet Sputnik launching. it * * "All I can say on that," said W h i t e House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger, "is that the President was informed last night that It appears the Russlanh have placed an object in space." He said the information from the Intelligence service was relayed to Kennedy by a staff member after the PrsWdent re-. turned to the White House from a movie. The Chief Executive had gone out to see the movie “Spartacus." which couldn’t be shown at the White House because it requires a Holly became the tone unbeaten team in jthe county by defeating Bloomfield HUls 7345. Highly ranked Femdale tost its first game to East Detroit 67-58. it ★ ♦ All the details are on pages 10-11 of today’s Press. jsaid the earth satellite wa kilograms ____________________ ^ lapproxiniately T4,m6 _ No mention was made of any animal, plant or other life being aboard. The annouiftcement used the term "Sputnik" to describe the object, not "space ship" as it did in prescribing t w o previous launchings. Sputnik is Russian for satellite. The heaviest object previously lifted into space was Spaceship II. launched Dec* 1 and weighing five tons. It burned out in re-entering the earth's atmosphere ! 'niC- Tass statement said tljei radio-controlling system installed to turn info a bitter floor fight. Their withdrawal dashed hopes of a few Oakland County delegates that the party mi^t look for a dark horse candidate. Waiting in the wings they had U.S. Center Has Data on Sputnik BEDFORD, Mass. (UPI) T» National Space Surveillance Control Center announced today It is “receiving information” on Russia’s latest Sputnik and has alerh ed its network of stations around the world to watch for Jt IHK)R ADVERTISEMENT — The heart of New York Qty's advertising district, Madison Avenue, was a poor advertisement for the city this morning as pedestrian.s took to the middle of the street to plow their way throjigh the heavy snow. There was little ar rhstsiai to fear from automobiles, which were, in large part, snowed in at home. It was the third knockout blow by the city’s worst winter in 80 years. Even Endorse Income Tax Blizzard KOI Dem& 5e/iin J Swainson New York City GRAND RAPIDS Uf — Michigan! The endorsement came from »hr Democrats fell in line today be-j Platform Committee. d Gov. Swainson's proposals for drafted resolutions almost certain income tax ~ and his campaign pledges on education, constitutional convention and economic policy. fiscal reform — including a state to get the rubber-stamp approval of the record 1J6-5 delegates tending the biennial spring conventions here. p governor ti ’ Alter hearing them that he woutd support whatever platform the committee came up with, the members approved planks eovering'A ^de tMd «l subjects, ineludittg clvlt comes the 35th man-made object functioned normally and that it in apace. Thirty-one of the others carry a “made-ln-Amerlca" label, and the other three are One of the Russian objects was a Spuinik sent into mbit May 15, 1960. The other two Soviet objects are space wreckage, a spokesman aaid. The control center here, part of the Air "Torce, keeps track of every man-made object in space for the United States. Some 100 stations ranging from radar observatories to \moon-watch” teams of the Smithsoniaa Astrophysical Observatory report to the center through channels. was determined the Sputnik was orbit that carried it 203.1 miles from the earth at its highp.st point and 138.3 mites at its lowest. Orbit inclination was given as 64 57 minutes. News Flash WASHINGTON (UPI) - The State Department annonneed today that Rnssla has agreed to the American proposal for a six-week postponement in resumption it the Geneva nnelear test ban talks. Union-Supported Slate ApproveffTn Grand Rapids wages for leaeheni. Swainson told the committee. I leave in your hands the future of iihe Democratic party." ♦ A ★ The work of thrashing out the ! platform lasted beyond 3 a. [backing the governor’s tax pro- “The measurements of the Sputnik orbit are ctooe to the calculated ones and the scientific-technical tasks set in lanuching the Sputnik have been accomplished,” Tass said. (German acientlats at Bochum, Germany, said they picked up Russian words in morse code from space Thursday and Friday night, ^ching off some speculation the might by trying to place a man in orbit. (Two “ham" radio operators in Italy said they heard what sounded moans" from space but scientists said the noises could have been "anything.”). >.8 MINUTE aRCUIT The Tass announce,ment today lid the new satellite Was circling the earth every 89.8 ipinutes. The Russians launrhed what Continued on Page 2. Col. 7) Says U.N. *s Existence Periled by Congo Crisis [gram the committee said: "This program . . is designed to stimulate economic growth in Michigan by eliminating the major n. rronrr t trumritii jh inequities on business and industry By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. Special to The Pontiac Press j,ure. and by n-ducing the present GRAND RAPIDS—A recommended slate of four new tax burden on the lowest income Democratic State Central Committee candidates from Oakland County, endorsed by the local AFL-CIO, stood off a brief challenge here last night and won election going away. Elected in a bitterly fought county caucw today’s state convention were: Otis Lawrence, 52, of 470 Ferry Ave., an international UAW representative with the Pontiac regional office; *^William A. O^Brjen, 31, of I Clawson, a Detroit attorney and unsuccessful candidate jfor state representative !from Oakland's 5th District !in November. ’ Also Mrs. Walter F. (Barbara) Brinkman of 1496 Ea.son St-. Wa-Report Goivoo Trying; terfprd Township, who miSsMl her to Take His Cose tolelcctlon because of the measles; sLa Mrs, Harold E. (Marie) the World Court j.shpiece of 2.5708 Westmoreland I Drive, I’acmington Township, for- RECIFE. Brazil (UPlt - Brazil leiraally returned the hijacked I cruise ship Santa Maria to Portu-[guese military attache Col. Joaquin da Uuz today and Da Luz ' said he hoped there would never similar incident. attorney with her husband in Returns Liner to Portuguese There was no information wmment on the Russian launching from either the Defense Department (M- the National Aeronautics and ^ce Adminislration. , A * * ' First public word ol the launching came shortly before noon today , trom Tass, the Soviet news agency. From oar New* Wire* united nations, N.Y. - A high-ranking diplomat said today that failure of curcent efforts to achieve U.S.-Soviet agreement the Congo might mean the end of the United Nations. A A A "this may be one . when he joined the staff at Wayne State as a speech Instructor, Dreyfus had worked as a radio actor la Mii-waukee and Chicago, taught speech at the University of Wisconsin and served In the Navy. He became manager (d radio station WOET at Wayne Stete in 1963, position in September. SEVERAL AFFlUAnONB In addition to his duties at the liniwiaity. I». DfQdUS has writ-Iten magazine articlea concerning television and radio. His klfilia- smashed auto. Hope is in fair condition' at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. A passenger was treated and released. The accident was the , result of a drag race, police said. They are bedding the driver of the Uons include the National Assoda-other car for questioning. , Educational Broadcasters, Dr. EUsmI csll^ Rhode’s sp- pututmeot "a sl^flcaat step Hold Avon Boy wf-gf Ms iwognilfon of the Importeucc of bringing cduca-ttoBsl oppertuidly Ip adults as Dems experience and great interest in liberal arts and ties extends MSUO's liberal arts concept fiuther into the continuing education program," Ekiund said. Rhode, in assuming the new post, said; "The triumph or failure of free gc^mment hinges on the people's Clawson Youth Hurt in Drag Race With Him, Police Report (COhtinued From Page One) the state party for the next two years. None of the incumbents sought re-election. the first-time practice 61 a steering however, developed at the caucus, committee of seven members for awareness of public issues and . , . - „ . enthusiastic support of effective ** Caivw Barr of 2825 Devondaie gomfty to her party friends st A 17-year-
being held today for investigation of leaving the scene of an injury accident in Bloomfield Hills eariy this morning. Held by BloomfieM Hills Police public pdicy. "Tha Araericaa people •„ I compedtlou between free and ■niese temporary furl(^s wiU „u^,rtUriaa system, of govern- i> in B/Uitinn tn ttimninnHs nf in.; . ... ... meat—and the success of the be in wldition to thousands of in-1 definite layoffs announced •Tiousi>'. In fair condition with head In-fortes at W. Jooeph Mercy Hospital IS John A. Hope Jr., IT, of SZl Ftsher Court, dawsoa. w A pa-ssenger in Hope’s car. Wil-demorrucy will be guided by jliam Bedard Jr., 17, of 4108 Kent Weatherman Can't Keep Up With Storm The New York dty Weather Bureau buried Its head In the taow today, completely frustrated by the li-lach wlnd-drivea reported a fall of U Iscties evea A Weather Bureau employe plalallvely expialned that fere- from Inquiring reporters and cttlieas fraerully that nqbody had lannd time to take a new For the first time In memory, the Asaoriated Press weather map-used in hundreds of newspaper* uround the eountry—eras late moving on network. The renson; The 1st was snowlMNind. cUxeai^' Inlelligeiit and educational guidance of Iheir public "It is an obligation of the universities to provide the foundation of continuing knowledge necessary for meeting these responsibilities." Rhode, his wife Patricia and their son, Stephen, 1^, live at 688 Cambridge Drive, Avon Township. Stick With Swainson at Dem Convention fCbnlihued From Page ^) -Prohibiting discrimination housing. —Banning discrimination in the publie schools. Road, Royal Oak, was treated and released. The spectainilar smashup occurred as the result of a drag «, said police. Barr said he was racing with Hope, going south on Woodward Avenue near Hickory Grove Road , shortly alter midnight," said Sgt, James Fowler. "Barr said their car. bumped and both went out of control. Barr’s car spun onto the center Island and Hope - spun into a free,” Fowler said. Barr was quoted as sa.ving he didn't know the other car hit any-' thing. He pushrt his car back onto, the pavement and drove away, he troversiai question of a constitutional convention. It said; “The Democratic party pledges Its support and leadership for the holding of a constitutional convention, planned and conducted in a manner which will result in need-reform based on Democratic action," The plank also took a stand opposing a suggestion that delegates to any constitutional convention be elected on a nonpartisan basis. The Weather Friday evealiig. With 2,000 colorful campaign ballocms floating, helter-riteiter everywhere in the Pantlind Hotel party headquarters Mrs. Phillips, went thrt)^h the motto campaignihg by visiting ail district caucuses although aware that her wily competitor — never a serious contender — had pulled of the race "tor the gtwd the unity of the party.” OPPO«mON QUITS When the Oakland 142-delegate caucus finally got under way, Mrs. Phillips graciously intrOduert Mrs. Lillian Bmrett, a suburban Mount Clemens beautician, who announced she had quit the contest and pledged "all nfy support and cooperation to Harriett.” She was warmly applauded as she stood arm-in-arm with Mrs. Phillips in front of the cheering caucus. It meant sure victory today for Mrs. Phillips, who nearly a Hope’s car hit the tree with such force that part of the tree was left imbedded in the vehicle, police home. Witnesses to the accident got his license number as he left the scene, police said. Blizzard iocks New York, E. Coast (Continued From Page One) Inland New England roni-lunities, some already blankel-by* tkrw-Mt spow a« Intioiis,Were warned to expect up to a foot more by nightfall. Eigtat-lnrh falls hit coastal points, which also faced a flood threat. FnBtf. S. Weatfaer Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Gradual clearing today, high 25. Fair and cold tonight, low 10. Sunday increasing cloudiness, high 28. Gentle northerly winds becoming varisble tonight. TMtr Is FsstUe Xov«(t trmperstur* prrcrSlat I i At S s.n) ; wind nlocUr I m | HrreUoa—Morlh Sun wU Bsturdajr «t l;M pm. Hlfhrst umpsrttur* tsaipcrstur* U*SB t«m0«rttura Wnthcr—Sunny. sad Uwral Timstralsrn FrMty't Tmapcmtsrr ( DudnUva Ten Baltimore iBtimarck 24! Brownevlllt JS 27 MemplUi 29 90 Omaha 12 - Friday la PaaUae , (Aa reeorded dovntowni mshaal umperature Loweat Umperatura Maaa tamparatura ______________ 71 47 ------ .. I Ptttabttrth 94 U Port Worth 92 29 8t. Ural! 22 2 O. Raulda II 10 8. Pranntaco 03 II nouihtoo 12 -2 88. Marie 19 -I JaekeooTlIla 90 29 Trarerte C. II -9 Kantaa CUy 20 17 Waahlastoa 21 92 'Laniint 17 12 SeatUt " " . *—■“ — •* X, Anoalaa 72 00 Tamps The violent storm heaped 15-foot drifts in northwestern Connecticut, piled 16 inches on the level in some sections of the state and brought transportation to h NEW ONE BREWlN(i A new storm began building up in the Southern Plains today. Show belted Western Kansas and was expected to spread into Missouri cast for Oklahoma and rain southward to the Gulf of Mexico; The weather bureau in Kansas City ssiid it was too eairly to tell whether the storm would follow its predecessors eastward to the hard-hit Atlantic seaboard. One of them, Mrs. Harriett Phillips, a Huntington Woods housewife and veteran of six yean on the organisation, had that of party vtee ehaiiman, auc-ceeding Adelaide Hart, Detroit schoolteacher who bid a tearful tory for her new i Cartoo O. RIchardsoa. Richardson didn’t attend the caucus, apparently discouraged by the slippaiy roads between Pontiac and Grand RapMs. Mrs. Phillips wag being escorted :rom caucus to caucus by her campaign manager, Sherwo^ Colburn of Oak Park. She missed the parliamentary procedure tangle that surrounded the election of the four state central members. A new member of the delegation is Aldo Vagnozl, recently appointed editor of the Michigan AFL-CIO, succeeding Ted Ogar, who became Gov. John B- Swain-pr^s secretary. Referring to the drawn-out election procedure, he verbally spanked other dele-"for bickering over , such minor things." why ymi can’t get the Democratic majorities in your county," Vagnozzi said. Saying he "greatly disappointed' what he was vri^ssing for the first time, Vagnoai said it wduld never have happened in his old ongresstonal district, ing Fourteenth” of Wayne County. “Why don’t yon go buck,” retorted a member of the Oak Park detegatlon. whose job it was to screen 23 candidates who were bidding lor the nonpaying state central positions. Each of Michigan's 18 congressional districts elects four ev-years. LATE BIDS FAIL Opponents said this was taking away powers usually vested in the dele^tes, and would virtually assure election of the lour "recommendations" being supported the county ewnraiftee leaders, worked out that way, but only after some of the "leftout” candidates made an 11th hour bid to overturn the slate. It had been endorsed Thursday ijijpiT to a m«^^ in Pontiac by the officers oi the Oakland County AFLCIO CbuncU. The labor element of the party, as It did to helptng Mrs. Phillips push through her i^te of national conventhm ilelegutos tost May, again proved to swing the Ug Soon after mort of the Oakland delegates and alternates arrived i the Furniture Oty yesterday, movement to upset Mrs. Sipiece’ chances of election was under way. It was led by ttrase spOTting "Fae Weiss for state central" badges. The spokesman said that Smith Backers of Mrs. Weiss, an Qakland Harian would be renominated. Park housewife, said ^e deserving" of the job than Mrs. Shpiece. who most local delegates knew little about. One member of the screening committee said Mrs. Shpiece "kind of came out of the blue.’ SHE DECLINES But all efforts of the 'Tm for Weiss” draft committee proved futile. When her name was placed in nomination against Mrs. Shpiece by James E. Seeterlin, Waterford Township clerk, Mrs. Weiss shocked her supporters w i muffled "I decline.” Mr*. Shplecq^bad It sewed up and the Oakland detegation ud-Journed for steep or more ’Vsun-custag" before today’s meeting to deeech Association of America and Phi Beta Ka{g>a. . James L. Cameroa Jr., presl-Friends of the U-."saia idl ■ been tovlted to the program. Other interested persons, he said, are welcome to secure membership to the organization, which makes them eligible to attend lu-ture programs. As part of its program of Indoctrination in the congregational heritage of America, the Pilgrim Congregational Churdi of Birmingham will have as its sermon topic Sunday "The Religion of Abraham Lincoln.” The speaker wtU be James K. Ftock, provisional chairmaa of the newly organised church snd LOUISE H. TUOMEY Service for Louise H. Tuomey,’ 73, (d 327 Southfield Road, Birm-in^m will be held at 11 a.m. Mecial Gifts— Division in the Pontiac jYMCA’s $650,000 expansion pro- gram. Birmingham Q\apter 220, Order of the Eastern Star, wiU sponsor a card party 12:45 Monday at the Masonic Temple. A lunch wiU be served. Proceeds from the program will go toward several of the organization’s projects, including the Can- Russians Send Up Seven-Ton Satellite (Continued From Page One) they called their first space sMp last May U, a tost for tannchtaig the space ship last Aug. U that had the space dogs Bciha (squirrel) and Strelka (litfte arrow) aboard. They were brought back alive after 24 hours aloft, Taas reported then. Last Dec. 1, another Soviet satellite, a 5-ton affair carrying The dogs, Pschelka (Utile bee) and Mushka (Utile fly), perished when the sparo sMp slutt off The voting was completed by roll call open ballot after delegates a duded « heated discussion cm motion to vote by sgpret ballot made by one of Mrs. Weiss’ supporters, which was defeated 78 to 62; and burned up to outer space. The previous Soviet eTcperiments were described as pretesting space vehicles for manned flight. Mrs. Weiss said she declined "for the good of the party.” Others bb-lieved she was diaheartened at how the previous votes were going tor £ nominees. RiXXNT UA TEST Tlie moat recent U.S. test for manited flight was the launching Jan. 31 of the 2,400-pound apace capsule that carried Ham, a d^panzee, 156 miles into space for a 420-mile flight at 5,000 miles per hour. Ham was retrieved safely and his Physical condition afterward was declared excellent. Griffin's appointment as head of one of the two special gifts divisions was announced today to' Robert M. Critchfield. general chairman of the forthcoming fund-raising cmnpaign. Critchfield said Orifftai'a dlxl-Mon will toclude the sollcitotion of approximately Its proepects throughout the Pontiac area In Ito raining of part of the funds which the "Y” Mteds to expand faculties at ]3i .Mt. Clemens St. Lot« active in Pontiac civic affairs, Griffin, who lives at 106 Ogemaw Road, has served on the board of directors at the "Y" and is a past president .of the Pontiac Board of Education, of which he is still a He is a past president of the Pontiac Klwanls Club, the Community <3iest, and has held several positions in the Pontiac Area .United Fund organization, of which the "Y" is a member agency. Among his other activities. Grtffln to n past presideat of the ' Ponttoe Area Chamber of Com- 4>f Commerce. "The need for more YMCA fedl-ities in the face of the growing school enrollment is obvious," Griffin said. "We need full YMCA programs our YMCA provides activities tor the whole family and makes a unique contributiwi to the solidarity of our community.” Griffin said some 30 men will work within the division. One of the main features of the proposed YMCA expansion, according to Critchfield will be an iiP structional swimming pool whidi will permit more effe<^e teach-ins in lif^MmyUpg ming classes. $700,000 Bond Defeated Reject Levy in Romeo I ar rwMsx -" NATIONAL WEATHER — It will be clear or pi^ doudy over most of the nation tonight, with cloudy skies and rain Ip eastern Texas and southern Ftorida while showers are forecast frdiR Washington and Oregon eastward to Idaho. Ihere will be name anow flurries to the mountains from Montana southward to northern Near Mexico, in nortbena New York, northern New Engiaad and western PetTnsyivania. (Continued From Page One) land State Reps. Uoyd L. Ander-John A. Gibbs, executive secre-ison, R-Waterford Township, and Raymond Baker, R-Southfield. ! Oakland GOP (!om- Uke many other rauensea, Oskiaad’ii ran far Into the idght, wlfii detegaton scatierlng to hotel rooms wtthout deciding on whom to' rapport for the staito chairmanship. The Oakland caucus broke up at 3 a jn. today, athvting a wait-and-lee attitude. Oakland County GOP (3iairman Ai^ur G. ElUoti Jr., who could ha^ had the post for the asking, was asked to reconsider his earlier decision not to hin; He fused. Many state legislators « working hard on ifolegates to get behind Van Peursem. -Among them wero ^te Sen. FhrreU E. Roberts, R-Oaktond, Nondnated district’s le OOP State Central Committee were Gordon T. Oetsiager, of Bloomfield TWp., James F. Perish of Royal Oak, Mrs. Betty Ftainegaa, n( BIrmtogkam, and Mro. Robert Lowry. Bloomfield Twp. Four Oakland candidates seemed assured of party nominations in the Hiring elections. They are James C. Zeder of Bloomfield Hilli, retired C!hrysler Corp; vice president, 'for University of Michigan Board of Regents; James C. Covert of Waterford Township, superintendent of R^l By IJEE WIN BORN Voters in the ItaHneo Community 'School District yesterday turned for Wayne State University Board of Governors classroom construction and expan- incumbent Supreme Court Jua“fc„ tioe Hany F. KeHy of Birmlnghaml^^*^’^ ^ a dialler was a shoo-in to win nomination, ^ p,^, ^ ^ave allowed the board of education per- Breaking tradition, voters in the Romeo foecinct rejwted the mil-lage proposal instead of passing it as they did the smaller tax levy for a second eight-year term. Undemer, who is stepping out after jour years as chairman, voiced enthusiasm over the big crowd that jammed the convention hotel, squelching concern that November election defeaU doused party spirit. Oak achooU, for State iBoard of keyn^ the convention today by Educatton; and Thomas B. Adams of Lathrup Village president of (fompbell-Ewald Ailvertislnc Co., ipisshn to borrow $700,000 for struction of 23 new classxmms, was defeated 626 to 415, h addition tiw board At the formal session today, the 1,508 delegates were to diooae a new State Ctoitral Committee. Rep. Charles A. Halleck. R-Ind., pr^etteg further gains in Republican ranks in elections throughout the country. Also rejected wak a request for three-mill operational tax which would have hem levied for 7 years. lect 11 candidates tor the A|^ 3 P«PO**tion lost by a 603- to 563-vote margin. The board had presented the operational tax proposal to replace the current "stoi^p" levy of four milla which etepires this year. BRkAK TRADITION Voters In the district approved \ the four-mill'''levy last March by a vote of 633 to 533. that the board will meet Feb. 9 to deckle its ne« move. He said less voters had turned out yesterday than in the special election last March. Ahu contrary to prevtons voting pattenis, voters In Waahtaig-■■ of yesterday’s The proposed school expansion program would have included a new sevtoi-classroom elementary school and site. Seven classrooms and a special education room also would have been added at both the Junior and senior high schools. Other projects would have been a five-room addition at the Warii-ington Elementary Schotd, installation of a new heating plant at the junior high school and ^Iterations of several other, rooms In th|i dis- SupL T. C Filppula said today NOTICE PLEASE! Yesterclay in the Downtown Park and Shop ad we were listed as belnjr one of the stortM open Monday evenings. Sorry .:. we arc not. We are open Friday evenings to 9 DICKINSOIVS Mai’s Wear ■■ 1.5^ ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. FORUART 4. 1»61 U.S. Starts Aid Plan for Cuban Refugees THRteE United Statei has stepped in with • brond scale program n> feed, clothe and help And jobs and educational o^rtunities for refugees from Fidel Castro's Cuba. President Kennedy said Friday i |4 million from mutual security funds will be provided to keep the aid program rolling until the end of the current flaeakyear June 30. Tha relief program will be dl-rectedXby Secretary of Welfare AbrahantxA. Rlblcoff. n wiU combine direcTxfederal assistance with help for vtm^itary aid groups. “I hope th^ these measure# will be understobd as an immediate expression of firm desire of the people ot tbe\jnlted States refugees until such time as better circumstances enable them to return to their permanent- homes," the President said in a statement. Ribicoff announed the new program to Whitb House newsmen after meeting with the president. "The Whole approach," the secretary said, "is basically a humanitarian approach. The United States has a heart and wants to help these people."_________ ^ ^ ^ —Ribicoff said the jtrogram. be coordinated by Dilloh S. Myer. a former government official who directed relocation of Japanese-Americans from the West Coast in World War U. Hope Wanes for 13 Trapped in Rubble JdOUUN-SOUS-FLERON, Belgium (AP) — Exhausted rescue at least IS periwns-^nd perhaps as many as 30—trapped beneath tonf of rubble that awept through this hamlet FrMay. Three bodies, one that of a 7-month-old baby; were dug from beneath the avalanche from a 300-foot-high pile of cinders outside a power station. It buried four houses, damaged several and sw^ trucks before it. Rescuers wieldii^ ________ shovel.s attacked the rubble with renewed vigor when nni«p« u/pno reported coming from one buried house. But then Interior Minister Rene Lefebvre, who had rushed to the scene, said there was little hope for the missing. pjrk« am1.r)ep«i-tmi Plan S^tamps ' to Commemorate WarCentehnial - WASHINGTON (UPI), - Bost-mastpe General J. E^ard Pi las nnnouncejl i^ans for a fiv^ stamp commemorative issue in observance of the Civil War Centennial. The first avR War stamp will be Issued April 1* to comnsemo-rate the bombardment of Fort I Aumter In South Carolina. Day announced that "during each of the live calendar years, ^ginning in IWl, the Post Office lent will commemorate one which symbolise# the battles and Jeadecs"^af the CiviLWar._ - The four other stamps will be: Shiloh, April 6. 1962; Gettysburg, July 1, 1963; The Wildernees, May 5, 1964, and Appomattox, April 9, 1965. Expert Fisherman Makes Cast of life MIAMI BEACH, FU. (AP) Four-year-old Allen Calarino fell Friday. Philip Davis, fishing nearby, made an accurate castr hooked the youngster, reeled him in and gave him artificial respiration. ★ ★ ■* ★ Allen is in good condition at a hospital. Commented Davis: "Thank goodness this one didn’t get away. ■’ Sees Anti-Church Acts VATICAN CITY (AP)-L Osaer-vatore Romano said Friday Soviet authorities have stepped up m ures against the Roman Catholic Church in Lithuania. why there’s no water heater like an YOU CAN PUT IT ANYWHERE-even in an air-tight closet. Because there’s no flame, an electric water heater doesn’t need air flow to support combustion, or a vent to carry off fumes. There’s even a table-top model you can put under the counter in the kitchen or utility room. Here’s the only heater you can always place close to point of greatest hot water use. rfi 1 n --- HOHER HOT WATER WHENEVER YOU NEED IT. Some laundering requires very hot water to get clothes\really clean. Dishwashers, too, ne^ water that’s very hot. Reitjember, an electric waiter heater can keep on and on, delivering the extra-hot water needed without burning out... OPERATING COSTS ARE AMAZINGLY LOW. TW popular 50-gallon heater will meet the needs of 8 out of 10 families. Using estimated operating costs for this size unit, a plentiful tnipply of hot water for all family needs should cost you less th^ 15c a day! PLENTY OF HOT WATER «OUND THE CLOCK, for dishes, laundry, baths, there’s always plenty of hot water available. Electric water heaters have two heating units: one for normal use, the other for those special occasions when there’s an extra demand for hot water. MAIL COUPON FOR MORE INFORMATION. ETROIT EDISON. OOM 350, 2000 SECOND AVE. ETROIT 26, MICH. I WOULD LIKE MORE INFORMATION A80U I HEATERS. ----------------- (ptssM print) I CITY_ get it hot... get a lot from an WATER HEATER SEE YOUR PLUMBER, ELECTRIC APPLIANCE DEALER OR DETROIT EDISON Tliw« COUPON PRICES Gw)J TONITt «■< MONDAY SIMMS Big Deal DISCOUNT — ^COUPON BARGAINS YOU Mwt |riN| Theso Cmmmi ft ' ■ “ ■ : Bey St These Speclsl Fj Limit AH Quentltiet. Nethiwg Sold at TheM Pricet Witheiit Coupon*. Ter.ito and Manday. Aulhoraiiro and Salf-Proaouaciag Webster’s DICTIONARY a s 79‘-j wW Bold, readable type — de- I school arid j Clip Zhis Coupon Valentine Heart Box ; CHOCOLITU ! 39" Sisco Hamilton V4-pound • box of assortad choco- { lates. —Slain PlMr ! Clip Zhis Coupon KLEENEX Tissves 400 Sheet Box 2'”43® Refular Wc box. Cl.tni-int tluuM In pSp-up een dropped in the ash can by most of our “friendly” contemporaries overseas. The theme song now is: ----“Yank — Go Home.“ But she can’t fool a Michigan perch. It’s Our Duty .... Our long time friend, Bill Mullkk, brings out the fact that Michigan hasn’t a Gtovemor’s Mansion. This was of no consequence to G. Minnsn Williams, but it would constitute a serious problem to most people—including Governor John B. Swainson. ★ ★ ★ One of the greatest States in the union doesn’t want the Chief Executive a scant yard ahead of the wolf. It isn’t dignified and it isn’t consonant with Michigan’s financial abilities. We can’t reserve the top .spot for multimillionaires. ★ ★ ★ The legislature should erect a fine Govemor;s Mansion and maintain it at State expense so the Governor won’t leave with the sheriff breathing down his neck. The cost would be less than two cents per inhabitant. Michigan should face up to her responsibilities. This isn't a luxury. • It’s a duty. Voice of the People: ------^--:- , " ‘Men Did Treme^m Job in Filming Pontiac Story* HaU off to the area Chamber of Commerce and the centennial committee for a tremendous Job »o welMooe. regarding the film. ••The Pontiac tWffy of Progress and Prothlae.’’ . Every dUsea wU| ftwl |hls Him ntMt tupirtag. Every phase of aar dvie. cultaral. eodeL edacattoaal aad rettgloMS Ufa ie portrayed so vividly as the FeaUac story ualoMt. ★ ★ ★ Thtli is posiliw and constructive action. This is something for and about our people. This Is democracy in action. Let me say to all who were connected with this project, "Gentle-T salute yoa.“ Robert A. Laadry Saturday Editorials Prompt Questions ‘Obey Law When Burning: Trash’ A^irtty ordinance etatee thaTTitr" trash should be burned In an open notebook of our peripatetic re^ wire basket, barbeque i porter isn't well thumbed or there cetera. If you must bum trash, do are some pages missing. it within the law. Use a it^al trash How can we look upon Ilci as burner wtth closed top and filter, •the soul of honor' when we read Carts should ^be stored in your gain this very paper about ‘Sherman vage until pick-up day. Adams.. GaU&lC and the admitted Why start a slum in Indian Vil-lies of the U2 fiasco? lage with Tra^ yanfs and Bui ' * * w smells. Do yoo resUy expect us to Y, *. Thstwsy believe Ihst our world prestige nvr«. preoldeat was stoned and spat upon and.lhe presMenl was asked to cancel trips to so-called Wood-ly naUonsf Wh.V did this modem .Nero golf while a madman took over an Island a few mllea "No one could tell me where my soul might be. I sought for God, but God eluded me. ^ I sought my Brother out, and found all three. " President Kennedy has not forsaken his former friends once he asumed the piesidency. The "rat pack” includes some of our greatest talent, such as Bette Davis. Sir Lawrence Oliver, Morton Downey and MariAn Anderson. Let us all give our new president the i-espect the oUicc deserves, and ,Joday is Snlurday. the i'ith day of the year with 330 more in 1961. The itiQon is approaching its The evening stdl-s are Mercury, Venus and Mars. On this day in history; In im. electsrs cast sit M of thefr votes lor George Ws»h-inglon. Jobs Adams was chosen vice prroidcst. In 1802. Mark Hopkins, Ameri- the support he asks in re-establish- can educator and prosideni of Wil- I’hese lines, expres^g the faith of a little known American reformer of the last century. Ernest Howard Crosby, lived to transform the lives of Allied prisoners in the Japanese Changi camp on the River Kwa Noi in Thailand during the last war. Voic-ed by a corporal to whom the author was unknow n, the lines inspired starving, diseased, depressed prisoners to become hopeful men with inner strength. They built a Iwmboo church, estaUiidied a Jungle university, foi-med teams to voice encouragement, teams to massage wasting muscles. Craftsmen made artificial limbs, botanists, drugs. Men shared food they had fought over bclorc. And they forgave the enemy-guards and Tsoldiers who had trespassed against them. Such is the power of taith. r rightful place in the world. Janice C. Page 75 S. Johnson St. liams College, was bom. ‘Too Many FDR Memorials Now’ In 1861, delegates from six seceding Southern states formed the Confederate States of America. In 1938, Adolf Hitler seized con-iro) of the German army. dent Kennedy. M e b b e Oakland County Jtaa a-better pipeline to the Dr. Brady’s Mailbag: Raw Oysters, Shellfish and Hard Liquor DO Mix Walter Gehrke, Oakland County r e s i-dent and President of The First Federal in Detroit, says he espe- ? dally approves of the little pictures run here of good looking young ladies, but he feels they should be augmented by phone numbers and addresses. Pierre Salinger, Press Secretary to the President. i^>ppose the suggested RoogevyH memorial which phony liberals and do-gooders are trying to foist upon the public. There are already too many F. D. Roosevelt memorials around now — inflation, high taxes, leftists-in govemmenf -and the countless crosses in cemeteries all uver the world..... William Laura Bix^lyn In IMS, Ceylon beewne free and wlfgoveralag dominion ol the British Empire. Thought for today: Gertrude Atherton said: "The perfect friendship of two men is the deepest ^ h ig he s t j^ntiinent of which the finite mind is capable: Women miss the best in life.” Portraits Is it true raw oysters and other shellfish and hard liquor (straight) simply do not mix, as the result is practically a lump of cement in the stomach, necessitating use of stomach pump? I recall the old folks on the coast cautioned about this. tP.J.F.) Ans. — It is not true. ‘A Miracle Needed ent methods altogether, but thou- .• » sands of women who have ex- tO Build Prestt£:e’ perienced it are as pleased as yor SitoeO letttri. not mor« thin on or tW «ord> long perMtoUti t porionnl beoltb uid hyrirne. not dll r»r. dioinoiit, or tretlmrnt. will b --------- ......— Brody « I I’ve lived abroad during the last 30 years and know that It will take nothing less than a miracle for By JOHN C. METCALFE Love is like a little bird . Singing gayly in the daw-n ., . A with flutter of its wings . . Dancing on the garden lawn . Love is like the rainbow hues . Faint upon the heaven high . Can you suggest anything darken or restore normal color to white patches in itsmpcd. aelt-oddmoed ravrlopr It 0 Tbo Pontloc Presa, Pontiac. Mtcnigi (Copyright IMI) Perhaps we should do precisely that -i- go home — and take our marbles with us. Here’s one way to help stabilize the dollar. ★ ★ ★ The President is determined to communion last hold currency at its current level. Matthew 20:1- has shed 65 pounds and is And in Conclusion .,. . down to lea...... Jottings from the well thumbed The fighter was badly overnotebook of your peripatetic re- matched and the second porter: time he. went down in the Elpiscopallans everywhere who took round, his manager Sunday heard' screamed: ‘Wait tor eight. I requested the Don’t get up'til eight. The the condition called vitiligo. (M. J.w.) ........... An.s. — Or leu- th(»|:ghts for today How lightly you gad about. |Mif to shame by Egypt as you were pul to shame by Assyria. —Jeremiah ?:8S. Save Your Skin " (3.5c and stamped, .self-addressed en-l ycJ^ BRADY find a iTope for preparing a kind of paint to rover such patches. .Sometimes tattooing improves The appearance. Or paint has been ripped from the boiler by thia aloud at the next meeting of the mumbled: -‘Q.K. What time thexpm twice daily wnh'a-sdTution The irresolute man flecks from one egg to another, so hatches nothing. —Owen Feltham. our present government to undo the "’hen the sun peelu through a damage to our international repu- '’loud . . . With a window In the tation wrought by the Eisenhower ■ • • tove is like a melody administration's lack ol purposeful • • ■ Drifting in a summer night leadership, the outrageous policies • ■ "bore the wind with soft of some American-owTied corpora- taress . . . Kisses golden candle-lions. the high-living employes of **^bt . . . Love is like the silver our embassies, the hordes of over- - ■ - Carpeting the silcm— 'bearing tourists^ and the ill-man- B^und . . . With a thousand tiny nei-ed young louts in our armed i®'*’^** • - Scattered gently all forces. These people gave” the im- **wind . . . Love is like a fragile pression that all Americans are ... To be sought at times uncouth, loud-mouthed find bar- w-hen leaving baric. empty arms . . . Causes i Manhattan Arnold Thoringlon heart a pain. (Cop.vrlght. INI) ^ Case Records of a Psychologist: But the safety valve on closevcontrol Rev. C. George Widdifield to read fighter blinked and finally the close vote in the House. Now what. Mr. President” Give It a Chance .... A lot of us are non-plussed at Governor SwAiNsoN’s tax program. it ★ ★ . Along with a few million more taxiMyers, we’re under the impression that (he sales tax we voted last fall was the current answer to Michigan’s empty larder. left wing Democrats. The good Rev- is it now?”....................... « tea.spoonfui of oi^beytarrK)i, ■ ® ■ ,, • m a fluid ouiK-c of alcohfd and then erend said Matthew must have been Ernesto Hursch. of the ,he spot, not the surround- Dr. Hoke’s challenging advice a Republican.....................Donald Argentine, paid a New York *n8 skin, to sunlight or sunlamp about changing yourself is CAR.OS My, J«.u.ry, PebruMy .nd cabbie with two one.dollar March are the heaviest occupancy bills—-only they proved TbT Juice. Are the same benefits de- personality, starting now. Quit months for hospitals................... be one thousand dollar V®"'' <^fhes and ^ ami greens daily? (Mrs. L. 0. M.) pains. Focus oh outside pro- Miami Beach hotels are making spe- bills. The cabbie has not Ajjs. - More benefits are de- jects. Join the “Compliment cial inducements to honeymooners; been seen since the acci- '’‘^ed from eating vegetables and Club" at once, so send for the , . .. J 'rom drinking just the vital booklet below. It is also free gifts, lowest rates and de luxe aent.................. Sinatras However, if your teeth are ideal for school and church i service. “They’re “rat pack” hit a new low at not up to it. juice is better than projects, too. nothing at all. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CompRmeDtOthmtGTfflprovrSelf— solely preoccupied with s* own .skin, so he was coward, ______ But he later turned tendon outward upon the great mlHoion of spreading Christ's doctrine of world brotherhood. Then Peter waa so courageous, he went In his death with a •'How prudently we proud men compete for nameless graves,” _jald WondeH PWHtps, ‘‘while Dow it it it Surely the great bulk of Michigan's citizens wants the State’s bills paid. We want our credit restored with normal governmental services and the state sales tax should do it. it it it Lansing reports suggest both . Republicans and Democrats are taking a dim view of the new proposaL Is the (iovernor trying to play Old Mother Hubbard a little prematurely? the best guests. No Carnegie Hall, even for complaints and Sinatra. With 3,000 people thpy'm always h^p- attending-A-b^TYeTtt~Tbf^ Thirtee^yfiat-old—^ ___________________ _____ . „ TesticIcT undescended. At age 12 College at Charlotte, North Carol-family physician gave him hormone ina, and one of py.” i.............. Martin Luther Kino, many tablet.s for several months, with America’s f o r e- Trusted scouts rec- dignified performances apparent effect. Surgeon ex- most Applied --- ---- . . I T .n ■ -- L and thou^t It too PsycHpiottists. ommend Nancy were staged but when, late to operate . . i^ g.) his roeent book Heine as a ncrni- Sinatra, Dean Martin and Ans. ^ it is unimportant, if one inee for one of the Jan Murray to6k over, it "? ‘reatment is lucc lui uiic U1 me newlpd. especially if, as you say, area’s especially became a pretty fearful the boy is well developed. NANCY Nancy, you’re nominated it it it Now they suggest a machine into which you dictate and out comes the typed letter and a phone into which you speak your number — and the telephone does the dialing ...........Everyone seem.s agreed: Barry Goldwater is the best money raiser in the GOP ranks and may become the ^ actual head of the party....... CMtere leave me top and cold. Who Ua-American Aetivitle. can have any truck with the amount ot nuts the squirrels lay away or the length of old Dbliiiirs coat? And who strings along with the time the ducks and geese go south. Even the United States Weather Bureau leaves some of us a bit skeptical, f I .4 n J- - ■ attractive girls, thing. Sammy Davis Jr., a I am 67. have always been mg-• ® * j 1 a AL Bed. but years are catching up was emcee and he let the j g persistent pack run wild — which It lameness in the lower back. did. --- fiend me a stamped en- —Harold A. Fitzgerald velope bearing your address, ter the pamphlet Calcium and Rbeii- and then some starveliiui of Fate foiYcfs hiiaself into Immortality. " One of the quickest ways to fulfill Dr. Hoke's advice about becoming the successful person you could be, is to enroll in the "Compliment Club" and start paying In fact, when he was to be killed complimenta perxiay —--------------- by crucifixion, he never whim- a«^d CASE G-496: Dr. Roy E. Hoke pered but even requested that he--------------SQ__ggtkLjQlL_the "Ownpliment » Guidance Director of lOng’s be crucified upside down, for he ^ ^ didn't believe he had accomplished enough good to merit being killed in the same manner as Jesus. Every courageous person MUST first be afraid or he cannot* be termed brave. The coward is chicken-hearted and admits it. He runs away or lies. The brave man is likewise fearful. but he talks himself into standing his gnkind, despite his trembling knees. Courage is thus conquered fear. It means thongti we sGII feel entitled "You Can Have Success Un-1 i m 11 e d,”' is chock-full of helpful and very prac-i Deal ideas. "Every m a n,” says Dr. Hoke. dR, CRANE •'is really two men — the man he now is and the man he could be.” That would make an ideal The Country Parson matiz. Low back pain in persons clergymen, at well The Perch Know . . ^ . Now we know. Those small time weather fore-' Committee says the hosts of com-mica who were ruti out of Hollywood by public demand are sneaking back and a few hundred are again congregated........... George Meany Mys Walter Reu-(her is too influential with Presi- beyond 50- it commonly due combression fracture of. a vertebra caused perhaps by such a slight injury or wrench that the patient scarcely remembers it happened. er». Gave birth to twins by natural childbirth. Don't see why it is different from birth of .a single child. They weighed about six pounds each. Have bad all but my first two children by this method and I think it is wonderful. Don't WDea We toeiia on SELF and (Ims narrow our peropertive, we grow fearful and may become n failure. atten- see why more doctors don’t use tectlon “Sa^g the right iMag* while thlnkli% wrong things is nearly at least let their patients know about it. (E.M.G.) Ans. — Perhbps because it is different from the method they have learned to use. Natural childbirth is not likely to replace pres- on and ali« oar sola In church _ or recite ^ poem or make our as a superb motto for you teadi- bUfo speech, regardless. And one of the quickest ways to become brave is to extrovert our attention off our owm "innards” and focus on outside persons or ideas. A mother bird thus will never fly into the face of a cat to defend herself., But when her. fledgling is helpless on the ground and being stalked by the cat. the mother .. ...™ -.V.A. *'*** sctually fly at the cat foUower bf Christ, he »»m8 liar, three times deny- Csmern for . her hahy thus makes esea a bmM bird forget her seffdatereot. And selflob neso simply means we nra ex- Club” booklet, enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents (non-profit). Scimis and churches use Jt, widely as a Christian project ter winning friends and banishing timidity. But when we turn < tion outward upon positive Jects, we ran often arrompllsh Atwsxi Is Dr, Orarce W. Crane m esre of The Pontloc Preee. Pontloc, MJehlfon. cnelotint o loot «c otompeO, telf4ddreued envelop ^ 30e to c4»or tjrpiDi ond prlnUlit coete when you eend for hie peyctaolotrcol cborte ond pa«- When the Apostle Peter became so coneerned about his own welfare and thus tried to avoid de- I became i , ing that he ever- knew Jesus. Indeed, in his attempt to add emphasis to his denial, he indulged in violent iHofanity. I > At that moffieipt, Peter was eatlon i thii oei , . newe dieoatches. Tho hontloe Prete li — -----------------Ie delivered by earner to- 4S eenU a week; when nailed la Oaklaad. Oeneeec. Llvtnt-“.............. *------- -‘ W*»S. Miehlfan. Hambtr of AhO. 1 i / I THE POXTiAC ipRESS. SATURDAvt FEBRUARY 4. 1961 Oakland Ave. Dr. Marbach Retires'<<^f<^ iflk_____Dr- William H. J D«cad« of Destiny, Title I Wf Three Young --•■of Talks People Sunday Morning Vouth Sunday wUl be observed at Oakland Avenue United Prei-byterian Ghutydi tomorrow with of senCTai toplt “Decade DeaUny,' ^ preactj his last sermons as pastor of First Presbyterian Church at services Sunday moiming. faster of the church for 30 yean, lie wiU *A Band of Men Whose Hearts Got Touched.” Bethany Youths Usher, Greet Churchgoers at Both Worship Hours Elder James E^ke and Trustee E. G. Winn will-'speak during the worship houn on behalf el- the congregation. Mn. Basil Kimball will sing “How Beautiful Upon the _ _ . Mountain” and the choir wUI be Bowes will speak on “How^ard in .“If God Be for Us” by la This a Decade of Destiny," at I Allan James. I the 10 a.m. worship hour. Other , . . i speakers will be Kathy O'Brien ^ »■'■•***•*•• rei-eptlon will honor with the subject “How Can the |>f- «»«• Marbach from 8 , Church Meet the Challenge? " and PoRgy Wilson presenting "How| " Can Individuals Meet the Chal- lenge?” community are ln\1led. The Marbachs said they would especially like to have the children and yo\ing,people present. The committee in charge of arrangements includes Mr. and Mrs. Earle VanDyke, the Robert Ir-■ , the Warren Abbotts and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Doule. Others taking part in the morning service include Janice Goines, Tom Simpson. anT Linda Koch. Ushers wiU be Benny Pawley, Jerry Benner. Dale Harvey, Jim JMI Mute, ud HU«; ^ «w. HW. i Tho jn - . '*^*** attend their pastor's w. kS- ! bach, will preach. Reading the! Educated in the-public schooik Scripture will be Martha Webb. Chicago. Dr. Marbach was grad-. UndA Sehultz and Mrs. Thpmasi"**^ from T^Wcagor^Teacher's ISMLVEBCBEbT mpeak of the customs and necdsjthey have not aiready been ap- • "Conflict,” a fuU-color film de-W Jspan at both the Sunday School >proaehed. picting the development oT pobti-jat 10 a.m. and worship seivice loi- Vestrymen cliosen at the annual cal intrigue in Jerdiialem which lowing at 11:15. Iparish meeting include George R^* leads to the Crucifixion will bekii^yy HOPE Troost, A Concluding a week-long observance of Youth Week, young people of Bethany Baptist Church will conduct worship services at both the 8:40 and 11 a. m. services Sunday. Deanna Rclyea.’Tim Pepper and Highway. I William Shirley will speak on the> Highlighted by the Ihome, "Into All the World To- which JesuS resloies the-picture, ipiy Highway. when he preaches at 11 1 Frstt^ I Sun- the"2r of a‘‘‘‘*" 1 .D;"* "T reUring“ J’'.- -rr ipartk-ipants will be GaU Travis. poHrays the clever maneuveinngs: /f^ p-ograr t J'"’-''*’"-; iJames Dillard. Mary Jean Thorn-o, high priest Caiaphas with'^ the Bishop s .Si „ . , ■ . . . the/high priest Caiaphas with' Rodger Olsen. Carol Lewis, NEW.MAN AME .^ly_Ide, Diane Maxfield Betty The fiim i* * part of the "LivingI Tlie Rev. J. Allen Par ke Douglass and Kenneth Goff. CHnst’’sepies of Ilf pictures whichiP'^ach on "A Radiance ' at Jhe;|” panm __Uiheni at the sariy hw wM-iitre being shown at Sflvercrest. ajn. service at Newman AML' *'*’ * be William liewis, Richard ]! The Rev. Wesley Dumond of the iChurch Sunday. .Members and warden. Acre. Roger Fergusoa, DavM lEvangelical Alliance Mission willlfriends are asked to read Ha\-Uand and WMte. Greet- ' ers^-pill be Thomas MeOHlIbch sad Nancy Hko. ■rhe Re\’. Lester Dobyns, as* •tor. read the citation to scnbits Rich-* •ich. He also presented* .Silver Cross lor the, drvoled, imaginative and wipe ,^j|] leader ship Mr. Sanders has given warden and u» MetiibeTS ^e theme at U a. n,. will bej^Q gg ReCeiVed UK. HIU.1AM H. .MARBACH Douglas Anderson. Raymond Trav-, is and Midiael Sickels. \rrt Pino TTi/J • Also particlpattng wib be Mar= ^ vel Wolfe, Martha Foren, Joel) T . , . Snyder. Terry LafounUin. Robert! Eddy. Ellen Cornell. Sally HamU- “*>eduled for the 11 a m. worship ton, Mary McLaughlin and Jeffery Bergemarin. I with special emphasis on chapter^ 'Teens to Teens'Film "Scheduled at Joslyn Mackie will be soloists. Evening where he prepared to be- his pastorate to become a chaplainjtions every summer but one since vUI be Ron Shelton. Mike " manual training teacher, in the United j;taics. ADPy. .At Jhe|l#25.-J|iefe p.r,,-Maid»ach ushers will t Ushering will be handled by Ed Young. Bud Osier. scheduled for the 11 service Sunday at Pine Hill Congregational Churvh. "Pathways to Tlappmess ’ will be the topic of Miii^ D. Grey’s sermon. Uiurr ti Is sponsonng a musical , .... .I.;.,------- . _____________________ , .......... _ „ Dr..Jilaid»acb--4wea*iM*jKidm»*-?^y4«rr*'liwU}air;»l^^r2®^’^^ the problems of teens.. McCormack, Sin#-md accepted IfieV''a httie *hlte frame churdijHanrfcl DdViea, Robert Ward and Parents. His tOPk will be ceiving a degrw in English and Church in Jacksonville, III. It was and local Indians, without remuner-ilhe door will be Robert Smith Stiff here the Marbachs two sons. Wil-ation. iUois Garrett. liam and Robert, were bom. 06n Sween^, ‘"ist^ied at Lake Forest College, re-call to State Street Pr-esbyterian mor e than 100 yeai-s old to villagers|I-ouis Sidwell. Greeting arrivals at ' V ——" — iceiving a degree ' - • • ■■ ................... .................... *■ - - • " ■ ■ - — The? ^nday Sc-hool cornniltlee Iphilosophy in 1912. chose the theme, “Crown Him | w * i **** contest sched- ■ During this lime he assisted the! nled lor the four Sundays In pastor of the Lake Forest Presby- vllie he was' rliled" versity of Michigan Presbyterian! tcrian Church and taught in Lake^ and Corporation, and of the For-I Assisting Tom Stimpson. chair- forest Acadei^y for boys Presby terisn man, wUl be Mrs. Gerald Fritz,'. »«"vice to the chruch began church. Pontiac. 6:14. The Finis P. Harris Bible Class \ and Sunday School will meet t 9:30 a.m. Allen’s Christian Endeavor Norman Clothier. Oakland Youth l,cague.»;ilJ lvQld..Uje. Sunday. fye-/lciri3uM dix»:tor..wUl exnlain.ihfi..:! ning service, at the home of the program and purfiose of Youth lor ' Rev. and Mrs. Parker. 149 Frank-Christ and show a film, "Teens fo lin Blvd, Teens” during the Sunday School ST. JAMES MIS.SIONARY charter members and bylerian Church Sunday. James Missionary Baptist; Church is sponsoring a niusical ‘ sign. Mo™.,, D»„ A series of evening services with Al Jackson. Mrs. William Orffing,'*" ‘he early teens when he took, Harold Brtttian, Mrs. Guy Cas. ® ® Sunday ! s"™'* of Omcna well and Alex McAllister. The ®*^**®®’ Christian''"^ Traverse Bay. ------------ ----------^ goal has been set at 630. | Endeavor. Marbachs have spent their vaca- philanthropic or social natur#'. * * * IeNTIRE SEMINARY , ” Sponsored by the Men’s aubj j,, September 1912, D^ Marbacbi'The Missing Christian' launcJv Study of Hnity ^ held at the Pine prkcj The Rev. V. L. Lewis is pastor missionariei as speakers wlU be-OuKklo 0, IlK. ta-.l chorcl., D,J Urt.,.- ^ukrS v.«h Con. After seven years in Jackson- '* ® member of the Uni-i other episode in the award-win- , a a * *'*'■ ANDREW’S EPISCOPAL ,, ,, Plan MiscinnR nf thp iTnitpH PrM.1 ^ -Ciass aie anangra. iue pastor^ ^ . rv -s rsi • rv I ay ''as a teachor in mission work bvtPrian Church ILS-A ‘ begins with Sau)*s re-;will teach the class at 9:30 at Drayton ■ A fi,- n!.....-., r-i.A. ^s home town of Tarsus.'each Sunday starting Feb. 19.i^™"^5?'. . «a«’den. 1. J.Iq_ Pakista j|! Mansfield, seci^etary; and Carl iQty in West Pakistan. tip There, he waits for 10 years for a “Christian Faith and Purpose” \.„. . t .u ^!''“^isign from God that the time has'be the theme. Hoffman, treasurer. Jerry SUnson i projects particularly those of «|con,e for-^m to fulfill his mis-j The annual meeting, of the De- was chosen head of ushers. |p|jp| Pg5|Q|’ |Q 3p0d|( Incltided is a sequence show- troit Association of Congregational XRINITY BAPTIST ling him collecting money for grain!Churches will be held at 4 p.m.j p„_,„ «■ Mnmv will al Circl UavarAnA to alleviate -famine in Jerusalem. Sunday with dinner following at 6'^ ?he'^re"^l^i9l • 1^51 NaZarene Church School meets at 9:45 p.m. The Pine Hill Church e.vthe theme. The a. m.; and the five youth groups pects to have 12 unofficial dele-and Adult Forum meet at 7 p.m. gates at the meeting, the pastor S-Muled Tonight Within ChriMion Chu'rch ! ^S“\nntl!j‘'sSthJart*BlLuet The Pike Street Church of God Rev^n ®"‘> ‘^e Holy Land and On|Missing Christian” at 7 p.m. to- University study ol the move- g^ggi^fQ^j Providcnce ^----------------------------. n Engram of Detroit, theisept. l, 1915 he married the former day at the churcji. East Pike and *°ward unity within the Chris- GueSt Pastor tO PrCOch !Harriet Reitz. jAndenten streets., ___ tian church has i^n launched un-j The entertainment committee of! Bishop EIzy Ytmng of Cincm-]of‘^(Jtrsni* arid Hdy^Commi^^ A graduate of Olivet Nazarene * * * ' Revival services will c-ontmue!„ ^®e Rw. Ewell J^Provid^nee Missionary B a p t i s tinati. Ohio, will preach on the 7 «^ CoHege, 4re_ wiU be assisted ‘~ —OTte 3 . . . .. I _ ^ • thn B nm' ' ' ' ‘ .preach from the theme, ’ !’ Most Unforgetable Character f! Tire Rev. BcmaiM Gill, pastor of '"Ever Met,” at the 11 a m. service'fhc West Church of the Nazarene Sunday. iin Flint, will speak at 7:30 tonight The second reading of lire con- and at 6:30 p.m, Sunday at the stitution will be read at 5:30 p.m.'Eirat Chutx-h of the Nazarene. 60 The pastor will conduct a service he should have learned know^at the Odell Presbyterian ChurcbiJames W,. Childress of Portiand,]^- ^'**®’'! T. Tonticy. evU, not from his own soul, butjin Marshall. Mo., near the Mtssouri|Ore. conducting the meetings. Thei®***’ ' from late and long obiurvation of;Valley t^llege where he oftenivisitrng pastor has also trained the from 8 fo 11 a.m. Sunday at the-worship Youth Week services by Winston fhurcli. n Bethlehem Tern-;U***^*^T ( HfRCH (’RANBKOOK pn^g p, Marlette who will be iis, Christ:charge of the music. A service of Baptism and Holylhealing service is scheduled for Church Cranbrook suggestt mem-! Participating’in the Sunday e pie, 533 Franklin Road Sunday. A Jack Petherbridge • ...... ....9-------- .............V _ ... -....«ss.>v siasAitru Uir /% ftCTVittr i>i Da(illMll aiiu ilUiy ) IieiUllIK srlvlvl? 15 M.JirUUJi'U lUi V.IIUICII N^iatimwA 01.. 111S..111-: x ail tiK nature of evil in others: know-jUught a Bible class in the absence;choir as well"9nal *«^‘P President Boti McKee said., football with the Wiraiipej; Blue Youth in the Alliance church are Bombers Durii« that tune hejchallenged to dedicate their livies toured major United State* eol-iio Christian witnessing and more leges under Campus Crusade. pcfeiparlicul»ri> to Chriy|ian vocations EVAHGEUCAl UNITED BRETHREH CHURCH 212 Baldsrin Ave FE 2-0721 Sana*; acluMil t 4> SM woRBRie n s» A M -a*m*B wHoea ana roor- Tb* TmU> Moor I 4S P M \TBP*R ta» P M - aernwn: •a?HllO TH*' . Oaricston High School at 7 p.m. The Rev. A. A, Weinert wiU lead Sunday, devotiocis. . Crivary Onoch ia a mission of Christ Lutheran Church in Water-A large class' of new members ford Township. Admission is free. wULI of Detroit playli« tour grou|iS' on the organ and Mrs. Elizabeth War-rikw of Pontiac In vocal numbers. when the pastor on “A Feast of Deliver-ant'e. ' ITiC Sacrament of Holy Communion will also be observed. Mlhs. Muriel Sweazey will singj Director of the Guild of Church "Come Unto Me." Musicians in DetroB, Mrs. Weinert; .a nursery with |»rofei«ioiiul sup- niLB is a graduate of North Central College in Naperville, III, Currently die ia accompanist for various high school d»rale groups, ifor husband is a Detroit minister. DR. H. H. SAVAGE- eivision is maintained at all serv- iMk by tta Rev. Hkuvy B. KEEGO HARBOR BAPTIST CHURCH ITII a. CM* Lak* IlMd SUNDAY BCHOOD-IS A U MOHNtHO WORSHIP-II AM EVENINO WOMHlP-1;M P M ;oop*r*Ui>t with SoutiMra Baptli CaortaUea Patlsr-IUT. "Bak" KoaiMrt « Untoucliakl* m PtTlI *( UKfainnt' RSV MAMON P. BOrO JR . MloUtn CLARXMCB a. JACKSOR. MtSUIfr of Bd«c*tlon AfruiAtt* with Soalbtre laptitt COBvtDUo* MrmtMnhlp Om S.MO.M* ■■■- ...... ......— ■ •• '—.7“ B ------, Sara, numiuw wui pii-sriii T QuHo tor sevwjsr^-eelt*, Mrs. Sav-jround of tarrible excesses and beset with remorse over my unr-fsinav«rTt» Woiid’’ by'Mamef; 1 "Dawn" by Curran and "I Walkedi Today Whiw Jestw Walked'* by{ O’Hara. * * * Other oigan numbers will be' Were You Thei’e" by NordmapJ ‘Bells in the Easter Garden” by Lorenz, "The Holy City" by Adams, "Nursery Tunes" arranged! especially for children, and ‘.‘Grand i Choeur" by Rollins. | Her closing selection will be The North East Community Church of Pontiac lEvangeficjl United Brethren' Mt Clemens Street at Featherstone Road age Is with hOT husband. /faithfulness to both family and God, I knew I could not con- Dr. Savw has ^ tlnue this struggle by myself. First Baptist Church for M years. eu6Mng I set off through the snow ;to an Army chapri about a mile away: With a humbleness and j seeking I had never experienced IxfotP. I knelt In that dimly Tilt chapel and poured out my heart In prayer. ★ ★ ★ “As I continued to pray, I was aware of a gentle touch on my shoulder, and the awesomeness of the warm feeling, together with an immediate lightening of my heart was an experience I shall hold forever. , “Even If the touch I felt was Imagination. I knew that His; presence was with me in that moment.” Well, the best' test of the depth of any religious experience! is whether It is followed by a lasting change of any kind in the quality of a person’s living. I think the sequel to this man’s experience In that Army chapel speaks fer itself; “Par the rest of my tour in Korea I foand that I had the strength to help my fellow men to the best of my ability ^kjpn I encountered suffering, and 1 lived a sober, usc- * 41 A'JI Church School lor *U *(* gi First Methodist loins Michigan Church Mission First Metlwdist Church will par-^iticipate in the "United Witness '■'tor Christ Mission” in which nearly all Mettwdist churches in Michigan an taking part. Beginning Sunday the program will consist of special meetings and instruction tor making calls; ; Guest speaker at First Church will be Dr. John Lewein of Horse-head, N.Y.. a member of the Central New York Conference. He serves oo the Board of hkhication In Ceotial New York i:*S rw r*now»hlpHour—wUh B«» Mrmbrr cnttrUlBlnf H*rrr B Bc-hlo«*fr MIobter « Congo, v^ere starvation sent to subscribing convents any-|‘h"''‘«'* 300.000 people, where in the world for use byl Through Church World Service and its Christian Rid^ CK’erseas Prbgram (CROP). American church people also have been He who is of a calm and happy nature will hardly feel the pressure of age. but to him who is of an opposit disposition, youth and age are equally a burden. — Plato. BETHEL TABERRAaE . ,yU»tjefntacoat Church of Pontiac SB. 10 a m. Worship 11 am. Evangelistic JServlce 7:00 pm. Tues. and Thurs.. 7:00 pm. RfC. and Mr*. C Crouch alerted to the emergency situation in an appeal for more funds to continue the Congo relief program. A report from Dr. William Rule, medical secretary of the Congo Protestant Relief Agency, plies, describes the "appalling is carried on under gunfire and along roads clogged with starv-Ing refugees, he savs.____________ Dr. Rule also announced a new project which •will provide three; airborne medical teams in the Kwango-Kwilu area, making it! possible for them to serve a dozen hospitals regularly. ’The Missionary! Aviation Fellow^ip, he reports,! has promiaed a pilot and a i^e; this month, "but we badly need] some young physicians to work In' these airborne teams.’’ I Expressing deep gratitude tor CWS shipments of food and drugs. Dr. Rule’s report concludes; "The year 1961 is before us. We do not potlcnls are d.ving for lack of jknow what it holds in store but it food and medicine. Distribution can be certain that it will be in many neetions of the Congo | neither predictable nor dull ” ST. ANDREWS -EPISCOPAL CHURCHY OhseiVA 8 A M —9 30 A.M. 11:15 A M. HOLY COMMUNION fv Eaward A, 1,0017, Rector Drayton Plalnii. Mich. . "Searching the Scriptures" Rcx)sevelt Wells, Evangelist i-IRUE-RELIGION VS. TAtSE REttGIONT contrasts It with false reli^on. In true religion. Christ Is the _ ^ ____________________ ALL authority in hehven and on eartii (Matt. 28:18; Eph, 1;28).a In false religion, a man is the head of the church. Bte the re-' y head of the ohureh With markable description of thif false religion In II Theas. 2:1-12 of a "man—sitting in the temple of Ood, exalting himself, setting himself forth as Ood.” CHURCH OF CHRIST SCHEDULE OF SERVICES Bible School Sunday . . 9:45a i Sermon and Worship . 11:00 a.i Evening Worship and Sermon ............. 7 p i Bible Study Tuesday .. 8:00 p.m Young Adults Fri. ... 8.00pm even during the lifetime of Paid, (II These. 2:8). " Trueyfellgion ha* few followers. Fake religion has many followers. d tpachor* ready to serve. * * * iDstructjon is given following ^ prayer meeting. At each session a filmstrip from the series, "Suc- iFour Towns METHODIST CHURCH COOLBT tAKB RO. I Rev. W, Cadmtn r Sunday School .. Church Servure )ut, Pastor 9:45 A M. 11:00 A.M. cessful Teaching’’ is shown fol-; lowed by discussion. The film-: Strip was produced by the Moody Institute of Science of Los Angeles, j the direction of Dr. Irwin' Moon. -- I ’The Rev. Knuiianuel Wolff of ; Cleveland, Ohio will be guest minister at 6 p.m. Sunday. A Baptist minister for M years, he Is currently on a tour of Baptist churches, including several in Canada. Assisting the pastor in the morning service will be John H. Pres-tel, John N. Veneman and Mr. members of the church IcoundL "A Baptist at the Lord’s Table" will be the Rev. Mr. Al-Icom’s subject. ! ’The topic was prompted from a ! panel discussion by a Methodist, a Lutheran, a Baptist and an Episcopalian, the pastor • said. CHURCH of CHRIST 17 LAPAYETTB »T. irihtp *t the Bsrly Lord's Dty Worihip Lord's Osy Evroing . Wednesdty Evening ., O. C. Wlllli First Social Brethren Church 3M Baldwin, FB 9-0M4 Sunday Night.... 7:30 P.M. Sunday School ... . 10:00 A.M. Grace Ooner Oencaae and Olendale i (Weet Bide) j Richard C. Sluckmeyer, Paslor j Church Bervioa_____9:00 A.M- j Sunday School .... 9:00 A.M. Churrii, Service .. .11:00 A.M. j Sunday School .11:00 A.M. 'TTie Lutheran Hour" over WKMH 9 A.M. Every Sunday f FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N. PERRY 9:45 A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL "Help Us Slay Over 500" Bring Your Entire Family A Class f6r Every Age. 11:00 A.M. Mdrtiing Worship Choir—Gospti Preaching A Worm Welcome 7:00 P. M. SDN. EVE RALLY (EVANGELISTIC) Proyer for the Sick You Con*t Afford to Miss Men's Fellowship 7:00 P. M. TONIGHT PARISH HOilsi^ 28 EDISON ST, 1 am bigger than anything that can happen to me. All these things, sorrow, misfortune, and suffering, are outside my door. I am in the * ' home and-I have the key. —Charles Fletcher LununlB. ZION CHURCH of the NAZAR^E- 239 E. Pike Street to am.—etmday School It am.—Morning Worship 7 pm.—Evening Service Rev. Harold L Hartis FE 4-6216 BLOOMFiaO HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH Temporarily Mo(BUng; Hickory Qtmo School LsHmt, aenth of aquarv Uikg R4. SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. *'A Bmmtlnt kt Lord*! Tnble** EVENING WORSHIP 6 P.M. Ouatt MlnUUr: TRB REV. BMMANUBL WOLFF Cleveland, Ohio PRAYER MEETING (Wednesday) 7:30 P.M. Tues. Young People . Thursday Prayer ... 7:30 P.M. 7:30 P.M. REY. t<5MMY guest, Paslor First Congregational Churdn Mill, E. Huron and Mt. Clemens Malcolm K. Burton, Minister , Howard Clegg Jr., Assistant MornfiftjiYorBhip and Chuixdi School 10:30, A. M. "TO WHOM VENGEANCE" Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Preaching Marimont Baptist Church 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 REV. PHILIP W. SOMERS, Pastor Sundoy School.................I0:(X) A, M. Prophetic Series in the Book of Daniel Morning Service ..............11:00 A. M. *^THE LlON*S DEIS** Evening Service................ 7 ;30 P. M. “THE EMPIRES OF THE WORLD** _____________Pastor Somers, Preaching_ Youth Group................... 6:30 All Saints Episcopal Church Willloms St Qt W. Pike The REV. C. GEORGE VJIDDIFIELD Rector 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:30 and 11:15 A.M.—Adorning Prayar and Sermon by the Rector. Church School. CHURCH OF THE RESURRECTION will meet in Clarkston Elamentary School, 6595 VJaldon Rd. 9:30 A. M.—Holy Communion and Sermon witfi Church School by The Rev, Alexander T. Stewart EVANGELISTIC SERVICES at the WESLEYAN METHODIST CHDRCm 65 N. Lynn St. WILL CONTINUE _ THURS., FEB. 12 Rev. Wm. J. Lcnab REV. WM. I. LAMB Evangelist -SERVICES NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M. I. M. Kovonaugh, Pastor FE2^19 Emmanuel Baptist Church 645 S. Telegraph Road REV. TOM MALONE Speaking at All Services 10 A.M.-U A.M. 7:00 P.M. Special Music Radio Broodcast WPON 10:15 A.m. Each SurxJay Midweek Service Wed. 7:30 P-M. Sunday School Attendance Last Sunday 1443 ,1 DR. -GOM MALONE, PASTOR — EIGHT THE IH)NTIAC SATURDAt. FEBIUJARY 4. 1061 Safeguard Your H4igband*s Heiurt Proj^er Diet Lowers Cholesterol; C«olcr, Ch>f»r>'-. By toils ». KATT, M.D. TV male U the »x, ■t least alien it comes to heart trouble. Women live lonsec. four jvars longer on the average ih'this coOTtry. This difference between seves in life expectancy is duo lai-gely to h^art disease, pri-marly that re^ultinE from high Woixt presstur and haiti-enmg of th<’ arterie.s. The male, aged l.i to 65. ha.s Campus News and Events Armoancement from the De- ..oartment of Air Sciend^, ROTC Detachment. I'nitrf States Air Force at the Universrty of Michigan, names Cadet Lt Dttstan T. Smi h of Pontiac commander of the New Arnold Air Society for the coming tenh. Cadet Smith is a junior scitmee engineering. “'“*^Hd«h“Scftlicfir Mr and Mrs. Aloysius Schlicht of Oandie Avenue was capped Sunday at St. Lawrence Hospital School of Nursing. Lansing * . * n Among the 435 Ferris Institute -students named to the dean's hwior list for academic excellence during the fall quarter are the following from the Pontiac area; ' j ' Carole Burgess. Flagstaff Roger Horton. Iroquois Road and Wilford Ross. Shimmons Road, trade and industrial division; Ross Luxop Jr.. Third Avenue, pharmacy': Kenward Pearce. Whittemore Street, commerce. From Birmingham arc Kenneth Gertz and'William Ritze. commerce division, and Bruce Wellington, general education. Others are Vena _F* T^owie. South Winding Road. W'ater-ford Township, commerce teaching and Janice Smith, Waterford, commerce. ♦ ♦ *. Donald R. Tison of Pontiac Road, a student at the University of Michigan School of Mumc will give his recital towards the bachelor of music degree at 8:30 pm. Feb. 12 in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. He will play compo6ition.s by Telemann, Purcell. Kennan and Chevreuille. Accompanists for his trumpet work will b«v Janet Sass, piano and harpsichord. Penelope Lint, violin and Ouuiie Arnos, cello. coronary artery disease anywhere from ‘2 to 25 times as often >«s the'femile does be-, fore her mejK^iauae. The dtf-ference is sex-linked. ♦ ★ ♦ That's why we're concentrating on husbands instead of the wives. But it may be up. to the wife to. safeguard her husband s heart' . . Whenever y o u r husband starts to look fat with heavy jowis and : n innertube Of fat around his waist, get him to reduce. His weight Is direetly linked to the amount oL rhglestcrol— in tbc-bo^:— FAT IN AKTKKIKS Qiolcsterol is the fatty-like substance that is the chief constituent of the lesions which Icem in arteries, setting the stage for heart attack or stroke. We are uncertain whether cholesterol „is .the. a^.ual I and others believe that high blood choteeterol levels definitely increase the risk of heart attack. Dm of the greats scientific inquiries is being TlBie- iatp cholesterol with resesueh fuMt^pewrided Scientists are trying to find agents to ceduce sthe cholesterol le.'el in the blood. The ideal drug has not yet been found and lh^TOug.Wy testyd United States Marine Band flute soloist William Montgomery who will visit Pontiac's secondary schools Monday and Tuesday will play a recital concert at 7; 30 Monday in Pontiac Central High School's auditorium. Mr. Montgomeiy will be in the city to di.scuss band rehearsals and concerts and to conduct dinjes for flute players in the Pontiac labile S<'hools. He began his career as a junior high school student in Texas with Richard Morse, Pontiac Central’s band director. His concert program will include "Hungarian Fantasie." Doppler; "Concerto No. 1 in C." Mozqrt; "Syrinx." Debussy; and"Etude Opus 15 No. 3." Anderson. "Sonata No. 7 In A Minor,” — Andraud — Handel: "Romance," Chaminade; and ''Sonata:" Ponlanc will conclude the recital selections. Tickets may bt- obtained at the school's music department office. Womens Section - Marilyn Law of Miami Road (left), Jenifer Marion of Sorth Cass Lake Road and Gwen Hovis of Dwight Avenue are among tkc 120 yjiiing people attending the- annual youth relredl of First Baptist Church at Camp Bara- ket near Fairview for the weekend. The program consists of outdoor sports, devotions and panel discufsion on youth problems. Featured speajeer is Conch Boh Davenport of Taylor UnL versitv. • I The Graham ■ B. Darlings . of Durand ^ H/WDunTe the ' engagement of their daughter Susan to Dwain F. SidwelL son of the F. F. Sidwells of Drayton Plains. She is a junior at Henry Ford Hospital School of Nursing and her fiance attended Lawrence Institute of ^ Technoto^.~ Don'tTip ■ If It Isn't Deserved svsAS mjRLm: He’s Gray at 30—Abby JENTIEN G. AGEUNK By the Emily Post Institute Question: Last Saturday night three couples went to a supper club. There was a cover charge of seven dollars a couple. When the bill was presented. the question came up as to whether the tip .should be based on the full amount of the bill, including llic coyer charge and taxes, or whether it should be based on the food and drink that was ordered. Wfll you please tell me what Is cor-lect in this situation'.’, , Answer: Cover charts and taxes have nothing to do with Hie service given you by/fiie waiter and .should not be . included in deciding the amfiunt of hri lip Quest ion: Whenever tny husband's sister introduces me to anyone, she always -rays. "My brother’s wife." I think this is definitely very uncomplimentary to me and that she should introduce me as her sister-in-law. I would like - your-opinion-QiL-thi.s^_ Answer: Introducing you as "my brother’s wife” is neither uncomplimentary to you nor incorrect, but I agree with you that "my sister-i»law” is preferable. At Cranbrook House Dye If, Why Not, but Be Glad if You Have Enough to Comb DEAR ABBY: I am in my early 30s. I em married to a woman the same age. She is very young looking. In fact, she is constantly asked for her '•r.D.” card when wp go where diinhs • are served. Now for my problem; My hair is suddenly started to turn gray and I am be-ginning to look more like her father than her husband. My barber suggested I let film dye it. He said he could -do.iLtoioqk so natural no one would know H '9tts dy^ In your opinion would this be deceptive and morally wrong? GRAYING FAST DEAR GRAYING: It is no mbfe "deceptive" or "morally wrong" for a man to dye his hair than a woman. Although in my opinion, gray hair -doesn't "age” a man — it only makes him look more attrac- tive. But black, red, green or gray ... be glad you'jiave enough to drag a comb through. A A W ' DEAR ABBY: How can I get a boy to like me better than any other girt? 1 am 14 and he is 15. WANTS A BOY ITUEND DEAR WANTS; Keep your hair smelling nice. Be pleasant to his friends. Laugh ns if you mean it, but don't giggle. Let him know you like him, list In a hurry. It tells women howj < to be middle-aged for fun and> profit. j Hiere U. 1 can teU you, a lot^ of Interest in thU topic. I found thlT but recently when I wrote a short dinical study of the shock induced by ray own tOth WrthdUy ★ ★ * The main point of my treatise , ttot 40 is a-toud Uww-troig aside one's childhood ambitions. In this conneetlon, I n«ed that I had abandoned some of my youthful aspirafiops. such as wanting I to learn to play the flugelhom. This did, and does, seem like a reasonable thing to do. Hugel-honi lesson* are rather expemdvr and, besides 1 couldn’t practice at kome without. gotUag a lot . of Up from the neighbors. I found that out that time I took zither lessoas. At any rate, I regarded my view of encroaching middle age as a: nice balance between PniiynTr*"^^} . on-thgrtwe htmd iBid^ti^^ other. But it must have sounded rather morbid. * * * All sorts of people began writing; in to cheer*me up by outlining' the advantages of being 40. One letter came from an 18-ycar-old girl, who perhaps is the final au-! thorlty on the subject. i , J dmeiiem i&Uantl lEx-Dem Oificial Inhale, Exhale! pets State Dept. i IA „ 1^0 You Breathe Correctly?|^ blni' orijo^'l ' ' * i-r-.- -r^ I Moth WASHINGTON Louchhelm, l^er vice! chairman of the Deinocratic, Na-1 tional Committee, today was ap-| pointed as a $13.2S5-a-y«ir State Department consultant on matters concerning women. ★ it--------it- , The department said she wmild-iwork on "a variety of problems' concerning the participation of ! women in intemationat. ediicatlon-al and cultural affairs." t Department Press Officer I.ln- ! coin White said that ’’la accord ! with President KeBiied.y’* wishes, i Mrs. LouehlMdin will be con- I cemed with giving greater emphasis In these important field* to women’s acttsitles and n1l| work in close enllmboratloa with i for public affairs and for coordination of Memnlionsl, edn cattonal and cnitural relation*.’’ White said he assumed she would I work with women's organization^ i and also act as a sort of protocol officer visiting women digni’o-ierl from foy^ countries.........- - • i Mrs. Louchheim. a native of I New York Qty and wife of a Washington investment .counselor, was director of women’s uctivities foi I the Democratic National Commil-itee ftwn^®TTS'-tt89:■~«1e-waa.A vice, chairman of the eommifteo from 1936 until mid-1960. Others ,re Guests ETght meinberiV the YMCA meinben ! Mothers' Club of Poni a meeting of the attended Mothers' Club on Wednesday. \., ( Accmnp«t)dng Mri. jKllsworth, president, wefe Elmer Jewell, Mrs. Leonard Col. x iter, Mrs. Neil Stranahan, Mrs. ' Ray Stiger, Mrs. Ray Noble, Mrs. i Frank Aherns and Mrs. Robert Wisdom. ------- Two Mrthday partim for oomo V-Teen outings nnd pnrttes have been given since the elab’i second snniverury last September. .Shirts were purchased for basketball player* and teen leaders, and food baskets were given to needy m;ea families._____________ Ever watch yourself breathe? /n this you breathe many times during the day position she ran observe how her. di(^,^.sa that, xait can aitercotue shallowJirealh-phragm worhs._,,Tix 4^ way ing. ’ B) JOSEPHINE lyOWMAN I bent and arm* resting on the Ibrcathing. This will be a youthi- Far loo many folks brearhe vciyj overhead In a relaxed man- j{ying you to cultivate, shallowly, using only, the tops of Try to touch your entire their lungs, and when they do at- to the floor. Now obsene empt to breathe more deeply they! '•o* J'®"'' diaphragm works, mo* may do so incorrectly. One of the’ '"K ®P .vou Inhale and down a* jaft^ U3UI.I tondencir.s is to lift the -'o“ exhale. deep Bieatthe in this same rhythmic MON-TUES.-WED. SPECIALS • Shampoo • Set • Haircut AI L FOa $25 r*Bll*< CItBtIrr Naturally. It is impossible to breathe correctly if your posture is poor. Your lungs wlU be crowded. SrS riMi RUDOLPH’S BEAITTY Salon 10 W. Huron St. FE S-6tll Zeto Group Meets dt Bors^old Home diaphragm wh4ui.-iycij-ioh4je..and | depth it goes when you exhale, f A«'tH«lly. the diaphragm is used hi calhing. It goes up and down'the depth it goes like a bellows. This alone is-a good exercise. Zeta Chapter of Alpha Delta ,.*.*.* , the same thing except hold Kappa Sprority met Thursday eve- hrealhmg|ihe air in your lung.s after they are i ,ning at the Svivestw Street ’home*'* 'n ehsceve the w&y tilled while you tap^ur chest with , . iof Mrs. John 0 Borsvold in Drav- r“’’™s; ims w a two-part spring greet- for you. Our sizing is comparable ton Plains ' 'hen do a more ex- forces the air into the little air- u.. .. o-.._ Eleanor Traut spoke comeming instance, p (1 overcome shallow It is entitled "Get the Most Out of Your Best Years.” I haven't lead It. but when I heard that the author. Maxine Davis, was- speak-1 ing at a luncheon here, I enlisted' in the audience. There were, as a rough guess. 200 or more women present who could be calledimiddle aged, if you said 4t. in a whisper. Miss Davis gave it to them straight from the shoulder, mincing no superlatives. imeasuremente select the-size best Dept. P-6, New York I, NL-X4r: will attend ; all-day Teens Have Replies to Clothes Questions ;cbheermhg“Treeddms aiid thetf**’^ -Chapman.-White-Cross meeting Tuesday from respon.sibilities which accompany' N**" tn»'mbcr Mrs. Engel Groen- 10 to 2 p ni. in the church. Quilts our freedom, so often disregarded I introduced. for missionaries will be pieced, by our citizens. , * * * group prepares bandages. He stressed the pursuance of per-; ^fV'ing on the refreshment com-bed jackets and provides medical sonal excellence, through enrich-;Adah Shelly, Mrs.lsupplies as a missionary project. Ing education, assuming responsi-jf^fr^ft Peterson. Doris Haynesi Members have been asked to ibilities on the locals state Afld na-j**'*^ Je.ssie Brewer. Mrs. Monroe bring scraps of new material and I tional levels, since our nation willj®®** Scott presided at the tea portable sewing machines to the ‘be no better than its citizens. ' Smart Thinking Wonderful New Coiffure At Feb. Sovings NOW- „„ Fiaeit PemaaBBti at lig l•dBctio■l 95 BEAUTY SALON I services. Phene FE 8-1343 42 N. Saginaw Street AppoisImMl net always aocstsory MON. and FJtl. 9:30 A M. te 9:00 P.M. By RUTH .MIIXETT started to school^lhe first grade.) , , A French dress detagner who "How mwb mWy are you -ndov,.™.-, f,,_j Mmnpv* ’’.Middle age •• •»««» paH hopes to .design clothes for Amer- »••»'»«* bujIngdn^^T’’ Goddard Bov’s Dormitory built ,T!!lt look farwrrS fall.' i‘=*n has come to “ ^/Ht^eitas It’s Uke Chrisiniss.” country armed with seven ques-on how much they can lalK\our ** tjifer nn ™ ** snswcrs to4alhers out of. \ Y*!!* Society DAR age was "the American'* woman’s questions, he figures he’ll "Does it make you sad if at age was the American womans •• u u . . oartv someone is weai-inff ‘ihe ®* delegates and a new frontier” - a time for going ^ en^8h about American giris^2 d^^7s yo^ ’ »® »he State DAR Conference out and doing the things she had c'ot*®**‘hem y®"; ,j„ Joseph next rtionlh are Mrs. always wanted to do but Zo^^S ®‘"er is an LiMe Echtlnaw, Mrs. Allen H Mon- I m Ih. women 5,,',"'.°liir'S AUsm.io. »lll h. Mr., u, L. found her message comforting and » wsi<®t«»n- ,^.pj,ring loafers - or vice versar-+Ou®l»P- Mrs. VV. 11. O'Laughlin. perhaps inspiring. If I had been Here are the queslioas and. ..j. , !Blanche Averv and Mrs E G. a woman. I probably would have all for free, the answen, toe. i Clark. ^ right out and bought a flugel- ..po you like to be dressed as a la^nslve or' a number of dresses ' D^IPRales to Hie National DAR woman or a young girl?” less rich looking and costing '('""K''*’'®' at Washington. D C. in Hut as a man, I kept remember- Neither As a teen-ager — which less?" ‘April are Mrs. Echtinaw, Mrs. Ing what my father Mid when he j, neither a woman or a voung The more the belter We aren’t **'''**^'*'' ° us* lab?eoascious like our mothers. E^l'^ard V. bothered him. he said, was the;five age. -no vou think American hnvs'H®''**'" *'*■ alternates. A al•e^nte^"t.!d in thsTX Ss * * * granomomer. _ dress to please your boy friend or wear? If not, what are they inter-’ Ameiicani.sm Chairman Mi-s, W: a m-tiac Motor Division, gave a voca-timial talk. Tentative plans were made for the Hand of Friendship Brqnch,| March 19 at The Kingsley Inn, andl Boss Night, at Edgewood Country Hub on April 19. Guests for the evening were Mrs. JamesPatterson, MnkGeorge Barkley and Mrs. Vemette Mat-i thews. Martha i. Breckenridge iM-{ ceived the door prize. • By JANllTr ODEU. IfaaHac Press Home Editor If there were more readers like Mrs. Duncan MeVean, we d never run out of recipes. We fnun^ the one below on our detac. the other day. Thanks, Mrs. MeVean. ★ ★ ♦ Today’s cook is wed known throughout the area for her community activities. Even though her family has grown up, she keeps an active interest in cooking. CALIFORNIA CHICKEN PIE By Mrs. Dimeaa MeVeaa I ut (*rin« ) v.cet.biri Melt butter or itjargarine in .ckillet and add flour. Stir | until w-ell mixed. Slowly pour ^ in milk, stirring constantlv. If sauce seems too thick, add more milk. Add seasoning. Dump ran of tuna into s sieve and pour cold water over It. Drain. Add to white :> sauce, Hllrring until all is blended. Add mixed vegetables. Yon may. use canned pens uid eaimts If yon like, a; Heat thoroughly and sem over toast or hot biscuits. * Serves 4-6. f BRIDAL SALON / Do . . . So many bssutiful ways to say "I Oo" this spring and summor. Alicia offers dozens of memorial gowns for YOUR DAY. Depend on Alicia's for gowns of quality. ST W. Hutm BL—Biker Bldg. For Your Wedding QUALITY and Quantity O U rsela* la lit Alkm 0 rn» CmMitaa O A W«eei«( Oamt SMk O A Ltrt* ‘Jul kfarritS' Stfs O A Mlalalsn Msrrtaf* CerUtleata *39 |95 Up C R. HASKILL STUDIO : .W 1 ML CIcuMns 8L FE 4-MSS Mrs, George Croekett Current Rate Paid on Every Pollar of Your Savings Insured Savings by an Agency of the U.S. Government! Your savings here are insured to $10,000. Four offices to^erve yw, plus a mail-saving plan that’s tops in convenience. Open your account with any amount. Earnings start the 1st of the month on money added by the 10th. Why Settle for Less? VINGS 4 HOME OFFICE; 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN OFFICE ROCHESTER BRANCH 16 E. LAWRENCE 407 MAIN STREET 4416 DIXIE HIGHWAY, DRAYTON PLAINS 1102 W. MAPLE RD., WALLED LAKE TEX St Fred Beats St Benedict for Parockial Crown, 5247 THE PQXTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, mi PNH Rips Skippers, 75-52; Rams Win 1st Title Since'42 Fedynik Scores 24 for Huskies Jtint Central-.53 Pontiac North. .75 St. Fred ......42 Holly ........73 Rochester ...67. Lake Orion....60 Pontiac Central 48 Waterford ...52 St. Benedict...37 Bloomfield Hills 45 ['Ansel...50' Clawson......43 VasquezHits 22 Points to in6ttil-LWin Vikings Remain Secbnci . by Defeating Beiicley; Remington Wins By DON VOOKL ...Watgriool numbered Pontiac Northern fans laat night irl the PNH gym. but the Huskies far outnumbered the Skippers on the scoreboard. A standing rooi^ only crowtl watched coach Dick Hall's Huskies roll to their SLxth straight Inter-Lakes victory of the season, 7M2. It was the 16th triumph for Northern sia«..itsIarlMBartii^^ ing in I-L basketball last season. Walled Lake kept its slim hopes of catchmg PNH alive by slipping pajtt Berkley. 56-53, and Farming-ton handed winless Southfield a 66-64 overtime setback. Mike Fedyalk pared Nortli' era's victory with S4 potnls. The sharp-ahoottog a e B1 • r forward pumped la U la ^ first half trouble puHliig away frem Wa- PNH blew the game wide <^n in the third period with 36 points. ' We lobifed much belter,'' said Hall after iti;i charges had dumped Waterford fori the second time this season, "nie tayi lost 10 points by.missing five gasy layup Tumbles at Flinrtentrat Cold24.6Pct. Shooting Fatal in 53-48 Loss Lead Champs St. Mtice, Ol St^^tery Score Victories for Local Sweep Chiefs Rebound, Fire Aplenty but SVC Foe Has Better Eyesight i Arthur Hill .51 74: iPOBIIac Ontr*l ... t 3 7 4; ‘PHnt Nflrthfm ' .. t * J ? B«y Cltjr Crntr*l .7....... Crntriil »3 Pontlkc Ceutr c Central 4S OIT OF MY WAV!—Ed Stigers of Waterford clears a path below as he ewnes down with a rebound. Being moved by Stigers' body are Northern's Bruce Norton (24) and Bob Readier of Waterford. Steve Thoippson (34) is the other Northern player. Dick Shipman 1431* waits to a.ssist Stigers. BILL fX>RNWEI.L i FUNT — Forty-eight rebounds among three players and 69 shots ifrom the floor are impressive basketball stati-rtics. In fact, you'd isay that a team compiling thase figures should win. but overall, I felt (1 a definite improve!^ last week." n showed • the Thd Skippers were ihiproved, loo. They piwed this e^y by jumping to a 6-2 lead. Quic)K,tos kets by Steve “piompson. Fed; and Jim (japiatrant pushed Huskies into a lead they n gave up.^... Caplstrant prmided one >t the Mk thrills of the game by ssrishlng a Iwo-hand set s h « f from si* feet behind the centerline as the buzzer ended the first quarter with Northern In front, iS-6. Ferndale Bubble Bursts; aples Beat Hazel Park ! ■ Kpfnr» But in Pontiac Cejitral’s case they all added up to a five-point defeat here Friday evening because the Chiefs couldn't do the most important thing often enough — put the ball through the hoop. Shooting at a miserable !4.8 compared to Hint OntTal’s r cent, the PTH quintet 5.1 4* Saginaw Valley Con- There lin’t a member old enough n the St. Frederick basketball team who can remember the last Catholic League championship; Ihat was 19 years ago, in 1942. Last night St. Fred finally did it jagain by defeating St. ^nedict, 142-37, on the Highland Park court. “It .feels a little atraage claiming the champtonsblp, but a wonderful sort of a feeltaig," aaid eoaeh Gene Wright afterward. The other two area pareeWal schools were not in title contention, but they made it a clean swe^ locally. St. Mike whipped St. Rita, 54-44'and Orchard L^e St. Mary defeated St. Clement, 43-32. In the other league game ^al Oak St„,Mai5(..smn ovar...Stj ,• jriS'eT‘ofT*'ernda1e, 61-54* It was the ^8th straight victory for St. Fred since losing a one point verdict to Royal Oak St. MaiV in the second game of the St. Ben was troublesome however. The Kama led 18-1) at halftime, but l» the second half St-Ben cloHed ft to )• )7 after three periods then took the lead In the 4lh quarter and held It until the three minute ma^k. It*waa I7-S8. Craig Thompson then hit a buck-'et to make it 38-37 for Freds and j Pete Vasquez then dropped in four I straight free throws an^ that was-|the final tally. before 1.J74 fans at Ballenger Ileldhoiise. TTie lo.ss was the 3rd in .seven | (iKh*- Park and Bill Boldt 11. P'afP with the or an unbeaten: —^ ^ jlndians: Pontiac’s over all record season burst liHe a huBble when: |j,g!now*stands 7-4 while Flint Central F-ast Detroit. thMa.st place team Birmingham hit!'* action are PNH pla.vm Bruce Norton, Mike Fedynik and Jim Capistrant, left to right, and Ed Stigers (13) and Dick Shipman (43) of Waterford. The Huskies won, 75-52. Vasquez, with'22 points to lead the Rams, was red hot at the free throw line. He had 12 for 14. No other St. Fred player got in double figures. Joe Kelly had 13 for St. Benedict. which now rests in the league celiar. In the Eastern M\higan Li'ague, .scored a decisive 6 It “urly cost 8 victory, highly oniy nine©! 23charity tosses while Hazel Park got only six of 17. ■---------------------- B HAM TTiompson, playing his best half of baskctbaJl this season, led the 26-point assault with nine points. The Skippers managed only two field goals in the periexL ranked Dales the EML thunks to Royal Oak K^mbalf wiiin which knocked off Tort 64'62. the closest com Ferndale now stands 81 In fl league and 8-1 ovciwil. _ PortV”^ Huron is 5 2 In the F.Ml,. Thompson collected 19 points, IS In the last hall. Bruce Nor-loa hit 18 (or the winners and Marty F.\erelt in. Although ■vUA' .Skippers were niuch improved they still committed passing er¥ors and .several time.s Waterford pla.vors were caught in the lane lixi long. P(>or shooting hurt as the .Skipfiers hit on 18 of 66 field goal attempts.: Ed .Stigers was high scorer for the Skippers with 19 points. Cary Moran addH .H and .Shipman hit 10. The SkippiTs now have U: 3-^Jeague mark. Birmingham, meanwhile, won s .3rd league game in seven^ Kv LI T' starto b> downing Hazel Park, J P0l|Dl6 lIQUrBS M42, Pontiac's rangy front line of 6-foot-3 George . Eei 54 Brudell »u ri ir Vo ^ Kennedy j 0-3 « D»vi» 6 i-i u!did a tremendous job around the s 3* n Pan"*' 1 1-1 jjbackboards, both offensively anc 2 13 3 owtrt 3 3 4 4|‘*^*‘bS'vely, and the "big three' 4 1-3 • ^ ;also paced the scoring attack as r 7^i7 43 Touii Z3 »^33 $3 o”** posted double numbers. - ' * -3Mr4m— j But they receivetEvery little help li io la 'a lJllfrom usually reliable back pourt where Oarcnce Douglas, the .Sagjnaw Valley's 3rd leading point-maker, tallied just four points on a single bucket and a pair of foul shots. Douglas entered the game with a 16.6 average. I Can't H($lp Utica TTic Walled Lake Berkley.dash was a game of contrasts. Neither, team could find the range in the first half and the score was tied 16-16. Both teams began connecting in the set»nd half and midway in the fourth quarter the Vikings had gained a 10-point edge. John Maragos pari-d Walled Lake In Its lourfh T I, win agalmd two losHea with 90 points. Paul WJrebaugk Ml 17 tor the loserw who are 14. Leading 31-27. there was never any doubt for East Detroit a.s the \ . I Kennedy grabbed a rfdzen re- .Shamrocks kept a five point mar- Despite three^ne double figure! bounds and meshed 14 points, 12 gin most of the way and then poinlmakers, gave up a In the 1st half. Fed bagged 11 broke it open early in the final .3.3-27 halftime lea^and lost ai points and lopped the rebound-‘ 60-36 contest to I^ftrahore last] Ing. as usual, with 28 recover- liOU Perry, 8 5 renter got 24 *’*8*’*- \ Pritchett rebounded 18 and IMilnts lor Ikisri Detridl, and * * * \ i Fi-rndale had all Its scoring 1 To*>y Palazzola with 18,\l)ave However, the great board work done by lour plavers, I,arry Kraft at 16 and Tim Krenzko vnth atone for poor shooting. Trcgoniiig with 22, Mlcheaii. Instill wasn t enough. Lakeshorh^ Thp Flint cagers netted 21 of 55 with U, Daniels II and Hicks 18. l-arry Thomas pushed in 25 poinl^allempls while the Chiefs were Rill (Tiiltnn of-Rnva! Oak Him I. PulW 't out in theming an additional 14 times and Bill raillon of Royal C)ak IGm-14,h quarter by dutscoring UticaijXing onlv 17 ball led 4he upset over Port ,6-10 in that r^riod. ^ ^ ‘ Huron with 29 points. Port Huron led 27-‘JB at halftime, hut starting Ibe final fieried Kimbail took HT frrV"l/6ag> ifivp point lead, the largeisf margin J'"*/ CTO ,in the game. ♦ a a Poll use Honhf It was Chilton’s personal high' We«i tooom*ieid"'i of the year and Kimball’s best: Sirnh’/ir'id 4*»' Wsllfd Lsks 's*,' Glssioo 43. Ls*-Hl. RitA-3»^t Rochester coach Gene Konleyl stole the hall and made the first could well wish every game wasj three baskets each time. Roches-as easy as last night's 67-50 vie-- ter, which has show^ a weakness L’Anse Crenseiir a^Trt-[ anUFtree throw Hhe IWs irasdn. County league contest. : made the first nine charity fosses Every member of the foam; In a row, but then still only did played end all but two got into the! slightly better than 50 per cent scoring column for Rochester; with 11 of 25. Which held a 40-20 halftime nrar-j Rochester plays’ rival Avondale , Tin a non-league encounter on the Roseville, however, kept a full,Avon court tonight, and then the game ahead of the Falcons >n falcons close the campaign again.st Xric Price with 14. A field goal by Walt Grimala| with 20 MCohds to play in the overtime earned Farmington e 3-3( league record. Southfield's Lc.s Wilkinson had tied the game with two seconds to play in regulation . time witiv-a basket. Ririningham led 25-23 at halt-lime and Hazel Park got within thn-e, 41-18 with six minutes to play. The Maples then pulled Bwa.v With !«eve Willis and Bob liefs' did an excellent job high-sivmng front line\tolding Cloyce Dicker-son \o foiirNroints and Jim Toles to six. But tngy failed to halt the Indians’ guard^s Rick Moore tallied 21 points ami Jerry Roberson added 13, Similar to their first meeting at PCTI when the 'Chiefs' won by 5843 score, the battle wa.s close >n 4S, RO Klmbsll Wi. 01 «4sry is. 81 Jsmet Ronrifo 41. Ao*«vlll» 43 noflinwr 44. X’snM Cr»u»* 34 North Brsnrh S3. Oiford 3S Ortonvillr S3. Mllllniton 44 Birmmghsni QrozeAtt'Srtry HiH 3s ucver could make up LskMhore Si, Ullcs and hard-fought all the way. IMl bad 3rd quarter piistw^ the iChiefs into a-10-point hole and Wilkinson took game honors with 28 points. Bob Salay hit 20 and Grimala scored 18 for Farming- !dcficit. 38-28 'rile Indians gained lead roldwny through the .3rd period and PTH never came closer than three points after that. Flin’ f^lee held 18-polnt edges in the 4lh sesston.------------- Rochester Has Easy Time; Soine Hits 44 Big Duane Soine, an outstanding 8-5 are, took sroring honors of all the games reported last night as he hit for 44 points on 21 field goals and two free throws. Lapeer and then Roseville, -what should be the tnie-deTemun-ing game. ROCHESTZa I 2 0-0' 4 Blsmsn 3 3-3 I TreplM i 0-3 to Bsbr - * *1 Brosd 1 Pslton I 3-0 21 Brosd I 3-4 Soine hit 17 of those points. inlB'id^" the third period alone when Rose-:**'“ I 0-1 0 Upton after three stanzas. Ken McLeesej “ added 10 for the winners and Joe |Totsii Walker had 10 for Romeo. Rorheiu Saine'.s output was a Roseville j **'*"” High School record. St. Mike led at halftime 28-25 in its game, and St. Oement moved ahead in the third quarter and held it with about four min- Jlm Hurren scored and AI Tunny got a c4Hiple fre« throws to, push Mikes back into the lead to slay. The Shamrocks got 18 points to the final quarter while holding 8t. Rita to only seven which was the margin. Hurren fini.shed with 16 and Art Robak and Tunny each had 13. Sam-Nai'dicchio had 12 for St. Rita. Orchard Lake stayed in a second place tie with RO St. Mary as Giem Haax led the way with 15 points for the Eaglets. The first half actually turned out to be a personal dual between Larry Sisson of St. Mary and Ron Van Hille of St. aement. Sisson got all four points in.the first period and Van Hulle got 8t. Clements* six. Hulle continued hitting and got all of the vIsHora points except the final basket of the first hair which went to Bob Fortin. Rochester, Jerry Olsen e pla.ved. the' best game of his high g school career as he connected for Jj 21 points. He got help from Phil a Kwicrant with 11 and Dan Bird ** 10. I 0-» 3 Wsiker • P' 3 W 3 Psimi 1 M’K( Ford •fboiw 1 4-1 5-8 junior guard. Psatlse Prni PksU BIG 22 — Pete Vasquez paced _ St. Fred to the Suburban Cath-\ olic League basketball title last ‘ night at Highland Park where the Rams defeated St. Benedict, 42-37 for their first crown in 19 years. Vasquez got 22 points to lead the (wui iiig and lie^lllrista’ crucinJ free throws late in the game to pull out the victory. Thumb Stays The Southern ThumlT Leafue title looks like it will go right down to the wire before being claimed. PUntiac narrower! the gap to 36-j New Haven and Capac, the tied 33 in the las two minutes of tlw leaders, each won last night. and Dennis Diehm’s/capac whipped Anhada 57-.14 and layup shot in the fnal .50 seconds New Haven romped over Dryden cut the difference to 5148. Shots 78.4.5 Almont took it on the chin by Fi^ and ^y Couscr 1 the again, 7949. at the hands of last minute and a half went in and Brown Oty. then popped out. The Chieto were ahead following the 1st quarter, 17-16, but Flint led at halftime, 29-26, and kept in front after three periods, 42-35. Craig Dill’s' two free throws after the final buzzer brought^t^odd Harris at 17 each, Tom Arthur'Hill a 46-45 victory over Flint Northern Friday night as the HllIKcs tnov(*d into .sole pdssession of 2nd place. Unbeaten Saginaw, Jthc Valley loa^tor, drubbed Bay ICity Ccniral. 70-40. PCH ( 1 s-s 13 n ck'im : 3-4 13 Tol»» I I-t 14 Harnllut ‘ WHO WiU, W'l.V — Steve Thompson (white jersey) of Pontiac Noi-lhern battles for a rebound with two Waterfotd jdayef). No, 43 is Dick Shipman of the Skippera. 11 14-» 4S Total. J Soar* Sr llaaHcri r CMitral .....II ( • 13_4| Ctaual_ ........It 13 11 *• *“ rootlas Central 14. ruul Central ;i. Das Pels wMh 20 and Kei« Kohayashl with 12 tod Upae while Juliua Tranb had 18 for Armada. It waa 28-12 at half- Griffin with 11 and Irv Short with 14. Dryden teally fell apart in the! second half New Haven led 30-221 at halftime.” ’Tom Lobstein got 16 and Paul Grwidin 14 for Dryden. Almont made overtures to w’ln its first game by holding a aeven point lead in the third quarter, 57-SO, but Brown ,City pulled away in the final stanzu. Harris had 26 and Dale Hobson 21 for Almont in a losing cause while Gary GorsUn Mt for 28, Lew Houck 13 and Jim MUka-11 tor Brown City. JIulle iiniriied with 15 for the game, but it wasn't enough as Orchard Lake pushed to 26-16 lead and kept a wide margin.' , Royal Oak St. Mary got 21 points from Bruce Stewart, 18 fft>m Bob Dorr and 10 from Gary McLain in whipping St. James. St. James led 31-28 at halftime and St. Mary tied it 46-46 in the final quarter before taking the lead Jar, g^. Smith had 14, W«mer-13 and Kieman 10 for St. James. ST. run (43) ST. HKH. (IT) TO FT TP FO FT TP atmkt 1 1-S 3 K«tto 3 1-3 T 3 1-3 B ZIto : I l-I 3 TtpO .a - • • a,-..- Vmiauei . - - -________- Kennedy 0 O'I 0 Rlc^ I S;1 *, T«UI> OL ST. MART Tmt l 4 1-1 I Fortin - ! !'! 4 ■ ? i'- 1-11 31 ■NT (S3) ______ FO PT TP 3-B 1 Vlfneau 0 0-B t I-I • izl'ur* 3 L-Lia 0 Dslicz 0 1-3 I B ft-B B Tncd* ToUIb MBrz Clement ..B B B ti-n Ro(>i)k B 14 I ST. MTA (44) ■P FO FT IP (3 B'i’VBOB 1 B-t ) — - B rnmi 4 B-i i Tunnz 4 B-13 13 Leo I 1-S I Hurren B l-B if K'd'e'he S 3-B IS Keeilini 0 4-4 4 Normnn t 1-1 B Bon'bri 8 S-1 B Jncobt B I-l D'm’ckI 3-3 4 i 0 1-31 ToUU IS 1B-3B 14 Tot»U 11 lB-11 44 Score bz Qnnrtere 4(ke ...........I 13 I IB—34 ........14 11 II 1-44 Archery Class Tonighi Not Lost Night — Sort _____ . PonlUc Free. Pbou LITTIJ5 MAN, BIG NIGHT — JPrry Olsen, 5-8 Junior guard for Rochester, enjoyed the best night of his yowig career as he led the Falcons to an easy 67-50 triumph over L’Anae. Olsen harrased L’Anse Ijy steaUng the ball three tlntos In a row and scoring the flrsTtltree bockeU. He finished with 21 points. The second advance;! arcl setsion at Oakland Coi Sportsmen’s Club Is being tonight at 7:30 p.m. and not - . - aports page. « speaker la Dr. Ge«rg« Km The nfMHda departmeto la t tor Uie taeonventonce the • THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY < QrioQ JAfiDi Again; Holly Is Lone Unbeaten Quintet New Showdown Set in Oakland B Loop Orion won c»uld find plenty of tmiWe when streJ(M (aune Uit n^t by beet- it meets the Dragons. inrOawson, nawr. team, fight — The big smile on Pam Huntley’s face reflects Pontiac Northern’s cage fortunes last nliht. Ihe ■■ senior cheerleader had pleirty to be happy about as IT-yearold a the ttttsi^ Then there’s Lake Orfcrn. The Dragons are virtually out the were weU in front. Bob Rea^ (Hh Waterford, title fdeture tjut the way they have and Bruce NoHon (24), Northern, are the players. the stage has been set for anothn* in the weekly series showdown battles in the Oakland B League. a ★ ♦ Oak Park moved, back Into the spotlight by downing Troy, 63-53, minor showdown Jast night at Troy. The win earned Oak Park a first place tie with k«e Avondale. You gaesMd U! Ayadsle trav ds to Oak rmrk Friday. But the whm of (tds game will find no time to breath easier. Right behind the MdHti Is FlU-gerald, 63-36 winner over last plaae been playing ot late. Avondale Lal^ Orion conttmwd fts drive toward a possible second or third place finish by dumping Clawson. The win evened the Dragons league record at 5-5 and left them a I game behind third place Troy. Clawson never got within eight riafi wfter~lhe* Big lint and fenrtk ifaarien gave Lake Orioa Ms flaal margta ot vtotory. Bqcfcy Craven led Orion wifli 17 markers. Gary’ Hunter tallied.. 17 and TOm Reed added 14. ^ohn Miller topped Clawson with 13. WWW Troy led Oak Park until the start of the last quartv. A free throw by Steve Dressier early in pacibd put Oak^Park' ahead, 40-39, and ’Troy never regained the lead. Dressier converted 13 free throws in the final eight I - Hopes for Title Get Delayed by Millington Oxford Offers Little Resistance in Losing 9th Straight ’’All is not lost. We can still the title outright and go a long way in tournament play.’’ TTiis^was the opinion of Harvey Fletcher, OrtonviUe coach, last night after the Black Hawks took an 83-73 setback at the hands of Millington before a breathing-room only crowd on the Brandon Township court. ' ★ ★ A The defeat, second la 10 games aM first In the South Oentrul League,, pot MmUMtoa wttMn reach. Ortpavllle to new %-l and MilHogtan 4-1, and Ike advautage for the Black Hawks Is that they t play Imlay City at bome ImUy on the road ta the key game. Oxford, meanwhile offered little resistance as North Branch took a 58-39 victory. It was, Oxford’s 9th loss without a win and kept the Wlldcata iiL the cellar of tlu league. Jerry Simmons, a chunky 6-foot and 315 pounder, did most of the damage to Otonville. He hit on 11 or 17 attempts and finished with 33 polnU. He got help from Mika 1 Zink with 14 and Ned Lockwood with 15^ i led 4BM at halftime after A big tad period which Mtted the wtaaers >7 points. Ortonvtile get wlthfai five polBto but never sny closer. Dan Leek, o substitute, did some serious damage. He scored all aev-en of his points in that 2nd quarter, while Simnwns added 11 and Lockwood 7. Millington burned up the nets with 33 goals In 64 at-temptt ter M per'coit. ★ ♦ * , OrtonviUe uliich had been aveil aging 41 per cent hit only 33 percent last night with Jim Hutdiinp getting 29, Jerry Brousieau 13 and Lee Hotchkiss 13. Sink S 1-1 14 Ituth’ii I n-ll It Lockw'4 1 1-1 IS Moori * *-* * Kol*lk 1 S-l * Brau'ku r^ter 1 t-S • HIckty ... Atam’t 11 11-11» mtari t i-s il Leek i 1-4 7 Bkrrett 11-1 1 nm 1 «-i 1 Pistons Edge Hawks on 'Merchants Night' DETROIT-It was ’’Merebants’ Night” Friday and the Pistons put two ’’products" on display for 6,852 customers. The clients hissed at one and loved the other. Fortunately, the Detroit quintet exhibited the latter product twice,i and in so doing outsold the Syracuse Nlits, 121-119. PndfleC Na 1-tot’a eaD IL "Braad X”—waa professtoaal basketball at ito pooreat. The Pistom ^loelfed terrible In the second qaarter and, unbelievably, evea 1a the third, when they feU M peMs behtad. Product No. 2-”Brand WOW” -saw thr Pistons at their best. It enabled them to build a 39-31 first-quarter lead. 4hen brought them, teck from their deep deficit in the closing 12 minutes. Strangely, the leading salesman for both products was Don Ohi, rookie guard who played hia college basketball at the University of Illinois. eat la for starter Chock tke third pertod to have beea yanked aeverai .times by most But Piston nientor Dick McGuire stuck with him as he missed seven of nine field goal tries, xHit a half dozen bad panes and otherwise was neariy a compete picture of ineptness. McGuire’s p^ence paid ofl—big. For Ohl auddnily caught fire in ’the last qtenza. He 4ri field goals. Five ziK>ed through the hoop. His passes were accurate and clever. He couidd do no KTOng. Ohi’s teOfinflMites, whu had looked nearly as bad aa he daring the third-qnnrter stoim, sharpened np with hton. The Ntts led, 98-86, ns the last period started. Five minutes and 12 seconds later, the crowd roared u ao Ohl jump shot put foe Pistons back in froiri, 163-102. Syracuse managed to t|e foe game once more, at 113, but nqver artin went ahead. George Lm iced the contest with five seconds left os he netted two free throws to put foe scoreboard at its closing tally. I Ohl flnlahed foe night with M potato. He was outdone by mates BaOey Hawefl (M) and Gom 8lme (tS) bnt M conM dc«y that OU made hfo salea eouart. Dolph Schayes notched 34 points for game laurelSr Cohcol. Dick Barnett had 24. ★ ★ ★ There were two other loop games last niight. Wilt Chamber-lain poured in 52 points setting Boston Garden records for points and field goals leadfaig the War-rioifs over the Onciimati Royals by 136-135. Boston won the (rther tilt beating New York, 123-KB. A ^point 4th quarter sparked by reserves clinch the issue. etern TMaU • S • Lm . 1 4 tt McMillan 4 S 11 Morclud 4 4* HoM* 4 T 17 QM / ] 4 14 Bkw IS U It Broncos Easily Defeat Barons by 73-45 Score Second Place Deadlock Results in W-O Loop; Wolves Win Holly has tte distinction of hav-.-only-4inbcat-high school basketball team. Feiyidale, the only other team with an unblemifoed slate going into last night’s aetkm, suffered its first hiss at East Detroit. ♦ ★ ★ Meanwtule, the Broncos soundly whipping Bloomfield Hills, 73-«, on the HoUy codrt. It wds the ninth Wayne-OaUand Conference win for foe league-leaders and lOfo overall. Bloomfield HiU’s teas cansed a major Jam In the ninnernp spot. No leas than four teams, Incind-ing the Barons, are deadlocked lor second. .., Dr^er . gpd Dgve .. aroretT 14.points for Oak PariT Henry Akin’s 18 was high for Troy. Duane Pisarek counted points in FHzerald’s easy win at Madiaon. The* Spartans held a 27-15 halftime lead. Tom Reddinger scored 10 tor Madison. ★ ★ ★ aax OaioM <«) clawson at} ro rr TP ro ft tp ick 4 1-1 1 Miller 4 1-4 13 krd • *-l I Burton * * ' ' lUlimi I 1-1 3 McArthi Hoed 4 4-4 13 Beene . mter I 1-3 17 MerUn Cnrej • • Crevei 1 S 1-3 4-4 SO S ToUU 14 13-34 43 ij Qnertere 3 City Swim Program Starts on Monday The Pontiac Recreation Department swimming program will begin at Pontiac Central pool. ★ ★ ★ On Mondays, the program is for beginners’ swimming for youngsters. On Tuesday there will be open swimming for everywie. On Wednesdays, youth advanced swimmers Trill use the pool. There are two sessions each night, 6:30 and at 8:00 p.m. 60-42; Milford Wped West Bloomfield, 51-37; and Northville topped Brighton, 67-46. The three winners are tied with Bloomfield Hills. The Barons had lost to Holly 49-45 at Bloomfield. This was the closest any rival had c(»ne to Holly going into last night’s action. It still is the closest. i * ★ The score was 1-1 in- the opening minute. 'Then the Broncos started pulling away in a big hurry, trolly held a 40-24 halftime edge and increased its lead to 56-32 going the final period. Don McKenzie took game ing honors for Hdly with 20 points. Ron Morlan hit 19 and Roger Hall added 14. Fred Jeynes was foe only Baron in douUe figures. He taUied 16. A vicu«y next Friday over Milford would assure the Broncos share of the title. Minimum height for swimmers is 48 inches. W ★ ★ There Is a 25 cent fee tor (^Jen swimming for youngsters under 18 and 50 cents for adults. Ear the beginner’ swimming dastes fee is $2.00 ’This is for an eight week period. Registrations for Rosburg 2nd in Classic Milford, on uncertain footing the last few weeks, had no trouble dumping West Bloomfield. The Redskins hustled to a 22-12 halftime lead and coasted the rest of foe way. Ernie Miller led foe Redskim with It points. Tim Kurnick It. Hie Lakers fatted to have a player la double flguree. The loea kept Weet Bloomfield tied with Brighton at Ihe bottom ot the league. Bill Powell tossed In 22, points to lead Clarkjtion to its win over CHarenceviUe. The Wolves held 28-15 halftime lead and coach Dom Mauti emptied his bench in the second half. Tohy Giacobazzi was high for foe losers with 16 points. Mengert Still on Cloud 9 PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP)-AI Mengert plight find the last two rounds of foe Palm Springs Golf Clastic about as delightful St. Fred in Tourney ehamp M. Fred at the LasJ Event Loss Sinks Pontiac Central, 54-50 rr Tf Tlfcbltt* '3 j-4 ■ 1 -- 4 rvemt’a 4 j Butte'S 3 \ t? le miiiipi 4 3-4 M Built 4 3-3 . i Kttriwr 4 1-3 1 le Dodit 3 4-i It 1 li it* in the breaststroke and individual medley. • — The loss was foe fifth straight meet from Flint Central eatlkr Victory In the 160^yard freestyle relay, the last event of the day, gave Flint Central a 54-90 decision Tngemar Johansson found hia last two rounds with Floyd Patterson. But whatever happens, it’s a real tribute to the 31-year-old pro-that be got .this far. w ★ * Although his tournament pearances have been infrequent and rarely rewarding, Mengert was a atn^ ahead of his nearest rival today gcfoig into the fourth round of this $50,000, 90-hole event. But that nearest rival was a good’ one — Bob Rosburg. And so * were some ot the others jdned in the close {wrsuit. Mengert, one-time amateur star from Spokane, Wash., and more recently from Phoenix, Ariz., took foe tead Thursday with a stunning 6-uhder-par 65 at Thunderbird Country Club. Friday, playing at Bermuda Dunes, he got off to a brilliant start with a 32 on the front nine, then polished off the back nine in par 36 and came in Trifo a 4-under-par 68. ,His M-hole acofi 201 was 14 wider par. ‘ Rosburg, playing on the same Coach Jailed After EDISON, NJ. (AP)-When a bAskettall player commits a fool his osVomA geta a free throw, but whM foa eoaeh Mta foa tUite keeper tt maana 90 day* hi the workhouse. -4 That was the penalty meted /OUt , by MMistrate Roland Winterg to . .Thomaii Hutton, who was ! guilty ’Ibursday night Of a ii« police Lt. William Fisher *u> iiw a basketball game Wadfiaaday n^Kht. Hutton, 24. of Forbea Coart, . was coach of the North Edjajg Raiders to the RecfjifflSnSjtta. Fisher was the ttaoehf----- Police said Hutton FMier stop the clock while an ;attempted foul shots. in foe PCH pool yeeterday. it it it The meet stayed close all the way and PCH t^ foe lead when Ben Donaldswi won foe 200-yard freestyle wttX hia second varsity record ct tito night. He won the 40-yard freestyle In :19.0 and went .1:56,7 In foe m this a la another meet laet ni^t Royal Oak bondero lost 63-42 to Fordson with A1 Lowery setting a new Don-dero ichoN record in the 200 individual medley with a time of 2:31.5. Dondero is now 1-7 for the Dldc Doerr added a first pfoee for PCH in the butterfly to go afont with DonaklaoB’s two flrat aj^ Bnpto Norvell’s pair of wtaa Groyos Triumphs/ 54-48 i w I Birmingham Graves ftltki qutokiy to a 17-9 first qaartor Northville got off to a slow start against Brighton, but once rolling, the home team came iqi with an easy victory. Steve Juday and Dan Brown each scored 16 points for NorthviUe. Mack Piersall totaled 13 for the losers. I Render 4 t . • Eurnlek 3 4-t 10 sut 3 1-1' ■’rleetleT 4 1=1 s Lucadem 1 1-1 jewU 10-0 3 Relmrich 4 0-3 Miller 3 2-4 13 Peddy 1 3-7 Muneen 0 1-4 I Pnddy 1 S=T Hermoy’n 1 0-1 ToUle 10 10-30 M Tatele"! for a three-day total of 202. Ken Venturi, who shot a 67 at emnida Dunes, was another stroke back at 203, and distince-driver George Bayer, who got a 69 at Bermuda, was next at 204. Ftour players — Bill Casper Jr.. Paul Harney, Jay Hebert and Billy Maxwell — were tied at 206. Arnold Palmer, vriio came on A flourish on the last day won this event last year, was tied at 207 with Art Wall Jr. and Bob Harris. 4. tis ferosiUtr«k*; Jim MabbtUIo (P)v Ofti MOMtBfBl* .................. 00,7441-111 Ttm« 1:144 • ............. 73.7047-311 r:----144 fcooowif. John e»t» IF). T1B>0 '.47j Lwiwrd .................. 7M0.71-dU H-o .......... WSfcSi rO#T TP 4'^-4 » 4 4-5 30 3 1-3 ■ Tratenin 3 3-14 . I Jeynea 3 0-1 1| ToUll 30 31-31 73 ToUIi It 11-30 44 , „ 8c»rt »y OaorWr* tolly ............. .17 33 16 17-73 lllU ................is 14 I 13—45 16-37 ; 13 II I S 17-37 CLARABTON (00) CLAATEVnXX (4t) FO FT TP FO FT TF lOndy 3 0-0 4 WhMlcr 0 0-1 ‘ 4 4-*..i TaI» - 4 0-4 Mc^n 7 4-0 3 Olocob'si 0 4-7 WtI(on 4 1-3 0 Blovctt 4 3-4 Powell 0 4-4 33 Dowdy 1 1-2 BplegBU 10-0 I Fraelu 1 0-0 lien 3 LawrAWB 1 < 1-3 7 Total! : iirencevlll* J4:31 10 ^otala II 13-33 41 w FG FT TF S 0-1 10 Hill _ . . 1 0-1 3 M.Plen'1 0 3-11 13 3 0-0 4 Bldwell 3 1-1 7 7 3-4 10 Marx 5 0-0 ‘ I 0 4-0 4 Oymond l 3-3 -------1 0 ♦-} 0 D. Flm'l 3 0=1 Pllkena 0 0-1 0 rwbaa ^ 0-0 A &!! 4 1-4 14 DB - - - - 3 0-0 Totala 33 11-31 07 Totala 10 1-33 40 SMra I tturtara ... I 31 II 30-«7 ....t 4 14 lS-44 Former Star Athlete Dies of Cancer at 21 ARKADELPHU. ^rk. (AP)-Jody Jones, 21, a three-year letter man in basketball and baaeball at Ouachita Baptist (Allege here, died of eancer at his home Friday. Jones was the leading scorer lor Ouachita task season wlfo 39 points. Jones underwent an operation Sept. 1. He returned to school and had served aa ^n assistant basketball coach. He was a native of Quitman, Tex. , I PRESS BOX Lansing Sexton suffered its 2nd. setback in 29 games last night bowir^ 60-S6 to Jackson. Another prep upset saw Grosse Pointe hand Highland Park a 57-54 beat- top afoletoB becoming o rally ineligible. (Nympto broad Jumper Toay Watson ot OUm-konw and Boston College cage mce Jim Hooiey ue among the __ryjiMM.Prm. F^* - ’REA&V.-AIM.'BL’LLkEYE - Wen'deU Banks, 16, helps in foe Pontiac Recreation department’s archery program by tutoring Roger Chapdelaine, 9; Richard Klingler, 12, and Pat Riley, 13, in some bow and arrow fundamentals. The Recreation department finished its winter junior program this week .at Pontiac 1 Another family program will be sponsored soon. ajt points e game. ★ ★ A Smashed glasses nuiy have cost Manhattan a victory Thursday night Near-sighted star Doug ifo wu ’’affirid to what I couldn’t see” in the dosing' minutes and his team bowed by He had hit four of seven shots before breaking, tbo space iA- Calvin belted HiUsdale 97-56 for its 13fo straight victory last night Eastern Michigan to^ a 126-80 walloping from Southern Illinois as Central Michigan bowed 86-7% to Eastern Illinois. Hayes Makes Hurdle History Jones Ties Record From Our Wire Services Pontiac’s Hayes Jones shared the limelight with Wilma Rudolph ovenfoadowing several other stars in the annual MiUniae Games before over 15,000 fans at Madison Square Garden last night. Jones, who has not lost a race In foe New York arena, tied the indoor record by winning the 66 yard high hurdles in seven seconds flat. The M-year-old former East- first man In l;latory to make that time twtoe. MUt CampbsU dM It first In 1BS7 and Jones matched foe teat In ’H. Miss Rudolph also tied a record of her own by running the woih-an’s 66yard dash in 6.9 for both ' the semifinal and final. A A It Manhattan’s 2-mile relay team, John .’Thomaa andmiler Istvan Roszavdgyi of Huhgaly w ere College Hoop Powers in Key Games Tonight among the other stars of the meet. ’The Manhattan team broke a 19-year-old record with a 7:S2.8 clocking and drew a prediction from its coach Geon^ Eaatment of making 7:30. Thomas cleared seven feet for foe 57fo time but couki not get above 7-J. Ros-zavdgi easily whipped Erfoe Cun-liffe of Stanford in 4:06. Other winners included Jerry Sebert of OlifmniA in the half-mile 1:5L9, Jim Wedderbum, of New York University, in the 600 1:12.2, Henry Wadworth of Florida in the pole vault 15-4, Frank Budd of Villanova in the 60-yard dash :06.2, A1 Lawrence of Houston foe 2-miIe 8:52-8 and Ralph Boston of Tennessee A&I in the broad jump. 25-9. By Uie Associated Press Second-ranked St. Bonaventure _ It its revenge against third-ranked Bradley Thursday night New York. Now it’s fourth-ranked Duke’s turn against, fifth-rated North Carolina in the Saturday feature of a showdown week in cbllegc basketball. ★ * ★ The Blue Devils of Duke and the Tar Heels of North Carolina play at Durham, N.C. tonight in rematch of the final of Decem-ber’^Dixie Classic, won by North Carolina 76-71. ’That loss is the only blot th 16 games this season for Duke and one that probably will have avenged if Coach Vic Bubas* club" to to jom St. Jtona«?tJtBre as foe chief national challenger to top-ranked Ohio State. ★ ★ ★ Sixtb-ranked Iowa <12-21 challenges Cincinnati (15-3) and the Bearcats’ 16game unbeaten string in a diicago Stadium doubleheader that also matches Drtroit with ChlcSgO.1 Loyola.: 1rtghtK.T!mlrni4 : Southerii California, 78-63 victor Friday night over Big Five - foe UCLA, plays the Uclans again, and lOth-ranked Kansas State resumes Big Eight Conference tussling at Oklahoma. ★ iir * LaSalle and Sf. Joseph’ battle for the Middle Atlantic Conference lead, Mississippi State’ Southeastern Conference leaders entertain LSU, Dayton is at Memphis State, and New York University meets Syracuse at Utica. before the national television cameras, in other noteworthy games. * it it I/Njisville (17-3) and Niagara (10-3), another pair ot independents wittr posf-sclaaon ideas scored easy victories, while Maine gained a share of the Yankee Con- ference lead with Connecticut last night. Seventh-ranked Louisville, winding up a three-game swing through the deep South, laced Loyola of New (irleans 75-58 on 67 per cent field goal shooting and 23 points by John Turner. Niagara, with slump-ridden A1 Butler leading a second-half surge stepped Holy Cross (164), other tournament-hopeful 86-73 Butler totaled 18. with 15 coming in foe second half, although Kennedy Glenn tom>^ foe winners with 20. In the night's big upset. Stetson knocked off Miami, Fla. 76-68. McElhenny Says He May Retire From Football SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Half-back Hugh McElhenny, foe San Frandaco 49er star acquired last week by the new Minnesota Vlk-higa of foe National Football League, said Friday he may give up the game. ..... ★ * ★ ........ Although he previously had expresses approval oi the'transfer, he has entered ihto a partnership I In a supermarket at Santa Clara, Calif. * "This throws a different li^t on the whole matter,” McElheqny said. ‘?^«*-.^^usFlips-3D^^^ Another Rams Booth WOOI»l5RY. r*m. iUPl> - A |Trailw«yt Bus dddded out ng—Mdrllyn Monroe—and his next one—Sigmund ITreud. Some Stan, Including Robert MUidlum, claim Huston’s a cheerful sadist who overworks his performers till they drq;»—<»> tries to scare th«n half to death. “Marvelous actor I” chuckled the satanic Mr. Huston when I' mentioned Mltehum and his accusation. “PuLa beard on him and ha eouM Tlay OPEN SUNDAY 100% NYLON ’169 S 100% NYLON $9900 1^. SkiSiiiah wm Re*wtiM« H»m CuihiMM MODERN DAY FURNITURE_______________________ 1640 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-5983 Sia 12 ■. te 5 p.BL TAILl LAMPS— FLOOR LAMPS— POLE UMPS— COLONIAL SOFAS— CHAIRS—TABLES— DINETTE SETS— SERTA MATTRESSES -.-Select.jTroa jHandreds ■King l*ar,”’ he said, continuing to ignore the Mltehum charge. “Anyway,” I said, “the burning gues-WILSON tion of the day is about Arthur Miller. Does he try to get any message across in ‘The Misfits’?" Huston held up a finger and smiled triumphanUy. • “I just happen to have an answer for you from Arthur Miller himself.” From a coat pocket he predaeed part of a typed letter*frem the playwright “Let’s make a pact," Miller had written to Huston. "When tt»y ask yoii wttat~tt means, think a minute sagely and then say ‘Ask MlUer.’ I’U do the same when they ask me, and ni tell them' to you." After a short rest In his castle in Ireland, Huston will be off to Vienna to start ‘Freud." Laotian Win Claim Is Termed Untrue VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) - A U.^ official, who i^ent Mveral daya with aa army mluffip driring northw^ on the Vientiane-Luang Prabang h^wsy. said today government ^dahns of the capture Tof Sala Pbou Khoun road junetkn were not true. » k k ★ the strategic juhetka Friday and was stUl riwUiiR It. ed Weateni observers who'db- BoMvan HMHira clahm tth( two Bikwiii had IMwi ap aad Hie offirial said the southern eel- 4 Did, 31 Hurt in Crpth ROCK SPRINGIS, Wyo. (UPD — Four pmeons were kiUed and SI were injtued when a car, a aemi-trailer tnKfc and a bus canyiag 60 homeward-bound woricera ooL Uded Friday seven mUea west of here. I - ... ••"■’■WSTOX.™ “You’re golhg to do it ih ALL YANKEE STORES OPEN SUNDAY 10 A M. to 6 P.M. WITH 3 SUNDAY SPECIALS pulco?" the reporter asked. “Not underwater?" he said. Legends have grown up about Huston's demoniacal slave-driving . .. about bow in “Moby Dick” he had Greg-ory Peck gravely concerned about how he was to escape ; with his life. ★ ★ ★ Puffing a long cigar and running a hand through his graying hair, Huston smiled and reminded me that “We all have our vices.” You might remember how he walked out on David O. Selznlck, or the other way around, when he was staring to shoot “Farewell to Arms.” “Selznick's vice is memos." Huston said. "He gets drunk on them. I quit after I read the first six pages of one hi sent to me. I said to my secretary, 'Let’s go’.” ; Profit-making 1s never his goal. "If I let that gi me,” he said, "all.my values would come tumbling down. •AAA EARL’S PEARLS: What a girl looks for In a boy nowadays are looks, personality and his father’s car whenever he! . That’s earl, brother. (Copyright. TO — Columbia University law professor William L. Cary has been picked by President Kennedy to be a member (d the Secipities and Exchange Cotnmisaioq. Pontiac Theaters EAGLE ‘Toby WaU oimey; “Bi^ into Outerspaee,’ Ryo Ikebe. Mon.-Hni.: “Suddenly Last Sum-»r. ” Elizabeth Thylor; “tock God's Country,” Rock Hudson. HURON Sat.-Thu.: "Midnigbt Lace, Doris Day, Rex Hairison, eolop. STRAND not'"Jtca- Ttireewr.” Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr, Robert Mltehum, Jean Simmons, odor. Why Accept Less for Your Money NOT wants it. . Spocs Sover Pull-Down Openings StHI Exist for Adult Education There is room for more registrants in several adult education evening courses being offered in the Avondale School District, according to William Saville, director of the Avondale adult educa-; tion program. U. of Miami Intogrates MIAMI (UPII — The University of Miami, which announced Thursday it was lowering all racial and religious entrance bars, said Friday four Negroes have applied for admi.ssion and five others have picked up application forms. NOT 3'/2% I Registration bc^n last Monday. Hiree courses still have not reached the quota set for continuing the classes. I The courses are scheduled to be-!gin Monday at 7 p.m. at Avondale High School, said Saville. "Anyone who wants to enitdl may register at that time at the' class meeting of any of the three courses," Saville explained. 51 S. SAGINAW — Nqxt to Wrigley's In other courses, the quotas have been met but there is room for few students, he add|^. These classes are typing, shorthand, .bookkeeping, and cake decorating. Anti-Castro leaflets Dropped on Havana HAVANA, Cuba- (UPI)-An anti-Castro plane flew low over downtown Havana last night and droppril leaflets calling for a Cuban studenU- strike "against the tyranny which oppresses us.” Militiamen on top of the presidential palace o^jened fire on the twin-engine Cessna that wooped down on the capital and dumped thousands of leaflets. The plane which also was fired upon from La Cabana prison fort-ress, managed to get away safely. BUT CURRENT RATE on ALL SAVINGS Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. 75 W. Huron FE 4-0561 PONTIAC drive in theater OPIN CHS—STAITS 7:00 —SUNDAY—; BIBD SHOW* TONIGHT - SUNDAY The Magnificent One! They were $eveif..,ind tkey^ fought Mike MO vea hufiftredl, BniBiiifli.gi»ifc(^ pnnniniz HIT #2 COLOR EXTRA TOHIGHT Hie dnck-scordied Nam of Lieut. Blackbin, who led the U.S.A.’s secret Headhieters! ! Author on Board Santa Maria Has No Fault to Find THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY; FEBRUARY 4, 1961 THIRTEEN ’^’ license Tab Dip •w. 1-d‘diM^ to Business RECIFE, BraiJl )fUI»I) — Eben N Baty, 64, of C<»1e Madera, -CaWrr-aidd Friday the oi^ time he and 1^ wife weij» frl^tened aboard the cruiae ship Santa Maria waa when U.S. Navy planes were “buzzing'* the ship. “At a# ame dM are satfer a laek at food, water er servtoe, nor did we feel oar liberty re-■tricted.'’ be said. Baty, author of the best selling bo(*, “Cltiien Abroad," said he had talked three times with rebel Kennedy Wans to Meet Press Next Week WASHINGTON Iff - President >nnedy is planning to hold a news conference next week, the White House said today. — * a Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said the day has not been picked Dped to ' the adtere oonversation flows easily. Everything was going well un- ol the Pom 1-E.^w. "iny tmt ^s Friday^ the Coluinbia Broa» — ^ 'AWitHTw PmMcutefit s«4rnii lVuir»*«________*i__ «__.__________ be a mainatay on the local basketball team. He is ^pec.-4 Johninext June. The local citiaeniy, un-H. Givens, 34. of Milwinikee, Wis. jknown to Givens, got tocher Givcins. Stationed with fhe Army land Bernard Chauvierf. presi-Aerial Support Onter at nearbyident-of the Pont FEveqoe Sprats St. Andre, wanned up to his'Union, drafted a letter to Presi- the. moment he arrived in Decern- * *, * her 1959. ft was throuch his has- "Mr. Givens epitomizes the ketball skill that hr became ac-;fnendship of France and the Unit-; quainied in Pont I'Evcque !cd Slates." Chauviere wrote, and Givens ^ |da>'ed on YMCA then he added two, requests: and^ hq^ school Ssl(eTBannraiii^ t. T%at Givens a grant in Milwaukee and found a spot so he can study at the nearby hastartball team. The American embassy in Paris and was fonrarded to the State Department for the White House. "This aQ came as s big surprise to m«.” Givens t(dd a re-I don't know what * casting System presented a “Caricature of medicine and its aims” ^ Thursday night on its television I forward on the local Army squad. He soon was hooping baskets in Pont I’Eveque and in early 1980 got taken on as center or forward. University of Cbm aftra he com-pletea his military service France. ♦ ♦ e 3. That Mrs. Kennedy become elfeWve7Presidwit Sekw To^'s soldiers could be. Guinean offldals are secretive ^t their new army but ^ program <3S Reports. ‘it is not an aggressive instru>| . * In New York no CBS spokesman was immediately available. The board met in Chicago and sent a letter -to Dr. Frank Stanton, CBS president, accusing CBS of "misrepresentations, bias and distortions" in the show, titled "The Business of Health CHICAGO tp - Richard B- Oqii- p|y Kills 1,453 In Britain icine. Money and Politics. ;vio. federal prosecutor in a recent- Two AMA officials apiiearcd on ly completed probe of syndicated LONDON tl PU - An outbreakithe tapi-d ^ow, which also in-crime, says close ties betwxH'n „f Asian flu in ilie Brititsh Isle.sicluded statements bv labor lead-hoodlums and some politicians ptr-^ok L433 lives in the first fourjers. legislators and others The mil organized enme lo flourish in weeks of this year, the British 1 program dealt mainly with health Chicago. I Health .Ministry announced Friday I care . plans and their financing inight. jand medical care Tor the ag^. Politicians Aid Crime? Most of the armament has xxn Ctechodovakia. Guineans argue that ftiey accei^ed it only wtirai ^e United States turned down their request for arms in 196D. .travesty an the mimical i lUufeasion." ----------^ . They said the AMA was given an opportunity to develop its position that “the medical pro-feMon has always believed that evay parson, young or oM. In l need of medical can diouki get it, regardless of ability to pay." 7 Die in Japan Blaze TOKYO (APl-Flre destroyed a four-story restaurant building ear-J ly today in Osaka City, killing seven pereolns and seriously injuring three. One of the first American auto-miUion in 1959. up 12 per cent overlmobiles was invented in 1893 by 1958, Oiain Store Age says. lElwood Haynes of Kokomo, Ind. The AMA trustees said they were "profoundly shocked'* at toe _____ program and consider it a "monu- Wilson. A thermostat’s a scientific gadget that keeps the house too, warm'fiir half tte family and tooj cold for the other half „,, Whether a man winds up with a nest egg or a goose egg depends a lo chick he married. —Earl WORK ___________________ J into • hit., busy office. On the desk of thfr receptionUt I saw a card: "Work it the catalyst in this business.” A train of thought flashed across my mind. I had driven on a Freeway: my car was. one of thousands; those osrs were made and owned by men who Worked. I thou^t of our IBstory; George Washington waa a farmer, _ ^ RoebUng built the Brook^ hSSS" house was a slave to hla Edison made his dreams row true. Esther Morris suffered InsulU, worked,jpve equal suffrage — dedicated work | are happy children; those who ob not a« emhmUlcd in J«v«>uie Gourtr-work is the mf-ference. The greatest Impact on Seniw CfU-sens is boredom; they have worked all their lives, suddenly find themselves in a sea of inactivity. This four letter word—WORK—is the catalyst of a happy exlsuaice. " F.8. can ua any hour the day or hlghi; we re ready, always. VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 3M North Perry Street Phene PE S-OTI ROMAN CLEANSER Full Quart* Bottle MOMOAV ONt¥ ID S«« Our Windows for Mony OHior Monty Sowing Voluot! ATLAS OPEN SUNDAY ________ ’ SUPER MARKETS to 6 P. M. ^ WALTON Get Ready for the semester School Band Program jpiciAi:. Nickel Ploled Music Stands $2^95 E«ii Dtgn Pads aad Siickt.. s.i $3.95 MOUTHPIICIS CoaloMi Fitted or goods and Irau Beginiiiiig Bend Books For Yoor School Prooram CALBI MUSIC CO. Ooca Mmdtr VrMsj NlcSta—firk rree-Ewr mt Starr 119 N. Soginow S». FE 5-8222 w FOLDING DOORS CLOSET DOOR SETS s to 40" $19.05 OjMRiitgs to 60" 520.4S Oponings to 7r $22.95 Opotiingt to 14" . $26.95 Openiiigi to 96" $29.15 Notkiof iatrs to luyl 4 Oponing Ooor Siaos LOUVRE DOORS ALSO AVAILABLE SLIGHTLY HIGHER SPECIAL-1 WEEK ONLY! MtROCUlY DOORS SJCA Net Seconds — But First Grade ALL SIZES—UP TO 2' 6" ■# EACH In Lets of 2 or Mere $4S BURMEISTER'S NORTHERN LUMBER CO. 7940 Cooley Uke Rd.—EM 3-4171 ■IG DISCODim ON GU un EUCTUC •1 DRYERS •11995 Only a Few 1959 Fkilco, Bondik ond Wottingkouto ELECTRIC DRYERS • While They LosI 1960 Whirlpool Ekctric Dryort $139.95 —$149.95 —$159.95 i960 Whirlpool Got Dryers $149.95— $169.95 — $119.95 — $209.95 EASY TERMS TO SUIT YOU ELECTBIC CO. "OpeB Every Night ‘HI $ P.M.” 825 W. Huron St. FE 4-2525 SHOPPER SIOPPERS For Monday Only! ^ Outstanding Values Especially Selected to Save You Plenty! Shop Monday and Save! ]F Our Lotf - Your Goin! OVERSTOCKED A TtoNiBiidoBS Sifply of SNOW SHOVELS Must be Sold by Monday, Fab. 6th Regalai’ l2Jf $150 Heavy Oek Heedlet 1 50% OFF On au ikartli la ataefc Stafareini BURMEISTER'S RTHi oloy ± NORTHERN LUMBER CO. 7940 Ceoloy Uko Rd. EM 3-4171 Quality, Quick Drying SPRAY ENAMEL PAINT Gives furniture, wicker, toys, rodiotors, tools, form mochinery, etc, a be0UtifuL-_S03OOtb,_ glossy finish. Easily sprayed to any item. • Choice of colprs. Big 16 OK. Economy Sixo Con . . . MONDAY ONLY 57 CONSUMERS CENTER DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE 178 N. Soginow St. MINGLEWOOD SHEETS 4x7 SHEETS ijLJEJMXXlMMiuXUl^r Vb" Thick . . *275 Vi" Thick.... *2^5 jDI 4xS Also Avoiioblo Use for room dividers, train boards, bed boards, uruJerloyment, decorative wall paneling. BURKE LUMBER CD. 4495Din«Hwy. OR 3-1211 rrkee Quoted at Our Yard Only Af»o: BLANKETS BEDSPREADS SLIPCOVERS PRE-SEASON Drapery CleaniRg SPECIAL! 15 % DFF REDUUR PRICE D^twbtB Monday, Feb, 6Hr--indi Satraday, Feb, 15Hi New b the time to hove your droporiet clooned exportly during this ence-o-yeor apo-eiall Chock These Draper Form Procen Feoturee: • Guaranteed Against Shrinkage • Measured for Seme Length • Perfect, Even Hemlines • Returned Exactly Samt Length FOX CLEANERS 719 Watt Huron FE 4-1534 SKINLESS HOT DOGS Large - Farm Fresh EGGS 4^ 2®-89' 3 SISTERS’ MARKET 608 West Huron Open 7 Days—9 A.M. to 10 P.M. COUPON SPECIALS Good Monday Only Bring in Thia Ceepoa CASH end CARRY ONLY 1x2 Firriig Strips__2$ 1x6 Roaris..... . .rr«. - 4* 2x4 RaidoM Ltigflis.. - >• St 2x4 S’ Eeon Slide .... - 36< 2’x4’Pigboard . . . . . .. 59* PeiriigWoollnil.....85t 4’xff-V.” Harftoanl . .- $1S8 4’x4’Birch Plywood .. $2w PONTIAC LUMBER CO. 831 Ookloud Ave. « 4-09T3 By Popular Demand ^ Now Open Mondays Hoffman's Oakland Paddng Market ^ Will Change Thoir Nome To PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 526 North Perry Street Oven«Reody - Young, Tender Fresh Drested>Pon Reody lurKcys None Sold lo Doulort tryers ^ TRAY-PACK j/ggg ll. KING NUT YELLOW OLEO OKor Mayor Exfro Leon Sugor Cured SLICED A BACON OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6 —FRIDAY TIL 9—200 FREE PARKING SPAC6S IN RiAR ■ ^ ‘ I _ I THE PONTIAC PRESS SAtURDAY, FEBRUARY 4. 1961 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. FlFTEEiT -•- ^............ ^ LIVIN 3f our Neighbbr*s Houge Frank Balaam Family Setfkd h^hrb^ixikeColoriy Before moving to their new the Baleams lived at Baas Lake, their builder and furnished the home a little over a year ago John Northrup of NorthviUe was plans for the house. No one has ever bothered to count the number of tri-level homes in the Pontiac area^.JUte^-.„lhink, however, ilbat most of them include a recreation room in the lower level. Not so in the Frank Balaam home in Dait Lake Colony, fbey have, a music room down there. The Balaams are musical pe^ pie, both teaching public school _^usic and giving private lessons 1iPheMc.ASrs. Balaam has her piano in the TWiig, room which leaves the lower levePnltP'-sic room for Mr. Balaam’s pupils who are apt to be playing “Oom-Papa” or tooting a comet. Works out just fine this way. Paul who’s 12 and Hugh who's 7 have their own room with a .Ifileviaien set Iff Bl» gon»l. TfJPjr can retire behind closed doors if both parents are busy teaching. A earned bay window In the Woodwork Is all Mrch. The floor-length drap-erlea are natural color. At one side Is a louvered door to the room. •A paiFoTRinenuMHjbakg-Bjth a low round walnut table be-' tween them stands in front of the window. There are brass inserts in the top of the taUe. Across the room is a long mod-wn sofa striped - nr shades of -turquoise and blue. The lamp on the square walnut table at one end has a square tangerine base with a white shade. An artist friend of the family made the plaque on one wall; it shows musical motifs mounted on burlap. There’s a beamed ceiling and blue walls In the family room at one end of the house. Windows on the two end walls let both morning and afternoon The tile floor is beige. Draperies are'striped in blue and green. The red brick fireplace has a raised hearth with a pair of turquoiae .£ushkef!l on one side. On the other 'ncfe is ' a storage unit with bookriieives above. Furniture is Danish modem. The sofa has brown striped cushions, while the uphedstery on the two chairs is turqimse. The family eats at a rmind broozetone' table. Each of the 4 chairs 4s a different cokx* — turquoise, tangerine, white and yellow. Above is a hanging three-globe light fixture. tween family hull. On the family is a wide sriilte ~ .er that donbles bar. The chairs here lone udth Oh KM Walls are blue. Cabinets a fniitwood finis! are bronzetone. * * In the boys’ Is natural birch. Wj on one is a travel Spain that.shows i The closet has roo boys’ clothes as wel and games. There 'wt brown spreads on Oie maple bods. The maiitrr pink walls. The the bed in this to be replaced, ing that heavy first day Of September, tree blanch came c through the were away at displayed understandable ticlsm when, « one of the boys a tree In the bedroom. The furniture in bleached mahogany, are white with plalif ter rugs are green, curtain plaid (it's green) is used for and for throw pillows, ed spread is green.* The exterior is red brick wi'h light gray sidii^ on the upper part. Shutters are white. Their lot. about half an acre in size, a nicely wooded one. FOR FAMILY .MKAIJI - A bronzetone table s placed before the front windows of the family room. At the left is the fireplace. Drapenes are striped in blue and green. The chairs a able are each a different color. The t 1 ocr IS beige. FAMIIJAR SCENE — Mrs. Balaam plays the piano while her music in general. Mr. and Mrs. Balaam chaperoned the Michigan two sons, Hugh (left), and Paul (righti. pay dose attention. The piano is an inicgial part of the Balaams’ home and hie, as is Chorale group In South Amer.ca last summer. IN l)AKB lAKE r»IX>NV The Frank Balaams live in this trilevel home In Darb Lake Colony. This Is the rear of the house, as seen from Hiller Road. The exterior is red brick and gray sid- Paatlae Prm fkaUi s the builder. Full-grown trees e in summer. MEMOS OF A coffee table in the last summer’s trip TRIP — The two silver cocks on the tow walnut living room are souvenirs the Balaams'have of to South America. All the interior ptoturn on, m Kt night. Drapo^ in this r4am are nakiral color. The upholstered (Ihairs are tangerine. Carpeting and walls are sandalwood. Just a hit of the Hue and green striped sofa is seen at the kmjr right * BOYS’ ROOM -r- The poster of a Spanish buUf^t b wall decoration In the bedroom ^shared Paul and I Hants come from various places. The styrdy nuple fur main ! tailored curtains anS t Pen- out a dksculine room. You w^d expect the son of a bandse , the play it bugle, wouldn't jrou? 6uii you ipot the Instnimentr -r:t: f SIXTEEN THL^ PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, FEBRUABY 4, 1901 Space for That Additional Bathroom Poses Problem Want an extra bathroom butithe apace provided by two «*t wondering where to put it? idoaets ahich happro to ba<* Ice Dams on Eaves I - 1 Can Damage Roof Winter’s snows aran’t far away, and thm's nothing moR damaging to a roof, accordtng to housing autixHrity. Clarence Hausmann, a roofing spaciaUat for Allied Chemical’s Barrett Division, empiiaslaes that islive care in the autumn can spare a homeowner the discom-fcnis of a leaky rocd during the ficttit. The aoswo’ is to mintmlae file melting ct not snow by attic beat loaa, and Insulation j^aoed in the ceiling below the roof usually does.the Job. Howevar, carelessly placed to- dation, says Hausmann, can leave gaps next to the Interior wall throu[^ which a eondderable amount of heat escapes. Insulation Today's Fixtures “ Give More light Today's lighting fixtures are be-ooming larger as the demand lor ------------' 1 according to the Americail Home plate of the exterior wall, so that ‘A few years ago, an IWnch diameter fixture was ronsklered large, ” the institute said. “Today, diameters of 33 inches and 24 inches are increasingly common.” As fixtures become larger, more and larger bulbs are used, thus providing more in th«>.rOom. dnutd tfq^tly lap over the wanThe total of K Is continuous and without gaps. 600. larger fixtures can go as high as is no guarantee that he won’t have e this year,’’ says Haimnann. '"rhis is file time tor roof inflection by a qualified contractor because he can spot potential leak areas that would escape detectionl by the amateur handyman.” qnah km LAKEWOOD VILLAOf... Home Sitfis EM 34WI5 or MU 44S25 Higklisd Etiaist *13,950 inr noxui. iiiMtii “Cultured Liviny” Cam •• Tears ia tmamIUnI University Hills ffeor flJS.U.O. Coaipat Avon B4. East of Creeks Rd. Model Fhene i^k«et reel. lamUsetc PHONE FES4M5fferploRi C. SCHUETT. lEAlTOB For one thing. Cook says, prices of homes tend to go down slightly in the wintertime. If a home’s a jdod buy during the rest of the year, dt might be a better buy now, he adds. Prospective buyers interested in new h^es will find that builders or their sales representatives will have more time during the winter to go over a house's features with you. Because you won’t be battling wami weather crowds, you will be able to discuss in detail such important considerations as insulation, heating, all-copper plimibing, electric wiring, carrying costs, taxes, schools, shopping facilities and community services, U a uaed borne Is what yon’re ter oaa give you a better Mea at bow good the beathig and plambtng woriu, bow the roof js holding no and how dry the bnaement Is. If you buy an older home and have to do any interior remodeling wtirtf during the winter, chances are that coitractors will be more readily available than they will be later in the _ "Wintertime is a contractor’* slow season.’’ Cook says they are more willing to give estimates on small Jobs than they are when big construction projects get underway In the spring.' Detroit Inventor Solves Some Burning Problems Details Important in Small Rooms ACfULAN RULES — This feminine Empire bedroom, designed by Tpm Lee. featuring white-omwhite striped vinyl wallcovering. has its fleiw de Us motif echoed in gold on a white lampshade, irt white on the blue Quality Seal blanket of 100 per cent Acrilan acryUc fiber and again in gold on the cornice of the bed curtain. Furniture is a warm fruitwood, and blue, accents appear in opaline accessories. A Btttan Valberg area rug, also made of Acrilan, in shades of deep rich blue and white contrasts with the solid color waU-to-wall acryifc fiber carpet. All, fabrics, blanket and H6or covering can be cleaned i............... and water. DETROIT (UPI) — Inventor! Nicholai Oshkaloff isald today he thinks he has found the solution to ashes on the carpet, cigarette burns In the furniture and all those fires that start with people smoking , in bed. Oshkaloff has named his latest invention "Safety Smoke’ plans to get it to the market about Feb. t. stainless steel and aluminum, the device Is about six inches long and fits over either regular or klng-sixed cigarettes. It will probably retail for about 12.50,. considerably cheaper than wall-to-wall carpeting. "WHh a safety amoke, yon can even carry a lighted cigaret In your breast poeket wtthoat i bole in your coat,” 'I tried tl^ the other day at the supermarket and {deked 19 two orders from, people standing be- Another advantage of the safety smoke, Oskhaloff said, is that it acts as its own ashtray. You just empty the ashes Janitnl HEATINO EQUIPMiNT OtT HMl OtTAUS At Window and floor treatment Is particularly important for a small room. When two windows are adjacent, join them ^th draw «»,a. look more attractive and give greater width to the nxxn. ★ w w Wall to wall carpeting i* costU'-However, the floor can look just as attractive and large with an oblong rug. Here again, be care-of patterns. If the floor is In poor cmidltion, you c wonders by painting the border a color that matches the rug. This creates a color (low which contributes to the size illusion of the Uke to smoke to open cars but are afraid to becauac of flying sparks. He said he hit upon the i^^ Give Children Big Boxes for Play damage to exterior sldteg, paint The formation (rf the “ke dams' at the eaves does not. In itseif;l cause the damage, says Haus-| mann. "But when the shrot of ice. has backed up a foot or so above the eaves, heat from the attic space causes melting on the underside of the iee< can't escape to (he gutters because i of the ‘ice dams' and it, plus tbei water from the melting snow on| the Kxrf above, may flow backj underneath the shingles and down] through the roof sheathing onto the i ceiling, wall or the roof overhang! that is below it,’’ he explain^. Fallnre to paint. It may also exterior paint, cnnsiiig H to bH» t^r to the spring. I Wet rot is caused when backed-up water penetrates roof sheath-j Ing, rafters and siding, says Haus- (RJRE IS EASY Prevehting damage from "Icei ims” is neither costly nor Three or four sturdy homemade boxes will furnish endless fun for children under six. Sides are IslOdnch- lumber, bottoms of safety smoke (w yesro lgo sPlfiS'^^free Masonite 14” Tern-Propfif Nailing when his'^ile, Margaret, took up'p^'^ P*’e***wood. all avaUable at when his'^ile, Margaret, took up; smoking and started burning holes in the furniture. Oshkaloff. owner of the Callo Anti-Rust Manufacturing Co., said file fievice irtn^prodm-'tion at his plant in the old Studebakei^Pack-ard Building in Detroit. At present he Is turning out only abont IM Safety SmokM a day, but has Uaed np another company wUeh srill ntake them tor him at a rate of S.OM a day. Oshkaloff, 52, who immigrated to the United States from Russia 1920s via Swltzeriand. France, England and Canada, also has invented rust mnover and rust preventive compounds and K costs about $3 'Tee Walkers" for use on riipperyjfoot to finish off pavement. lumber yards. Dimensions 10”xl0’’xl4”. Include smooth handholds in ends. These versatile boxes can be uaed I seats, footstools, television perdiea, cars in a train or parts of a toy OT book caw wh^ih^^ stacked. (tae eanDe put on casters, too. Sand the wood. TTien prime and paint in bright colrxs. The low cost of thew units will amaze you, and the tots will enjoy them a long time. Watch a good old-time carpenter or floor-layer drive nails in hardwood flooring. Proper nailing is essential in a trouble-free maide floor. Drive the nails through the side tongue at an an^ ol 45 to Much of the objection to an inside location for a bathroom or powder room has disappeared with the introductioa of delight lighting and the development ol better mechanical ventilation. 1920 SQUARE FEET!! I, 4, «r 5 1V$ Baths C«lNtill| 1590 Ihb IXXCATED AT WILUAM8 LAKE AND AIRPORT RDS. WATERFORD TWF. OPEN DAILY 1 TO • PJL Slavik Iwdty, Ihc, 10450 W. 9 Mile lU. JO 0-9134 BUY OF 'THE YEAR! 1400 sb a. FoN OMOowot S290 Di. Sknik iMity, lac-, 10450 W. 9 Mile M. JO 0-9034 Kiss Yoir OM Garsgi Doors Doodbya MODERNIZE with Taylor Made Stool Soctioiial Doors Economicol, sturdy, easily operated, quiet, built to test the life of the garage. FHA terms, No Down Payment, Terms. Phone for Free Estimate. COMPLETE BUILDING SERVICE » CMOorttB Wars e AtkBBiM BM 6AM CONSTRUCTION 2260 DIXIE HWY. FE 2-1211 It's Cheaper to Go Lower |5per equaiw compared with $9 to |15 for equivalentMibK iibotot Ow ground' Of the nine most popular roof level of a house, according to home coverings, asphalt shingles a r e modernization specialists. A used most fr^ently, report roof- basement recreation or hobby Ing authorities at Allied 0iemical’s room, a workshon or a laundry Barrett Division. They- estimate area can be finished with gypsum that 75 per cent of all residential wall board and ftberboard celling Oshkaloff claims Jito Invention 'roofs are topped with asphalt shin-|tiles and such addititnu usually In-•Iso Is a boon to people who igles. Icrenoe the value of a home. I’ainling the baseboard to maich the painted border of the carpeting will also lend to the Impre.s- 3101 Orchord Lk. Rd. FE 2-0278 After 5 P.M. MA 6-6247 definitely be avoided for they break up the floor space. However, If you have a few treasured scatter rugs, they will look attractive when placed on top (rf your solid rug or carpet at strategic places— such as in front of the sofa. >.-ing shelving. venttonal as the interior. The upper level roof blends into the roof over the lower section and tends across the entire front in nn unbroken sweep. Another special feature is the outdoor dining, deck directly be-the kitchen and on the same level. It's connected by stairway 10 the ground level tcTOce behind pleasant setting for outdoor re-the recreation room and makes a laxation or dining, with f ice possible either from the kitchen oryer throngh the recreation stone on the front facade of B-50, PIumMng-Heating-Cooling In-but brick may be substituted without materially changing the char- B-50 Statistics '''^There' ari!*lS^ tdlSTm eight rooms, baths and three bedrooms . in this unconven-tiQtial SDUt level design. The living room is only two steps separated from the dining room by a glamorous balcony. The home may be built with one or two-car attached garage. Over-all width in the two-car version is 55'2”; 4Er’ in the one-car version. The depth is 33’5”. Living area on the living and bedroom levels is 1,300 sq. ft. Another 508 sq. ft. of finished area is added by the entrance level. soon as t can he operatt*d » switch thrown as / falls or It^can iinaintMn-ture in the walks br driveway areas to melt snow and Ice as required. Retattvely small systems, such [ as under sidewalks 100 to 150 I feet long, nsnaly cost from St I to ss' per square fool to Install, ' Including materials and labor. Average operating costs for a i system designed to melt 12 inches of snow on a drivqway 100 feet long and eight feet wide nih from 70 cents to $1.50 per hour. In considering the cos.t of snow melting system it ^uld be remembered that it will mean saving in indoor floor maintenance as well as a saving in labor, says acter of the design. Should a fireplace be desired, the chimney can be located outside the living room wall at the side. The small basement can be reached either from the recreation exterior cn-trance sunken at the riglit rear corner of the house. formation Bureau. The Bureau also ealls atten- to the fart that a fast and efficient snow removal system will minimize the possibility of falls due to tee and snow and will also prevent the hazards of heart altarks resulting from the manual shoveling ol snow. Hooking up the boiler of, the hydronic house heating system with a snow melting installation and designing the system so that it will Noting that the present growth ol Southern Pine sawtimber ex-joperate "efficientlv requires" skili cceds that ol all other softwoods^and experience, iieating and pip-! combined, the United States For-ling contractors are familiar with est Service predicts eventual con-|the installation of snow melting ccntration of the nation’s lumber Isystems. They will be glad to production in the South. ioffer estimates' without charge. GUARANTEE: WE FIX IT AND irs FIXED BIGHT! You can't afford to tolerate fduify plumbing. We guarantee superior work. Our experts work fast and efficiently! They leave no unsightly mess! Our reasonable rotes will save you money. You'll be glad we do your plumbing work. OSCAR FERRELL ■ Licensed Master Plumber SALES—SERVICE—REPAIR FE 8-2800 - FE 6-7601 1829 Opdyke Rood \\ Talisman ff to tb« rear terrace, aad across the 18-foot living room, contribute to a feeling of spactousness. Family areas of the house can be reached from the front entrance without entering the living room. A half-flight of stairs from the recreation rpom reach the dining room alongside the kitchen door U-turn at that point will take you the rest of the way up to the bedroom level. Off the recreation nx>m to the left is a small study, guest room fourth bedroom. The kitdien is 18 feet long, with ^mpie space for family Ttienls. On the upper les’el are three bedrooms mad a large bath. The bath Is accessible both from the hallway and from the master bedroom through a compact dressing room. Master bedroom also has a walk-in closet. Architect York has indicated Our Price Is Right!| Located in Beautiful Watkins Hills Completely Gas Built-Ins,-3 Bedroams, 1 Vi Bath, Walkout Exposed Basement, Full Recreation Area, 2 Car Garoge- Why Take Less When You Get $0 Much More in o Ross Built Home. You'll Find the Conveniences You're Looking for in This 1961 MOQEL NoCuhNsedsdip FHA TERMS it TO 5 YEARS I' ALSO Terms to 20 Years CoRsolidate YoRr Bills ♦...... ■ iniirove Year Home NO CASH NEEDEB • Rsor Adiifiois • Kilelms • SMieg Md Rdsflig • OtraiM •FiriMM • BtttRMtS • Allies FhlsiNd • ShtR Hems CiMpIsIsd iwsswnUMLKRQ ^ £ DURING FEE 1 1 OPEN FOR PONTIAC INSPECTION FEBRUART ONLY Come in and Let Us Tell You . About Our Home Trade-in Plan! **The Builder That Makes a House a Home** W.W. ROSS HOMES FE 3-7833 Cair Anytimt ^ 24 Hour Strvict 1.6 miles post Telegraph Rood on Dixie Hwy., turn left on Wotkins Loke Rd. ::K 1 Uin KEN f- : THK PONTIAC PHESS. SATt’llDAV. FEBRUARY 4, 1961 T Faimers Fiiend Brought on Plumbing Revolution A mixtiUv ot ina •nd tin wWch te tight, laalii«, and >s atroi« as grawidathm kept handy — • Wch Kouaeho)d.utei^ and milk : A aden^ ptteiple iDnam (or hondreda of yean: A metal ot yean ago: Put them ^ togelhifr and you mom CASK — glass blocks provide a showcase for treasured planis and plates as wdl as a warm welcome sign to passers-by. Whether the architecture be colonial, contempMory or modem. glass bio^ have the afaibty to blend well with them fltOBgs lor capper ttdw. T. Fodil, .an Anaconda plumbing specialist, agrees “there is nothing r^y new under the sun." rsdd pahMs out that asUer (praMuneed aa«er), a lead and tia alloy that bonds weB to sdwr metals, has been aoed by tarmera lor yean. Thirty !)waih ago, bowcver, the kventtsa o( f new typo o( flttiag naade I malertals. The rnooM has bean What's Wiring Capacity? An easy way to check the wiring capacity o( your house is to simply look at the name (tote on your switch box. which ah the amperage and voltage; amps is the accepted mhiimum. but you'll be better oH (or present needs with a 100 amp box. Apd il you want to be prepa^ (or (Utore Domestic production of crude oil, natural gas and ca , averaged TJIO.OOO barrels daily during USB. up trom 7418.000 barrels daily du^ "AVON MANORS' in Hm ROCHESTER-AVON AREA ^11,390 $90 Down Sso hfodols 2l-h«ils St |sks FIELD ILDG. CO. UL 2-4450 lowest-cost home o( a rost-proof A solder-type fitting is made o( a diameter Just a few fiwusandths of an inch larger than the copper tube to be inaertM. After the tube and fitting have been assembled, the fitting A*-,h<*(!?d.,hy, tjfte is applied to the hair-1^ opening between the tube and fitting. The solder is melted and flows by capillaiy action to all areas of the connection. The molten solder bonds to the metals and bnmedi-0 make a Joint that 24-HOUR SERVICE 6«s All Oil Finuuet GAS HUTINC LUX-AIM — MULLIR SUrillMC —EXCCLL MOERY’S FE 2-4970 %arge Hamper Helps Mom Sort Laundry A commodious laundry hamper ilB a boon in the family with chil-;dren. 1( it has dividers allowing I the homenuker to sort (he linens and smied clothing according Ic their textures, the hamper is a iver. If it is ventUated, little danger of clothes [souring though they may be damp [when tossed in. Sudi a hamper, having [cubic foot capacity, can be built from common lumber, Peg-Board {and smooth-bothsides hardboard. nails and corrugated fasteners. Four 2" casters'also are required to make this oversize hamper mobile. Tb aid the homemaker in membering which of the three IRON FIREMAN ij compartments is for certain items, (Rthe home craftsman who builds the hamper in his worksliop can readily paint the fronts white, ■ ■ I |w |H n ■ ■! ^ipeach and md. or any color com- AUTOMATIC STOKEB SERVICE IRON FIREMAN Um •» AiitsmsHc Firinf ISMlpmsKt for Host or FSwor. 195 W. MONTCALM FE 4-4681 hardboard aalled oa the laslde. 'Maaonite hanR>oard -fivldem are olmply aHd tarts plaoe la grooves cut bite the framlBf sapporta. For a free plan detailing its construction, send a postal to the {Home Service Bureau, Suite 2937, 111 W. Washington St., Chicago 2, |ni., requesting No. AE477 Relatw the «M of oweal-ooUer Otdags. asaeh. thicker p^ was le^rtred beeaajw^ot the need far thread eUrtlBg. nia put the Mrt e( cippar phswiblag out of rcaeh at tha phimbing methods and mateiiali that has made "all copper phinrts-lag" a houaebold word from evM to CMSt. Dates Galore Are With Us Don't ^ around waiting for a .dhte, Xgu:mnd filmy Of Jbem.At your food store this month. The Department of Agriculture says thO'’re both (dentiful and reasonably priced, so you can uae them generously witimt upsetting your food budget. The dates are fresh from California, where roost of our (tomestk dates ctnne from. It takes about seven months to produce mature dates, and they're harvested from igeptembO^- to DieecalrtT. Vhe dates on A cluster don't ripen at the same time, and the pickers go from-bunch to bunch and tree to tree, picking only the ripe fruit. ITuit means you can practically blindfold youi^f and atUl srtect good dates (qhich certainly leads to a ^ ,i|iom blind dates.) Yoam find that theae CaHforala dates make wooderfal eating oat of band, and they’re exo^leat ad-dltlona to your eakeo, cookies. MOW ALUMINUM WINDOW WALL - Richard SutUff (left) and Donald Goldman (right), plant manager and sales manager Giklorama Division, Whizzer Industries, Inc., Pontiac, show off their new window wall. Factory assembled, the units are constructed of extruded aluminum, and come made up to architects’ specifications, with sealed glass and insulated, sandrtich panels included in the package. Local Firm Inirgduc^ Aluminum Window Oeam 1 cup of sugar and ^ ciq> ( stertening. Dissolve 1 teaspoon f s^ in 1 Clip of applesauce, and dcKto the shortening and sugar. Sift 1 teaspoon of allspice, 1 teaspoon of cinnamon and a pinch d salt with 2 cups of flour, reserving a little flour in which to roll 1 cup of chopped dates. Combine the mixture; bake in a loaf in a 35-oven 3fl.taa40'jninutes.. Lighfirig Outlets Do Wear Out Did you know that the con-venieDce outleta into wMcb you plug lamps and appliances can wear out, after many yean of good aervieef Here are four aigns which are symptoms of. old age or hard usage, which indicate that It is time for a change: 1. If the lamp or appliance plug slips out, or has to be bent in order to make omtaci this .is Oosl tsr pitch MMl tarred fdt art the prtneip^ waterproofliM I of tiw 129 new office buUd- ingi oonetAicted Jo New Ymk C3ty rtnee IMi; report roofing epecial-ists at AUied Chemteal's Barrett let have worn down. 2. When the cover plate on the outlet gets uncomfortably hot to the touch (not Jurt warm — this is natural) while it is in use, it it time to replace the outlet. S. When a wall ew ae It Is tamed •«, tMs liidl-cstoe that the IsMr woikinge . have oottlved Ibrtr nseiaineas. 4. If the switch has to be “jiggled’' in order to turn the light on, the connections inside are not making a good clean contact. The best time to have old out- work Is being done on other parts of the home wiring system. Then you have your electrical coptrac-' tor's expert knowledge and skill at your command., .,, ,, Two-Toning Finish Dresses Up Walls ease of installation found in the compkny’s heavy-duty C^rnimercial line. * * ★ The new Window Walls are constructed of lightweight extruded aluminum sections, and are supplied as a package unit, ready for erection. The company feels that a complete factory-assembled wall section, fully glazed and finished inside and out in vnde choice of decorator «A)rs, will permit architects and builders greater design latitude than they’ve previously ex- A new line of Residential/Light Construction Window Wall panels, designed for' use in homes, as well as in small office buildings, clinics, neighborhood banks, small schools and other light commercial structures, was shown for the first ^ time at the National Associatkm of Home Builders Exposition, January 29th through February 2nd, at CMcago’s McCormick Place. This entirely new concept of exterior wall construction is being introduced by the Glidorama Division Whizzer Industries, Inc., of Pontiac. Engineered to provide the same precision and quality that have been important features of Glid-orama’s CiKtom Aluminum Window Walls, the new economically priced exterior wall construction panrts also offer architects and builders the design flexibility and According to B; M. (Rildman, company vice president and sales manager, Glidorama's Rqsiden-tial/Light Construction Window Walls were developed after many months of intensive research and experimentation, and represent major contrilnition to the building Non-Toxic Paints If you am pTanhlng fo ropainfl old toys for Oiristma.s gifts toi children in hospitals or orphan-' ages, or if you will be painting toys that you make for your won! children, be sure to ask your paint j dealer for non-toxic figiwts and| 'enamels. Under no circumstances: pse left-over outside house paint; lor trim enamel. "Ampere’’ or “amp” denotes ca-j pacity. “Watt" is the amount of [energy useij. “Volt” is the level! of pressure — the higher the volt-{ age number, Jhe greater the pres-! TOY (MKKT — This little toy chest not only holds your youngster’s toys, but serves as a dan4y extra seat. There are caaters under it to make it easily^ moved from one room to another. AI-though this chest was painted and decorated with decals, you can make it of plywood and give It a natural finish. You simply trace the pattern on plywood, saw out the parts and then put them together. To obtain the full size chest pattern No. 248 send |LOO by ^turency, check or money order payable to Steve Ellingson, Pontiac Presa Pattern Dept., Van Nuys, Ciallf. Additionally, the new mato-tenaneefree wall naits are offered with a variety of horizontal gliding window styles, fixed win-dhw seettons, single nnd doable glazing, Penna-Pa dress up a recreation or other room with a decor that is-both handsome and different. First step is to put in an embossed surface accent wall. Either in a new or existing home, room may btf paneled wit|i m >w hardbot^ known as Maaoinito Seadrift. It may be applied directly studs in a new residence over (dd walls. Sr A * Both decorative and rugged, S drift may De used efIectively'Xin recreation rooms, children’s rooms, attic modernizations, enclosed porches and vacation homes. Shallow grooves 3%" apart add to the panel's attractive appearance. tOrh effseti hi deeof can be •btaineid with one paint «ent of ■elected color, tince this pond-ii« is snpplicd by lumber deni-en with n fartory-apptted whNe "New fabrication techniques developed by our engineers have made it possible to produce a ^xredlly-erected, lightweight, non load-bearing window wall- which offers all the advantages of modem curtain wall construction. Because of the light weight involved, there is also the possiUlity of using less costly foundations with this type of wall," Mr. Goldmati added. A A A In addition to the standard modular units revealed at the Giicago show, the versatile Glidorama Res-ittol/Ught Oanstniction Wln-' Walls are available In sizes and shapes to meet architectural specifications. Hide Old Radiators Your radiators needn’t look like an old accordion, or a sqoc toothpaste tube. You can give them the modem streamlined look by enclosing then! in a metal housing perforated with slatted vents: dress the top with colorful designs In ceramic tile. This can either ceramic nsosaira glazed wall tile. Rags used to apply floor sealer are liable to ignite spontaneously. Hiey should be carefully destroyed at the end of the day’s work, ^ preferably by burning. NOW IS THE TINE TO GET RID OF THAT OUTMODED HEATING SYSTEM! TOO SAVE NOW WHILE OFF SEASON BATES IRE IN EFFECT! AMDi YOU WILL NOT BE WITHOUT HEAT! kilsiiy ef ser ca«toiuef» art aleassariy seiprteed ts dtecevsr that it It eel aicswery te fe wMieut best fer eves eee aifht whHe hertufi a new heartafl wrtt iaitalled. Aad with lew eff taasee rates we think yea'll afraa that sew b the tiiue te act. BOTH GAS ond OIL . NO MONEY DOWN FIRST FAYMENT NEXT SFRING - Tbaw PsMeM Braedt: Ceiieral Bbctrk — MueNar — GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATINO 1401 Weto Herae Street p| 0-0404 g tech- Two-toning is done simply by brushing on a darker color of mb-ber-base paint, over an expanse of approximately half the 4’x8’ panel, and then wiping it off with a damp rubber or plastic sponge. The darker tone remains far the recesses of the embossment, and the white primecoat remains on the high spots (or contrast. JoinU between panels don’t show because they occur at the grooves. Patching Holds When patching large cracks or holes in walls in preparation lor painting, apply enough of patching compound so that the patch is slightly higher than the surrounding plaster. This allows for shrinkage and prevents con-spots. When the patch is dry, it smooth and flush with the ____unding area. Prime thel patches before applying the top coat. I NEW EXHIBITION HOMX! OPEN “Tho Virginian’* OpMi 12 *til 7 P.M. Sondayfi , Weekdays by Appointii|ait ^ Tkidited ncu Cam TAke Rite and Elizabeth Lake Roada FE 4-9377 OR 3-0716 AUSTIN BUILDING CO.'S FASHION SIXTY-ONE DifpltT HtBi Sunday, I . 7 PM. IN ChtrtkM Hilli “MtHESTD lEMONS'’ An Address You*d be Proud of • 3 Bidroom Homtt • Full BoMmtnhT • All Brick * City Woter ond Sowers • Poved Streets «13J50 Sili Ayoitabic Located of 424 Reweld Drive in Rochester Mcedows Tak« adcbMtor Rd. North Threush tbs Villafio of Rschottor tom Rifbt on Romoo Rd., Turn Rifhf on Porkdab. Watch for Sitnt. SUMBIT BOILDING CO. Model Fh. OL 6-9491 Office LI 1-7517 Fred Moote Eletdrical, Inc. Announces In Gtnjunction with National Electrical Week An exhibit of commerciat lighting fixtures recon\-mended for efficient, economi^l, improvement for better sight. PUBLIC. INVITED Suite 313-—Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FEBRUARY 6th and 7th "Ifo. It's ael loo oorly ie ikiak sr buy yowr Csrpoir\ Altontteax Now Hoom Buyon. U you aro buUdinq or buyiaq a now homo, pick out your carpal .now Ikat you IBto and a email dapooit will held your carpal till you more in your'now kemo. No Money Dowo —16 Menriii te Pay OR 3-2100 OR 3-3311 4528 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS When Buying Insuran'ce- Don’t Drop ONE Policy to Buy ANOTHER! There are exceptions to this rtile but they are RARE! Rates go up you grow older, so you will pay a higher rate if you shift! Reliable agents will tell jrou that 9 times out of 10, in the shift from an old iwlicy to a new one, no one gains BUT THE AGENT WHO < SELLS IT. Moat agents are honest but a few yield to the temptation to beeome a “twister” — salesmen who sell new. policies by talking people in t(> discarding their old ones. If an agent or anyone elm suggests a change in POLICIES, TAKE YOUR TIME! Know clearly why he thinks you should change. Write to your State Insurance Deptirtment for ad-vicd atjout yourold policy, or consult that local Life Underwriters Association. If you aren’t convinced that a change is advisable, ' DON’T CHANGE! (Rder policies should be kept in force if possible. BUSINESS ETfflCS BOARD of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce I. \ y Mkcow Silence on Bid for Talk Delay Puzzling THE PQXirAC PRKSS, SATURUAV. FEBRUARY 4. 1961 WASHINGTON (AP)-U.S. offl-ciaU were puzzled today oven Moscow'! (allure so far to answer President Kennedy’s request (er Ham to Get a Fuller Checkup CAPE CANAVE31AL, Fla. (AP» postponement of'the Geneva talks‘® * ft. iisf sr." ewunination which XINETEEX By Lon Pint N.Y. Rail Passenger Shutdown Averted " Kennedy, who wants to pause nd review the disarmament scene before dialling his new administration's course, asked ^ the ^viets for a dday as one of his eariy official acts. He announced t his first news conference Q. Our S year-old beagle has begun to saort and shake her head a M. h this aa aUergyt Mrs. SOvers, Teaaeck, N. d. /a. It could be due to an allergy, , out the odds areagainst it. Snorting is particularly common in the shorHiooed dog. It is usually caused by a condition of the soft palate, which can be alleviated by surgery. But the cause may also be an ob-«««»« in IfieTidS w as eusta-chian tube, which connects the ear with the throat. A thorough esam iiiaiion of your beagle's ears, nose and throat Is in order. Once the proper diagnosis made, you should haw no difficulty in clearing it up. Your dog probably finds it ks iriitating as you do, and at her age deserves a pleasant life, — NEW YORK (API _ A threatened shutdown of Long Island Rail Road passenger service was averted Friday night after a two- could determine whether ready to make a short rocket ride into space. OfOciafs are reasonably certain after a preliminary examination that a human could have survived the - 156-mih been going on since November 1958, has been in recess since Dec. 5. It was scheduled to sume Feb. 7. Kennedy asked for hour meeting ^^eSeiaJa^ ^f the» poetponment until Warch Yt. t Rocky Says N.Y. Fights Corruption NEW YORK (APi-Gov. Nelson A. 'Rockefeller, answering charges by Mayor Robert F. Wagner that corruption exists in some state agencies, says action has been completed or is under way in all cases cited by Wagner. WWW Rockefeller, releasing his here Friday night, blamed some ol the shortcomings in various state agencies on situations inherited from previous Democratic administrations. Wagner charged "notonous’ situations exist in the Motor Ve-hit^s Bureau, the State Rent CM;misEion, the Slate Liquor! Authority, and the State Dei»art-| mcnt of Public Works. WWW' i Rockefeller noted that Wagnvr! failed to name any specific em-l ploycs in his charges. The gov-! ernor added that he has not, and, will not, "tolerate^ miseonduet ort coiTuption in stale government at' any level.” Vt’agner’s letter said the Motor Vehicles Bureau "has had, and; has today, cmplo.ves who accept-, ed cash and gifts in private sales-o( license plates'; to ineligible drivers, <«• W * W To this. Rockefeller replied that State Atty. Gen. Louis Lcfkowit/ has been. working for 1& months with bureau officials in probing .ijency personnel. TTig governor listed eight employe indictments and a number of dismissals and forced resignations as a result of an investlgatioh. The Brotherhood had called for work stoppage to begin at m. today, charging the lim rolling stock was unsafe. It also charged 60 per cent qf the road's equipment was “inoperable.” The . ralinaci.immediately d£r. nied using even “one piece’ unsafe equipment. A joint statement issued after the meeting said the railroad would put into effect an expanded maintenance plan under which 150 extra malntetumce workers would be sent into the yard m ^e weekeirf. __ Warm Greeting Waits for Ike at Desert Resort PALM DESERT, Calif. . i m «««,u«K,,iior Ex-Upm CouplejSaixta Mana - Memorial AffA11* DUCl with cashing some of the checi«.|for Mr. and Mrs. Percy D, Wor-; ***'*** vav* He was apprehended by Binning-.gess of Battle Oeek will be held 3 police Jan. 17, and is awaiting imignment in Circiiit Court at 9 a.m. Monday. Sham to to be arraigned in justice court todiy- Rhone, sieng wHh Us nnele. Jay Uayd. SI. af S46 S. Aadar-pen at. PaUlanWere aecnsed af 'aaeaalfl^ Raymaito T. Forbask of SN S. Aadersm St at about 1 Forbush friimifl police-Neither Shane nor Uoyd, both when apprehended in the ice shanty Monday at 3 p.m. at Baii^ Funeral Home in Lapeer. ' Mr. Worgm. 68. and his wile. Bother, 81. were killed Wednesday, in an auto accident in Mexico.!****' * *“8**®®* loflsj-The memorial service will be W ★ * held at the same.hour as funeral t But uiriike the Santa Maria Rf-serviee is- being conducted in theifair. the "piracy” attempt in Bis-Presbyterian Church of Battle cayne Bay lasted only a few min-Creek. . jutes.,. The bodies may be viewed at; officers saM the men heM up Shaw Funeral Home m BatUcl» watehmaa hr the predawn Creek. Burial wiU take place hoars and took a tugboat ta-I teadlag to sail It to Cuba and Memorial cards may be obtained! Join coanter-revolutioMry forces, at the Baird Funeral Home. Mr. Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg says he expects measure to have clear sailing. Chalnnan WUbur D. MUIs, D-Arfc . of the House Ways Means Committee, will totroduce Monday the extemion trill plus a companion measure to make hearts available to the children of unemployed parents, as they now are to orphans and abandoned children. President Kennedy and Goldberg will send Congress supporting communications. Milto mU D|en fieinhgs^ the two bills are scheduled for Feb. 15. but may be held earlier. ★ * * Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield (ri Montana said the &nate might start its bearings about the same time. Thr-tuiem-ployment measure, as a tax bill, must originate in the House, but ________ _______________________ the Senate could tome pre* MIAMI fUPIv—Prriice said five ciadieux Corp. of Tiriedo and theilimlnaries out of the way and men with a ym to fight the FideljABC Vending Cc^. of New york.jhandle it quickly gfter favorable ’Castro government engineered 'their own "Santa Maria" incident | , and Karmann Ghlai (sports The fraachlse also lacladea govemmast can order a French- to leave jl lorei^ army if the Pontiac area, he takes part in activities “contrary to the (French) national interest." If he does not heed the order, hit citizenship lifted. So far as Is known, Trinquicr has received no such order. Area Restaurant Sold ifr2-Way DeaL , The Greenfield restaurants have been purchased for $3,451,000 in a jtworway transaction Oxford Twp. Accident Hospitalizes Victim Injured in a head-on auto crash I Oxford Township yesterday afternoon, George Ml Krotzer. 41, jof 175 Romeo Road, Leonard, was reported in fair condition today at Pontiac Gmeral Hospital. A A He suffei^'4acig^ cuts, possible! by duties Donald Bailey Mr, we,;^ -----I—W—• —> . -I„ » parently did not know they had to George Lumbard and Lake Orion patrolman Thomas Cuter. Forbush was being held by deputies for queUioning. of Lapeer tor many years; Wo .Ko uwo.. “P hydraulic pressure in the He loun^ the Worgess Insu^ igj^^ U)ce Co. to lUpeer rnore tl^ ^ years ago. The couple moved to \ * Death Notices FRANCS F. FALK Former Pontiac resident Francis F. Fslk of Vicksburg died yesterday in the hospital there of a heart Harbor police, tiK>ed the tempt might be made, set off to punuit and fired a_ few shots m the tugboat began aimlessly circling in the bay. Other officers had been waiting on land Battle Creek two .years ago! Surviving are three sons, RuiaeU, DonsM. and Duarte, all of Battle Oeek; and 11 grandchildren. Mr. Worgese to turvived by one ^ brother. Glenn, of North Branch, p. Mrs. Worgess is survived by a sis- _____________ter, Mrs. Rose Winslow of Northtoot close enough to prevent the ailment after an Ulness oT thrw Branch: and a brother. Carl Hiiterjboafs theft, weeks. He was 56. I®* Silverwood.' ' ; The tug ran aground on a sand- A member of the .Methodist' ..... Cruise Liner Bangs Etta. Helen. Jack and Jean, all at home; three siUert and a brotb- Virgil A. Gladieux, president of th« Ohio corporation, said 13 affiliated corporations of his firm merged with ABC in a ‘'stock swap" involvtag 68.500 shares of ABC Vending common stock. A A A • This, traraaction was ended Thursday at the same time Gladieuxwrchased the Greenfield-Mills Corp., owner of ^ Detroit’s two Greenfield restaurants, another to Birmingham on Woodward Avoiue, and three Mills restaurants to Cincinnati, Geveland and Columbus. , I Gladieux said the transaction was aimed at expansion of the organizations, with new restaurants contemplated for Chicago, Phila-de^riiia and New York. action in the House. Goldberg predicted considerable bipartisan support tar the unemployment extension—"It seems to me a number oi RepubUcuis. especially those from states which have a serious unemployment problem, are sure to be l«r it." Service will be held at 2 p.i Monday at the Gitz Funeral Home. MSS. gahsoll pointeb Mrs. CmtoU (Ethel) Pointer. 72. of 340 W. YpeOsnti St., died tUs morning after a kng illness. She wss a mmnber of the Zion Church of the Nszarene. Mrs. Pointer leaves three daughters, Mrs. Henry’Hefner of Hillsboro. Mo.. Mrs. John Kent of Port-tiac and Mrs. William Salter of Tampa, Fla.; two wns, Walter of Pontiac and Paul at Drayton Plains; 19 grandchildren; 17 great-granddiildren; and a brother. Service will be held at J;30 p.m. Tuesday at the Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial following to Wl^te Chi^ Memorial Cemetery. BABY BOY BOVEY CLARKSTON — Graveside service was held at Lakeview Geme-ter>- at 10 a.m. today infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Iva Freighfer Near NY NEW YCmK (I'PII - The cruise liner Nassau collided with a freighter to a snowstorm last night just outside New York Harbor, but Injuries were reported and neither ship suffered major dam- Hoping to Pack House in Role of Rep. Dagmar? NEW YORK , 41 Conklin Road, Orion Township, was reported to the ■berilfa department yesterday. An unknown amount of change was Jnntm SImnm, 84, ef Drtnlt was found guilty of. drunk driving fhuridhv before Monicipal Judge Cecil McCallum. He was fined $100 and sentenced to two days in ^the Oakland County Jail—or 13| jtlays U the fine is not paid. MILWAUKEE (AP) -The Mil-I’aukee GIpper flocked here Friday night after spending 20 hours n a wind-driven ice peck outside the Milwaukee harbor entrance. Spartans Nip Michigan EAST LANSING W — Andre In Coate’a lO-foot ihot with M second! to play was the wianlag ntargta last night la Michigan State’s 8-1 Wertern OeBei Heckey Asseclntios epaet Tke Woivertnee, whe are in the leagne’e Ne. 1 spet. will be beet te the last-place spertnaa tenigkt at Ana Arirnr. .4r ME RESIGN? — Carmine G. DeSspio cracks a smite and extends his open hands as he shrugs off Mayor Robert F. Wagner’s i BaaknB at TH W. Harea. flemands that he resign from the New York county Demo- [Ph, FI ertUe organization. Wagner said the party would benefit if _____ DeSapio would leave. DeSapio says he’s sti^ijig. [eo pR s-ali. —Adv. f ’• I. I Yankee Skaters Bow Garmisch-Partenktrchmi, (AP) —The U»8. toe hockey team whidi defonds'thie wnrld titie in Switzer-and next month lost to West Germany 4-1 to an exhibition match Friday night. Young Fullmer NEW YORK (AP)-Don FuU-mer, fast-rising young star of the FuOmer family from West Jordan, Utah, boxes unbeaten Joe Archer of New York tonight at Mndlaon Square Garden. The 10-round match will be carried on ABC network television at 10 p.m., EST. TMCA eesoRmry usoot All SaiBU, T • C. 1.4 Ptrit Baptlat « } Irt OlrtifliB- 1 *4 Watertord 4 1 CaBtral S 7 tart NMthVt laataa (Tat Saaran) Ml SaiBU 44. WalarfarS >I-T (MeOratb U) iMulima D pantral M«tlkools 10 an ^pS^SSt' ^ aSeft"' **' ' DO you' NBBO AN BXmiBNCBD ' ^ ^---1 tutor la readlnf orBrlttameMc? , ' ' Cull ON 3-SSSS. ' I Reni Apts. FurnWiyd 371 Rsijt Apts. UntaralM Ji f tTOTN. BA1W,t» HOOMS. PRIVATTi! 1 ROOMS AND BSm MtAT. |OT uttimee. Qlooo to n yiAM. 1 >ath. _prHaM oatraBot. adufti. ^nir"ffili iT* f! I a monih. rtVTMa* BOOKS. TILB BATS. OCNI SS'tWd'^ MOoar *****£&£ 1 * .S«i2. *L °a J^ltor 1 p.m. fl ?-l7at. -1—Y nnui a n ROOMS _____ tle>. M3 aoeS „■ ___ ___ ROOMS. BATH, FOR OOUPlF \ * „ itjCftT PURR Clean, aarni. upper, Prt entrance _roupie only. i^RorioBj_ N Poplar, pi; f-444I : 4 WARM ROOMST MBAjTKi~itA. _ ROOiT~FuRNI8HBD APART- ; P*”t, lU utilitien fura p«efifB- ^r*SS'.****- **• P»»ty. iWe ■ P¥_____________________________________- ___' 2 ROOMS AND BATH, UPRh I * ®'fILmM. Utlimei and furaitur. pri. Inuuire M Dwlgl- vale entrance. »t Voorheit._i 4 ROOMS. MAIN____________ a-BIPRTOM.^TACTRD^Aig i Rdtton'’fR“>^ilH*^ Rtlcome, ■ ■ ' ' 2-RboM. KnrmiNfrfrTbuLii: n S.Q4M. after t:M p.m.___* t. ________ J ROOMS KirraBNrm AMD' Ki'’,*'*'*: S' SERVICES OFFERED Building Service ...... Building Supplies ..... Business Service ______ Bookkeeping & Taxes ... Dressmaking ft Tailoring Garden Plowing ........ JtoamteTj* Service, . Laundry Service ....... Landscaping ......... Moving ft Trucking .... Painting ft Decorating ... Television Service .... Upholstering .......... Nursery Schools .... Lost ft Found ...... Hobbies & Supplies Notices 4 PersoHulk e held Tueaday. Voorhaaa-^..,..______ Harold Harrlt otflciatlns rm*nt In White Cb—'•—* I. Pointer »1U ---- . .J P IT Slplc Chap«l.___________ . 14•• l»«i" MAUDl. *]4 Boiton. a(« H; Beloved f George p Wlleke: dear —•- --- Monday. Peb- ruary g at i p.m. fro- -Doneleon - dohiu Puneral ....... With Rev. Oalen B. Harabey ot-nclatlng Interment In Perry Mt. Funer»l Ho»». ___________ Card of Thanks 24 WE DESIRE _TO EXPRESS TO. 35 j thought '' i.loni of lympathy. ^rtnt the^'loae I ol our father and huaband, Leelle i I ferlngt «ere eaprclally apprerlat. I ed A apeclal Utanka to Rev ; Jamea Parker. Oladya Conkllu . add CWldreo. ____________ JC i"‘wisH TO THANK ALL OUR . , Partridge a AaaoclaUa rnwB a-»». je. Huron - PE 4.»ll bn«j^ gna S-RM. L6WER~i^WDic6**f-— „ ed, garage, tit. PI S-WM, > ROOMU AND BATH. NE^TY -------- ---- 'imlahad. PE ’A"dS^7,'|%'S.^*™' •^Ri°MarTV-WASHii™YW; | * BOOK BMEUENT. PRJVATI S^i.oJgj”''^ Relerencaa. »*“ bath and tottranco. adulla. 11 B ArrRAT^tTE—has R« «■»« I ctol2“nor“7Sd «rVv*.1 ... ..... oelghbora. ......... ... thoughtful Irienda our heartfe Conklin. The Beautiful floral s PONTIAC PRESS Landscaping 36A . aril 1. hiLeaveiMot i aoU'ra WANTED Wtd. Children to Board Wtd. Household Goods .. Wtd. Miscellaneous ... Money Wanted ......... Wanted to Rent ...... Share Living Quarters . Wtd. Transportation .... Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. .. Wanted Real Estate .... RENTALS OFFERED Rent Apts. Furnished Rent Aj^s. Unfurnished .. Rent Houses Furnished .. Rent Houses Unfurnished Rent Lake Cottages .. For Rent Rooms ........ Rooms With Board ...... Cohvalncehrilbiaes Hotel Rooms ...... Rent Stores .......... Rent Office Space ___ For Reijt Miscellaneous Ivv. iipaclally I_____ . ___________... Iw fiiinfortliig word*, fhv Dh. a.hifd, ycleyana Poal Ho.. II. and. th* V«orh«lt Punaral.Boma. Ura. Arthur C. Woollry. 'IdlbotS Iona. IM 3-1370. WALL WABHINO BY MACH. ruga, upol.. cleaned. PI 1-0421 VOUNO AMBITIOUS VETERAN , ’^1^ .fa^y^arlahya Ki^illfbe e^ ' 4-yog ______. ; _______'___ Work Wanted Female 12 i-DAY mOMINO bbrvicb xxp , ref . Mrt M^owen. PR S-lCIl ' BABYBITTINe. WE8T eiDi, Me. per hr.JPR 1-3401. _ DB8IRB PART tiMI OFTICE ANY~KIND'Of LTOHr HAULINOf. r rppmt. I l-ROOM APARTM^: WEBTIiOR' 7»-ciirkrappryApt.-r ga. UghU lum. Vl; » *OOM8,^om UT e““how^F* bii!t?°“lliufrR^n^te I ' .I'M!.-, i BOOMS AND BATH. WARM AND tomTorasw,”' mintHi • rw--- " “ S-2707. _ )OM8. PRIVATI BATI 21 Wtd. Household Goods 29 j' and 3 room AiPAR-riiENm“' A-UCI TRIE BERVIC' ^ rpiiS'^^OUSEPUL WTD. *' i 8TDMP WMOVAL Quick cayfi lor furniture appll- ; 2 ROOMS . AND BATH. CLEAN, menu. Schneider. MA 4-l»^ i hid p« ? 7^ai n/™'a eVi?' i - ' eiervthlng furn. FE 13712 Or cijtAN"liNb~cdzT~rBlDRdOM i >'‘I-T*.MI« Of I APPLIANCES FURNITURE AND l«-3IM afterJ;30 p ML Pv" emrknee Mid Moving snd Trucking 22 ^ ‘ J!*'. “* l*!*®* .SL li‘’“‘*K * rooms and bath. OROUND front upper. ga$ heat. Utiutlea! Immediate eervlce. Dong . PE floor, pvt. entrance. facllUlea adult iridow* ladv preltrrad. : ifortable, *" ~ ciiAN SlEWLY'DRCORAfEDTs * HEIGHTS, SQUIRUL 2Jl~«e~.m .n.rt«.n, h... _______________ ^Vrn. .... LET US BUY IT OR SELL IT FOR '!«»» H> Pootlac. PE »- ---- „ COMMUNitY 2 ROOM8 R1ID.MATH.-WHLPPIIM; ---- ----E-Wm; 51 Pine MTb« “ O0M. OaOUMD FLOOR. PS drloker^or pet. PI M'”' - 2 CLEAN, warm ROOMS. BLDER- MArk in Memoriam SINOLi .fiiUng 0_________ acceplea Cloyd i HAULING AND R U B B I sll. AOK>“MAN IRONINOS DON! IN "^MT" HOME. irTfTlTlih'^S?^^^ tor home man ira « ^ Jim “ •'JL*‘•1®"-*> “ youT*j>Tlc* Any**time KE 2 *mec£nie wanted. -rcl-Huron vie, PS O-IOS*. O'DliLk CART AGE i WANTED AJCEL^ Hll “ LADY WANTS DAY WORK. GOOD Local and long dUUnce movln* hoiuetrnller fl 4-7130 relerence.^PE M7I1. ______Phone PE WAN-TED^fo'llUV~ill3 raliiif qiiaifiiiuon'i’ eiperTe'Il'cV. MIMEOORAPHINO TTYPiNO'SEC- LIOHT AND HEAVY -TRUCEINO. ; Head * ' ... ------ ,. *■ reUrlal tervlce. EM 3-2042. Rubblah nil dirt pradi ---- pirec.fitmDERaRAbUATa AND PRAC-! f™*** •“* *f““ «™ *»’ utlUtle.. ----- ----- lady —-----------' ' Dwight Ave. Ft riMJ. — _ _ , _ .. i Wsihted.MrscelIaneous3o’ ’-^^^^^ IRONWOePraiUP Agg.RMITT-^Oimi^bo^E^ ont.iaea ty Ijdy, 510 H Snginaw. I FE 4-1311. 4100 1 In Uia wlnur, e__ __ mer Ample laundry Itcllttlea. E. ?E»‘*A-Ser‘fp's:’‘ciir% orcAaI^IPSurt ~.~-BenbHow-Oiw«B Jttdiidi4PV'~V“ - AIR CONOITfoNID - - 1 AND 2-BEDROOM Modarn In EvarrtMUU - ADDLTB ORLY- FE 8-;^18 JMNAOIR MJMLI^ CT,. yT^ 2 ROOMS AND bath. . sagtly ml.aed by wife, Mary E. a Hale I ^ Funeral Directors 6' COATS FUNERAL HOME dratton plains or 3-T SPARES-ORlPPm chapel' ThoiBhtlulJMrrlci^ — * ’ r of Maintenance. 40 Patterron Help Wanted Female 7 I fooo? ' _______ REDUCED RATES NOW. DURINO | :' Moh-Ttrucking I Building Service 13' ' 1 ALTERA-noHN Aii MODBUi- & Decorating 23 Ranted 'o^ent LANDLORDS >ke advantaie ol i house, and apartmen furnished, FE E2S14 ________ 2 ROOMS ON WILLIAMS LAEE .* Med kltchecf. ndr util. furn. I ter ol ! , 3-4171,_____i 3 ROOM, MODERN. WARM. NEAR NICt~3' hospital. Jl N. Johnton. _ Hovey 3 ROOMS AND bath. CLOSk IN niun. 1 _ _____12 N. Cnaa.___ _ ! 3 ROOidB AND BATH. UPPBR. PE LaEEPRONT 3 ROOMS AHD UlHIe. bath Newly decorated, MY 1-YWl. modern nicely furnished: ! Very nb I-IMI tbroutn preparation AiijdbSAVAws BUltBIMntl. Subtnii relume. WrlU Ponttbc Preu Box , ____ _ _ _ ____________ _____________OK 3-«u3 ' _ Ini Rea.. Don Beck. OL 1-3141. . mjck lVALUFT 3 LARGE ROOMS. ^ BATHTPYT iJOn©lSOn- Onns BABYSIWeR » days a week. A-l“CARrtNtlR*'AND~aUifNre 1ST CLASS PAINTING AND PAPER J t™ . .L. entrance All utllltlee turn. 274 37: - Ui. my 2-M»3_ or MY 3 MU3. work wort guaranteed^rlS _h»j?Slni Thompaon. FE_4-1364 _ : Realtor FE 4-35.H S Anderson. PE l-Ml# , 5.9?“ . .. babysitter' FOR DATS AND'2 reatonable. OR IjBU- -- ---UT-CtiAM PAINimO. AND, OEC-i__ 345 OAKLAND AVENUE 3 ROOMS. UPPER. UTILlTlis itlng_ Camj^termiLjy^WO.^^eq^i •_^8un^ n^-'—pahl. IC2 Parkbuut. yi S-6502.__ PAINTINO XnD decorat. typ HAVril P 3 ROOM UPPER PIKE STREET inij^ 26jear. e^rlenee^Reason. . * I3«I "Deilgned lor FTurrate'_ BABYSITTER FOR DATS AND 2 . ____ __ ; • *2f.i‘.5pi‘“ ^ »f*» A-xRRictrKLOcK and t , _Call a^ 1. EM ^3, , —t work Also ftrepiMi. Ol ); VoornGGS-Qipie ; cl^stomek sekmce ' CLERICAL Cemetery Lots Oardens, OW Ru»< ,« Cro«» Section. Bsrfnl- ■ law Academy 1-Stll. _ 47 PERRY MT. PAiRK CEkOhERY 48| ......... Beautllul 1-grave h modeling. John 1 ’1121. Capias. MT" ._2:L3M. e, esUmates, Phone UL ■ RENTALS OEORGE R IRWIN. REALTOR RKAL ESTATE KOH .S.U.E ^or . Sals Houses • . 49- Income Properly . ___ aO For Sale Lake Property, .51 f or Sale Resort Property 52 Suburban Property ...... 53 For Sale Lots ......... 54: For Sale Acreage ......: 55 For Sale Farms ......... 56 , Rent Farm Property .... 56A ■ Sale Business Property .... 57 Rent-Lease Bus. Prop. .. 57A | For Sale, or ExchanRo 58 ; FINANCIAL Business Opportunities Sale Land Contracts ... Money to Loan........ Credit Advisors . ... Mortgage Loans ...... MERCHANDISE_______________ Swaps .................. 63 For Sale Qothing........ 61 Sale Household Goods .... 65 Antiques .............. 65A lU Fi. TV ft Radios 66 Water Softeners ....... 6GA For Sale Miscvllaneous G7 Chrislmas T’-ees ..... 67A Christmas Gifts ....... 67B Machinery .............. 68 Do It Yourself ....... 89 Cameras ft Equipment ... 70 Sale Musical Goods...... 71 Sale Office Equipment ... 73 - Sale Store Equipment ... 73 Sale Sporting Goods..... 74 Hunting Accommodations 74A Bait, Minnows, Etc......75 Sand, Gravel ft Dirt ... 76 Wood. Coal ft Fuel ..... 77 Plants. Trees Shrubs 78 For Sale Pets .......... 79 ..Dogs..Trained,..B.'Td£d—...80. Hunting Dogs------ .. 81 Hay. Grain ft Feed t2 FARM MERQIANDISE BOX BEPLIFS At IS a.BL Today Oierfr-werr replies at The Press Office in the fonowing boxes: m. 34, », i«. 67. 68, 76. 80, 90. fl, 67, 167, 168. The Poatiae Presa FOR WANT ADS DIAL EE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ■houM bt rs- KS ■ larger Ihsn rewolsr agste lv|M !■ 11 o'clock boon Ih* dtv prrvloui to publlesUon NOTICE TO CASH WANT AD RATES Llnci I-Dty 3-Days 1-Dsyi 2 11.71 12.12 11.41 3.34 l.M An additional cbtise of lOe wUt be WSds for -Jto of Pontlsc Prcrs box numbtri. -BARGAIN- Onrage. 1411, recreation - **“ Additions, porchet. basement Modernl- pm,. rie... Mus Karla, i CEMENT WORK, AL£ K IK D6: rom T-p-m Special wlBMr prlce. OR 3-1172. to 1:30 R». DRY WALL dOARANTEKD WORK' WINKLEMAN'S iVee estlmatea. PE 1-1731. Wsw iUECTRlC ' heat. IKStfLATTON EXPERIENCED WOMAN 30-50, FOR and airing. Ragilo Electric EM general. Near Birmingham. Own 3-«a4 or mU v-tJ23. _ —™ MX gx^VATINb AND TfUMTHlNO -I PAINTINO. WINTER PRICES : ng w WALTON ' PE 1-! now in etfact. Frea Est. AH work ! ---—------- Ouar. fe 4-Moi. _______I Share Living Quarters CHinjDAXmr-DECDRATORS. " ROOMS AND BATH. ALL PRl vate, ttUlltles Included. FE l-klM 7183 3-r66m APARTMENT, it>Y WIL. --- lard FE 5-1321_______________ * ROOMB AND BATH, LOWER. RE-decorated, pvt. entrance. PI _8-0714. 101 wnuami.______ ‘ uifcdln°oTO22*!°“' i rum.' siM Aubim-A-vi" vViTm I S^ERAI RbbMB,-NEWLY-DECORATED. WlSfra jtfv‘* .‘rea a h.«rvi.m. I.s"v ! private entrance, adults only. FE *'* “‘““loa aro paid ; ;r-ACHEr “QUAT.Trr' '* Painting, -------- washing. ' ADT i loertet ------ i PE 1-0343. „UL 1-3110 n Cotutt nod' Ot-NEED AN APARTMENTt SlatGFs Apt. FURNISHED AND UNPURISHED 53 . PARKE ST. ____ PE 4-3541 AFTER 5 AND SUNDAYS. BEE CARETAKER MR CARROLL 1^67 N^PARKE BT_ OKCHARD CT. APTS. .. Bent now Srtstly reduced Furnished Or Unfurnlshr^ 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT AIR CONDITIONED Modern In Iverv Delell ADDLTB ONLY FE 8-6918 Marmger, » Satmer Bt. Apt I Open Delly a Bun. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. PRIVATTE 4 ROOMS AND BATR; 3-bedroom duplex. Btofs fnrn, full baiement. Wt 1-17C.____ CHILDREN WELCOME 'em 5 room apartment, and refrigerator lurnisbed aw monthly. Apply at 113 Bloom-! field Terrace nr ^one FE 5-1311. ' 1 Efficiency Apartments ; Llrlng room, klteben. bntbrooaa _JI0 I^Paddoek. Fl 3-kN. i LAKE VISTA APT§~ I BLIEABETH LAKE FRIV. 3 rooms and bath, atoea. rtfrte-emter ^d all uUUUat fttroiahod. living room, full-rtled ^iMdrooim Ail bit flptrli Pint rtftpMQn hall, built-in bathtub, tile ffodrs. large dinette alao slSaabla kHch-CD. gas beatad buUdlai, Just 1-I story walk-up. Automatic gas hot , water, day or night. TUed hnll-ways. High school also grada school within short dUtaaea. 444 ^ X Pike. FB6-M01.--------------- NEW MODERN t-ROOM AFART-—“• '-undry, oil furnace, location. Call PE SILVER LAKE APARTMENTt Now available. Very nlea condition. excellent locaUon. Adnite only. Referenoea. Sea Mr. (^p-JlgidaVre i man. Apt. 3. 2720 Dlxla Hwy. 33M Auburn Ave. UL 3-1324 8BYERAL APT8. FOR RIHT — _ _ __ w,.., 8pokaba-Ub- : 4-7140 room and TV. ILOIRLYnLADY"TO'“CARE~FOR child d»s More for home. Ref. J^2-43*0^fter 3 p.m______ OIRC FOR TELEPHONE WORK la Walled Lake Area. Part time For appointment call Hr. Penrod MA 4-3«l after 4 p _______ OiNIRAL RODBEWmiK. LIVE IN. I private room and bath, own transportation, food references. 335 I week. MAyfalr 1-7333.________ footings and light doting 2-5404 hlES ESTIMATES ON ALL > 11 finaDCt. n n. M Co , 1011 W. Hnroq_ UL SSitiTil' DON T PAIL TO CALL for quality painting nt_iow^ priers. PAiNTINO~PAI>ERINd7 REMOV- Jl. WsjhJng, PE 2-23^12_ PAINTING and" OTWRAT^O — Television Service 24 CREST TV. 1 HOUR SERVICE DAY Plant 2 TO SHARI ROMIT _______OR 3-0110_______ WoSkINO OIRL to share pur" fJi"S;8"he!4 ^tshrt ^a^rtraem ISO a mo-PE-- ' W'td. Contracts, Mtgs. 35 ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST AC ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATI WEST I entrance, Itthta. gat, steam heat; ' '—■- Auburn Heights. PI _____^_______ _____ J^L® *?** "Z^d bxih*’aa'iT«*a't» Rent Apts; Unfurnished 38 I*. DAV OH NIOHT, TV'^SERVICE Upholstering bujrfrii waitiof Call Realtor Par* Irtdgf PE_43m1. 1050 W. Huroiu BUYERS fX)R CONTRACn-S CLARK REAL ESTATE 2K 004 W. HURON FE 4 4113 FE 3.78M 1 ill? **“■ DINETTB, KITCHEN CHAIRS Rl- _ JN® “«‘P*^* 0“__________________ covered. Vinyl or naugahyde. Free HOME. OARAOK CABINETB, ^ eetHnates. Pickup and daUvary. _ __ ___ ditlona. ______________------------ Ponti'ac'T'rest Box m! *........ _*'™* * &afr*; T* ♦’MAP- L.' A. xoung. , MU 1-4W. ' LOW. LOW PRICES. EXPERT ---------------------------------crafumeii. Fireplacea. ■ addU— ------------ ------- “ Lost and Found 26 CASH Land contracts. equIUea and ^our^^ymente Saginaw 3 CLEAN LARGE ROOMS; iST 1 . AND 3-BKDROOM. PARTLY floor front, utilities. PE 4-1151.1 *“rn. lakefroot apts. OR 3-1146. --- 143 Pairgrove. iST-FLOOR," CLOSE 8T: 1 ENousH ponrrxR. fk-mala, black and white, vtclnlt*; Pondae Lk. Rd. and Casa lL Rd. OR i-pi makes at nhone ; repaired by I BM at our office. i /tog A Office Bupp land contracts to buy OR 3 ROOMS AND to sell, Earl Oarralf. EM 3-3511 , floor FI l-gQIT __ or EM 3-4544.___________ 3 ifOOMS. EVERYTmNd PRL LMmediate action oniy^iE «-705; On any good land contracts New Isfactory toapecUon ol property and UUa. Ask for Kap Templeton. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 3314 Orheard LUe Road PE ^643 JI’JF??®*”®!_____________tot PK”4-i74i or pe" i'-iiiiT' mSSSa Pl*?.*^**®*” ’ ROOMS AND BATH, REiPRidiR: | ^ h}SShed“'c iwpsowD. ra a mus j^r and stove. Iota ol cloacta ' After 3 n m BATH. FIRST, jpaca. FI 5-0444. ________ i days. 343 P. . J R^MS. PMVATI INTIUltCE 3-BBDRM; COWikB^. A0id; and garage. For CASH FOR LAND CONTifitCTS. H. J. Tan Welt, 4540 DIkle Hwy. ___________OR i-1355_________ Wsiited Real Estate 36 MiNtlEbr 14 TO 144" huckl'eberrles growing In the wild. Write: Steve, I4II4 Harlow. Detroit ____________________ I BUYERS WAITINO WE NEED .. pTo^'pe 34ii5 •"‘1 Personals 27 DRV WALL \.\I.FNTINK CARILS .. ^ counter *** 'I** HAL^LMAlut'TABIjrDi^^^ —‘tl fully Eueranteed. No fob place mats Dsoktas cuna talllaa ?' S”*2i Tableclolhi and centerpieces Backeiistose Book Store estlm^. LI_4-7144 or RE "1-1733; nUbOMPIBUD WALL CLEANERS; Wall ahd wIbAaws RggsAnabU FE l-lto. If you are Interested In aalltog. look into this brand new item which everyone needs. Wonderful opportunUjr._Ata-wo VCfrlar. Ba Employment Agencies 9 ^^^7^*'****^ ^ Assistant Bbbkkceper ---^ Ixparteneod In ind rewihdiiit. 3U E. _____^0 fR 4-3141. SUTINa rURNACai CLXANID and airftC44L C. L. Nelson. FE ________________________ I AND.REPAIRS ARD1--------- 3844 AUBURN H- OPEN SUN. 10-3_____ UL 3-244 SAWS SHARi^Eb LAWN MOWERS REPAIRED Air Cooled Englnec Bopalrad Incoiporated Crafts _ ______43 ty Union Btxeet _ 8EPT7C TAJOTM CLBluilfl. ____FE 4-4343._______ If EAST LAWRENCE FE 2-1414 SMART FORM OAmOWTS ANIT Charts garmenu. PB 3-3435.^ ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? FREE HOME ANALYSIS TO SHOW HOW WE LL BBCURB TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR HOME W. II. HASS, Realtor FE 3-7314 LAKE LOt-POR CASH Suitable —' Automobile Repairs prices St HOLLERBACK b AUTO PARTS Floor Sanding Television, Radio and Hi-Fi ^rvk^ ^w's'lERI^ix VbrUCE vet 8 TV AN-TENNA SERVICE. ....... ....... lavtallailon and repair, lowest Furnace Dealers’ g»»r«a«««. n -jm,**” 1-!M ~~ NEW gi USED EQUIP. 14 HOUR Serr. Jalka Heating PE 4-Mll. JOHNSON R ADIO & TV- Oel 0 Rent A|rt6. Furnished 371 PLOOR-FREK OARAGE modern 3-room anu. Completely lurnlahod. ITS Janitor Service . j COMPLETE JANITOR SERVICE I Truck and Trailer Service 'enlng work. Call R 3-d433. 4-1 p.m. For Sale Uvestock ... « Andy Csiki Garage eSm*om °° 6omasUc and foi Phone PB 4-8141 778 Baldwin, Pontiac We bays aipand^ our bualncas to VW Service Wanted Uvestock For Sale Poultry ... Sale Farm Produce .. Sale Farm Equipment Auction Sales .......... 88 i payroll wd Intol^. Good typ- | kOTPOINT. WBIBLPbbir Ing. Heads own traBsportation. Kaamore waabar ranalr 5-4137. EVELYN EDWARDS COUNraLINO*'uRVICB*-4tb East Huron Suite 1 Phone FEderal 4-0^ AUTOMOTIVE For Sale Houaetrailcrs ■ . Rent TVailec Space ---- Auto Accessories....... For Sale Tlret......... Sale Truck Tires....... Adto Service .......... Sale Motor Scoaters .... For Sale Motorcydes .... For Sale Bicyclea...... Boats ft Accessories ... Flbergku ............. For Sale Airplanes ;...... Transportation Offered . Wanted Used Cars ...... Used Auto Parts job, guaranteod wans for right party. rOVK MBr'OB WblCiir"tlTH eari lo fill tMHiielM. Ihill ot part tlma. Opportunity to oarn ^1 Inc^ M tC Farry. 8:34 jpULL TIME job' WTni OPPOR-fid tunlty for good neat men. Ages M 31 to II. If you Ibtidi the world ia_yo4 a bvine - dont ap-But If you ara viUlng to k - than yg« may bo our a. AMIy 18 a.a Mon., Ptb. Ill r PonUac Trail, WaUod . n itARRnto MAN. i4 TO 3|'P6r WHAT DO YOU NEED?^ Whatever it is, you’ll have more success in ing it in The Pontiac Press Want Ads. ___J aalca, 8117 phu ekpenaea ' to atart. High Seheol edueaUon. ^l^e.^aMf car oacaaaary. Ph Com. TrsUerg .........,...102A| nm*. cau P _________________ Sate Used trucks 103 MAN WITH CAR Used Truck Partr. ........ lOSA in PonUac area to repretOal Auto Iniuranoe ............ 104 For^ ft SiXs. Cars.........105 Sale Uaed Oars ............ 101 To Place a Ad — SIrelchea your dollar — No charge far budget analyils Write or phone for free booklet MICHUJAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 703 Ponuar Stele Bank Bldg PE 1-4458 Pontlac't oldeit and largeat bud-I i^ftancc company. : — MIrh. AsaoclatlOD ol ___THINK! Boat repair and motor tunc-ua time. Be ready lor fun In •81. : YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER _______ waahing. LI 3-8873_;______ 18M_Teregroph Bd^___ «f 3-»33 ‘ JANlTOR BraviCE. RIBIOENTiAL »«ki,”ra4-5303*'’'*'’ *'*‘'' ’"T 'vlyter prices ...................... ......... l-3:^M:KITCHEHTnr.W^^^^ Sd SilnSr.'S'ppra**’”' *'*"'”■ I 3-4445 bath, utilities. y. Privileges Hoapftal. Walking dtetanct < _.|9^ .am8ll child. wikBint 4 Dixie Hwy — On L awn I PAUL A. YOUNG. L\X. ■ >« pub Ttui*jheeM —— -American Truck Rental BY HOUR, DAY. WK OB LEASE DolUea. Llftaatei TE 5-5630 Dressmaking, Tailoring 17 T cradt't "cowaeiiora'" ---------------------------—, — American AaaoclaUon Credit CounMilora Mra. J. Manning_____PI 8-4574 ANY OI^ OB WOMAN TAILORINb--ALTERA'nONS 5 aiM* Oreaa Maklm—Pur Rmalra '* ——“ ft 5-3138 t IRL OR WOMAN NSIDINO , landly adetaor. phona PB I. After 8 p.m. or If no' ------— g.*a4.--------------- Income tax ^rvice 19 ARE YOU” WORRIED OVER DEBTS? CONaOLIDATE ALL YOUR BILLS - AND LET OS OITE YOU ^ ONE PLACE TO PAY BUDGET SERVICE 18 trWTHOtl nanclal management rttht" nowl Hoaacx amnrlaca, 141 a. Broadway, Lake Orton, or 108 NaUonal Bank BulMlngr^heater. oEl-8184. kCC'URAfk EXPERIIWCED BOLIN TAX service, (AyaUab’i Tmr Rouodl I yi ■ 88 AYER BooUteeptof and Tag lerylce. OR ABE US TO PIOURE YOUR IN-come tai. Prltndly, pereanal aerv-tea at yaur born* er Mra. Ayer-UfO nte-83 - 85. Keya B Nacker-man. PE oam. 3881 N. Paw* u Z M171. 388 Fourth at. BO HAWUCir OntT^ trabte^ FE 2-2602 Green Stuff . . ... In the form of U. rency la a waleoma add: anyone’s pocket If you're Inter-cated to bow to tevumpilab tbir' youreelf. become a PONTIAC PRESS Claaalfhid Dear. Building Moderniiation BUILDING AND REMODEUNO. Keith O Biegwart. PE M762_ CUSTOM HOMES AND REMODIL- : 4x8 i«" A3 Birch Ply 814.85 ea! ; li-xon Ptcl PONTIAC LUMBER CO. truc Trucks to Rent star Modernlaatton, OR DO IT NOW. REMCH3ELINO, NED Carpet Cleaners Dressmddng, Tailoring- monay-8 a r I n g bargalna. PIac< your own proflt-maktog ad by phone (PE 34111 u the number k can),, by man, or orcy Iba ooun. ter to TRE PONTIAC PREBI Dry Wall lent appoitnoHy tor rtibt maa. Baratap Ills Mr vauj^amd a*. DIAL FE 2-8181 Included without added < 13 yrt. an Laka Orton or Rochaater _______ _F^2-4654 meput ra urvicb trajn- IVICK NdTABY V * FE 2-8181 and Thk for Want Ads Floor Sanding mtmi Painters & Decorators Wm. c. McBath Plastering Service A.l PLA8TERINO AND REPAIRS JteM^ Pat Jt*e. PE 2-7433._ PLAS'TKRiNO FREE kanMAfi^ 0_Meyers____________XM 3^t3 PLAS’TERiNO - WORK OUARAn"-teed. «3 N. Baglnaw. PE 5-0344. Saw and Mower Service RAT'S SAW a LAWN MOWER SERVICE MO 54441 3873 S. MUIord Rd. m-'f'on Stakaa TRUCES - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Truck!-Bamt-TrtUora Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 135 S. WOODWAIU3 ri 44«i — ...... Opan Dany I U^lste^g THOMAS UPROLSTgaiNO 187 NORTH PERRY^IT, FE 5-8888 This space reserved for your Business and .Servtee Directory Ad; 3138 Uarfaral. Aul __________OL PW EAKlK's CUSTOM *— 8171.^-------- Ml Washer Service AUTOMA'nC 1 TV and. radio laa. aTj. Hay, Water Softens Service Water Softener Service Prompt SarvtM m AH Maka* cblck'a MT 347*.l ur PR 44838 \ ^2 ^ *f VVKyTVTXVO ^ t-' : ■: THK POXyiAC PRiisS, SATI RDAV. FJSBRVARV 4. laiGl Rant HmIms Fmmidwd 39( Rcirt Hoyei Uwlwn. 40 .Savr*) go»pS«»ll 4omo pormtmt or o rMI |»i|4M^Mr ca^ ne vnil Aft- BT OWKER MOCBO NVORBOR- For ! i*bltNI8BlS UOOTO RObii 0*8 Lorid LAEE. scrr*8LE for' U4IBS 834 ) n04 4ltcr 4 lAKIOJUON COST CUEAN ROOM MuVaTE ER »«SS!Sa^C*U;8B 4.44U. ilRMlKdH*M.REVERtV HliMI I bedroom roaOi. tlreMtO:. carpel. AUaohed «ar«te UTM^ eoaer Ml 4:7»i. SuadAir. V OWKER. )-BEOROdu toilCK i frt oin m Hiihland Esialn EicepUaaalD Bodern klubea — Subufhoft L«wngi At Its B«st Taar hRat* kern* b Uw (CG.VVKRTIBLE 24^ W.* W.Ir^ «OMEvS ____OR 1-8M1 atLVAN VILLAOI. 3 81I»M8'. ruu bmt. lat bMi. n (-mb ■■f47 Wi»t " CIVILIANS $99 DOWN 0 OTHER COSTS ^144 HeijhU Road MT : Tbedroom _______ ___ _________ autonatic heat, tlorata. •craeai. opaa. vacant laiaiedlaM paaaet _ _ - WO J-33S4 Evjra sXr .^avM;. to qssh-*»»«> TIM wilJi automatic hST 4244 Ratcberv . ri/’RKlSHED ■ 'e »rTTtJe*»a. _ I |m_3-3U1 SMAIX HOCSE. ili * WILLIAMS tAEErROWT WU rtat year aroaad MA »-3W Rent Houses Unfurn. 4 IDEAL BACTHELW 8 OC^RTEIw; B¥ OWNER.' 3-BIDROOU HOMS. ROOMS »“»■« pool 444 FE 4-4722 tatF baaemeal, carpetiag. N aide ^Sdo« " NICE SLEEFI^ ROOM Dravtoa PE 2-:j44 FI'S-4^ or OR 3-2141 NICE ROOM FOR REFINED RE DRAVTC^ PLAINS 434 PER 2 BED ipoBvlblf peraoo No other room- mooD and the rent trom the 1 •lerenrea m PE 4 <344 bedroom apartment aili make the ROOM FOR I pSrson private MONTH mrancr Rejria and aWve A.. K,eMen{‘ ailb^ r* FW**FE SJdi*^ ^ ’ car |ara*e boiv 411 744 '*<' PP ____ [ AUINOER realty or 4AMI ROOM IN OUIET HOME Oa^fc Oopd location. MAyfaIr TKI -I .E\ eTsTARTE^^ NO MONET OQWN - __ — Tri-Ut_________ Your plant or ourt Bata model. a FlatUey. Builder^ EM 3-4442 TO but M sell see CL.vkKSTON KK.M. KST.M'K. I\C. r a'riakert U4 8 John DISCRIMINATING BCTIR lukurlou* lakefrimt Ir room’ IN CHRISTIAN TiV'^ro. Open OaUi 4 to 4.’ siiaday l MAple 4-4421 TO SETTLE ESTATE 1 1 4 3041 Rooms with Board '2-BEDRCHni nm rx - ••■—malic Heti Full Ba-meot Will DECORATE $r5n.M-'K :M show him I'm iKnoriiiK him!"' BEDROOM FUR ConvBlcsient Homes 44 I PRIVATE NURSING ___ ..rea To _____ ltd people EM 3-4433 ■LOERLT LADY 17li/dlH-tli t ake Ranch 3 bedroom. baacmenL \\ fSt Submliaii , "-'WrwmYT- 2100* Ck4i Ukc M n 3.«|7S WILL ACCEPT LATt MODEL CAR I’au^ M, Jones, Krai l"st:- FOR SALE- IDEAL WITH UTINO QUARTER8 . BmaU down .payment DUPW*.-------------- --------- decorated. 444 per moaih . 234 N SAOINAW Nk HOLIK - ttARGF.R KK 5-8183 Eroier,. _______ : Rd With parkiBf Will alli 4-4134 _______________' STORE WITH PAREINO 11 ‘'5S^*^d*dIS^»!^frtk?^r «A»il ' 24k24-POOT~ SUITING roR COLORED 3 AND 3 BED-aodMorc oil beat garaae fenced Re*' reawnabit 1434 Pontiac room homo Low down paymenu in back lard Lake prlvilctet Ukr Road Call PI t-1044 after Midd)eu>n RraUy FE 4-3243 3 BEDROOM HOIdE, UNION LAEE KCnl UniCe SPBCC Near "TB boapital. 144 month. . FE 4-TG_________________. 3-BEDRM modern HOME FULL* huei^t, oU baat. wmiaau Lk. . ______ WiU dl.ide LOW rent FE 3-72IU SEE U^AIUD IlNAMa tiac Lake'^R'3^14 after '4 WEBSTER. k. LAj^^ QRION -_OXrORg _ vwsmmirsu ^ HAYDEN For "Itife Houses 49 MULTIPLE LISTING SIRVIC^ w o e ■ douhta antry doors with "-wr. front to back Uelni •mman with flrCPlaCt. dlOtOf fC------ with buin-ln china el—* kitchan with bullt-toa. and 3 baths, plui batement i —- ----------« with fireplace- I attach^ 1-car karate. M4.044, t QUEEN, an enjoy t tractive Colonial home, Ideally located near Clarketon lu»t a ttone> throw .IcoBL U>< ... 1^. £4iUtt.,i32>A..a:- - NEW ' HOMES MORTGAGE IRWIN OPEN TX • In't'^rwm* ^ Iv/} ‘^?y a beautiful 2-1 ' DRAYTON AREA On tbeie 3 tou bedroom^^un^alow, has ful Urge carpet^ room, ^- ..c^. f ' Equity -"T _ lovely bedrooms --- ---- ---- ,. I barbeque grill al .. ... mortgage. Total price 414.404. By appointment only. dining room overtoolimt lake, attached two-car ga-ra|e, 44' trontsfe on Ukc. Drive out Elliabeth Lake Rd. to Number 4431—Owner rlghfnow li the ...is lovely Sylvan yuiaga bunfalow r“- -■ Its---------- ----- _. tk>car garage. Living luuiii. iwii bedroomt. Urge lovely kitchen, tiled bath, and sxtfa 3 OFPIC18 FOB BENT • _ Dule Hwy. OR 3-1344. _ 3 OFFICES. rURNISHEO OR N - ■ de Low rent FE 3-1 North side. 3 bedcoome. FE 4-U44 HOUSE FOR BALE IN INDIAN VIL- lage_EM 3-2044 ___ IF YOU NEED 1500 ly decorated Lake pnelleiee. I 4M MONTHLY. WEST HURON pel mouui . Street location, parking Suiiahl- C- PAsVGUS. Realtor 44_SOUTHNA 7-i414 » HOU« the miller t JAMES K BLVD. '-nely^ S^lvM Lake Ironl home. STOP This IS IT! ' 4444 down Lot 40x340 with batr-ment and 4“ well wiih pump. 43 104 Off Walton |. C. Havden, Rcalt(lr u i. Walton ' FE 1-0441 Open Evei. Sun 10 to 2 WATERFORD TOWNSHIP This 3-bedroom iplit-level home .. of brick coftHfuction hat large llvlnt room, dining room and kitchen. Kitchen ba> birch cup- ------- ■ rmica counter lop. ex. ceramic tUe bath. i Water eoftencr. OPEN *'.,H CHAPIN. Inc. > large utility ^an’ Realtor one of our oe»v ouye ai on Mutual 4-gg24 412.7J0 with low down payment FACT’ Today t< the time lo bi Cepe O'NEIL Lake' prlvlle LAKE PRIVI1.EOE8 ------ ■ ck (re icktop »1 I full: batha. brtek wail tn aiichcn. barbecue grille, etutom-bullt kitchen, natural fireplace, full painted barement, hot^^r “¥ahU-Way;fli 'h GOOD BUYS AND TRADE "a^S^rS 'd"oKyment. j4ie SP-CIAL BONUS - Sullder. rent from 'a of th(. fine hofiie i .'»rp«‘!.“4 In living i will pay the monthly payiftente I *' eame low Oak (loore. pUxterM wall*. ““ down l-hedroon n MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE I Phon'c FE 3 4442 3 BEDROOMS. BASEMENT DOD Y ROOM 3 BEDROOMS. MODERN ____ - ter'2“hl!«lrtrwrliome“‘’?M? l-BEDROOM. OAS HEAT PARAOE neU. chicken house 170 mo 3 tail basement, baby walcome In-; rm suite offices Orchard Lk qatre 244 N Perry. ___——- Ave Heat, fight, water, parking rSEDROOM DUPti^rDRAYTON; ,»» _ T Stout. FE >4444 . Plains, 4^(Jk|ldr« J>ROAMQW IN GOOD COHDITfON. 3-BBbROOM HOME, IN PONTTAC. •V’™**- ‘(Si. *2,*®® - - - —...... ”• Baldwin, taqnlrc. 273 Bald- Avenue. Phone FE 4-1041._ VValljiaper Steamer Wll.I, TRADi. 14 acres with 300 it iske from. or land contract Cscchcnt \igb ground, must tacrlflcr Phone space Ce-Large lo' rlth rustic ranch fence. Nice hrube and blacktop street. $14.-SO with Approximately 41.400 I consider < out West Walton • Blvd. to Clintanville Rd to Anielus Meadows Sub. to 3414 Mra-dowlelgh St. 4240 DOWN RANCH HOME Nearly new 3 bedroom with automatic olj heat. Ule Eas heat, oak fUors. tils bath, utlt-ln oven and range, double cloeets LeBeron school area. Call today for appointment. lor limited time only ____^M1 4-4374. _ >-|Un>ROOM. MODERN OASCBEAT In PontUc_OR 4-1404 _2 i-BEOBOOM H03O. lAYER AMD. RCSSFl.L VUL'XG REAL ESTATE AND. BUILDERS ___FE 4-3200 _______ LOVELY 3 BEDROOM BRICK $00 buy for 1 NOW!! Rrr‘g';___________ also icwint i ?o'-u‘b'i,^i£i‘k“ 1. L«rg^ bath. 1 Un^ ilMterc^«IU . 414.440. .1 after 4 exc^t Sat. and Sun 3' BEDROOM ranch HOME. 1 bain, built-int. uulity room, ce port, near schools, lease til FE 4-4214 4-ROOM modern: OAS HEAT I . fumtet I ... __kUnd Ft • Orchard Lake S For Sale Houses ?sfoiifn. AND SAm' 1 BEOROM HOUSE 77 EA Bruoklyn FE A344I. [pttrr t 31 2d-A!dll:V INCO.NiK Id- 14 LIKE COUNTRY FOR CHILDREN Yet close to everyihlni 3 yr. 1.724 sq ft. 431 000 1 bath 4-9 bedrm . gae, 40x140.-MA 4-3443 ---LEASE-WI3nZQgriQN TO BUY IT brick jbedroom. gas hesT'FE 4A134 or FE 4-7386 IAEETRONT: 3 BEDROOtf*HOMF NO MOXFY DOWN to Non-Vets ’aynients I.ess Than Kent KAMPSEN »r- 2411 Ellitbelh Lake Rd FE 4-0421 ’ Eve . Ph FE 4-7375 3PEN Newly decorated Situated Warren Stout Realtor IT N Saginaw Bt. FI 4-4144 Bat 4 30 a m. to ■ oo OPEN Bj|D I tc 1 furnace. Colon shingles. Only I BATEMAN REALTY Hvlni -$55 room with studio celling. L step ssved kitchen, yet big iDtre - 2 utllily rooms. Tht 48x134 lut U nicely ■ "scaped. Located ^ S IN DAY I TO 5 I' Culonial ililU home, large living room COLORED -iarp home, enjoy the luxury aclous living on West Side '■‘ge 3 bedroom home Ni replace. I'k bath, dlnii lirch paneled rec. room nl^ Oarage Only 474 p OPEN SFF’CE OPEN SUV FPOM I TO ! OBOROE R IRWIN. REALTOR 394 W Walton FE 3-744: . (Dick) Schoo Prlce"^ I V.UT KT Realtor I'l"; 4-3551 L OAKLAND AVEKUr <^n • to » Sundty U to 4 h dock Only t [Tali todayt! 1, LAUINOER R HURON GARDENS 17-350. Vacant, -2 : WOODWARD A ___ A mootb. Aft< OtaJ-Oltt _________ 4 ROOMS AND BATH 6 lU.MO. Beal of tertna avalUble Cali b^ei OH 3-4531 [l heat 3 bedroom* ranch HOME. I*. Rraitora. baUi. built-tiu. uUlUy room. car. port Otar acbooli. Price lll.MM :rrace. iPARTlt onfum OU heat Cbm Lk Rd. FT l-KU rs 3-41U or P£ l-UtmOOM BRYcK~ PUIX BAftE- LET'S TRADE OPEN mith bulit.it 1. |.c«r •man barn _____ J.bedroom F----- baaemaot If ir---- CUrkaU Realtor OR f-oisi' ‘ LOCATED >"r EAST HidilLAND iindiKlins" Kif) 1 IU.S00. Fl- _ 4444 Tranapaicnt Dr. MA 4- _________ ___ FUH3ROOM 1‘4 BATH . _____ _____ _____ ^Ajubum^___________ _______________________344 Central ner lot near excellent 4-ROOM AND BA-TH C11 today to sec It. OPEN SON BY appointment FE 3-7444 - RES FE 4-4413 CT.AKK KE.M. EST.ATE ’ 444 W Huron. Open 4 U> 4 j Split f;Og n. 3 bedroom Ju.vl Ihe city 13114 I finished family room. Priced DIRECTIONS Sashabaw Rd to MIDLAND I "BUD" lien' properlV I* bio . Elisabeth Uke \ . Termt can be i S!":E I’.MiE 3) J’ictnre ,\d of npen HoUvses ~OEEICE OPEN i—^t=ND.\Y 1-5 P.M. I'AL-- * 77 N sagfn.w Bt. H;- 'ar.^lScTd* T p^• has been reduced to only II IM Good west stltrarban an Ckwe to town. Fenced ri card, carpeting and other i Rav O’Neil. Realtor North Side Bungalow 4 room home, ------ ‘- heated front knotty ■ ELL BUY TR.XDE THRU MILLER ftff ! paneling. ' storage space, and m FINISHED MODEL i L aai l. ON CONTIkACT' rch cup-UsS'MrNAB^ ART MEYER BY OWNEK' ||,“rVngMn'X:fc*^?S.';*-.l,‘*Ml8‘5: will consider trade. PB 5-4101. , A BARGAIN * , OH Woodward near Squat e Lake . Need RfHimi Is T room home, large llvipg . dining room, kitchen. 3 bed- N ced -A. IJjimc ? 108StEasfBlvd.i DOr^AA/’lSJ OPEN DAILY AND SUN 13 TO I *• ni?.® . MODEL PHONE FE 4-3878 E®‘Lf _ ^‘i ' S B S 'SUtLDINO CO nlli?? na. fun SPOTLITE i3 Bedroom Brick L‘;Near M.S.U.O. ---ir tranaferred, will si . It* Information. full baaement. recreation i aole.-aiid^a|>a*.-ftUchca I. fiiny Insulated. bath dowqjcUb.____,_____________, dm room. -Drapes included. 2 3-—■ up for Income extra lot. An excellent property la tip top condition. TVIll consider land contract. 2 or 3 bed- down payment. RTOMjto^ RAMBLE 2 story brick call's* •oved, 4'i down plus ci luallfled buyer. Why i (Tesceiit I ;ake Area All On One Floor nook. tamUy room,' 2 ear garage Nice landscaped lot. lake. - privHegea. beauUfUl view of 1he lake. The low price will surprise' LETS TRADE IMPOSSIBLE ' rot* ‘SLKy tUevable, but ONLY 110.440 fireplace, c lanSse»ed. Un true! The price l^ir QUICK SALE. LETS TRADE NEAR SQUARE LAKE Very targe rambling hrlcl with flreplaca, * *— BDITOTNO COMPANY 2- and 3-bi .. no down payments. , CRAWFORD AliENCY ! •front. Only 41 400 On SMITH- WIDEMAN 00 E Flint MY 31143 NO MOM'IY DOWN i We will build 3-bedroom starter NAME YOUR OWN DOWN I .Vi Cake Sherwootl OPEN SUNDAY I TO 5 4*00 DRIFTWOOD DRIVE •rs^ complete I bedroom ^brt .....I Terrific 2 bedroum home with everything. tt.440 FE 4-3045 NORTH SIDE 3 BEDrSom BUN! t FE4^ _ 3 BEDROOM HOMES Near Union Lake I Call I I. Mc- t 40.400. c LAKE PRIVILEGES — Williams i Lake -- Hlca cUan 3 bedroom > bungalow with large 3 car. ga- . I rage. Large lot. This Is an Ideal! home for retired couple, or new- i lfkVne'w*|^ulf‘?rfciJ‘^OTly*8fo,i'oo' ! ■s and Insurance. Including i car attached garage, large n-stsed ecreened porch ir. Natural fireplace "BUD” Nicholie. Kcaltor+ ■r^m"«n^k,*”p'Jivfc 44 Ml. Clemens 8t. T onl 'k block away. OWNER EE 5-1201 U MOVmG - BAYS BILL AT After 6 p.m., EE 4-8773 lake privileges Maceday 180 1-T. l-AKI-’-l'KONT' LAKE . 3-be> TRl-LtVEL BTARTER MODEL AfTakriamT Villagf OPEN SUNDAY I TO 4 7001 BISCAYNC __ |i • lenlasik lor ulmosl living ' O Flaltley, Builder IM MODERNIZED COUNTRY-HOMI. 4 “ -““'rtursand beaefi OWNER^^ bedroomt. 2 lull baths, oil heal, r.-i- a acu utllily and rnreatlon rooms with ' •- o-tH.njS l.e>ric K rri|)j). Kcaltbr 74 West Huron Street FE 4-4370 or FE 4-4111 Fare brick Front , GJayin’ts l^ffOL-Ibaa-ftenk;^ bedroom carpeted rarport. Large. 44 i Paved St This h« bought with 41.004 di : INDIAN VILLAGE room Tor additional $10 DN. three - bedroom It™*?:..! .Ulli Electricity ai ( SUIIUl-rTT. Realtor Perry Park BZ u STARTS DEAL OWNER'S SACRIFICE ; haalth Pived St. Nlc Is a bargain for only ! be bought with IM4 ' 3 BEDROOM BRICE - FE 44526* lent to school 231 Stock Rd Meianuita. 4124 Ml 4-2407 MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME Excellent locsiion^EM 3-4004 NEWLY DBc6RAtix>: OiBEOROOM MBgla home, l-car garage Eliea - • _Lk. EtWtes. 474 i ^^^TO~BOT~ IT'S A SAD FACT- Ami Oh So-TTwrf PE 2-OTT4 ' PRintYWIUTE 'L FRAME , r to UmoD Lk Fine nfiah-“ cuTtr No Mortgage Costs Gas heat-carpeted living room DON'T WAIT-BUY NOW! :r softener. You can £52^ in excellent; X per cent mortgage ; condltlor *....................— --------- Large living ...u uiulng room. carp< kluhen with eating apace, t MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ARRO borbood. Dandy big IM CtreuT furnace Cerpetlng. I >r garage $1,400 down: t Model Open Daily 1 lo 6‘ ■■ drapes Road EM 3-3200 liTHia__________ k ranch. 2-car garagt. ' Kent orTease OptioT)~ 2- bcdroom new home, ITS.OOj monthly payments, gas imat I Many oUter nice featuree. 1741 Dreaden. Por appointment call: PE 0-rf<3 bet i and 4 or Ll! 3- 44M cets after 0 p.m. Weetown Realty^_____________ i REBPOitSIBLK COUPLE ONLY -New modern 2 bedroom home Lake privileges Union Lake Area rm A7004 after 0pm S44AU--HOUSE. 8t6ve“ REPRIO- CLOTNINO. PORNI-TURE TOOLS MOTORS, anything - eeu can tura them Into CASH with a low COM WANT AD la The Pontiac Prese. SNOW APPLE DRIVE, CLARSB-jvn l-bedimf brick ranch. Bath, gas heat NOW III ■ monlh MA 4-0704.________________ ilitALL HOUSE tH EBXdO. Ask (or Want -\cis It's Easy Just Dial FE 2-8181 fen cad and Mrrae^ nar ygjd, _iak» prmi^isrm-Mwr _ ROOfiMTER-S-BEDROdM UTlt Ity room Qaa -beat. Aluminum elding In good locattaa. Only 0l,> 000 down. 40d a month AUBURN HEIONTS - 3-kedroom - Larta Uvlng room, lull bath, basement, antomatie gas heal -Large lot. Only 0740 dowp. U. U. NlLWlXr.JlAM CONNER crooks AND AtiSURN FE 4-0203_. ____UL 13$}0 Rent Jir. Lease Option 3 bedroom ndw home. 174 30 monthly paymentb. Oas heat Many other nice features. 175 411 KENILWORTH IJuat north of FcOthcratone) estown Realtr FE 2-7304 FeV|703 ........ garage. This home Is nloelj ----1 beaiHllwl him Ooqd beach. Boai tor gnll. Large UOi lav n. Imedlat* posses lion Tlila home can be bought oi Model openlSTcin., Thurs. and .Sun. eves, till 9 p.m. call I p.m., roome. m batha, recroatlcn reosL 1-car garsga, 034,444. PE 4-M44 or FE 2-2100, TRIPP I with fireplace m I Attached caraae Nicely i ed. Will eonslotr, tri^. 75 Weet Huron 'Street appointment JOHN K. IRWIN At SONS Roaliorj . ■Since 1434 313 West Huron Street Phone PR 5-4447 ...EVE. gUMSbO......... L. H. BROWN. Realtor 504 niaabeth Lake Road PH. PE 4-3404 or FE 2-4110 MULTIPLE U8TINO SERVICE OPEN adlant heat;- targe i overlooking Oats S.I.S*"**' ‘' HAMMOND LAKE PRIvnEOBS THE LAKEl.ANDER - Vakte-Paeked , s-Dcnrin. rsncj), large osmi.. Isfaed garage, back porch, peted. 2 ceramic Ule baths. 3 fire-! placet. butIt-lDs. birch cabinets, > landscaped lot EXaUL^t MO^ME '' ! Several other homei to show , Open dally I-O p.m. Saleiman Lpke. I thdlai ^Wclirnr*nnf*' family room ^ Atla^ed 3-car garaae. elder trade -make offer. Out Walton to Behoolhouee Dr. left tint houet. beautlt^ —, .-Jra. lafga h fireplace, alld- LAEgTHDiX^ -j screened porcl Lake, atlacbe - i bedroom brick ranch, wall to wall carpeting, bullt-lns to kitchen, large- tarairy room with Oraptoce. 0 b a t ha;-■ bate-rai heat. 3 car aUaebed LAKEPr“nt - 1 kedroom ranch, _ excellent kitchen, large living room with flreplane. picture window with beauttful view of lake, •ftoched ^r*ge. 0^' on the wa- LAKEFroNT - Lsrge famUy of '——me. I rooBM. fireplaces, base-t, oil hdat. It li furnUhad has rented lor 070 per week ‘ family type kitchen with It-ln oven and. range and ced-in yard. Oversised 3 car iched garage aiid many olh-features A. real value al LET'S TRADE William Miller ' Realtor EI*; 2-0263 •70 W HURON u.s. Government Property Manager 5 Hl'lDROOM COLONIAL Bum In 144«. Lots of ritras Including hot water heat, ledge-rock fireplace, walk-out basement and 2 car garage, t'k ceraaite tile baths, plus stool and shower to basement Large 100 g 14$ loot lot with lake privileges to edge of Clarkston This Is one you will like and a price you will like) We Build New Humes Choice Lots. Choice Areas : KEsiLXOR -- - FK 4-0528 377 S. TELEORAPH OPEN EVES X—B.\RGAm SHTO ATTEsNTION. HOME BUYERS THE VETERANS ADMINISTRATION HAVE FOR SALE scerai choice pieces - 01 properties offered aL.A-substaiHtoi xartnis it) jiou - YOU NEED fid DOWN PAYMENT - and you can ' ^VliGAIN COLORED- - payments li • with monthly mthl^ 'PEDROOMS --- LAR'OB LOTS — IDEAL LOCATIONS - YOU D O NOT ~ HAVE TO Re a VETERAN TO BUT - O'NEIL realty company Is a > A PROPERTY MANAGER for this area; Start the I WILLIAMS fenced yard. Cloae ■re Lake Rd. loustman - Spitxlcy i real estate insurance i PE i-1311 ' ^ Cltll i 1413 fcldw" « 4.8447 I HcCULLOUOH REALTOR 1284 FE 4-3844 4tU Cxss-Ellaabeth Road OPEN 44:30; SUNDAY lU-l O.NEIL MULTIPLE LISHNO SERVICE! ...-AVe.st Side mvfy decorated 4-room brick terrace, aR good-ilie rooms, tlla bath, full basement, oil heat, convenient to ihopptH -area. $2,000 3 BEDROOM HOME — LOT 180 I 300 FT - PLUMB-INO—WIRING AND WELL IS ALREADY IN — JUST OPP TELEORAPH ROAD - W.eOO PULL PRICE. NEAT AND CLEAN — 4 ROOM HOUSE - NEWLY DECORATED — BASEMENT - NEW AUTOMATIC OAS FURNACE-PAVED STREET - MOO DOWN 050 PER MO^. '• -KENT NORTH - 4 home 10 ft. heat Owner Pontiac s c b Bedrm. ranch type Pill' titfe to? faM. 00Is. 013,100 wivh EAST SIDE - Eastern Jr HIgtl ares 3 bedrm. home all to 'Ic-i.OOfl __cqndH^ Tltod baih. Large hvto* Clo.se Th 1 *'»' 0“{ lu.ioo wiiu ii7*j .n if North Prrry St. torge | joslyn krftil O-'roei Area WILLIS M. BREWER '. REISS. SALES t ■ran St. PI Xftey 0:3S ^ f ' DRAYTON ARES Onod • rm and bath with full Bsm'V Oood deep lot allows for Ottle »te" ........ Floyd Kent Inc t > For Sale 'Hoiwes 49 Partridge' IS THS "BUtO" TO BBB CUNTON RIVER *iir3 fS”.. '* flrtp^t, *xtr« Urge dining room With iprlog It oround Iho omor you'll en- TO THE HOME OWNER houK looido ond out — we a uppratse it ond eeU W» TRADES, ond due* to o., ...... of bttiUoouo we NEED bouse* tor Door rotldenU! We re at clot* at gout telephone. CaU now' Partridge WEST BIDE BRICE Four bedroom home, doubl rage, two loti Recreation 9 flteplacet. luU attic______ . ---«---- —Tj age, gat fired *1 rifle screened rear porch. I - ■ " -erlng, ExCeUent < went pleat*. Atfc Don %cbo - Cats Lake Road Road Wailtmi.____________ — for Townthlp — Indepeodenci TMtatbla-.....a -fo* hr-Fonttit — Call lor further details. §ge. lari C4 rigt ---- paymr • MOVE IN — IN TWO WEEKS ^—n paymcttl. ' ' for texts __________ _____ Oulte a tew Ot retain. Maui many loeatlaoi To duality til &.ri„‘“A»C MHtord. Waterford area. Independence Townthlp iciarktton Nicholie & Harger Co. Utb W. Huron PH FE iglgl E»*t. CaU FE «4«1 or FE «-gg*« Templeton For Sale Hortset '4»| - For Sale HtNMB THK PONTIAC pjlESS. SATURDAY/ FEBRUARY 4, 1961 GAYLORD OPEN West tide tubur^ l-b*droom, nice and cleah Mune borne — SUNDAY 2 s«iB«,wN Btti on B. Pike at. to N. Prancit Bt., left to tS N. Francli St. Open ilgnt. OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO S P.M. buu?^; l-b^mm brick rM^ I. Kitchen with .. J-ci I flre- .^-.'lof^xJ... Weet on Elisabeth U. Rd. . to cats Lk. Rd . left to property and open tlgnk. WIDOW MOST BELL or trad* eoneentloiitl brick ]• flat In excellent condition. 7 roomt and bath down, I roonu and bath up, 1 hot gat fired heating 1. Shows good return. 1 ■ bedr"om ' e- . LAWRENCE W. OAYLORD , U«-W. Huron Sf. FE 8-969J lOHNSON » Toart of Btrrlea Sitl?^ —..........bath, i bed- ‘»'o‘nl?'4riS?r cated tn nice t bedrooms, carpeted living n —House I* U very good ooi Uon. Full bstement, gat hot A. JOHNSON & SONS REALTORS FE 4-2533 ____I7B4 B TEUORAFH_ NOW OPENING THE ALL NEW Corvette $11,660 Justness Opfwrti^y 59 CLASS A HOTEL,BAR - ORIpSS-bUi IM* on*. > .STATEWIDE 3ty ar Night PN M400 Package Liquor Beef and wine, flN.OM worth ol store to the PMt log Milt tbo I bat bean olterated by i her father, being In butlneu i Florida. It you are Interritei CALL4»MOW FOR I _ nCULARS You will b« to find out t^ location^ LI$T-WtTH--- Humphries U N. Telegraph Open Ivet. FE 2-9236 STATIONS FOR LEASE OOOD POTBimAL, Pleitt caD between I a m. and l_p.m. IX t-omi or after B p m Pf I-IHK PDRBOn. COMPANY. Partridge TWKNTY-THRKR COMBINATION RADIO, RECORD player S 14 U. arfoct con-dltloo. gM. FE i-Wl.____^ It the "bird" b> te FEATUREB FAMILY ROOM WITH SI IDlNO GLASS WINDOW WALL ONTO PATIO 1 BEDROOMS WITH ATTACHED OARAGE. IN- - ALUMINDM LAP SIDING. TOD-VE NRVBB BEEN BO MUCH ' UONTH 11 NURSING HOMI{ $15,000 down. Ovnn styi .... n«tU^ $1,000 A mo&Ui. K8ltb< Itfthed lo^ 1057 — rcmoiUlMl eom. pletely \mnt ymt • ble- and _ ,.gUfUuF ditdtly Hi-Fi, TV and tlBdio 66 LOTS AND LOTS OP HEW TYt. « “ “ “ MATCHED PAIR bDROEONE WAV nut tpeakere, Alto Walnut equip-meet cabinet. OR l-lgM. part. PonUae Prtie Box M. Sale Mjscellaneous 67 LARGE ' CAGE ON STANDARD, ttrqngly built, Uko sew. Bultablo tor monkey or any large bird*. LAVATORIES, ODMPLETK. __________ BIbtB. alto bsthtubi. toL ■ ■ ■ ■ repilui , Wa Orchard 1 on. PinUfACB. TANK AND COP-?* ***° **"***■ For Sale Miscetlaneous 671 ^^INCH PLYW^^ -g^^f PONTIAC $ Bauiwtn i moDbo"«“ (. PB I-M43 TWO-LAMP 4-FOOT FLUORES- thowrooma Michigan Fluoret- _0^^dlUoa. MI t-im 4- INCH ^'IL Pira. 5 FT. T. $4.10 5- lneh Soil Ptpa ...... $3.““ Bump Pumps ............ gM. SAVE ftOMBma SUPPLY m 8, SAOIMAW_________^FE »- REBUILT TELEVISIONS OUARANTEED DELIVERED CHOICE OF a# GOOD HODSEKCEPiNO SHOP ^w_mn^ tlmatc. Bavt ot tl > AND FAN, COF- I4.S0. Romex wire at i ItO.BB. I -SNOW PLOWS SNOW Sale Muilcal ^teodE jJf. n a AMO jtBPAmiMo.] si- ----- aa work — . -------1------- _8A^^A«l Lowroy Holiday, Uko new ... Bl^o BuK>« PiAmTcbiaRSi " apinot. OL 1-MB3. jUle Office Eqiiipmant 72 Csrii ngtsteri, PONTIAC CASH REOISTER n S. SAOINAW FE gSM~ tton!^«! I »4S ih 3-49 > 431A ^ . 1 metal desk, W x ._ . .^3-4931, NEW~T4AflbNAL CS lerj from tW un. I.._ _________ adding machlnei from Mt «n>. 1 or^ tsctoiT authorlMd brae offices In Oakland tod Mssi Uounty where you can buy ________ or factory rebuilt cash regletert. Tba National Caeb Register Om.-' Mt W Huron, PonUoc. HE 3 B399, 33 B. Oratlot, Mt. Cloffluu, Howard 3-4331. USED ADOiNO Machines USED CASH RBOtSTERS 'nett Macblnet Valley Bntlneti 74 AUBDRN AVE. Sale Spring Qoods 74 BULMAN HARDWARE I. gat PER ! SUNDAY.. MONTH, INCLODBB EVERT- i THING. DRIVE NORTH OH JOS-LYN PAST WALTON. 4 MILES. I FOLLOW THE Candle wick W oods Sign , i -- TO MODEL ^ DIorah Building FB 3-9133 i BEF.R STORE Nrlghborbood beverage itor Incidental groceries and i 94.000 plus Itock, hall down I For Sale Clothing 64 H* { 3 BLACK sum. I FDR TRIMMED, ... litud .fprUM _____. . wool dresMi. l red end 1 ‘ ‘ I navy allk fuU. 8-4$34. Sale Household Goods 651; 3»c 8q 333 VOORHEIS 6w5«7 have ‘ Naturally 1 don't hav^Vour lunch nacfwd -c-rTTimg^vou 1 init It t profii- i got up Ioi:.s».w-t» letthe' cat but, remember?” I o a. Thompson, toi .. - i*13 RUds ' 93 99 BUVLO" TILE. IW B. MOINAW 4 INCH SHELTON MATAL lethe, udlect set-up. Tall . stock mj^— .............. ...................... counts. Pear*ont"iSirnituf( Orchard Lake Ayg, Evans Equlpmen* BRAND NEW WROUGHT IRON 4907 Dlalc Highway _________OR 3-7934 _ SPFXIAL.......... AutomaUc gtrage door operal 9119.90 plus initellatlon. Fret .-.-i xermt. OPEN DAILY ■ - ____ pi Koval, k . ^ agalow with All of the *■- droom I a full t OPEN SUN. 1 TO 5 7327 N. SHAKER. Built e 43 ft, - A 3-i oeoroom WUD .nardwood floors. Ptymenlt only 474 monih. FHA. | Good condition only 4 years oM ‘ MOVE RIGHT IN Excellent vtl-ue. Off WllUamt Lake RowT. Dish-master. drapes alto Included. E Z ' Rav O'NeiL Realtor MS'Sotttb TeWkr^ Hond Open 1-4 P.M. (fundty FI T-Tioil _______ OL 1-0! TERMS. k'.-SC:HUETT. FE 8-0458- DRAYTON PLAINS Very nice 3 bedf- " Large living rou«u, ,ii« „*»■. i “toreia air neai: fenced yard t with paved drive. IVi car ga-l Colored 3 BEDROOM HOMES Income Property 3-PAMILY IN INDIAN VILLAOB. i Partridge lH and Associates Butlnttt throughout Web. 0 W. Huron_ n 1-31 MilLTlPULLISTblb SERVICE IRWIN fPLET* chtirs! test /eq tste/ fu'i n^lon 1991 [ also* 12 te H. FE . __ (MAN-iai»’tADYm^^^ ______ NEVER USED. Jj9» MINK FULL LENOTHI, ---- cape, dresses slxet 13-11. FE 9:3333. ________I t 5-9019_ Perry.boor Sales Co. p* I siNO^zio JtJEW PICTURE I tews on buttons, faney det^si I-INCH OE, _ „ . ____ tube, blon^ emmoTe. 9139. Inch Admiral 990. 17-ioch Munu. 949, Rad'O. 910, Record ptoyer. ................... BIK vm‘ I OAiM\l*»fV caU' BaAVJ i ; wood console. Make* IN LOVELY all without attachments. Atsums 94 monthly, or pay cash, 944.70. FE 5-9W. Captl^ppUane*._____ SINGLE 3ENNY LIND Hb E D. LADIES' FIGURE ICE 8EATE8. slie 9 and rifleman's coat Junior site med. with diamond tread no sllpjelbow. worn once. FB 3-9M9. 91EN 8 RACING skAUBT 8U* 9, ftkl bOOtf. tixe IVb. both lika nfew. MI •-« Sand, Qravel ai^ Dfal 76 , PRICE -lul living r $150 wk Bargaii CM. FE 3-6$6. Hotue. 103 N. ^ ! COMPLETE BARBER SHOP jrzi 2 chal/r air conditioned with latest /equipment Includes real -------------' furniture and fixtures. A-1 For Sale Lake Property 51 i ---------------------------- [ dgonoB B IRWIN, REALTOR LAK* LIVfNO, WAirtBPOBD. ! 294^W. Walton FE 3-7943 Clarkston. Bontlac, Kenilngten, :----— Milford and Highland areu Vb-' Sale Land Contracts 60 sere. 41.999. 920 down, 930 a - ' mopte 30 minutes tp Detroit ji^ND CONTRACTS TO----------- ^^yed wtedini, streeu. School; to selrEsrl Garrels, ! ELECTRIC WATER HEATER, •ike new. 939. 90 nice clean electric and gat stoves. Refrlg. and washers. tU sites, low as 919. Duo Therm oil heaters. 919 up. 'Cheap. TV’s low at 919. Dressers,' springs, and cabinets, everything tn used furniture at bargain ptlees. ALSO NEW llv. tm.. bedrms., dinette*. rou-a-waya ru»t Factory seconds. E-Z terms. The __________________gft" I "949*79. ri—a.4* a.e **’•• combination electric ranges 1 Warwick s 3479 Orchard Lk. Road safe tIOUBepold uoods 65 and tv*. AU at great strings I j 93-OAL ELEC, HEATER. 99t*9, 30- ----—----------------Firestone Store. 140 North Bag- | gal. sute. gat heater. 994.05. Insw FE 4-0070, ] Cab, sinks and fittings. 994.0$ up. CASH FOR USED TVs FURNitURi ! £?’!! *?*' **?“' •“'* and ml*c. FE l-oarr > $W W Ca»h and carry. 4.|S| ' lOO^lTO CENT ADTOMATJIC^E^ 1-A BSUtCH SAND, SPREAD ON Ice, loading, EM 3-0373 nau A-I 'TOP SOIL CRUSHED STONE, ~~SforAN"b~LbbK~ i Big 1001 Wheel Horse Trsetor, 7 i FE 3-7774, or FE M301^ lectric tiarter, staodsrd CRtlSHED STONE SAND,^ DBAV-Alspi irt. Kart Howard: EM Ltesi. * ?• fzv.PiP'L?*?”** »*'’• i COW MANnHE^aANoTMiroSiv; — -------- .. boards, 990. Steam Iron, IS Ml 4-1301_______ CHAISE LOUNDE. PINK SATIN Damask. $39 Chair with good cover. 99. Octefon card table. Ping pong table. Ml 6-19M. DAVENPORT WITH 8UPCOVER. 3-pl< t. MI lovlngt up To 40 I lalt, 1331. a. A. Tin 14-90 West____________ Tbompaon, 7009 ATTENTTOh INDOOR OARDEN-ert — .floral cart, 3 tier fluoree-cent light, complete 990. FE 0-0701 I down payment .. vuenge for 3 bedroom good location. K. L- Templeton, Realtor 3339 Orchard Lk Road ^!$10 Sale Resort Property 52 61 DISCOUNT appliance SALE l clothes DRYERS BUY.mi, TRAM te3”N" caw ''‘^TOMATIC WASH _at_Lafayrtte. FE 2-6043 _ I iiPlEOT DININO ROOM SET, 930 09. 5-plece chrome dinette ; lyi 910 09. chest of draw— *• “ - ■ ‘ frlgerstors, O E . ♦'t 9179 I Brothers pipe and fittings. L Paint Super Kemt STARTS DIAL ANNETT iNo Mtge. Cosla^, LAKE LOTS. 9805. 910 DN . mo 30 mtn. to Pont FE 4-4 ■■fAKE LOTS. 910 DOWH. liorrow With Confidence lloiiseholf! Finance 3‘, S ^ «», ma~ -.ectric atovea ! DAVENPORT 91$ up, TVs 919.95. washers - _2«3i______________ Maytag, Speed Queen, 919 up ! DROP-LEAF BREAKFAST sij I ej'oirs: ’ Kenmore washer* used r times i —------- Loads of new (urnltur WAYNE OABERT i HIldHT SUPPLY SAOINAW FE 5-9190 | 3009 Lapeer Rd. PE 4-9431 ___________________BRAND-NEW EVINRUDE. 40-H P. CHAIR. 990 — *"“■ — ' Everything ______ ___ _____ Clothing. Furniture, Appliances. _____118 EAST LA^INCE________ ^PEWRltER, 939; MIMEOGRAPH, TALBOT LUMBER Now Is the time to get ready for winter. Basement vraterpiaoftni, glass Install^, aim wood sssll. hardware electrical, plumbing, paint and lumber tup^. Open r*.m, til 9:30. Sun. oTo 1. 1629 Oakland Ave. FI 4-4999 A'lN’CHOR FENCES •4 ; No money down. PHA aoproved * rail EOT1MATE3 _Ft 5-747 99 i BARGAINS _MI 1-3010. OB _______________ USED OIL FLOOR FURNACE complete with controls. In shape. OR 3 9433 COW_M^qRE, SAND AND oSA^ iD8» Id/W WHITE BEACH SARD. LOADED OB del. LUe dredging. FI 4-6M9> Wood, Coal and Fuel 77 AL’S LANDSCAPING Sa'^iS^iWSSll'laEiTEd*! FE 4-4334 or QR 3-0149. CORD WOOD AND CORD AFFLb wood. OR 3-qUa^or MAJ-H07.-FURNACI AND FIRBPLACl wSSdI 97 a cord deUvered. FE 3-0970. furnace or FIREPLACE COaL Kentucky Lump Poea. Briquet*. Olga and Kentucky Stoker Coal*. BLAYLOCK C"'* “ ............. USED LINDSAY WATER 80FTEN- hrat. caruetef Many other I window In living i •L". tile bath. ' Low coat oil hi '. {uoK.! Model Open l:30..to 6 Corner Lot ■tixabeth Lake Estatet 0-rm. home i VACANT) oi> . landicaped fenced .lot. Pea- W ture* carpeted living and dining rm.. new birch kitchen, 4 Ige. closets with; 371 B BLVD. at West of Franklin OPEN ' il400 8Q FT 3-BEORM BRICK - '"ded with extra features such 3 flrrplaera. an exposed base- 3 bcdrais.. d on Itl flooril! basement, new OAS fur-i screened pauo FTl^get on| ,„VV................... t , g , $U.t»0,. DRXVI OUT TO HiSiIlI VlLUOl Watch FOR THE LADO'B BKINB . Located on M 34, iLapeer Rd. or ' Perry 8l.< 3 ml. north of Pontiac. Also l-bedroom brick homes with full basements and 3-ear garages. ' Low as 919.900 , LADD'S. INC. j }• 3009 Lapeer Rd. (M34) or Perry Bt. *j Cor, Bllverbell Rd. * FI 8-0291, After 7 p.m., OB 3-1331 schools and churches, i/niy SI.3/9, easy terms. R I wickerbhaM 7199 W MAPLE MAYFAIR 0^256 CLARKSTON'E^TES" LOTS BOx MO' 91.489. 919 down. 919 mo. Blacktop sireelt. Shopping, churches, tchools «t your door. _n 4*4^. LI $-7711.___ HI-HILL VILLAGE ' "For those who care” A planned suburban community of large, beautiful rolling homesites with winding paved streets. Bee the wonderful view from the nu- FINANCK COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pontiac — Drayton Pltlni — UUc* Walled Lk„ Birmingham. Plymouth Get SZS to“ $.S00 ' ON YOUR 1 7 It. refrigerator .... 939 05 j paneirte counter*10001119. 4Se *q. ft. Crump Lkctric. Inc. J0-g*f. hot water heater. 947 90, 3- 3409 Auburn FE 4-3979 A UL 3-3000 910 ft with trade DlNETTE:^BSf^fim *'^*“•1 Oteer furniture. Alter 10 a m. |wni X’n-DTVT.' 1 I WESTERN boot*. Ipui 913 dellvered. FE 4-094T______________ ! FIREPLACE CANNEL COAL — Furnace, fireplace, kindling wood. - '■ —1* FueI BLANKET, I Or Paint. SIf_______' SLAB W< S ra 9A1M. Machinery _FE^-l»30 2 SLEEPER LOUNOES. LIKK NEW. 939 ea. Also 2-plece living room _tulte, goad conT, 949. FI 9-1907. 3 ANTIQUE MARBLE TOP - OPRIOHl FAMOUS ----e brands serstebed. Terrific 1 F»- I 4x8 Hi Masonite ... 91.98 MY 3-ril. 4x8 >1 Pegboard I 4x944 Plyteore — ‘-----/---P-----------:---- AKC“RE01STERED. COLLIE PUP- E!)w’ L?ke'*EM*^3*nM'^*‘*' ....... BOSTON BULUPUreV; —t 4-4^. . I MORRIS MUSIC. ica ranen, iivinx I brick fireplace walk Ige. picture window, full-alaa dining apaca, car-petrng and custom drapes Included. 3 bedrmt., spacious closets, 1V4 ceramic baths, kitchen In I''" lamuy rm. pantiaa isxie, 3-car att. saraie, PA oli heat. $35,500. itrina. Di-reetlqns: North on Dixie r U“.V drSr ^rk\ Sm^'o'pr ■ Wl TOLL TRADE Annett Inc.. Realtors 39 E. Huron Bt. Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 HOYT RMd, turn right 3 blocks Car! Realtor ” . 9o3 Community Hart. BahlT'Trde. FE 4-<*i>______EVES., FE 9-1813 Waterford Hills Estate A few choice lots left. Avertfe 100x250. Good drainage. Weal lo- iKammered step ladder. . Jardinieres isssortedi dow —.ii-.— items SUN. 2 to S 395 Sectjnd Street Herbert C. Davis. Rltr. ____re 9-4311 CLARKSTON AREA, $1,499, 919 Need $25 to $500? See •Seaboard Phone FE 3-7017 1185 Perry St. PARKING NO PROBI.BM Seaboard Finance Co. HOLLYWOOD BED FRAME WITH i 1*»9* 3*-*l Rock Lath 9 !99 maple headboard. 3 matching i *1^* Plasterboard . 91.29 night lUnds. A ebett, Icc cretin j chairs. mUc. PE 5-7333. r\ • $ -----------------------Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY 7940 Cooley Uk* Rd. EM 3-4171 IF YOU NEED 99W ^ .. v'aluabl. l hX*;™" te mention I gj-j. seaboard ftlfflcE CO $90 TO 9500 — 939 - 950( COMMUNITY LOAN CO ..;•.•. i.w .____ - ________ ft - Kale, pmir.-Sim. Eve, by appoint, j j 7940 Cooley___ _________ WATIC WAbHEK. KELVinA- i ffTa«r“TjrAv»nr5— L»?0 Floor mod.l._ full.year !o?2X“cArrJr'*‘'ta«”£fr i Ubie*. Baby baUUbette. Porte-Cr^ Babee-Tend*. 3 playpena. eMo/, ‘to* I Thsyrr Preatoe 1 Casco mrth. 3 teu of maple bunk-beds. 2 : exterior brand new Sealy mattresaes and bo* seringa,, bl^d 4-drpwer chest nert with lessons. FK 9-9439._ A World of New Sounds GULl TRANSIf ‘ wieek*"B F”ooodrlch Store” Vli _N Perry. FE 3-0123 APARTMlt-SIZE GM FRIGIDAIRI, 939. FI 0-4434.___________ FAINT OR 'lundredt of m. Interior Wt now hsvi ATTENTION New 1961 Bonneville For Sale Acreage ed living room i 60x130 feet Vicinity a schools. Drive ■ -nue to a----------- n left, go IS ( eat. of OrtonvlUe only 03.0 9300 Sown 919 s month t. PANGUS. Rerilfor ORTONVILLE ,69 Scute Siwt - NA 7-3*19' OL I-T5“'aCRE8 - lilMACULAfE" 9 FL ^-MJ* JJ \ TEAGUE FINAIiCE CO.. 202 S. MAIN good! 214 E. ST. CLAIR ...R(X:HESTF.R ROMEO LOANS 939 TO 9900 .AUTC” trade-ins. TVs 4-4049. Open 0 to I. nd AH* are least 30 days In and up. We take or other artlclet I Radio and TV. Lake Road. PE good ' coadltlon, i andran gold-rlcci, ah In K^VINATOR REFRIGERATOR. _Perfect condition. 990. FE 3-403L KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER, 939. Wood drop leaf t I chaste of drswars. . 30x42' btermrn $450 Down , Nt'Rr -Nortlu'in High;' 3 bedrooms, fun basement, oil hett, 114-c*r gtrage. The full price Is only. 90.000. f„vi---- bedroom modern J barn. 933.000. 40 ACRES ^ No buildings. 92.000 i Clarence C- Ridgeway ^ DATE. FE. 9-7091 308 W WATON BLVD, ! ; '4l ACRES RIPE FOR 8UBDIV1D-, INO WATERFORD TWP. FRONTAGE ON SMALL LAKE. TERMS; AUTOMATIC DRYER AND MAY-tag washer, late model. Balance 93 per week. Built-In wall oven. ....-iriT^Tafi** '^**'**^ ; .-.. . j about anything YOU WANTi tA^^'^ „ 3’3510 ; vrkD THB* unhic f'AN RE i Drwjd new. $15.$5. Peftrson s Pur-FRIENDLY 8ERVICW'_ FOUND AT I “ 8 BALES, »ltere. .43 Orchard Lake Ave Wni'V \’nil VKl-n a mtle out of the w*y but * lot mangle. REFRIGERATOR. OOLF \\ 11I..N lUU Al-l.lJ ,p ,„her. mlac. FI 3-3741. B of all kinds. NEW A: USED ~ ’ ---------- dept, tor real ; ovER 90 USED TV SETS FROM and look *rouna.*^3**lrere* ot free • WALTON TV parking: Phone FB 9-0341. *• ---- 919 B. Waite ..m . mr. a ____________ FE 3-3287 PLASTIC 'ilLE. *a -------. ------ ..‘lection. rrry Bros. Jelled Magic no-drlp paint. OAKLAND FUEL — PAINT 430 Orchard Uke Ave. PK 9-OHO OU&THERM. bODBLE BURNER space heater and 179 gallon oil tank with gage. Eacellent condl- THE FABULOUS | nim small doo, needs noiti; with- someone who will love and care for It.'.Reply Pontiac Preu ELECTRIC baseboard. HBATINO iBIectromodcl 1 ____ _____________ _____ $-wall thermostats. Will boat approximately 1390 to. ft. Used 3 moi. PrlM 93911_PB T314L____________ i^E A T H ERWEIOHT PORTABLE on hot water prairr aiu, on lank 99- table, ^tdiairti 90 got 91. EM 3-W3. FiSH shanty antique CHES'T. THEATER ORGAN Prices start at 91199 PIANO TUNING—OROAN REPAIR Weigand Music Center MIRACLE MU ^BAZ-^R AREA BALDWIN ACROBONIC SPINET Plano. French provincial, finished In antique white. ----' PUPPIES $8 UP .. . IKCL. INOCULATIONS. ALSO... LIVESTOCK GUARANTEE 1 HUNT'S PE^8H0P_ FE M113 iPARAKEin dUARAjffilirTp, 309 Plrtt Street. Rochester. ' *WlnXw ‘"dTtotey I POODLES, TOTO AND MWU-' —- 'I Ulre*. AKC. J " ■ ■ EM 3-6703 "’CALBI MUSIC CO. 110 N 8AOINAW_______FE 6-0223 j band"’in8tbument repair — j By factory expert. ! CALBI MUSCI CX3. ■“ " SAGINAW ■" OR 3 $25 TO $500 We will be glad te help you. S'l .XTK FI NANCE CO. 900 Pohllac Stale Bank Bldg FE 4-1574 ‘FEBRUARY ' -SPECIALS' POODLE PUPPIES. ------------ —->t, females, also stud servlet , trimming. EM 3-3390. FoOdLe” ” PUPPIES. 9 WiEKS _ .... -«**i u?'iuo'*^odic*c!rpptn|**6R’l^ Puepv:-PART~T0Y7*«LI^9 bargalaa. _ __ ______ . j-iAuburn Heights Area recreauon room >?‘«lBuilt in 1946 . Pull basement with rcc------- ----- HOYT REALTY 394 S. TBLBORAPH 'E 3-M40 FE 3-000 MULTIPLE LIBTWO SERVICE DORRIS BRICK AND FRAME. -------------B.^ 911j079. ^Fi derfui •v«— —• one floor, plsotered walls and oak floors, nle* bath, and well planned kitchen. IVAN W. SCHRAM .REALTOR 043 JOSLYH, COR. mnivcrtMj OPEN IVENlhOB AND BUNDA1_ k^LTlPLE LISTING SERVICE NIAB'LINCOUf JR. WEST 0 terms or *al . beautiful n ____. ________ il mot krtehen. fun basement, furnace, nlco lot. . 9»» ixjwcon'^ location ”wTth'"2-car garue. • nxini end mittOT TOPalrs,, : HOME ,— ------- located Lincoln St., between _____Jth Lake Rd. and Huron, bath and^ha'U, d eSidWn It good Cl S ftOTTB E IMI W to I block peat Airport Rosd, ‘"ith. Inspect this .—.v-t gmy thinglo bungalow, —furnaca, ga-1 M$. ronUl iL^aSnt’ THE LOCRAMY BUILDERB PROUDLY PRE8ENT8 A TREM^DOUB VALUE IN aluminum I wuh aH (he ooUlhx appoi mctite demandad by tod mbst .discriminating buj Pbr <(oll%r value it can be beat cn todays marl for basuty, prlbo. design. oonMnietloii. 117,300. Pick broohure* with deEgn. 1 pictura at our office. DORRIS 5ND°l^|l%AnxW wa W, Huron Pboso FE O-IBOT FE Lovoiy 3-bodroom I APPROX. 2 ACRES. CITY. ZONED MNPO 3. TERMS I J. e. HAYDEN. Realtor i 00 B. Walton PB 1-0441 LOANS $25 TO $.500 On your signature or other te —II. -------u. — repay. Oui endly a I unfurnished upstairs, dining ell In a kitchen 19.1 X if Full basement w o h . possible rec. room. Fully Insulated. otl heat, m-car garage. Only 9000 down, plus closing cotU on FHA terms. Investigate now. ! PERRY ACRES YOUR NEW HOME ; HILLSIDE. ! £ nsTi i HILLSIDE. level ana woouea lots. FE 5-94ZUj[MCltTQP ROADB Convenlejjlh MANSFIELD located on Lapoor Rdati 'M34) 9 ND B^M'fl milts north of PonUac ItmlU. .F «• 4M .UK in H*. Aw. 3-bcdroom home, with 3 baths * siding, fully InsuUted, tat heal. Bat glattcd-ln porch and screens and all around. Has recrea-om and full basomeiU. Car-Included. Shown By ap-ent. Only $1,400 down. it prtoe I >r tms. L 'r'^jSSsT' RoHe H. Smith, Realtor ______s-es., GIs No Money Down DOLL HOUBI. Cedar Shakes n living rage, lOOxIOS lot. Qlt. btro 1* your el got a 3-bodroom bor to ddwhtewn. I RAy O’Neil Realtor ^ M a. TolegTaph Hd. sBUDGET YOUR DEBTS CONSOLIDATE BILLS-NO LOANS For Your Best Bet to Oet Out of Debt. See Einancial Advisers^ Ijwv- “ SAOINAW 0 with 10 per can H. P. HOLldE il 8. Lapeer Rd. For Sale Farms 56 partially finished. Alto' garage. Soi3 Saahabaw Road. W mile to new Chrysler Highway, $0,499 $390 down. Psymanti (o suit.,,1V 4-4900. LI 1-7711. __...' ■'•''L 6$-ACTE CORNKR7r^ff*T? $«'•$' Rise, barn, chicken house. ....... m* nVer 3,000-foat troal- agc. Could 'be subdivided Into acre^or lai^ lotrpriced at only *C pXnGUS, Realtor W south St. NA 7-3019 __________ Ortonvtlle___ Business Opportunity 59 SUKI ll.oeo H» *M6HTH AND up. New product roquiro* UlUo setllnf. Simply show U to your friends . . . everyone InveatnMnt of $1.98 write roniiae rrass box i9, yi>-log phone Mo. or addreu and ‘‘LET’S TALK BUSINESS Grocery—S,D,'Mr - Orowlng anburban loeatlon with S-rqom apartm*ffc:"$l 10,000 last Foa*. Prtoo out to bene. Lew down parmtnl. Trailer Park 41 units now. Many oxtrsa. What a daaiti It will pay to hnrryl xflCHlGAN BUSINE^ SALES CORPOR ATION /ul. Visit our FE WIJI HOME &/AUT0 LOAN CO. 7 N, Perry 8t„ Corner E, Pike N MON SAT. 0 TO 0 FRl 9 TO 9 ■34 MONTHS TO PAY >wn payment. x'yTee*™" " tV3?^ee.l TaUG M U.SIC CO. luellty hardboerd 4*9 93 40 ea. j n9 N. SAOINAW FS i SURPLUvS LUMBER & “ month, spade tern* . tiac Press, Box 64. __ I PUPPIES FOR SALE, T W 3-5793. AUTOMATIC DRYER, KELVIMA-tor, 1M9 fgo^ m^eL^^U^year week*”B.' F. Goodrich Store, 111 N. Perry gt„ Pontiac. FE 3-0138. Credit Advisors 6IA' i Mortgiige Lodhs , ON 1-AC MORTOAOE8 With 190-fo......... pralsal fee. B. D Char ,--------- _. _ ------J, Eoult- sMe Farm Loan Service, 1117 8. _Tel4frapb. F* 4-0931._______ SHELL HOME dWNERB AND BASjt to finish yoiX dancing. For full detafla dereff. FB $-0953. We handle all of FiiilZBR REFRIG. :e stove. 909. 910 dn. FB 3-0043. WN NYLON DIVAN AND "7. FE 4-3790. BEODifib SALE Adjusubte bed.frameo ..... Headboard- ...... Maltressea from .......... Holly wood bed complete RKBtriLT VACUUMS 013.09 UP ni W. Huron Barnei ft Harxravei SOLD home’ — MUST VACATET Magic Chef high broiler range. Just like new. retailed at 9331. will sacrifice for 9145. CaU after 7pm, FE 9-1104.___________________ SPECIAL 4X;I3 HUGS. $34 09. McLeod Carpet. Woodward at Square —Lk, Tuat-bolow TedT.-FE^3--770L-BINOER ZIO ZAO EQUIPPED cabinet sewing machine. Makes dscorative designs, appliques, etc. Yours for balance of unpaid contract. 934 S0 or take up 99 per month. MI 7-103$, Capital Ap- «NGKR^WlNOtelACmNtWmT Swaps CASH FOR USED TV's RADIOS, plioaoa and tape recorders. FE BURfNCrfHffORXHt. 'YES, Tfif ............................ ARB Healing. ViiM right _____________ EQUITY - 3-BEDROOM, NEAR Madison Jr. High. Consider late car^^farm or tell. Owner. 1^ dbOD "40 RANOt TTILL r 31" gat range oi FE S-2*n. _ GOOD INCOME PROreRTY TOR -------- aouthern Kantuck’ “ properly In aouthern Kentucky c Tenneiae*. Wrl^ Pontiac Free hammar* lot root. PI $-$043. _ iBLL OR TRADE RBUIBTERID bliM tick qoon hound and rad-ban*. OR T-094$. Alio playpen and baby chair. Baby's Outgrown Things Great Demand IT IS EASY TO' R/ilSE EXTRA CASH WHEN you sell your un-ncctlablcs through Pontiac Press Want Ads. , . _ . FE 2-8181 TO PLACE VOUR AD! ASPHAI^ TILE. ..... ..... 'BUYLO" TILE, 103 g^BAOINAW NATOR FE 3-0133 lU 1 p paymants ot $9.40 per month r full balanco on^937.10. Unl- SEWINO MACHINB. WHOLESALE to all. New. used and repossessed. Over 75 models te choose ffom. Prices start singer portables, ilO.iO: tig tag Mulpped. Curt's ApDllanees. 1077 'feat Huron. FE 9-4040_________________ Huron. FE 4-1733. Used Trade-In Dept. Lounge CMr * •' Davenport and CSialr . Refrigerator Elec. Range ....... 0-Pc. Dining Rm. eulte Vanity, Cheat and Bed _ THOMAS ECONQ 111 S. Saginaw ^ ypRlOHT PIANO too, LIKE MEW •eoUoDSl with walnut corner table - cost 9300 tell for 9100. breaktaet t*t_f3S, tUt bq^ chair 93S, y 3-347i.------ We BUY AND sell Thieo Brotbera 370 Used PumMar* nc 4-0930^*” WYMAN’S UBXD TRAOB-tN DEPT. Guar. alec, washer _ .. 030.09 Apt -site- gas Stovec ,, 939.89 3-Pc. Ilvlnf room rate .... 911.9$ 3-Pc. *ocUao4tl ted* . ,. $30.09 9-Pc. chrome dinette ,J..$39 39 9-Pt. bedroom outfit .7.149.99 Dnnor With, muter ... 91489 1$ WTPIKH g-E TBRMa - f ______________ OR 3>7093 FORMICA. lOUiaiMO, P A I NJT flait, wlrtet- Op4n 7 day*. PB -4713. Monualm Supply, 16$ W. Monte-*- FOR SALE: LAROE CRIB AND high choir. Good condition. FE 9-149$. i-ln. herd copper 30-In. lengths.......... i-ln. soft copper 30-In. lengOit .......... 3 *c’*bath* K White or Goior^ Fsetorj Aidi = SAVE PLl-m 8. Stgliuy CONN TEACHER’S ORGAN _ ehemplon. FK' 3____ PARAKEETS. GUARANTEED TO ■ Cmierle^^^^ ____________1-. —__________._____ Auburn. UL 3-3300 CA“K=.N!;'j89,'l REofsTEMbAkc toyIox tWT- ELECTRIC OUITAR OIBSON DUO pick up. Solid body. Let Paul model. PE O-iq'70;__________ LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. LOWREY LINCOLN WOOD. MA-hogtnv spinet organ. (1) 13 Inch speakers Hat all combinations at well as glide and Chimet, Ouar-anterd In perlect cond. Do te MADE AND I BERRY door SALES Open from $ to 1 Noon on Saturday 371j8._Ptddock______PI 1-0303 OAB-OIL PURNACBS, NEW-USED. _B*jM buysl ARH Sales.JIA 8-1901. HOT Y^TER HiatTER. 30 go* Conaumera approved. .... hd $40.H 37 8. Saginaw . 000.96 Michigan Fluoreacent. INSULATE NOW WITH aluminum siding I Bt low Winter pi INSULATING ALUM. _______ WINDOWS SOLD AT COST _ ____STORM SOLD ------ .... snyiNC nothing 'UU Spring JOrVALLELY NOW INSULATION* M* A-IBE^bN” 4CB CO. __________FE 3-7017 ___________ CABINET .. SIHEE scratched. 43" niodel. 110.10 “* ae. 944.M while they laat. ten values on 94 ’rand $0" mod Michigan Fluoroacenl.i 303 j 1. terrific LESLIE 45 SPEAKER—39 WATTS. REOISTEWro SCOTTISH flS? POODLE ^PltCiaCC. __________ broken, reasonable. MY 3-3043. SIAMESE MALE UTIEN. SEA& . point, exceptional pedigree. .UL 2-3741. Eves SALE OR T_____ . _ ___ rier pups, Ry, OR >3^^_ Tt^^POLlCE PUPPIliS. 99. MA spinet piano In provli teg Only 99007 Ptoo I ■VISIT OUR..'NE76'"’prr Wt: Barnes A Hargrave Pet Mm. 743 W. Huron______FE ESWI. VALENTINE Miniature poodles, AKC Reg, -----‘-U stock. I_ w.eeks^old, FE t*‘in- 2-93Fl‘’' GRINNELL’S ^petlnw” Dogs Trained^Boarded 80 McN ART'S returned, 3 mos 1 BHITTANT POPS, _____________ Tatiwagger Kennels, boarding training, trimming. Brittany ana Poodle stud service. OL l-OjtM. Save I Used Baldwin Splntt. : Hunting Dogs - 81 pedal board organ ..^L-MO GALLAGHER’S T 10 E. Huron______FE 4-1900 PAN AHBRICON TROMBONE, UKf new. OL 3G030 alter 3:30. - os FTr PIANO TU______- Schmidt. PB ^-9317;____ 8LINOERLAND DRUM, A-l COMrt- STUDENTS' BPBXmtLS DRUMS Complct - “ CLAkiNETS Froi COHNETB-T---- TROMBONEI VIOLIN Outfits Prom .... IM 90 RenUl - Layaway - Payment Plan EDWARDS_______«_S. SAOINAW STANbARD~MAKE SPINET PUROl mahogany finith. lust ilka new. Guaranteed. Bench te match, $4$9. Terms. 919 down. Bslaaeo $14 per month. CALBI MUSIC CO. Ft $•«$ 11$ M. ■ / SAOINAW BoMlr*. 939. Rogltter.. ____ _W*lker, »9, MU 5-290l._ __ •-M6nTBS-<^~~BLACS FiMALI Labrador, axceptlonaUy $ood hunting strain from Lab^l Kennels. L. L. Oberlla. 1614 lat-Rl-MM. Hy » Orsln and Feed 82 ^alfa, clover, corn. OA 3-3gL* HAVE’^HATT Wiix DILi'VEli. MA 9-1941. HAT AND STRAW. 1 BAIB 6IT* ~t0 hslet. 779 Mcott U. float.' »jM23f^W_OB 3-9109. ~ For Sale Livestock tJ CHOICE BBBF. QOAOT». Bec($nd cutting hay. OA $-717^ >... Sale Farm Product 96 JAKLAND COUNTY kUBKIir TWEXTV-yol'K ,J . r trtE PONTIAC PRESS. SATlUltDAY. ^EBRUAKY|4. 1981^ X Sdcj^ E^Blpwirt 87 BomU md Acctnorie* 97 | FortSalt Cm *®^bxremss—" ■■&j!i„**ssru“as --D CHAIK «AWt 1--- — ..-ii «« - Mk. «»•. M wmat *-ooom. BMoror. ha- ------- —T« Rauh uM AiUy mr Utm tm trwa -------^fis JM MARMADUKp Blr ApdmoB R L—mhn B & B AUCTIOK 8AIXS ___1 Dirti tUchMm QrtMT^. i«k ______ Auctibn Salet __________ _ ‘sat rr now InMard pe«»r tor U>* prtr* auiAoonl. Hw SEA POWER c drlM COB ke tetuUod m i bo^t Bttli cbokd of e\tot mtorBat t ^ *rv . SELL - RETAIL DAILY ^hxSON OUTBOARD MOTORB, Door rxitm trm AacUoc . sortroll Boolj. Oowr TroJIOr* Uinrb Roots tew Cnry Aurtlw ESo-rliiiBt tor lb* boot MM mxnFHIQHWAT OWT.N S MARINE SUPPLIBB AIShTlW ■ LIODnUTID»l bale m« OrrtjW At* * HodItT MlctUfon ABCUOB. Motif I rEMt»^ «.,urodo* I BIS OroyriM. itxJi vASTf:u'^V Os '» r6or FIBER ^ i.«» or Oitwniam bool MA ETIE? YES’ BUT on A NEW OOMFACT. , .?*S"KISLcr!l,'5Si.r8r%- p*r Banch LLOYDS OOT H lloMla-liomDT-CbaiM — xn S SAVttRDAT FEBRUARY « A Sts iMrtBi tb» HOI*, p*! fi..u<*tMld*r »U1 dtsBOH of * SH-lr hWB et tnrwttar* N*or •pfi’diorn M-uitb okTtrlc r*B«» * lEM CMEYNOLCT t PA88ENOCR ■! Tr«n»portBt'n Offered 1001 W‘5 fS*; A ENGINE AIRUNEH; LOS AN-" F or Si^ Cm 1961 Dodge $1961 MS MILES. . Plus Free Bonus RAMMLER-DAI:LAS isn M, MAW BOCBBSTT* gODME-CWRYSU^THUCP Prtcod rtsht. No mon*r ---- Lufky Amo BoIm. IS) South Bostnow, Ft S-MI4. 'M n»0 WAGON, PAIR CONDI- CAM ^.i Mr Park* at MI -- jy„,_ BONNIE'S DRIVEAWAT FE ) »M Tlmifr Fbrd _____ enru*. LEA VINO «TH 'LOUISIANA | if CHEVHOClrr "Aw. c mon, now. For Sale Cars 106 { CHEVY BISCAYNE. V»IRY! ______________ Ibtoafh I , l.l oua Souibrou Mo Room for r T R D C C "001N6~ tI0Rtir~'PART i **■-"*' - "OI. FE S----- «»rii* pi«ce« of Ac W»te»t m ^ ^ ^L^Za *»« riMirr mmj. r«. m-mmmm iS^IUOcmr'Sd WANTED RIDERA .LEAVIMO F«>R cl SwkM* loo ABOci*., Ctlftomu. M*dn*i-£i*Tmli- jor E% tih FE Mils b*l***s j act woirr Lwi*r BAin ProuU. Aii on” *t OXFORD COMMUN-’iTY auction cb M MJ«i , Korih ol OJtford. Bd Proutx. Moa-Mft OAI-XMI,_____________________________ Wanted Used Cars 101 id pJouti. lioB- ALWAYS TOP DOLAR .* « ' T/'^*an'“welt‘ Sale House Trailers 89 *mo di«i« h»t et* ob _):I)m AS MUCH AS W POR JUNE AND Up GENERAL 33 FOOT. ) BED- cheap com. FE J-MM day* or Infi^ foV Ilf* Si^iTand «t . WE HAVE IT’ rdrSwHratloo « Waraer Trailer FOR BXWA CL^ DBED.CaBS Solcr 30M W HuNm. ’Flaa lo TOP DOLLAR PAID jBia «» of Wiiii btbb'* natiof _ (ilcnu’s Motor Sales ^UL 1 PONTIAC WASTE PE 1-03M ' IVIL ■ A‘JS“ h.y?“u.«i”'t«wu^ California Market Cofnalet* lUi* ol parD aad boill* W* aeefl 'M rttalioc* C wri irtred Sd bl^e* In- Bu.ck« and Cadllltci A1 pl_y^o____»“™5 .WERILL’S B^'ERS W AITING_______________«• d«*'» »r- POWER STEERINO and BRAKES LOVELY UOHT BLUE FINISH. THE EIND BEEN LOOKINO FOR $1295 Suburban OLDS JAU2 _ ______ __ •57 aiRYSLER I New Yarker )-door hardiop. with ]-Uh>* ftalth. lallT equipped. Beoatlful Uaroathotuf $l(»5 R&R MOTORS ! «♦ OAKLiWD AVI. FE 4-)MI CHRY8LBR WINDBCm. ItST^ door iedan. rxcelleai coi Oa«-ovn*r. UM. Ml S-UI). legso, willya?" For Sale Cara CLEAN Hirmingliam Trades THIS IS lull. X>c*pUm>aUt aad am. aboolHtclr .. kUac *b^ black tlnlxl byT beaimlul whitewall________ tall ehramo hub caps. Tbli autiL SobU* can b* purebaied for ** tie SI tS down. FuU will price of tUi excepUoaal unit o ilM. iBuiedlat* deUrtry. i Lakeside Motor Sale's HURON at EUZAarm LAKE RD. I : _____FE >-MW__________ I ItM rORD^ iUiNCH WAOOM. RA- For Sale Cm 106 I au3!^^-j*ni itmT**’ 'uid OU3B ••i’’ l-DOCMl MARf)-top. Hrdraawtk. pawer etoartas. POVerbrakM. tadia. better and whlicwaUf. Pueblo tea aad bets* tlaUh. A one o«o*r beauU. WOODWARD AVK.. BHUUNO- haM. ill yriM.______■ UW OLDdMQBlLE P t-DOOR barstop. VB^NlflBt. HydraMbUe. KT%;iL%'%tsr*u,r“au2t No. Itn. Only tlTN Eair torm> NORTH C^ROLST 00. KM 8. woodward AVX. BUUaNO-MAM. MI AITO. i‘»L“lTO.'£.**ulS%'i S»te”w^rior° iwP Suburban OLDS Woodw ard, Ml 4-W85 IMI PONTIAC 4-DOOR 'STATMW sr..5L.srif'B':r;MK VicJSA&X ^"s. SisMW. FE MDI ■M IWriAC OONVIKTIHJ!. ))■• Ml fctunl BitlM. POWM •Mertaf aad brakM. »4U. rk *•»<>■_ CHEVIES 1953'-'56 FORDS. BUICK8. PLYMOUTH BAD CREDIT? NO CREDIT? NEED CREDIT? No oo-elfBori, ImmedUle deity, ery. Weekly poyiaU. ea lot. low 01 IM down. Walk In. Orlve out. Iiiter-Citi’ Motor Sales "^ JSLHjXAkLAIUS AiraUJ^y^ LETS MAKE ROOM T) Poattac and 'M.....IN u -» Naeh. 'U Arabaewdor .. 14) ii ■U Plymouth and 'U tU up ■H to U Naeh MS to tM) III MACES AND MODELS Heoaeau Care______ M Au^ra IlM PONTUC HARDTOP, GOOD I price, auum* <«r”j IT’S SMART TO LEASE! poStuc^m/Xdo®"- COMPACTS TO CADILLACS ' ' FROM Ml MONTH , , _____________i ---- Call fcwdlt .Mir < WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC I , USED CARS M* ro IMI. NO - MONHV DWNt *^aCN- AUTO SALES. Ill I. BAOlNAW._______ . coed. UM. FE IF too' NKiO ISM for any tmerteacy torn ET I BU SRMOA^jyMiCB CO. lOOU In. Um W. Perry Bt. PR )-7in Woodward . BIRMINOHAM . Woodward, B'hani | iT*Mtr' MI 4-4485 .... POWER a—.......... . BRAKES ABSOLUTELY MONEY DOWN Aesume , ------, u, JJ p,, (^n Cred- i. Mr. Parke at........ '' Tttrntr Ford, a DOOR. RADIO] ^ NO ' liONXT Hfr. Ml ADM. Harold I *M BatUeh FORD ..... t M EnelUb FORD WOfba I )7 CIOCVROLKT 1-Door .. ... 'M CHBVROLIT ITtop Coupt MM ■" PONTIAC Hardtr----- *— __________ ___________ ... . . Trane. Radio and beater. Very ; ^'SSnafv^A-VERY OOOD^^^ ^ - ----‘ION OF NEW AND USED ^ ____, HKj HAKGAlNS __H9P*5H*dkdb 5« dodge 4 dr. wagon, aum 61 RAUBLCR 4DR SEDAN. Radio nid^Ou7*?fS^^‘HoS^i^R~T^-D6LMe,^^ LATER OH Tldtl'lLIR TRAILaR. ANY model cart Kg,'S?VeVk"l"v™r ooooXee M & M Motor ^alrs icLtCTIi TRAVXL-______ ___ -- II WIDE HOLLY MARINB « Enawann w oniir ^LLY holly BD - - JUNKXkM J’arkhurst Trailer Sales - FINEBT IN MOaiLH lAViNa ■ Feoiunai Ne* Moon- «« Ortftnal owner, W> PE i-m» I do« «d ^“31 1M4 CHEVROLET 3 DOOR. RADIO per mootta. Uoyd Mtri. Lincoln AND HEATER. WHITE WALL! Mercury-Camet. Ill a. aasinaw TIRES ABSOUTCLY NO MON- FB 3-lllL____________________________ EY DOWN Ateume peymenie of ' ■ lie n per mo. Call Credit 'M|r Mr Parke at *** * Turner Port VH1 UNCmjt a DOOR HABDTPP, a beautiful car. No money down. Lucky Auto Balee. Ill- South Bailnaw. PB 4-331*. ____________ IM) ME*^T 4 DOOR,^ RRDIO* AND HEATER. WHITiM ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Ae-iume paymeute of t).U_p*r mo. Cell Credit Mgr Mr. nirkc et Ml 4-TUO. Berold ^Turner Ford. MERCURY t Ml 4-7MI. Harold . FORD UM CUSTOM )0*. 3 DOOR Used Auto Parts 102 R POR PARTS d CHEVROLET 4 DR. S^DAN^Vf Auto. Trane., and heater. Clean! U CKEVIE BBL A UM Chev MtNMLE HOMBS’ FOR that BEAUTIFUL roowac u .1. v.». ^*rVud*',fri 3-Vm*. *”* See Rtt^-r^^'i* c^TO^ BHawB SI I ELTON Pontiac- Buick j Rochester. Mich. ----( Hx l-+lLt3 - : ~ Very ttuul:~l33 TE ) THESE TERRIFIC BUYS t Wide. • - 10 wide* — *U lengthe ' NO OIMMICKS - WB 081 THE OFFICIAL MOBILE HOME MARKET REPORT BOOK AND OCR PRICES ARB RmUCED PROM THRRH 4k.PT. 3-b*draom eld* elal* DIMM Tliii D not an raampir Not Rut 0 lead pru* But a real tni* price Be* u* BOW ibli- OMOth ---.< -ynu-aiU ts>» bBodrede of doUare. Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales 1 out* Hwy Drayton PUitni Sale Used Trucks 103 See Us FOR 3m'R Truck Needs Sales and Service GMC Crissman CHEVROLET COMPANY ROCHESTER OPEN rVFS OL t-1731 ER SPECIAL SALE PRICE. OF ONLY * $1095 Suburban OLDS; 592 S. \\ oodward, H'hain Mt 4-4485 rMCiSobOE 3 DOOR. RAOio AND HEATER, automatic TRANS. MISSION, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Aeeume pay-menu of «23W per no Caii Cn4- iia^ofj r ........ 1M3 FORD Vd, 3 DOOR. RADIO . AND HEATER. ABSOLUTELY , NO MtWEY^WN. Ai^ume^^-! ; Mgr Mr* Perke Ut M* ^Md I _ H>rom Turner ForeL______ ! I *34 FORD. 3^WWDOW COXm * ' f?hiODDed. chAAOtltd. Mt up (or i aket, *51 Ford AND OUT INVESTIGATE V PLYMOUTH 3-DOOR . sell. PE t-tUI. •id PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR BELVEDERE. A REAL HONEY THROUGHOUT! VERY SHARP! COME BEE THU ONE RIOHT AWAY' Ddgje^^ H,E%liWRut1a§‘a4«*?5 PERIOR auto. *» OAKLAND AYE. -FE 4-7MII.____ PLYMOUTH Belyedere, Y-l, 4-door hardtop. Kxeceutlee gray, automatic trane-mtaelan. power eteerlng aad brake*, radio I beater, aad Old*. Hydr*^—------, „ luepenston. till. FB 4-IMl._ ' 'M FORD CUSTOM 311 3-DOOE bi-juroan til). Eaey Terms. NORTH CHEV r, power sleennw bi 1.ISI._ [ 'IT PONTIAC XbbOR HARDTOP, OLDS _ -d-t. «a.M. Ford, X J^«dwa«L l«ia, !L _ = Bright Spot Me low «u«E«..one-• jijcBOjRY sd STATION WAGONS Orchard l^ke at Cass '”! Automftttc. while wulU. heulff. t-lt -r-* BUYS CARS owner today. FaymoDti o( I per Dumth. Low cash down or i ****««» old trade. Uoyd Mir*.. Lincoln- 8S?miiSi*^n^/utSur*i piTSSf®”*' *” “ ■**‘“*» ! “ Im’7'PORD~3~D06r. VI '_W1C1L4..... -BO money down: Kn price MM, Lucky Auto Seta. US South —sagiBaw. PB ran. , ')) MERCURY MON' TOP. 8HAHFT ll._ _____ AUTO. SK OAKLAND ATE FE 4:7*11 1M7 MERCTT DEMO l‘>60 CHEVROLi r PaRKWOOO. 4 DOOR STATION WAOON Vd, AUT-M A r 1 c TRANSMISSION RADIO. HEATER AND WHITE WALL ■HRES. many other extras. SAVE $1,400 no ruet. SHARP! Atjuine p*j-menli of I3S44 per month, no money down. Uoyd Mtre.. Lln-coln-Uercury-Comet. 333 S S*|-mew PE 3-IUI______________ "Today's Huy" R steering, absolute-, down. W--— , lAiltewtlu. Dray woo wane iiuua Only MM Kwey term.. NORTH CHEVROLET CO im 8 WOODWARD AYE MR- .^l«aH4M^..Ml.>17U.'.... _______ ■41 WNTIAC OTAR CHIEF 4-D06r. •lO^PonUee wmob- OR 1-3731. nil lONTUC 4-DOOR HAR'TOP. For Cara „ 106 UDOOla-Mercurf-CoaUaMtal Bob Frost, Inc. ^ a. Huntwr Rhrd. ■M RAMBUR AMttlCAN IHKKML radio end bMter. automaUe tiaae-aileaion, Uk* aew In aad out aad hei no ruet. Sherpl Aaeana My-menu ol 1)7.11 per moath. Low ceeh down or old trade. UMd Mtre., Uneohi-MercurjMJoaeoL tU 8. B*gtn%w. ra^lUL________ UP OAELANP AYE. FE 4-T5II. BRAND NEW X\KK STATION WON. d teL-Miadfid TVami. Heater -white walla. Other aceeeeories. 11,IN DeUrered. IlM Down mi^riIe vriLLYsT»». 4-WHIH.n«!t«: Rear power, taka oft traaemle-eion. fun eteel eab. enow tire*, dual heaure. front tow bar, many extra*. ^imU|Mt ^Mw _1»M Ruetle Lane. K«No Harbor. ■W V^kSWAOEN SUN ROOP 3-door, radio and heater. U down. IN) fuU price. Call Mr.-Murphy, credit manaxer, Bdfll* Steele. Ford PB 3----- M7 PONTIAC STAR CHIKP 4-1 door, hardlap. In exeellnit condition. hydra^Uc, power iteer-Ing and Drakes, power pak. dual i eabauat. deluxe radio with 3 ep^ere. Originai owoee, OR U PONTUC. NiwTTOis7~iTis> I Drayton Tranamlaalon. Dixie High- | "IRlftTCtC OTAR Cf month! old. Loaded w I.H8 mi)M. Cheap.. i lew Rambleri 1 February. h itack. Mu|t xen R&C RAMBLER ■ Market Super Mai COkntKRCB I BEATTIE )RD FORD DEi ppllfht la Whtci John Mc.Xiiliffe, Fort! 634'Oakland Ave. _ FT S-4111 UiE FQBn VO. iJXMR. RADIO heater ABSOLUTELY NO money down. Atnumr payment ol 123 W per mo Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parke xt Ml 4-7MI. Harold j Tmner P^. _ ______. list FORD COUNTY SEDAN OTA-tlon wagon, excellent condlUoa, sepiEE' gf^g?* eutomxticj 4-7511 HaroM _________ r.h"*Slock • PONTIAC CHIlFr'AIN. 4-DOOR t,rm. • hardop, radio. hexUr. hydrama-Al lOM no. power brtkra. white xld* 8 WOODWARD aye: BIRMINO ' I?B^ No UM. Only « _ ir. Call Utica J ~N*iH iMMBLEH STICK; | ’** ^ 1 onremv n*r_ Mdh. BEkAMMM^didhmh. 1 XOT 99 Or 99 FOnUBC COnveru OUR BEST FOR LESS UM PONTIAC SPORTS COUPE. hydra., radU. heater, whltewallx. UM PONTIAC STATION WAOON. hydra.,- radio and heater, whlte-wallt, color freen with whit* lop. .Low down payment. llM PONTlAp CATALINA. 4 DR. Hydrxmallc. Radio, Heater. White wxllx, A 1-Own^r ear. Whit* orer 1961 DEMOS AT CiRlLAT .S.VV1XGS CATALINA VISTA BONNEVILLE CONVERT -HAUPT i PONTIAC CLARKSTON .WE HAVE... 13 196(y CHEVY DEMOS AND LEFTOVERS ALL (K51NG TUTS MONTH* AT YOUR PRICE Easy Terms noM’h CHEVROLET beater ...................... HIM UM Pootlac 3-Dr. CtUUna UM) IM) Pontiac 3-Dr. Good cond. I14S UM Olds 3-Dr. Hardtop ........ |3M IMI Poattac 4-Dr. H-top Supercblef Power steering and Power brakes .................... fl3M 1M7 Buick 4-Or H-top. Dynaflow. 1157 Pontiac 3-Dr. CaUllna. Hydra-matte. Radio and'beater .. I7M UM Pontiac wagon. RydcaaMtir-: Radio at¥l-beater- |M5 HOMER RIGHT MOTORS 1Factory Branch T' a 'VT OR' Q ’ ‘« 0,AKL.iNU AT C.5SS 1 A I LUH D “< ENGLISH FORD _ REA1KR. AB80LUTELT SHEP'S February Specials all price 164). Locky Auto Sales, l3_8ou^ Saginaw. FE 4^1314. OLDS FIEOTA WAOON. BX- eUent oonditlon. FB )-lM3:___ 1 OLDSifOBILE SUPER radio and heater, txdellent «on-dttton, no money down, full Sice )133, sxxumo payments of 3) oer month. CALL MR. WHITE. CREDIT MANAOER, PE MMIt. King Auto Bales 11) S. Saginaw ble. Pay diflerence. OR 3-7731^ and Rentals Bperlxl wtnur prlecx on tratierx. - xappHe* and j------ US) WUltama Ufce Road. Orgy. Cm Plaint. OR 3->Nl FEi-9485 Mr. Pai TON CHEVROLET _ ick Qood condition OR 3-M3) ^o*^i ^ifk^EVYH-’—foOrEE^ --- Sg Chevy I’l Un. long wheel ■X. . ._ picgup chevrolet-oi^mobilk MArket a«8T” *'^*”'°l?ilied;.L»ke j uX?^PXRS!?5i. ■**~CHlVRrajX?^^ M per mo. Call Credit Mgr. I;»} fLyM >Dr Std. ACyl. ) 3M Park* at m 4-7*10. Harald ! • *• -r Ford. - , !47 PONTIAC. *-Door K-top . I N* il^age iod for V»i f Holly Marme & Loacli^ K-UP NO money ooin. Luexv Aulo VAGABOND, ZIMMER,: " , y terms NORTH CHIUROLET t» UN 8 WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI *-3735 I5g FORD 3 DOOR. RAOIO AND I .li HEATER. FORDOilAnC. ABSO- ' .jl pvtSn “ LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Aa- ' “ Oalxxle a-Dr a of I34JI I13N r Wide All »i -----J and prk-ei , ________d eight or fen It gdf PHced to xeU. Terms to S5 — 8pe< lal during Feb on!r Electric Chord Organ Ire* with iSy II wide •Oxford Trailer Sales 1 Bill* I of Uke Orion on MM PICK-y AuU U5t fftEVRoTri up. No mone.v i.-------, — . Salet. -113 ^uth Bailnav. FE 4-1001 or FK 4-3314 *3 CHEVY PICE-UP. OOOD TIRES run* good, 4335 FB 5-3317 1|5* FORD V* PICKUP OOOD my’ M4M ““ " U4I FORD tYrON PICKUP OOOD 1%1 lmi>ala 1 lardtop s-door. btf sarlD|X. MA 4-1 U5I CHEVROLET IMiPALA 4 Z','o: In^. Poeer hf*h< owner. Omy I1M5. Eaey terms NORTH raiVROLET CO. UOO S WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-1735 51 CHEVOLET BISCAYNX' ' ----- pej------ CbU Credit Mgi ______ .. Ul 4-75M Harold JTurner Ford. •56 FORD OTATION WAOON, I-eyimder, runs good, ISIS. FB , 'N FORD. Oalaxte ^Dr, ma'4^CHETHOLET Bel Air Mr,-p«k.'"M %,■ . V. . e , - ' Shep s Motor Sales > EAOT BLVD PE M3IT INI FALCON 3-DOOR. OTANDARO *57' FORD CONVkRTlNLB Ml Falrlaai. poq,er steering, wto-.— .—w— gy while, new tires. dy and tem llki le^MM^^Mr 4-4n li button '* . radio and beater, low mile- d'lKuT'irr:---------------- TUnberlake Drit OR BBI U8HBPORB TOC DBAL HOUGHTON & SON, 5» N. Main. Roebexter OL 1-1711 K"e:*'ir.nJ per month LLOYDS ( Lincoln - Mercury - Comet, 8x|inaw. FE 3-1131 _ UM ford 'FAIRLANK radio aad heater, sharp, payments of »3|.N per nranHiT Low cash down or old trade. Lloyd Mtrt. Llncoln-Mercurcy-Comft 333 8 Baginaw^PE 3-lt» CAR PAYMENTS TOO BURDEN- SERVICE I OF ALL MAKES AND! BUMPING, PAINTING W' i-r MARATHON PRODUCTS «3‘s:^ BRAID CASS AT W PIKE__PE MIM •poOR, i 1154 FORD CONVER'ITBLE. VA Asauint, engine. Ford-O-Matlc, radio, besD ^-4~ •. whlteaallr —- HASKINS SHARP CARS UM CHEVROLET BIBCATNk 3-door aedan. Oa* aavlng l-cylln-dar engine, atandard tranamtaxlon, radio, heater, anild beige fln-' tab, like new eandltlon. Bare! Solid black. Stock No 1713. Only IMS Eaay term*, NORTH CHEVROLrr COL UOO 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIR- MINOHAM MI V37J6.__________, 'U T-BIRD CONVERTTBLE | ' With full power, leather trim. , factory official. Yellow w"' Pfxl* Trailer Bale* in* Iforth Lapeer \ an ( amp tlicvrolft. Inc. DON'S l.'Sl'.D C.‘\RS MILFORD MU 4-113* | m M34 Lake Orion 53 CHEVROLET HARDTOP IN 1 _ , MT 3-3041, _ SUPERIOR AUTO »M OAKLAND ! INI BLUB FORD FAIJX>N 3-DOOR; AVE FE 4-7S00 ' atandard iblft fully equlp^. _________ ________________ U5I CHEVROLET 3 DOOR SEDAN. Alter 4 p m.. Ml 1-1533. ,/M PORD RANCH WAOON. EOON- ----fd shin, -s* PORD. VA. OdSb CONbiTibN; t>«F I cylinder, ttandard ahlft. h Stock l3M OR 3AII3 *' I-ARRvfEROME ROCHBSTKR FORD DBALBH “L 1-im ler. Fawn beige fU- - . . U73-B OniT I3M ESaw tcrmi NORTH CHEVROLET CO IM tlent Trailer Space 90 « BRAND NEW SPACES. PONTIAC ti« .. to Mobil* Home Park FE 5*^ ; up Long oo>. nr* ruuuer w™ ONTORO MOBILE MANOR FOB FE__3-4MI ■' ' -I p^it MaM U54 ford •TON PICEUF V-l i pMlo k fie engiof. Ft»od»fd nhift, r«riu» and ford oo L*kf.' hfit#r Thit u rftlly $ nic# on# I________ Stock No 1M5 B. only |5»5 Ewr tfrm». NORTH CHEVROLET dO 92 1050 I WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4>r:i5 IMi'. UMi & milt Road ^ For Sale Tires • li”^ TIRI8 AND TUBIt FOR ~ «le. IM 3-0141 "SSGTS'fi Auto Insurance .104 iS® I 'M Ford__________ i matic. radio and healer. . I Light blue tinlih. Asau_ , _______ . 4M. I mentt of 113 43 per month. LI OR 3-I3M, _ I UDx.. Llncoln-Mercury-teoMI. 1157 CHEVROLET 4-bbOR 8TA- ® Saginaw FI 3-1131.________ tion wagon. VA engine. Power- '*5 FORD V* LIKE NEW I $3U glide, radio, heater, whitewalls. I SUPERIOR AUTO. ISO OAKLAND ' ^ral white lurith ^k No. IMS i AVE. PE 4-7600 _______ jpoj,0g_(^jyg ..g.. Uoyd Mtr. Salet. Inc.,_FE_ 3-1131. ____________________INVESTIGATE TrioGtTL' AL "uLEil »1« lufl pr?c".f no’‘‘?22." n.«led 101 Ent BUd - • ^ AVE BIRMINO- WARD AVE BIRMINGHAM. Ml' 4-?735 _ _ __ I •M CHEVY. i^YLINbER. GOOD ^e.e*me« D mnet tt BIBK Kit T.^11 I 1567 >MUa~c. I pasMhier 84erra -aion, power ttecrins. |7N. Ford Fairlanc, 3Aoor, S cyUn- I ‘55 Ford,’ escellent condlUon. noth- 131 8. Main. Milford MU 4-I7U IIN FALCON. 3 DOOR OTAND^ ard tranamlaalon, excelleat con-dltlon. 11,501 OB 3A1M.________________ ACRgkS FROM pnOWROOM HASKINS CHEVROLET ________________Eewythteg origtna. You can tee It at PEOPLBM AUTO SALES : U Oakland___ FE 3-33*1. UM CHEVROLlfF3-DOOR SEDAN • cylinder engine, atandard trant-mtealon. beater. Solid white ----- -• --- -----lui*. maeaion. neuter, mmn wane ihimu. itw 81. { If 000 death benefit gtdek No KM. Only HIM. Eaay ______ 131,000 uninsured motorists | yinkiTM CHEVROLET CO^ ■». lit THOXK FI- 4-.I536 uoi s woodward aye bir- r« I ‘ 'tv-'*'*- ■ I- ^ .ixxFxj uiwnaaU. ixT a.nu MINOHAM. MT 4-3735 _ 4. V^nTron*"™ 3 P,5'JS4*^?riA *}TDEHBbN'■^•'e^NCY - ' 'MCHOTROLOT^ Loot ’ -7Mil4^LMS-TiREsrALL; 'Y' ™ "**o?‘*fiXfo°kSl' b«*™" I 15* Add cxcoAnKf. slAtf Tlrf price 1115 Assume ™ ♦•®®*’ !uH RENAULT DAUPMINE OOOD - *5 35 Jter’ month „.. __ ------- , condition, tunrool. while aldewaJI WIUTE CREDIT MANAOER. r Auto Service M ..*'"-. ™ »'«>. •“« ....... - OOOD RUNNING 57 MORRIS MIN. g;j_or_»)75. .OL1170* ____ ttoe^'iniop.'b''Ho^^ FE Sale Cars 106 li^^ENDiNT VW SiRVira | ’**JLd H*tr!a”° I Aady Oalki Oarage. 773 Baldwlnl ‘ * «atrw. ea »lMiii^^^^a'i~"F»owT~"FgH i BUlCil'll-DboirilARbTOF; •rtaSmTWoS^ w'K^T.'biw ?,•* rm’£hiu *5?**Eddte*^^l‘e VordM '“i***’- ***®- A r?retS?n^i BA *wll.1 ‘'f** "ORTH CHfeVRa It Orchard Lake Rd. Eee- ,^p|. t-O uu g. WOODWARD ____I AVE BIRMINOHAM Ml 4-3735 OaiMUST SELL IMS BUICK SPECIAL OOOD USED -HRES CRRNKSHAFT ORINDINO IN THE _ car Cylinderi reborrd Zuck Ma ' cblne Shop, 23 Hood. Phone FE OLDS 1*5*. /M HOUDAY COUPE. BUROUNDY AND WHITE. ALL NEW HRES. POWEH ^ STEERINO AND BRAKES WONDERFUL BUY AT $2289 Matthews-is Suburban ‘Hargraves ”_____ t ergeat Volume Cbvtr Der'*' )AKLA.\D AVEl FE 4-4547 ^1795 '60 CHEVROLET Kingswood Wagon Powerglldc. •parkllng gothic gold fl HOT! COLD! 1959 FORD (^taengrr Country Sedan cninder. radio and neater. Pbr omatlc. ONLY rji win'TsT 'cREDlT ma'naoeK: /^T T^O xiog'’*Aur.£.e. „.I5 s saginaw ! OLDS 631 OAKLA.N’D aVeNUE *“|S92 S, Woodward, B'ham MI 4-4485 ' 4-DOOR HARDTOP *"■ Hatrla. FI CaU FB t-3731. 1955 Chevrolet 2-Door, clean bexly, lowered. .\eed< some engine wmk. Best offer, 675 ,''Ct)i*\vocd. CONVERT lOHNSON Offers WAGONS ’60 Rambler Wgn. ............Save $1000 .58 Rambler \Vgn. . .$139.5 '.=i9 tliev. Wgii.$1595 — Special — 1958 CHEVROLET M^r HarlUop aUck ^R. Thi* car 1* la TIPTOP abab*'. .......... $1095 tranimiulon. radio and iF*ntmH.U57 Kanditef AYgii, . $991 hrakf*.*”*!#^‘mT'°^mm*c^te':y’^^ Jecjt Wgll.......$J95 mit el OM eaeciKlvr 43.3M ' ' Russ Jolinson I atecGog. power brake*, wh^ wllb red trim Stock Jto U7V Only ------------- lORHI CHET- PONTIAC RETAIL ! STORE! CRUISBOVT BOAT SALES l3tl|. WiSoe M FfE t-4*ISl ty down. Uoyd Mtrt ■Gncoin-Comet, 332 • FB t-*Ul. J II. H^OTt’Ct J Motor Sales LAKE ORION ! MY 2-2871 MY 2-2381L 65 Mt. Clemens AND Corner: Cass & Pike ’ Ffe 3-79541 1959 CHEVROLET 3-door, I eyUader. gtlek ablR. ra-yo ^^hgsStr."BrBW8BS-|^ '$1295'. 19.59 rambler 3-Door. Radio and hkater. matte trantmlaaloB. Shot coBdlUon. (H4LT $1095 1957 FORD S-pattengtr CUuntry SadAS cylinder. Fn’domaUe. radio beater, power brakea Ose-o trade-ia. ONLY $795 Eddie Steele ,FbRD 37SI olehard Uke Rd. Xeego Harbor PB |.»3t I MUo Wea 5:00 (4) Onuiibus j (7) (2) Candid Camera (4) Loretta Young. 10:30 (2) Whafs My Uni ‘ (4) 'Ihis Is Your J^lfe. (7) Winston (Thurdiill UtOO (2) News. (4) News. (7) Movie: "All Quiet < Western Front" (1930). Seven idealistic students join the 2:90 3:90 (4) Dinah (7) Rebel. (9) Movie: "Forbidden AlU-ance” (1934). The sensittve poetess E3izabetfa Barratt is courted by poet Browning. Norma Shearer, Fredric Mardi^ Charles 11:10 (9) Weafier, Sports. UiU (2) Weather. (4) Weather. 11:20 (2) Sports. (4) Sports^ Up” (1951). A yoiimg boy tries to nutke up his mind whether or not to leave home. Bobby ert Preston, Henry Morgan. 11:25 (2) Movie: “Those Endearing Young (Surms" (1945). Four jirople l^ome involved in a romance. Robert Y ou n g, Laraine Day, Ann Harding. 11:30 (4) Movie: “The Black Book” (1949). Robespierre starts a reign of terror. Robert CUm-mings, Arlene Dahl. MONDAY MORNING 0:45 (2) TV GoUege 7:00 (4) Today (74 Funews 7:90 (2) B'wana Don. (7) Johnny Ginger. I Gro«r2riO (2) C^aptuih Kangaroo. German Army. Lew Ayres,|0:00 (4) Continental Classroom LouU Wolhelm. 0:35 (2) Meditations ..laiNeiwi........ .......... Ifct# (2). On the Farm Front 1:90 (7) Movie 9:00 (2) MMe (4) I Married Joan. 9:50 (7) News. 9:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. 10:00 (4) Say When. (7) Jack LaLanne 10:25 (9) BUlboard. 10:30 (4) (color) Play Youi Hunch. (7) Divorce Hearing. (9) Chez Helene 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time. 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy. (4) (Color) Price Is Rigid. (7) Morning Court. (9) Romper Room. ,11:90 12J dear Hmizon......... STAIRWAY TO NOWHERE-A ship’s boafd^ ing ladder stands frozen in the ice in a waterfront canal at Buffalo in Lake Erie. The ladder was left when a grain freighter was towed" from its harbor moorings to be unloaded. Buffalo and most of upstate New York have been locked in a steady subzero freeze for several days. - (4> Concentration (7) Love That Bob! MONDAY AFTERNOON 10 (2) Love of Ule. (4) Truth or Consequences (4) (color) It (Jould Be You (7) Number Please (9) Mary Morgan 12:40 (56) La Douce France 12:45 (21 (riifaihg Light u 12:50 (9) News U:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) My LitOe Margie (4) News (7) About Faces (9) Movie 1:00 (4) Bold Journey 1:10 (56) Parlez Francais irSO C2) As the World Turns (7) Life of Riley (56) World History 2:00 (2) Medic (4) (color) Jan Murray (7) Day in Court 2:30 (2) House Party (56) Neustros Vecinos C4L Iziretta .Young-.... _ “~(T)'?toaT'to Reality (56) Tomorrow’s Oaftsmen 3:00 (2) Our Miss Brooks (7) Queot For a Day. (4) Young Dr. Malone (9) Movie 3:30 (4) From These Rooto ' (2) Verdict Is- Yours. (7) Who Do You Trust? 4:00 (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room (71 American Baodstand 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. 4:30 (2) Edge of Night _____(4) Here’a Hollywood___ Ovrilvf IvFixIIi House of Hearii^;. Free Parking at Rear of BntHteg "Opea Eves, by AppoialMMr 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. - Adventure Time 4:40 (56) Theater 56 •:(» (2) Movie (4) George Pierrot (color) (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Looney Tunes and Jingles 5:15 (56) Sing Hi-Sing Lo 5:36 (7) Rln Tin Tin (56) Americans At Work 5:45‘ (56) News Magazine 5:50 (9) News Hour Sorvict FOR GAS or OIL FURNACES JOSEPH GAUTHIER OR 3-5632 Chandler Heating Co. iR 3-4492 OR 3-5632 5:30 (2) Ccglege Bowl (7) Rocky and His Friends (9) Men Into Space SUNDAY EVENING 0:00 (2) 1 Love Lucy (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) State Trooper (9) Popeye. 6:30 (7) Walt Disney. (4) George Pierrot (cont.) (2) Twentieth Century (9) Talk Back (4) (Color) Shirley Temple (9) Movie: ’’Tarzan's Magic Fountain” (1948). ^ lives’ ’’fountain of youth” is threatened by commercial e^lmtation. Lex Barker, Brenda Joyce, Albert Dekker. (2) Lassie 7:30 (2) Dennis the Menace (7) Maverick 8:00 (2) Ed Sullivan (4) National Velvet 8:30 (4) Tab Hunter (7) Lawman (9) World of Music. (2) Theater TV Features COLLEGE BA8KE1BAI.L, 4:30 p.m. (2). ITie Michigan Wolverines play host to the nation’s top cage team, the Ohio State Buckeyes at Yost Field House in Ann Arbrn-. PERRY MASON, 7:30 p.m. (2). he boss’ son (Tony Travis) makes a play for the office secretary (Andra Martin). After the girt flees from ,hls lonely beach house, he is found Stabbed to death. BONANZA, 7:30 p.m. (4). Adam Cartwright (Pernell Roberts) travels to Mexico to return the "dead” son of a nearly blind neighbor. Adam encounters a gunman, Gl Smugglers Must Pay Taxes HAVE GUN, WD.L TRAVEL,! II e ^ TL 1:30 p.m. (2). Paladin (Richard Oil Those Booiie) and four other bounty hunt-1 Who Sneaked Liquor in era are after former slave Ishamt c___ r..U-. o • /er% Spruce (Ivan Dixon), now a dead-i rfOm L.UOa DOSe in 59 ly gunfighter. Paladin meets ^ruce and is Impressed by the man. NATION’S FUTITRE. 9:30 p.m. (4). Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, (Ret.) and Thomas G. Lanphier, industrialist, debate the subject; "Our Nuclear Arsenal — How Mudi is Enough?” PLAY OF THE WEEK, 11 p.m. JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Military personnel who smuggled liquor into the United States from! Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 19591 are getting billed for customs du-“es-or they goon will. * ★ ★ The U.S. (^lstoms Service said! [more than 12,000 cases of liquor; - (7). Vlvica Lindfors stars in a play worth $750,00o’ were smuggled in hostile town, and a beautiful girl set in Budapest in 1930, entitled i aboard military * (Taxtss R/vfcinn ^ //vsint*) 4*'ru.»k ___»» I _ ' (Ziva Rodann.) (color) CHECKMATE, 8:30 p.m. (2). Dick Shawn stars as a TV performer who denounces a retired •Tociay's Radio Programs-- WXTZ (079) WJBK (UM) WPOIf (IMS) TON'OBT CKI-W, N»Wi, WPON. New*. Sports t:S»—wm. Three Sooe CKLW. Alb. Tim* WPON. Ckndleltiht 7.-ea-WJR. Moods WWJ. Monitor WXTZ. 1. SebtstlM WPON, Bob Lark t:«9—wm. ^pbOOT t;SS—wm DetoaM lt;«a-wm DUIO. Ttmo l•:S»—CKLW, Bale. Armr 11;M—wm. Hewi WWJ. News ll;S9-Wm, Due* Tim* ■DNDAT MOBNINO •;«a-wm, P»rm Renew CKLW. Album Tim# WJBK, Brotherhood Hr. 1:99—wm Ptrm Forum WWJ, MAnnofi Church WXTZ. Oueit Star CKLW, Baugher Tab. WJBK. ProteeUnt Hour WPON. Bplicopal Hr. S;Mt—WJR. Newi. Hart , WWJ. Btorjrltnd, Music WXTZ. Dr. Bob Piero* CKLW, Tour Worihip Hour WJBK, Hgunt We Lore WPON, Bchoci ot Oalrarr t;sa—wm. Renfro Taller WWJ. News. Music WXTZ. Renral Hour CKLW. Pontiac Baptlet WJBK. Sacred Heart WCAR. Batk to Oed* WPON, St. Jabn'i Lutheru 9:aa-wm. Hewe, Baldwla WWJ. Croasroads Cbnrih WXTZ, Radio BIbl* . CKLW. Br'heeda Tnnpl* WmX. Nows, St. Prucit WCAR, News, Patrick SM-wm,^ Album. Rallglen WWL Hm. Hnale WXTk. Toloe of PTophicr CKLW. ROb. Chrlatlan WJBK, World Tomorrow WPON, Bun. Serenade Htta-wm Hrmns WWJ, Radio Pulpit ^ -WXVE, Healing Wlngg CKLW, Radio Bll-I* WJBK, Rews, Ipleewpal WPON Xmmuvcl Bapt- ttias-WJit, Chapel Hour , WWL Hewe. Soouta I PagJSmasa j CKLW. Oral Robe; WPON, Bm. Bapt., News Il:l»-WJR, Larman's Hour WWJ, St •'eul-i Cath. WXYZ. Israel Message. Ngwi CKLW, Ponttu Baptlet WWJ. Hawa, Ljmker WXTZ, Sundar Bast CKLW^ Labor News WCAR, Newi, WoodUng WJBK, News. Bun. Bourn WPON, Church o( Week l:tS—WPON, Warsaw Con'et t;W-wm. Seopa WPON. Clark D WCAR, News, —. CKLW, Ron Knowles g!g»-wm. Qnaitot 4;ta-WJR. Bolo Sheweae* WCAR. News, Logan WJBK. Bcorca. HlghUghtl g:ta-wm HawaU CaUi WWJ, Ncwi CKLW. News. Knowlei WJBK. Bun. Bound* WXTZ. Sundar Best WPON. Clark. DarU ampae Coooai LcilSSrU, SONOAT BTENDia «:9»-wm Scb-ibaek, Nawi WWJ, Newt. Major WXTZ. Sunday M «1*-wm. Speetnim WWJ. Mart Press CKLW, Crhrfd'phns. CKLW News. Tatar Darld 15W-WWJ, J*«L idu *--CKLW, Radib aureh WCAR. Na Ti., — WXYZ. Suedsy Best 1:*fc.-WeAR. News. TTioHli CKLW, Word of Lite WCAR. News. Thomas WPON. Casey Calling WWJ, News, Puhston ■:M-WXTZ. Sunday Best .CKLW, Rsvivsl WJBK, News. Stereo WPON, catty CaUlng I;ia—WJR, Tour Requeet CKLW, The Quiet Hr. WPON, Jerry Olten, Newt P:g»-WJR. Request, cont. CKLW. Orossa Pt. Bpst. WXTZ. Sunday Best WCAR. NeiA WPON, Jerry Olsen WJBA, Mews. Concert WXTZ, Truth MtraTd ~ CKLW. Hr. ot Decision IgiSS-WJR. Ask Profeesor WWJ. BUrdal Light WXTZ, Rerlrsl WXt2, Bun. Beet CKLW. Bldtr Morton WJBK. News, DD. comedy I:IS-wm News. Husla WWJ. News. Music CKLW, Album WJBK. AdolesesBto monsat mornino g:**-WJR. News. Ag'clt. WWJ, Hews, Roberts WXTZ, Trad Wolf CKLW, Perm Newt WJBK. News, Perm WCAR, Hews. Sheridan WPON, Chuck Lewis WPON. Xarly Bird 1;(9-wm Newt, Must WWJ, News, Roberts WXTZ. Ktws, WoU ciaw. News. Toby Da WJBK, News WCAR, Newt WPON, Hews, Lent* WJBK Newt, Tralllc WCAK New* Bberldan wm News. Onost »:#a-WJR. News. Murrey WWJ, News, MarUns WXTZ: Pant Hareey, Wolf CKLW. Nows. Toby Darld WPON, Olsen, News Mtl9-Wm Karl Baas 11:M-Wm, Baalth WWJ, Bob Allison CKLW, jo* Tan WJBK Reid WPON. Lawlt . WXTK McNeclay ll:sa-wm Tim* Par Music CKLW. Jo* Van WPONI Olsen. Hew* WWJ, Newt, pyts WXTZ. Nesrs, McHtalsy CKLW, Ntws. Van WCAK Hawa. Purs* WPON, Man on at., Uwi ll;M-wm, Tim* tor MuKs CKLW. Jo* Van WWJ, Bob AUlien WPON, Uwlt, Hows IKR—wm. Bheweasa WWJ. Music CKLW, Jot Van WPCHir Matey AMsan WCAR. Hawa. Music WJBK Rcld l:M-WPON, Olsen, Newt t;g*-wm, composite WWJ. Maswell, Music WJBK Las CKLW, Jo* Tan. WPON. Olsen, News ■The Emperors CSothes. Sunday NBC OPERA CO. 3 p.m. (4). A rebroadcast of last season's pro-(fuction of "Fidello” with Irene Jordan in the title role. PALM SraiNOS golf, 4 p.m. (2). Final four holes of pro competition at the Tamarisk C^try Qub, Palm Springs, Calif. OMNIBUS, 5 p.m. (4). "Abraham Lincoln; The Early Years,” a newly edited version of the five-part filmed series that was first presented liTlBSl TWENTIETH CENTIEY, p.m. (2). ••Ireland; The Tear and the Smile,” Part II, Irish life is discussed by actress Siobhan McKenna, Premier Sean Lemass, designer Sybil Cbnnolly and others. DENNIS THE MENACE, 7:30 m. (2). Mr. Wilson (Joseph Kearns) trembles at the news that Dennis (Jay North) wants to buy Tommy Anderson’s (Billy Booth’s) saxophone. ED SUIXIVAN, 8 p.m. (2). Featuring: actress-singer Dorothy Dan-dridge. Jazz pianist Erroll Garner, operatic basso Cesare SlepI, raconteur George Jeswl, comedlamr Tommy Noonan and Pete Marshall and Pete Fountain’s jazz quartet. DINAH SHORE, 9 p.m. (4). Dinah visits Denmark to show the various attractions in Copenhagen. She meets Ingemar Johansson, the Swe-Danes, some ballet dancers, fflm stars and vaudevillians. (color) VALMNT YEARS, Chapter Vlll in the "Winston Churchill Series” concerns Britain’s sfru^le to control the Mediterranean duriny World War II. S:S9-CKLW. Bud DSfieg WCAR. Newt’ abartdan WPON. Oarriat* Trade 4:SS-CKLW. Bud D*rlJi| Ijt^Wm HeWK Mud* WWJ. Howe, Ttmby WXTB, Wlntar WCAR. Nowi, •non. Bnl CSiw, BportK Mum* iiiiuuuyr aircraft that I year. Customs officers, with the help of the Navy, are checking! records of every botOe sold at! the Navy's Guantanamo Base. I So far 1,040 purchases have] been traced to flights that landed in Florida at Jacksonville, Mayport, Miami, Sanford, Pensacola and Key West. Another 100 purchases flown to Panama City,! St. Petersburg and Orlando are! being tabulated. | ★ ♦ ★ I Olhej purchases went as far north "as Minneapolis and as far wrat as Texas. checkup has already brought $31,000 in tax payments. If all the bills are collect^ they will bring in about $300,000 in federal taxes. Pedestrians Will Have Rear Lights in Reich ANSBACn, Germany (AP) — Pedestrians in Ansbach will be Is-•ued "cat’s eyes” as a protection atfalnst being struck by automobiles. ★ ★ 8 Qit's eyes are brooch-type gadgets that riilne brightly when Wt by automobile lights. The police suggested they be stuck where in your rear.” The experiment is being tried aftifr an increasing number of accidents in which p^estrians walking home fete at night l^ive lieen njn down from befdnd, I I Comb Northern Utah for Missing Pilot J5AI.T LAKE CITY (AP) - Ai air and ground search was ordered in northern Utah today for a missing light plane piloted by William D. Kelley Jr., technical director of the Allegany Instrument Co. of Cumberland, Md. He was alone, as far as any- ne knows. Kelley, about 34, attended sessions of the American Rocket Society here this week. He took off from the Salt Lake Oty airport! about midnight Thursday and! headed'north Into a snowstorm in’ his Cessna 1%. His last radio re-! port indicated he was four miles west of Brigham City, fibout 50, miles north of here. | Steering-Arm Firm to Leave Detroit for South DErtlOIT If) — Gemmer Manufacturing Co. announced Friday it is moving its steering-arm-making operation from its Detroit plant to a new factory at Lebanon, Tenn. Steering mechanisms for cars and frocks are the only products mode at the Detroit facility, where 800 workers will be affected. A weird deep-sea creature with D mouth, digestive system of breathing is known as means tWpof WHY ]¥OT? Yes, why not give your home electronic equipment the meinten-•nee it deserves? To most people, the tV and radio In their home is their favorite entertainment. Enjoy this entertainment reguiariy by using the best in professionai eiectronic service, your OAK-...ELECTSObMCS-A^ tf cbsfsTw"rribre to buy service backeTby the skill that only years of full-time electronics service experience can product. MEMBER SHOPS LISTED BELOW Autorn Radio & TV, 39 Aabani, FE 4-1655 CoRden'i Radio A TV, 36 S. Toitgroph FE 4-9736 C A V Sales A SorviM, 158 Oakland Ave„n 4-1515 Dolby Radio A TV, 341 Ukigh, FE 4-9802 Hampton Electric Co„ 825 W. Horoii, FE 4-2525 Hod's Radio A TV, 770 Orchard Lake Ave., FE 4-5841 Jehmen-s Radi# A TV, 45 L WoHoo Blvd^ FE 8A569 Jooes Radio A TV, 3111 Orchard Lakt Avt^ Keega, FE 4-5862 Obel Radio A TV, 3930 Elizaboth lake Rd., FE 4A945 Rich TV, 1959 North Opdyke Rd„ FE 441221 Phelps Eltctric Co., 2615 Dixit Highway, DR 3-1217 SttfontU Radio A TV, 1157 W. Horan St., FE 2-6967 SwMfs Radio A Appliance, 422 W. Horan St., FE 4-1133 Wohon Rodin A TV, 515 L WoHon Bhrd., FE 2-2257 WKC, Inc., Sarvka Dtpt., 20 W. Alley, FE 3-7114 05KL5ND COUHTT EiECTBONics issoainoH LINDSAY 0 THE Kne or THE WATER SOFTENERS OUTSTANDING FEATURES: t made of metal • Lindsay gives you a rustproof fiberglas tank • Lindsay gives the Purchaser a Lifetime Guarantiee • A Lindsay is not obsolete before you buy if, • With a Lindsay it is possible to make $l0 each month for the next forty years. Ask us to explain? • Lindsay is completely automatic, no regenerating A LINDSAY COSTS NO MORE THAN AN ORDINARY SOFTENER WHY NOT OWN ONE AND COLLECT DIVIDENDS THE REST OF YOUR LIFE? One lo Llndaar't U/e|ime Onaraiilee UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY PoymentB 09 Lew os $5.19 Per Month LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. Division of MICHIGAN HEATING 88 NEWBERRY ST. FE 8-6621 FE 8-6651 FE 2-2254 Well Get Your Gas Permit ' and give you a choice of 2 Big Gas Specials! BIG DELCO 105,000 BTU FORCED AIR GAS mBNACE >364®® Includes Ducts and Registers for Full 6-Room House NO MONET DOWN —$11.61 PEN MONTR Delco Gas Conversion Burner $19900 NOW ONLY INSTALLED $6.34 PEB MONTH ^ PLUS ||i HOLDEN RED STAMPS WITH EITHER FURNACE OVRIEII HEATIN6 & SUPPLY Authorized OahUmd\ CouMy Distributor 371 Voorhait Rd. '*S,2nS5a£“' FE 2^2919 IwEXTVjSlX THli PONTIAC PRESS. SATUIIlDAY. FEBRUARY 4. IWl r r film Couple, Wed for Reel and tor iJf?eai WiM Study! Economic Effoct'of AAotorio Contrx>i t at the Unhiwstty of MIcW- “]Two Form P«|riodicalk ^ -HOLLYWOOD tUPl» - The ANN ARBOR W-The economic effects of man's aucceases in the asaiittt malaria are the subject of a near study bcKinning thia{ Field reeearch ii of Latiii America will be a vil psH of'the study, according to E S.‘J; A)»lrod of the I’* of 1 achool of public health. 'We hope to find out what Imp- 's ooooomy>a a' result all parfiH any alcoixriic bevarig* fo be removed from his premtMS In LANSING (A - The SUte Liquor Control Commission has iJedared it illegal to carry out beer in iptt The commission rule declares ETUin tU9 naa er or carrier other than that provided by the manufacturer. i r Some soft-drink numufaetdrem had complained, it was exfUained, because beer purchases were being carried out in their cartons. and wife, the moade director yWed. "cut" mjd aiane 500 glasses of. champagne were rinsed in a toast, but uistead of returning to their dressing rooms the cou|de went on their TIus movie marriage was for real as weU ss reel, and to .a fen nxmttis mUlioos, irf" theat^ “gam around Ac worid will be watching the marriage of actress i|ina Massey. 21. and stage manager DavM Joesling, 29, in a Jerry Lewis film, "The Ladies j Comedian Lewis, who plays a ; hOuseboy with a cupid fixation in the film, and opera singer Helen Traubd — pUyed supporting roles as best man^ and nMitnm of honor last night «' the actual wedding ceremony ] was filitM as part of a .Veteran Hollywood observers briieve it was the first time an mMTiagg,.hl* fesm fillDHl a movie. M No lUPtlSU. notice U Iwrcbs slroa Uut s puoUc hoorUtf hu 0*« oohodulod be Ux eoo-tiK Cltr Commlootoii to be MM Ttioo-lUr. Pobnior; 11. IMI »t S oclock p m E.S.T. ot the CommitsMo Choraber. Cttij KM for tJ _______________________ _ ,D Ctmsicrcitli I Um follovtiif doKrlbcd prepcitT: | l>OU I» to nt both tocltulrc, Ptrrri r m AiMiuoa. CUi ot Poatloc. Ook-i load CounlV. Mteh^o. np brdtr bl tiu Atj OomailutoB. Dated Pebruarr 1. IMI. . ADA R. BVAN8. atj C NOnCK OP PUBUC HEARING nauc* b Mrtbjr |lna that a pubUci hedPlnt vlU be MM at tM Waterlerd| Tovbthlp Balt. 4IM W. Huron Stroot, Wateiiord Teomihip. Oakland Countr. ___________ ot 7M p p.m. (EAT.t Moadar. Plbi- , INI to dcelda upm tM queetton; ot croatlnt aad.'or Martag objecttoni; to'eaau7-aM&a« ooftalB pabUe hl«h-! wape la tM Toanahtp of Waterford Iti la eoatomiMted that the aforemenUOD*d apodal I aitt et tl Toeraahlp portion d BMi. acoOBipaaled M BM Booda. AReratlone Ifalntcnaaoo Bulldint, «U4 Poi luikc Road. Pontiac. Mlchlcaa-^and — nrlBlttrttloB BulMlns. IISl Weat WaltOB Bottlerard. Pontiac: Utchlaan. >Located: ‘B Waterford Townahip. lilcli'------ ew .TV........ Ptbniarj TUM : _____ _. otfleta of tfaa :......................... xrtu M pablldp opened and Propoaab than Include all »ork ... Architectural. Mrcbantcal and Electrical Tradee Plant tad tpecftlcatloni ohtalned — — '—- at the 0______ .. . - ___________ _______ O Maton * Co . 4M OrbaoM Btreol. Detroit H. Mlchtnn A depoilt of |is.W ' — ■ ot plant I Depoatt am ani apaeltlca M raqulrod acUleatlona. aaard ot contract. BOARD OP EDUCA'nON. WATERPORO TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS DOROTHT B. BARMIHOHAM. You not only looe weight fart with new 9tt calorie Cal-Away-but. Cal-Away taalcf ao good! Available from your milkman in Ready-To-Serve Quart Cartons. One glam is a full meal; four glasset provide 9N calories daily for only n for Cal-Away-the wholesome dairy way to lose weight! Ttule the difference! .^served the followiiig dairies: Rye ttoiry . ‘ I Uaf Dairy Co. P IjcharisoB Fdini Fam Dairy SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO Be Smart, Be ThriftyMonday and Every Ihiy, You Can Be Sure of Extra Savins at Se«rsl~ Sorry, No Phone Orders, w -Dolivrias* -^Except OR larpe items. Yonr Choice racta irica: !] for Porch, Bath, Kitchen Ceiliilgt Charge U Now’s the time to get thoise needed fixtures for the house! Choose from many shapes and deslgns.^¥ou’il want several at this Mon-prire! Elretrlcal Dept, Main BaaemmiT' IVIONDAY ONLY! Clip Many Dollars off Your Haircutting Bills! SAVE $2.99 on Craftsman 7-Pc. Barber Set Charge It Youj:et a UL listed electric clipper with a high carbon tool steel cutter blade; safety blade guard; 7V-»-in. plastic tapered comb; 7V-j-in. barber’s shears; clipper ’ attachment for crew cuts. Monday only! 15.M Clipper Set. 15-pc. >ho|» St‘ar> ‘lil 9 pan. I hiiixhn. I ri at $89.95 • Limed oak, mhg. $s Down Sew with ease in both forward and reverse. Automatic stitch regulator, automatic bobbin winder, automatic drop feed. Just press a button to release for darning arid mending. See it Monday! 3-Pc. Double Dresser G>ntemporary Bedroom •144 • Regular $199 • Dresser, chest, full panel bed Adds grace and space to any size room! And each piece is expertly crafted in star-light mahogany veneered hardwood . . . a new creamy vanilla tonq that decorators love. Pl^te glass mirror, too! Applianre Dept., Main Batemcnt Sewing Machine Dept.. Main Ftsor Farnltare Dept„ Second Floor "Satisfaction guarantee)! or your mopey back’* SEARS ^^***''^ Phone FE 54171 '4. -I ■; I' ' / . . . / The Weather * « U.i. Wcalktr Buu« ranciit THE PONTIAC PR 118th YEAR '~?r Itifll PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. FEBHUAHV 4. I9(;i —26 PAGES Her Candidate's a Shoo-In Much of Dixie PRETTY TIRED - Both these words accurately descrite Republican party worker Sally Thom j>t Detroit as she takes a minute out from hectic convention. preparation to massage a weary foot. She is one of many party workers who spent most of Friday preparing a downtown Detroit hotel for the convention. Seaboard, South Hit, Too Storm Buries New York City Wallowing in 12-Foot Drifts Midwest Hurt; 1,000 Persons Are Stranded, Then Freed in Gotham State Chairmanship Up for Grabs Republicans Form Baffle Lines From Our News Wires I in the smoke-filled headquarters of DETROIT — Rival forces mustered their strength today for a final tug-of-war in a lively contest to tame a new chairman of the Michigan Republican party. Lights burned nearly till dawn four candidates to succed LawTence B. Lindemer i party's top position. The race settled down to a three-man contest, and none of tht'm held a clear edge. George M. Van Peursem of Holland, anr ex-leglsIator with a reputation tor bringing ronser-vative and liberal elements of the part.v together, emerged as the leading candidate for the S2l,0OO-a-.vear post. A floor fight, however, appealed By United Press International A near-blizzard gave New York its third knockout blow of the winter today and slammed into New England, leaving thousands of persons stranded, air travel paralyzed and sea traffic in peril. i Heavy snow driven by winds up I to 50 miles an hour capped the longest freezing spell in the history of the New York Weather Bureau—17 days. The temperature rose above 32 degrees in Bostwi .this morning, ending a 16-day freezing spell that' equalled a record set in 1918. j Police said about 1,000 persons! County Delegation Holds State Championsliip Key POOR ADVER'TISEMKNT — The heart of New York Qty s advertising district, Madison Avenue, was a poor advertisement for the city this mOming as pedestrians look to the middle of tlie were stranded in their cars on the, street to plow their way through the heavy snow. There was little snow-choked belt parkway in 1 Brooklyn until they were rescued! certain. Supporters of former|by busses. The cars stayed '^reijgygp EndOFSC'InCOlTI^ TaX Congressman Robert J. (Jackt Me- »hey were, and the highway was|.------------------- Intosh of Port Huron and John R. ! At least two deaths were reported j in New York State, both of them I in auto accidents. Throughout thejj nation, storm deaths totaled at: least 35. including three in Michi- to fear from automobiles, which were, in laiTgc part, snowed in at home. It was the third knockout blow by Ihe city’s worst winter in 80 years. (JackI Stiles of Grand Rapids, a campaign worker for Vice President Nixon and GOP gubernatorial candidate Paul Bagwell, claimed i Special to The Pontiac Press DETROIT—Oakland Coupty’s 149 votes loomed today as the key which will open the door to the Michigan GOP chairmanship. Congressional district caususes ran far into the night, with many delegations scattering to hotel rooms IDems Behind Swainson strong support for their candidate. Drifts were hepped IZ feet high State GOP Neutral on Con-Con rooms without deciding; The winner I which of four announced candidates they favor for chairman of the State Central Committee. Although not a candidate, John A. Gibbs, executive secretary of I the Oakland County GOP Commit-DETROIT * — TTie Michigan;tee. was being boosted for the top Republican convention today wasipost by part of the Oakland ' ' In the fringe area with only outside chance of election was Gordon E. Gable. Ypsilanti attorney. Mrs. Ell.v Petemoa nl Charlotte was gaining strength in her contest with Mrs., Loin Nair itt Detroit tor slate vlee chairman. I replace Mrs. Elia Kocse of Grand Rapids, who has moved up to tJOP national commilleewoman. Lindemer, who is stepping out after four years as chairman, a foot of voiced enthusiasm over the big crowd that jammed the convention hotel, squelching concern that November election defeats had doused party spirit. advised lieither to endorse or reject a proposal for a constitutional convention that will go before the voters in the J^>ril 3 election. GRAND RAPIDS — Michigan The cndorseinoiit came from Ihcj .\flcr hearing Ihe governor tell oTpenniylvanTaJ^'”®*^'’*^® fell in line today be- Platform Committee, which' •'"•oi that he would support in the mountains Virginia, West Virginia and Maryland. Winds drove the through Fa.vette City, Pa.. Some major highways closed soBthwest Pennsylvania. Airports closed at Pittsburgh., Philadelphia and New York. Chi-, cago airports remained open but many flights were canceled. The New York storm began eai ly Friday afternoon and after It: hours New York was smothered with and drifts: hind Gov. Swainson's proposals for fiscal reform — including a state income tax — and his campaign pledges on education, constitutional convention and economic policy. 'it J move, platform drafters pjit down attempts to sub-olution supporting the f to rewrite the 53-year-oid constitution. idle party endorsements at I and IMO conventions, the / mommended platform plank at today’s meeting merely “anticipates” a favorable vote for the constitutional convention. The watered-down stand was an apparent attempt to placate conservative and rural elements in the party who have strongly opposed any sweeping constitutional revision. gation. ‘‘He is very much In the picture as a darfchorse candidate,” an Oakland party spokesman said. “He is the only dark horse in the picture.” The county (18th Congressional District) caucus broke up at 3 a.m. today with confused delegates taking a wait-and-see attitude. At the formal session today, the 1.508 delegates were to choose a new State Central Cbmmittee, select 11 candidates for the April 3 election and frame a platform for them to run on. Upstate New York areas were har^ hit. with 24 inches in Cortland County, N.Y., 15 inches in: Binghampton and 13 in Taiyters-ville. Many of these areas had 30 inches already on the' The resolution urged to seek out strong candidates for a convention if the proposition carries in April. It also went on record for Republican support of “the basic soundness of our constitutional system’’ at a convention. The proposed resolution touched off heated debate among the preconvention resolutions committee members. Nearly half wanted outright support of a constitutional convention. Area Cage Picture Scrambled Around A topsy-turvy evening .of high school basketball took place Oakland County last night. ^ St. Frederick won its first parochial title in 19 years by defeating St. Benedict 42-37, and Pontiac Northern moved vvithin one game of clinching its second straight Inter-'.Akes championship J by whipping Waterford, 7^. Pontiac Central’s Saginaw Valley hopes ended as FUat Central defeated tike Chiefs SSdt. Holly became tt^ tone unbeaten team in the county by defeating BlocHnlield HiUs 73-45: Highly ranked Ferndale lost its first game to East Detroit 67-58. All the.detafls are on pages 10-11 of today’s Press. 'The possibility that a dark horse might carry off the chairmanship arose as an old battle—liberals versus conservatives—threatened to split the OOP’s spring convention which got under way at 11 this morning in Coho Hall. THREE-MAN RACE Former House Speaker George M. Van Peursem of Zeeland, whose backers described him as a ’’moderate - conservative” looked like the strongest naan in the field. Liberals were split between (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) HALLECK KEYNOTER Rep. CSiarles A. Halleck, R-lnd. keynoted the convention today by predicting further gains in Republican ranks in elections throughout the country. ground. Halleck, GOP leader House of Representatives, said the Republican party, nationally, stronger than "I have ever seen It in more than a third of a century of public life.’’ He said this “surging vitality" was the result of solid gains in the House where the GOP picked up 22 seats in the recent election (one is being challenged) and pride in ’’solid Republican accomplishments" in the past eight years. ( drafted resolutions almost certain I « I'latfomi (lie .'..inmit. ^ ,1 tee came up with, the members to get the rubl^r^tamp approval ^ of the record 1.7K delegates at- tendn^ th? biennial spring eonven- ,„l„lmum wages for teaehers. .Swainson told the eomniiltee, "I leave in .vour hand.s the future of the Democratic party." The work of thrashing out the platform la.sted be.vond 3 a.m. In; Iwcking the governor's tax pro-; gram the commiltfs' said: "This program . .'. is designed to stimulate economic growth in : Michigan by eliminating the ma jor inequities on business and industiy Bv GEORGE T. HRU.MBULL JR. and local tax .struc ture. and by ri-ducmg the present Special to The Pontiac Press ,;,x burden on the low GRAND RAPIDS—A recommended slate of four he'At Sfoups" Union-Supported Slate Approved in Grand Rapids! ANNA MAY WON(i Hardly a living thing moved in New York. Fire engines had to wait for snowplows. The storm was expected to taper off later today. Light MOW glazed highways In several Michigan areas early today, but the weather bureau reported skies would clear over Southern Lower Michigan which abMrbed a snowfall of three to tour Inches Friday. Noted Chinese Actress Dies Anna May Wong Was Starred With Douglas Fairbanks and Olivier Democratic State Central Committee candidates from , ^ Oakland County, endorsed by the local AFL-CIO. stood off a brief challenge here last night and won election iSwainson'.s deciijion to announce going away. i*’*® program calling for a flat ;i T,, i J . ^ 1 , IA .. P*’'' rrnt ncome tax this w Elected in a bitterly fought county caucus preoedmg before ,hr April :i primar; today’s state convention were: Otis I^awrence, 52. of 470 Ferry Ave., an international \v'onI!,'^\I5iS° d»^ ChiS UAW representative with the Pontiac regional office; r«iiimiHsi,.n.r Kioyd h<‘«uty graced movie screen-s for ^William A. O’Brien, 31, of Stevens indicated t.Klav he ' is "’’"1 three decades, is dead. Iciawson, a Detroit attorney! .......... ' »■ .STi ^ Marshal under Ihe Kennedy i"'Sht .tl the age of While the snow jammed traffic F^day in most Southern Michigan cities, including metropolitan De-tndt, the low-pressure center which brought the storm snapped the subzero cold wave in the lower part of the state. Old man winter slowed the! wheels of government for the third | consecutive week and disrupted the' First Family’s scheduled reunion. | Seven inches of snow covered' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Returns Liner to Portuguese and unsuccessful candidate for state representative, from Oakland’s 5th Distriot in November. adiiiiniKtratlon. they decided not to make n of it t the c Although American-born, S}ie was a full-blooded' Chinese wd was among Ihe first to bring the f.icharm of the. Orient to American movie theaters. The party’s civil righlti plank liledged the Deiiiiterals to press igornusly for legislaffon that vmihl “diminish over expres. ions of dis<'riinination and jtre. jiidlee." , . —---------It calls for: RECIFE, Brazil lUPll — BraziliDrive, Farmington Township, foi'V i-^’reation of a civil rights com-formally returned the hijacked :mer memlter of stale central for mission Also Mrs. Walter F'. (BarbaraI Report Galvao Trying Brinkman of 1496 Eason .Sf .,\Va to Take His Case to **’*'*®''''* Township, who missed her the Wortd Court and 'Mrs, Harold E. (Mane) i.Shpiece of 25708 Westmorelai^ Her first starring role was opposite Douglas Fairbanks in “Thief of Bagdad” in I9'l*. Soon afterward she went to England and playi'd op|Misile lamrenee Olivier oil Ihe stage in "('irele of Chalk.” , Says U.N, *s Existence Periled by Congo Crisis ship Santa Maria to Portu-Iguese military attache Col. Joa-jquin da Luz today and Da Luz : said he hoped there would never ibe a similar incident. When war came in 1941. Afjss Wprig reliitxi from film and the- six years from Detroit’s 1.5th Con-: —Prohibiting diseriminalion in atrical work and devoteti all her gressional District. housing. itirnexto United China Relief and (Continued on Page 2. Col. 3) |USO ^tivities. From Oar News Wires UNITED NA'nONS, N.Y. high-ranking diplomat said today that failure of current efforts to aiihieve U.S.-Soviet agreement on the Cbngo might mean the end of the United Nations. journment of the Security Council, which will resume its . Congo debate Tuesday. "This may be one of the most crucial weekends in U.N. history, he said. and ao. likely, win the United ’’Everything hinges American cooperation. II that is maM|E RESUMES TUESDAY Consultations among the Uhttad States and other internet! countries were going on hdre and in Washington during a week-end ad- The UJ8. government, searching for n oolntion to the tni«led Congo sitnntloa, is eonsidering the inclnnion of lefHot Patrice Lumumba in n broader, new Congo government. In Todays Press Church News .............. Comicu .................... It Edltorinls .. « Home Seettou.............it-is TV A Radio Programs . Wilson, Eart l... Women’s Pages .. i... pre- The status of Lumumba. »ier now' a political prisoner, it an element of these consulta-ons, ” said Lincoln White, department spokesman. In Cairo, Col. Saad Eddine el Stuuly, commander of the United Arab Republic paratroop batallion withdrawn from the Congo, says complete chaos rules over the African republic and "civil war is at the door." At L«opoldvllle, Congolese forces lisyal to Lumnmba appealed for a ceaae-flre after suf-terlag heavy casasItieB, bring-lag an end to fighting with U.N. NIgeriaa boppo at Ktndn. One Nigerian officer was kill^ and four of his men are missing in the clash-that grew out of a brawl with drunkeh Congolese sol- According to tradition. Lawivnee and Mrs. Brinkman will represent * * ★ ]the northern part of the county, The formal ceremony came asjand O’Brien and Mrs. Shpieci'. Henrique Galvao, leader of the rebel band that seized the, 20,900 ton liner and its 600 passengers and 380 crewmen Jan. 22 was reported to be trying to take his case to the World Court. attorney with her husband i Detroit, the southern, portion on the 72-member governing body of: (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4' BULLE The banding Brazilian Adin. Dla.<< FernandcN, commander of the Third Naval District here, who carried out the negotiations that led to (ial-vao’s surrender late Friday after repeated threats to blow-up Ihe ship. Da Luz b, 10 Degrees Expected as Tonight's Low j Pontiac residents are recovering: today from 3 inches of snow that! I fell .yesterday. •MO.SCOW (I'Pl) — Russia t<»day launched a 6'2-ton Sputnik, the largest man-made satellite ever sent into .space, the Tass news agency announced. The announcement said the Sputnik'was launched “by means of an improved multistage rocket, tjhe Sputnik weighs 6,483 kilograms, not counting the weight of the la.st stage of the carrier rocket.” ship to Captain Mario Simocs Maia, the man who was in charge when the rebel band struck. The crew was expected to be allowed to take over the Santa Maria and return the ship to Portugal. The weatherman predicts a gradual clearing with fair skies and a low of 10 tortight. The forecast for Sunday is increasing cloudiness with a high of 28. Tension eased in Portugal with surrender of the Santa Maria. There was widespread belief there that the Santa Maria incident was designed to draw attention to ex-Gen. Humberto Del-Gado’s campaign of opposition to the nearly 30-.vear-old regime of Premier Antonio Salazar^ Morning' northerly winds at 3: miles per hour will become vari-' able tonight. The outlook for Mon-1 day is considerable cloudiness ahdj not much change in temperature. * The lovrett recording in dpwn-towrt Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was, 18 degrees. The r^ading/at 1 p.m. I was 25. The launching was “in conformity with the plan for designing and perfecting space ships of increased weight,”'Tass said, ' It did not say whether the satellite carried any form of life. it it it The announcement used the term Sputnik’* to describe the object, not “space ship” as It did in prescribing two previoos^JauDchings. Sputnik is Russian for satellite. , The heaviest object previously lifted into space was Spaceship II. launchM Dpc. I and weighing f|ve itons. ' it, it it It.burned out in re-enteriifg the earth’s atmosphere. f The Day in Birmingham Prof, Broadcast Official to Discuss Effect of TV BIRMINGHAM — Dr. Lee S. cer Relief Fund and the Masonic Dreyfus, associate professor at Home for the A«ed. speech and assistant director of ra- —— dio and television at Wayne State University, will be the guest speaker Tuesday at a program for the Friends of the Baldwin Public U-brary. Dr Dreyfus will discuss ‘‘TV And What It Does To. You” at the 8 p.m. meeting iq, the library auditorium. Before IMt. when he Joined the staff at Wayne State as a speech instraetor, Dreyfus had worked as a radio actor In Milwaukee and Chicago, taught speech at the University of Wisconsin and served In tk Navy. Auto Firms ■to Lay Off 75,000 More ^science. (esaor at San Diego (Calif.) State College before accepting an assistant professorship at MSUO in 1959. He became manager of radio station WDET at Wayne SUte in 1953, and was appointed to his present position in September. Rhode wiU work with Dr. Lowell R. Ekiund. director of continuing education, and devote one-third of • DETROIT (L-PD - The „,ion‘s automakers reported today theyj Dr. Ekiund called Rhode's ap-«iU lay off an additional 75,000, pohitment “a significant step ^workers fcH- one week periods this In the developnieat of osn- eon-Imonth in an effort to adjust back- tinutng education program befogged dealer inventories to dump c«ase of his recognitioa of the hng sales. importance of bringing ednea- ■ Ford Motqr Co., which originally •reported it would lay off 13.500i Imen for a week beginning Mon-j TREE JOINS CASUALTY LIST — It may look like trick photography, but it isn’t. This car, driven by John A. Hope Jr.. smashed auto. Hope U in fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- 17. of Clawson, spun out of control on Woodward Avenue in Bloom- Pjtal. A passenger was treated and released. The accident was the field Hills this morning and smashed into a tree. A healthy portion result of a drag race, police said. They are holding the driver of the of the tree was ripped away and imbedded in the rear of the other car for questioning. Hold Avon Boy After Accident IDems Back Union Slate iay. said today a layoff scheduled! in the aevdand area was expect-; ;pd to be postponed and that this «« extends MSUOs Uberal arts Police Report •would reduce the layoff figure uycoacfvf further into the continuing. •svm leducatkai program,” Ekiund said. . . _ . .. io.Sw- ; ^ 17-year-old Avon Township boy .American Motors also will tay IVITAL FACTOR jis being held today for investiga- tion se.ees Wirkcrs at its ptaats ! Rhode, in assuming the new tion of leaving the Kene of an in--IB RTscflBsto lor one week begUi- Ipost. said: 'jury accident in Bloomfield Hills ‘ wtnf Monday. A * a . jearly this morning. ' And General Motom said it would' ”The triumph or failure of L layoff «,500 workers across the government hinges on the people's'^ Calvm Barr of 2825 Devondale 'coimtry the week of Feb. 13. fulfillment of their responsibilities I These temporary furlourtM will'for awareness oi public issues andi In fair condition with head Indie in addition to thousands of in- enthiLsiaxtic support of effectivel Juries at St. Joseph Mercy Hoa- (COntinued From Page One) Clawson Youth Hurt in “» nw Drag Race With Him, kiefinite layoffs announced pre-; public policy. tviously. News Flash ‘”nie> American people are no longer unconcerned about the compelltlan between free and anthorltartan syslema of government—and the auccesa of the democracy will be guided by Forelgn I citlxens’ intelligent and educa- pltal is John A. Hope Jr., 11, of 3Jl Fisher Court, ClawBon. A passenger in Hope's car, Wil-liSfo Bedard Jr„ 17, of 4108 Kent Fload. Royal Oak, was treated and released. - MOSCOW (AP) ; Minister .AsdrH A. Oromyko : tlonal guidance ol their public : affairs. . E'orrtgn Ministry today and jversities It is an obligation of the uni- None of the incumbents sought re-election. One of them, Mrs. Harrtett PhllUps, a Huntington Woods housewife and veteran of six years on the organisation, had another election on her mind — that of party vice chairman, mk-ceeding Adelaide Hart, Detroit schoolteacher who bid a tearful goodby to her party friends at a dinner Friday evening. With 2,000 colorful campaign balloons floating hrtter-skelter erywhere in the Pantlind Hotel party headquarters Mri. Phillips, 37, went through the motions of campaigning by visiting all district caucuses although aware that her only competitor — never •nnar Bar's- rwsi it’ serious contender — had pulled DRAG RACE RE.SI LT i The spectacular . smashup oc-jthe unity of the party." first tlme.“Vagnozii said it would never have happened in his old congressional district, the ‘‘Fighting Fourteenth ’ of Wayne County. “Why don’t you go back,” retorted a member of the Oak Park delegatton. The Interparty squabbling stemmed frtun some opposition to the first-time practice of a steering committee of seven members curred as the result of a drag race, said police. Barr said he was racing with ”• jversities to provide the founda- Hope, going south on Woodward "■ jtion of continuing knowledge nec-: Avenue near Hickory Grove Road tenU arc expected to be re- pggary meeting the^ respon-; shortly alter midnight.” said Sgt. ; leased later today by the So- .sibUiUes.” ^ Ijames Fowler. , \1ete. __________ i * ★ a ••Barr said their cars bumped ’ ! Hhode. his wife Patricia and! and both went out ot control. Docks at Last !**’**'' Stephen. 14. live at 6881 Barr's car spun onto the center I Cambridge Drive, Avon Township, j i*iand and Hope spun into a ! MILWAUKEE (APt-The M|J-klukee Clipper docked here Fri- f* • I • n day night after spending 20 hours trUISB LlllBr DdHOS Jin a wind-driven ice pack outside ^ Freighter Near NY ' Fowler said. ,the Milwaukee harbor entrance. Storm So Bad the Weatherman Cant Repott New York City's storm plcrore ' was so unspeakably bad Ihia .morning that even the weather bureau there was speechless. Snow-caused manpower prob-- terns forced the bureau to delay transmission of its national . wcatlH-r map for almost two Barr was quoted as saying he didn’t know the othpr car hit any-|thing. He pushed his car back (Hito the pavement and drove away, he said. I Hope’s car hit the tree with such NEIW YORK (UP!) — The cruiser-force that part of the tree was left liner Nassau collided with a I imbedded in the vehicle, police freighter in a snow.storm last night just outside New York Harbor, but injuries were reported and neither ship suffered major dam- age. The Nassau was sailing from snow-choked New York to the Bahamas. and vacationers were dancing in one of the ballrooms when it collided with the Norwegian freighter Brott. Both ships turned about and relumed to New York. The Weather Full U. 8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Gradual clearing today, high 25. Fair and cold tonight, low 10. Sunday Increasing cloudiness, high 28. Gentle northerly winds becoming variable tonight. . Lovrrt tfinp»r»lt 41 ..iLovMt temperaurt {M»*n temperature Veather—Oupnr Hlaaetl and I.W isto -Vo In Ull 3S 31 Memphia 3 (Continued From Page One) -Banning discrimination in the public schools. Another plank backed the controversial question of a constitutional convention. It said: The Democratic party pledges its support and leadership for the holding of a constitutional convention. planned and conduct^ in a manner Which will result In needed reform based on Democratic action.” The plank also took a stand opposing a suggestion that delegates to any constitutional convention be elected on a nonpartisan basis. ■ (W Tra ^Baltimore IBlimarck .. . _ 34 Bravntvllk 10 03 MUwaukw . 34 ButUlo IS 13 MInneapoHt . 30 Chlrato 30 31 New Orirani 10 -I Mtai (A» rrtordfd downtown' Hl|he«t Umpfraturt . ... l.oweat Umperalur* ......... t4e»D tamparature , Wtatber—Snow, 3 30 Paltaton 13 -II 10 Phoanla 13 41 -0 PUttburyta 3i II 31 St. touTa r* ‘ 11 8. Pranclaeo ( AP PlMtafax J NATIONAL WEATHER — R will be clfar or partly cloudy . over molt of thh nation tomgbt, with cloudy skies and rain in v«astem Texas and aouthem. Florida while showers are forecast from Washington and Oregon eastward to Idaho. There will be some snow flurries in tito mountains from Montana southwrard IcTimJ !r fo northern New Mexico,' in northern New York, northern New jE^a^and and westerii Petirartv^. said. Police arrested Barr laW at his home. Witnesses to the acci^nt got his license number as he it' scene, police said. Stick With Swainson at Dem Convention OPPOSITION QUITS When the Oakland 142-delegate caucus finally got under way, Mrs. Phillips graciously introduced Mrs. 1 .(iiiAn Barrett, a suburban Moiunt aemens beautician, w nounced she had quit the contest and pledged "all my support and cooperation to Harriett. ” She was warmly applauded as she stood arm-in-arm with Mrs. Phillips in front of the cheering caucus. It meant sure victory today tor Mrs. PhUlips, who nearly a year ago in the same hotel bnll-room chalked up her first vie-‘tory for her ww arm of" the county party long dlsantlslled with the so-called old-guard leadership under former Chaiminn Carlos G. Richardson. Richardson didn't attend the caucus, nppaivntly discouraged by the slippery roads between Pontine and Grand RnpMs. Mrs. PhlUips was being escorted »m caucus to caucus by her cam-manager, Sherwo^ Coibum ik Park. She missed the parll-procedure tangle that the election of the four state ce^al members. the nonpaying state central positions Each of Michigan’s 18 congressional districts elects four every two years. LATE BIDS FAIL Opponents said this was taking away powers usually vested in the delegates, and would virtually assure election of the four "recommendations” being supported by the county committee lenders. It worked out that way, but only after some of the "leftout” candidates made an 11th hour bid to overturn the slate. It had been endorsed TTiursday night in a meeting in Pontiac by the officers of the Oakland County AFL-CTO CouncU. A new mSgiber of the delegation is Aldo vagnozl, recuntly appointed editorXof the Michigim AFL-CIO, succeeding Ted Ogar, who became Gov. John B. Swain’s press secretar>^<;^errlng to the drawn-out electioiKDrocedure, he verbally spanked other delegates "for bickering o^r such minor things.” "I can see why you can’V get the Democratic majorities in rt county,” Vagnozzl said. Saying was “greatly disappointed” what he was witnessing for the The candidates bid for votes before the caucus last night. One contest, that lor Michigan State University Board of Trustees, nearly caught the-Oakland delegation in a bind. They had dorsed incumbent C. Allen Harlan ol Bloomfield Township at their county convention two weeks but arrived -here to hear some rumbles of dissatisfaction against Harlan by some other Democrats. 1 him They weren’t too sold o they said, because he and incumbent Dr. Cimnor D. Smith weren’t ready to endorse Natiimal Committeeman Thomas H. E. Qulmby for MSU secretory. No ^tch on the endorsement, however, developed at the caucus. The Ubor element ol the party, as It did to helping Mrs. Phillips push through her itote ot nation-si convention delegates tost May, again proved to swing the big stick. S<»n after most of the Oakland delegates and alternates arrived in the Furniture Oty yesterday, a movement to upset'Mrs. Shpiece’s chances of election was under Vay. It was led by those sporting "Fae Weiss for state central” badges. Just after Harlan, believed before Pino came on the scene to be the only “favorite son” for state office, walked out of the Oakland caucus, I^no strolled in. With an apparent dig at Harlan’s voting record against some party policies, Pino asked the delegates when they vote for who will be nominated today to ask themselves ‘whether this man is a Democrat, and secondly whether he is a loyal Democrat. Backers of Mrs. Weiss, an Oak Parit housewife, said she was “more deserving” of the job than Mrs. Shpiece, who most local delegates knew little about. One member of the screening committee said Mrs. Shpiece "kind ol came put of the blue.” SHE DECLINES But all efforts of the “I’m for Weiss” draft committee proved fu^ tile. When her name was placed in nomination against Mrs. Shpiece by James E. Seeteriin, Waterford Township clerk, Mrs. Weiss shocked her supporters with a muffled "I decline.” Mrs. Shpiece had it sewed up and the Oakland delegatiim ad-J4ranied for sleep or more “cate cuatog” before today’s meeting to decide which of the many candidates lor U statewide educational and Judicial posts the third large delegatton at the oon-^i^Hon would vote tor this after- County BOP Holds Key to Chairman (Continued From Page One) John R. (Ja^k) Stiles of Grand Rapids and Robert J. (Jack) McIntosh of Port Huron. The fourth announced candidate, State Central Committee member Gordon E. Gable of Ypsllanti, showed no great strength but said he was staying In the race. IJoyd L. Anderson, R-Wnterford Township, and Raynaond Baker (R-Southfleld). Many Oakland delegates hesitated to support Van Peursem tit he clarifies his stand on con- Oaktond Count}' Oialmian Arthur O. EIHott Jr. npparently could hai-e had the chairman- The party’s resolutions committee adopted a vague con-con plank, neither endorsing nor onxMing the proposed convention. Nevertheless, he was approached by party leaders during the early hwrs of the morning and urged reconsider his decision. He refused. WONT CALL SHOTS Elliott wasn’t calling the shots in the county’s delegation. He was letting his peo|de flounder their way toward their own decision. With no boss to guide confused ddegatlons, many state legtsla* tors were working hard on them to get behind Van Peursem. Is Van Pesnem's camp were 8tato Senator Farrel E. Kobhrta, fUtoUand, add Stole Reps. The watered-d4>wm plank will please the “OM Onaid” elements of the pnrty, but prtrjM thf) more llbernl delegntioas, say Oakinnd Snow Buries NYC, Afflicts Seaboard Should Van Peursen declare his support of con-con, according to party sources, there is a good pos-sibiUty that many liberal delega-including Oakland’s — ^ join his camp. Four Oakland candidates seemitd assured of party nominations They are James C. Zeder, of Bloomfield HlQi, retired C3irysler Cwp. vice president, for University of Michigan Board of Regents; James C, Covert, of Waterford Township, superintendent of Royal Oak schools, for Stole Board of EMweation; and Thnnas B. Adams, president of co.r ity Board of Lathrup Campbell-Ewald for Wayne State Ui ol Governmrs. Incumbent Supreme tlce Harry F. Kelly of ‘ was a shoo-in to win second eight-year ternK, SEVERAL AFFILIATIONS In addition to his duties at the university. Dr. Dreyfus has written magazine articles concerning television and radio. His affiliations include the National Association of Educational Broadcasters, Broadcast Pioneers of America, Speech Association of America and Phi Beta Kappa. James L. Cameran Jr., president of the ^’riends of the Library, said all members have been invited to the program. Other interested persons, he said, are welcome to secure membership to the organization, which makes them eligible to attend future programs. As part ol its program ol indoctrination in the congregational heritage ol America, the Pilgrim Congregational Qiurch of Binilh^am will have as its sermon topi^Sunday “The Religion ol Abraham Lincoln.” oped when Oakland delegates foimd that 32-year-oM Ed Ptoo, assistant superintendent of the Madison Heights-Troy launphere School District, hailed from their oonnty — Royal Oak. Ptoo pitted himself against the older (S4) Harlan for the trustee nomtoa- The Harlan-Pino contest would be decided by the 1,762 delegates the Ovic Auditorium floor today. In the race for state central potions. Lawrence and O’Brien were unopposed. O’Brien won a spot on when former congressional candidate James G. Kellis, one of the original nominees, declined this past week saying he didn” have the time. He was caucus chairman last night. Mrs. Brinkman, how/ever, was opposed by Mrs. WllHam Clafk of Bloomfield Township and Mrs. Donald OUlmore of Pontine Brtokmnn celved W votes; Mrs. Clark, 38; snd Mrs. Oillmore, U. TTie voting was completed by roll call open ballot after delegates eluded a heated discussion on a motion to vote by secret ballot made by one ol Mrs. Weiss’ supporters, which was defeated 78 to Mrs. Weiss said ^ declined “for the good of the party.” (>ther9Jjfc the previous votes were going for the slate nominees. The speaker will be James K. Flack, pro\1stonal chairman ot the newly organised church and an anthority on Lincoln apd the a\11 War. The church service and Sunday School will be held at 11 a.m. the auditorium of Showcase L 136 Brownell St. A brief congregational meeting and fellowship coffee session will be held following the service. Birmingham Chapter 220, Order [ the Eastern Star, will sponsor _ card party 12:45 Monday at the Masonic Temple. A lunch will be served. Proceeds from the program will go toward several of the oirganizd-lion’s projects, including the Can- Weather Permits President's Tots to Fly to Capital WASHINGTON (UPD-The stopped falling, the sun came out and President and Mrs. Kennedy decided today that it was time bring their children home from Florida to their big new house. They were scheduled to fly to Washington with their nurses Friday. but the third blast of snow to hit the capital in as many weeks forced postponment of the flight aboard the Kennedy family plane, also named the (toroline. The President, who waited until h i 8 morning before deciding whether to order the flight, planned to go to National Airport with Mrs. Kennedy' at 4 p.m. (Pontiac Time) to greet the chil- Soviet Mag Knocks JFK MOSCOW (JN — A Soviet magazine criticized' President Kennedy in strong terms today and said his State of ti)o Unton message contained "irksome cold war echoes. A muskeg is a lake of vegetation that has failed to decay entirely due to acidity, low temperatures, and the absence of oxygen. LOUISE H. TUOMEY Service tor Louise H. Tucuney, 72, of 327 Southfield Road, Birmingham will be held at 11 a.m. Monday at Christ Church Cran-brook. Cremation will follow In White (3iapel Memorial. Her body is at the Manley Bailey Funeral Miss Tuomey, a former Detroit school teacher and librarian, died yeirterday following an illness of GLENN H. GRIFFIN Named to Help Tl Glenn Griffin Will Head Special Gifts Division in $650,000 Campaign Glenn H. Griffin of the Sparks^ Griffin Funeral Home has been enlisted as chairman of Special Gifts Division in the Pontiac YMCA’s $^.000 expansion program. Griffin’s appointment as head of ne of the two special gifts divisions was announced today by Robert M. Critchfield, general chairman of the forthcoming fund-raising campaign. Critchfield said Grlftto’s division will tocliide the soliettsUon of approximately 125 prospects throughoat the Pontiac ares to its raising of part ot the funds which the “V” needs to expand facilities at iSl Mt. Clemens St. Long active in Pontiac dvic affairs, Griffin, who lives at 106 Ogemaw Road, has served on the board of directors at the “Y” and is a past president of the Pontiac Board of Education, of which he a member. He is a past president of the Pontiac Kiwanis Qub, the Community Chest, and has held several positkms In the Pontiac Area United Fund (xganization, of which the "Y” is a member agency. Among his other activities, Ortflln is a past president of the Pontiac Area Chamber ol Com- ‘The need lor more YMCA fadl-ities in the lace of the growing school enrollment is obvious,” Griffin said. 'We need full YMCA programs to augment our school programs. In addition, our YMCA provides activities for the wlxde family and makes a unique contribution to the solidarity of our community.” Griffin said some 30 men will work within the divtsibn. One of the main features of the proposed YMCA expansion, according to Critchfield will be an instructional swimming po(d which will permit more effective teaching in life-saving and basic swimming classes. $700,000 Bond Defeated Reject ^evy in Romeo By LEE WINBORN Voters in the Romeo Community Sdiool District yesterday turned a $700,000 bond issue for (^assroom construction and expan-sum. A millage tax levy for to>er-ation also was vetoed by a smaller the four-mill levy last March by a vote of 633 to 533. Breaking tradition, voters in the Romeo precinct rejected the millage proposal instep of passing it as th^ did the smaller tox levy last March. (Continued From Page One) Washington and another inch was expected today. Defease secretary Rolrert S. MidVamara was forced to caimel a IligM to Omaha, Neb., to Inspect the Strategic Air Conmiand The proposal, which would have [flowed the board of education permission to bqrrow $TD0,0(n tar construction of M new classrooms, was defeated ^ to 415. In addition tiM .board was dented perinlsntoa to Inorease the miDage to pay oil banes hy s veto of C71 to 481. J(ton A. Hannah, chairman of tiw Federal Civil Rights (tonunisstoa, prevented from keeping White House aiq^ototinent to retain hb post Abo rejected was a i _ a three-mill (qmattonal toxNi would have been levied for 7 y Thb propositton lost by a 603* 1 563-vote margin. wort that he wwild thenoer- Elementary School, install t under the Ketmedy Inboard had presort tnei^ ^ ^ h»aHng pUnt at tl i unoer me itotmeoy ^ of sev^ other rooms in tl the current “stopgap" levy of four miUs which expires thb year. Voteijp in the disbief approved that the board will meet Feb. 9 to decide its next move. He said less voters had, turned out yesterday than in the special election last Marrti. Abo contrary to previous voting paltcras, voters to Waahtog-of yMterdsy’s The proposed school expansion program would have included a new seven-classroom elementary school and site. Seven ebssrooms and a special education room also would have been added at both the Junior and senior high schools. I ■ Supt. T. ^FilppuU Wd Udw % NOTICE PLEASE! Yesterday in the Downtown Park and Shop ad we were listect as being one of the stores open Monday evenings. StHTy ... we are not. We are open Friday evenings to 9 DICKINSON’S Men’s We«r J' Dr. Marbach Bring Message ^ltfm4Y Bethany Youths Usher, Dr. William H. Mai bach wUli preach his last sermons as pastor of First Presbyterian Church at services Sunday morning. Pastor of the church for 30 years, he wiU| speak on “A Band of Men Whosej Hearts Got Touched,” i Oakland Ave. Youth to Speak Decade of Destiny, Title of Talks by Three Young People Sunday Morning Youth Sunday will be observed at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church tomorrow with the general topic ' Decade of Destiny.” * ♦ A Gary Bowes wiU speak on “How Is This a Decade of Destiny.” at the 10 a.m. worship hour. Other speakers will be Kathy O’Brien with the subject “How Can thcak of Ihe customs and itcedS|tliey have not already vbecn ap- Concluding a week-long observ- "Conflict," a full-color film de-'ol •l*Pan at both the Suiida.v School proached. ance of Youth Week, young people P'cting the development of poHti-l^t 1® and worship service fol i Vestrymen chosen at the annual of Bethany Baptist Church will cal intrigue in Jerusalem whlchlJcwing at 11:15. | parish meeting include Geage R, conduct worship services at both leads to the Crucifixion will beiM;i^ hopE P'oost, Arthur Raisch, Jonathan M. .u. „ servicesSun-|sho«mat 7 p.m^Sui,he door will be Robert Smith andj!^ member^ip parchment. ^i^-Ihe Tnumph Singers. Indians, without remuner- jnere the Marbachs two sons. WH- ation. liam and Robert, were born. Outside of the local church, Dr. Alter seven years in Jaekson ;^‘®'''’«®h « ® member of the Uni-v’Ule be was railed to River Michigan Presbyterian Forest. IH. and in Febniarv IMl Corporation, and of the For-he came to First Presbyterian lf‘«" Missions of the United Prea-'bytenan Church, U.S.A. A member of the Rotary Qub, In the small town of Omena on he ha* been active in many civic the snore of Traverse Bay, tbe, projects pai'ticularly those of a Marbachs have spent their v^- phiUnthropic or social nature. Sponsored by the Men' ENTIRE SE.MINARY , Club I In September 1912, Dr. Marbach Evangelist BiUv Waiker'wrii MarDacn 'The Missifig Christian' Launch Study of Unity Chri.Ln ChuTch .. wi^LTM y®<^« >"®d® « trip to Europe, nlv Russia and the Hdy Land and on Iil.1,^" Detroit. the'Sept. 1,1915 he married the former spea^ , TTie judge should not be young: he should have learned to know evil, not from his own soul, but from late and long observation of the nature of evil in others: knowledge should be his guide, not personal experience. — Plato. Dr. Marbach began his ministry at the Odell Presbyterian Church in Marshall. Mo., near the Missouri Valley College where he often During World War I he resigned i invited Breakfast at Providence i- *« * * » i Guest Pastor to Preach The entertainment committee of Bishop Elzy Young of Cincin- The Pike Street Chuix’h of God ITHACA N Y a ski nm cm will feeturo a film entiUed "The ™CA. N. V 510.000 Cor-Missing Christian " at 7 p.m. to- University study of the move-day'at the church, East Pike and toward unity within the Oiris-Anderson streets, ! l'®n church has been launched un- Revival services will continue‘'*®'' direction of the Rev, Ewell J. next week with Rev. and Mrs.!^®®P". ® Presbyterian, and the James W. Childress of Portland,!^®'’- Richard T. Tormey. a Cath-Ore. conducting the meetings. Thej®*’® P”®®* visiting pastor has also trained the' a * * ®* '‘■®“ ®® K*:®®P ®'"gers in The study is entitled "The Etxi-iCommunion will be conducted b'ylThursday night. The Rev. R. of the college president. special numbers. The public is■ menical Movement: The Search forHhe Rev. Claud Goodwin at 7:30|Corr. pastor, said the public Unity m Chnstendom." p.m. 'invited. jices are held at the Pine Lake lEHementarv School on West Long tor Christ." an ,uke Road other episode in the award-win- Life of St. Paul’ series, will be shown at 8 p. The film begins with Saul's return to his home town of Tarsus. There, he waits for 10 years for a sign from God that the time has for him to fulfill his mission. Included is a sequence showing him collecting money for grain to alleviate famine in Jerusalem. Qiui'ch School meets at 9:4^ m.: and the five youth groups and Adult Forum meet at 7 p.m. Plans for another confirmation class are arranged. The pastor will teach the class at 9:.30 a.m. each Sunday starting Feb. 19. "Christian Faith and Purpose” will be the theme. The annual meeting of the Detroit Association of Congregational Churches will be held at 4 p. Sunday with dinner following at 6 The Pine Hill Chureh expects to have 12 unofficial delegates at the meeting, the pa.stor said. Providence Missionary Baptist Church is sponsoring a breakfast from 8 to 11 a.m. Sunday at the 'Church. A sereice of Baptism and Holy! nati, Ohio, will preach ’Great Reriew" at the 8 p.m, worship service in Bethlehem 'Temple, 533 Franklin Road Sunday, healing service is scheduled for A scries of evening services with missionaries as speaker* will begin tomorrow night with Gene Purdy, speaker. A member of the Southfield Unit-' ed Presbyterian Church, Miss Purdy was a teacher in mission work at Ezel, Ky. before going to Sialkot City in West Pakistan. The Rev. V L. Lewis is pastor n Mrs. Clolte Jones secretary. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL Carl Methner was elected senior warden at St. Andrew's Episcopal ^ Church at Drayton Plains; Carl ® Granfors, junior warden: F. J. , Mansfield, secretaiy; and Cart Hoffman, treasurei . Jerry Stinson . was chosen head of ushers. TRINITY BAPTIST Pastor Jo.seph W. Moore will J preach from the theme, “Thep Most L'nforgetable Character I! The Rev. Bernard GiU, pastor of Ever Met.” at the 11 a.m. serviceIthe West^urch of the Nazarene Sunday. jin Flint, will speak at 7:30 tonight The second leading of the con-l«i’d at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the dilution will be lead at 5:30 p.m.'First Church of the Nazarene, 60 The pastor will conduct a service. S*®*® St. of Baptism and Holy Communion! A graduate of Olivet Nazarene Flint Pastor to Speak at First Nazarene at 7 p.i CHRIST CHI Rt H CRANBROOK Jack Petherbridge of Christ Church Cranbrook suggests wishing to join a nei_ hood Bible study class dOnng Lent might get in touch with him if College, he will be assisted in Youth Week services by Winston Pike of Mariette who will be in charge of the music. Participating in the Sunday evening worship hour will be tiv? choir, church orchestra and Mr. Pike as soloist. You Are Invited To Our OPEN HOUSE Tomorrow February 5-12 Noon til 6 P. M. Our new construction and remodeling project is now completed. We are very proud of the results and deeply appreciate the excellent cooperation of our contractor and all the allied trades. We feel that we now have the most spacious and finest funeral establishment in the area. We have incorporated many of the newest inovations in our field for the comfort of those we ^erve. Our expanded facilities enable us to serve six families, each in complete privacy. We think you will also like the tasteful room decor. So many residents of our community have expressed such an interest in our project, we feel an open house is in order. We want to take this opportunity to extend an area wide invitation to our open house on Sui|iday, Feb. 5, from noon until 6 p.m. If you find you are unable to attend on this date, we will, of course, be happy to have you inspect the new facilities at your convenience. • faffed by well trained and sincere men • Affiliations for nation-wide service • Centrally located • Seating capacity for over 300 • Parking for 75 Cars s# Completely air-conditioned • Hammond organ • Color pictures of all flowers (.xclutir. ..trie, in ftoniiacl • Charges comparable to the most reasonable “THOUGHTFUL SERVICE” • TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE yOU: 4< WUUaau St. S5M Anbuni Rmtd , Pnntinc FE 2-SMl Anbnni Helfliti ULt-tl THE PONTIAC PRESSj, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1961 Today’s Television Program *^^Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subjicj^o changes without notice CteMd 7-WXSS-TV 4-WWJI-TV TOMOBTS TV HIGHLIGHTS C:M (3) San Frandsco Beat (4) (Color) Oorge Pierrot (7) Motor aty GoU (9) Popeye C:M (3) Highway Patrol (4) F nt.) (7) Christian SoJence. (9) Oral Roberts. f:U (7) Armchair Adventure M:M (3) This Is Ihe Life. (4) Color) Cartoon Stptybook (7) Faith for Today. (9) cathedral of Tomorrmr tails (4) Industry on Parade. ia:M (2) Felix the Cat. (4) Air Force Story. (7) Ricky the CIo«ra. lt:4B (4) Americans at Work ll:N (4) Mr. Wizard (7) Campy’s Cpmer (9) Christophers 11: IS (2) Uttle Lulu. ll:Sa (2) Union Pacific. (4) Quiz 'Em. (7) Championship Bowling. (9) Robin Hood H) Starlit Stairways (9) Mackenzie's Raiders 7:Sa (2) Death Valley Days -(4) People Are Funny (7) Decoy (9) Explorations 7: SI (2) Perry Mason (4) (Color) Bonanza (7) Roaring 20s •:N (2) Checkmate (4) Tall Man (7) Leave It To Beaver (9) Nation's Business S:U (9) Ted Lindsay 9:M (2) Checkmate (cont.) (4) Deputy (7) Lawrence Welk (9) Red Wings Hockey 9:sa (2) Have Gim. Will 'Travel (4) Nation’s Future (7) Welk (cont.) (9) Hockey (cont.) 1I:N (2) Gunsmoke (4) Nation's Future (cont.) (7) Boxing (9) Hockey (cont) 11:11 (9) Juliette 11:91 (2) Sea Hunt (4) Jotmny Midni^t 11:4S (7) Make That Spare (9) rang Whyte 11:M (2) News (4) News (7) Play of the Week (9) News 11:11 (9) Weather, Sports 11: IS (2) Weather (4) Weather. 11:M (2) Sports (4) ^xutS (9) Movie: "The L^ Wait' (1954). An amnesia victim returns to the home town he left two years before. Anthony ()ulnn, Gene Evans. 11:11 (2) Movies: 1. "Les Miser-ables" (Italian. 1947). Adapted from Victor Hugo's mous novd of a relentless police inspector. Gino Cervi, Valentina Owtesa. 2. "Mama Loves Papa'' (1945). A milk-Bop employe company finds his wife reading a book on bow to help hubby become successful. Leon Errol. U;9I (4) Movies: "Leave Her to Heaven" (1945). Disregarding the warnings of friends, a man falls In love and marries. Come] Wilde, Gene' Tieniey, Jeanne Crain. 2.1 "The Return.” A war corre- S:00 (2) I Love Lucy SUNDAY AFTERNOON 13:N (2) Detroit Speaks. (4) U of M Presents. (9) West Point U:ia (2) Press Conference (4) Builders' Showcase. (7) Pip thexKper. (9) Men of Ahupolis. 1:M (2) Movie: "Vii^ibl^ Lady' (1938). A cabaret Mngei meets a youthful colh^a^ro feasor. Ginger Rogers, June Stewart. (4) Bold Journey. (7) World Adventure Series. (9) Movie: ‘'Go into Your Dance" (1935). An irresponsible Broadway star finds he can't get work so he decides to produce a show hiiqself. A1 Jolson, Ruby Keeler. 1:98 (7) Issues and Answers t:t0 (4) Capt. Gallant (7) Meet the Professor 9:91 (4) Bowling Stars (7) Dir^ion '61. (2) Sunday Sports Spectacular. 9:00 (7) Youth Bureau (4) NBC Opera , 9:90 (7) Roundup USA (9) M o v i e: “This Man's Navy” (190. A Navy man is assigned to train young recruits for the manning of blimps during World War II. Wallace Beery. (2) Palm Springs Ckilf (7) Championship Bridge 4:90 (7) Paul WincheU 6:00 (4) Omnibus (7) Matty’s Funday Funnies 6:90 (2) College Bowl (7) Rocky and His Friends (9) Men Into Space SUNDAY EVENIN(. 9:91 (2) Jack Benny (7) Islanders I (3) Candid Camera (4) Loretta Young. 10:91 (2) What's My Line (4) This Is Your Ufa. (7) Winston Churchill 11:01 (2) News. (4) Nesn. (7) Movie: "AU Quiet on the Western Frdnt" (1930). Seven idealistic students Join the German Army, Lew Ayres, Louis Woiheim. (9) News 4:00 (4) Dinah Shore (7) Rebel. (9) Movie: ance” (1984). The poetess Elizabeth Barrett is courted by poet Robort Browning- Norma Shearer, Fredric March, Charles U:ia (9) Weather, ^lorts. UiU (2) Weather. (4) Weather. (2) Sports. (4) Sports. (9) Movie: "When I Grow Up” (1951). A young boy tries to make up his mind whether or not to leave home. Bobby Drisc(^, Martha Scott, Robert Preston, Henry Mmgan. 11:96 (2) Movie: "Those Endearing Young Quums” (1945). Four people become involved in a romance. Robert Young Laraine Day, Ann Harding. 11:90 (4) Movie: "The Black Book' (1949). Robespierre starts a reign of terror. Robert Cummings, Arlene Dahl. MONDAY MORNING 6:00 (4) Continental (3assroom ;:S6 (2) MediUtkms i;4l (2) On the Farm Front f:U (3) TV OoUege 7:M (4) Today . (7) Funews 7:99 (2) B'wana Don. (7) J(9mny Ginger. 9:16 (2) Captain Kangaroa 9:99 (7) Movie 9:01 (2) Made (4) I Married Joam. 9:99 (4) Ed Allen 9:61 (7) News. 9:M (4) Fnye Elizabeth. 11:00 (4) Say When. (7) Jack LaLanne 19:98 (9) Billboard. 19:99 (4) (color) Play Hunch. (7) Divorce Hearing. (9) Chez Helene (9) Nursery SchoM Time. (2) I Love Lucy. (4) (Color) Price Is Right. (7) Morning Court. (9) Romiier Room. 11:90 (2) Clear Horison You kZ STAIRWAY TO NOWHERE—A ship's boarding ladder stands frozen in the ice in a waterfront canal at Buffalo in Lake Erie. The ladder was left when a grain freighter was towed from AT PkctoUs its harbor moorings to be unloaded. Buffalo and most of upstate New York have been Uvifad in a steady subzero freeze lor several days. TV Features spohdent is being pursued by a Red agent forcing him write propaganda for the Communists. Maureen O'Sullivan. SUNDAY MORNING 7:66 (2) Meditations. 9:00 (2) Maas for Shut-ms. 9:10 (9) Billboard. 9:16 (9) Sacred Heart. 9:90 (3) (3uisto|4)ers. (9) Herald of Truth: 9:66 (4) News. 9:00 (2) Court of Health. (4) Cbmrh at the Oosa-roads. (7) Understandini Our World. (9) Temple Baptist Church. 9:16 (2) To Dwell Together. 9:99 (2) Detrdt Pulpit (4) Catholic Hour (4) ((jolor) George Pierrot (7) State Trooper (9) P<^ye. 9:91 (7) Wah Disney. (4) George Pierrot (cont.) (2) Twentieth Ontury (9) Talk Back (4) (Color) Shirley Temple (9) Movie: "Tarzan’s Magic Fountain” (1948). The : fives' "fountain of youth” threatened by commercial exploitation. Lex Barker, Brenda Joyce, Albert Dekker. (2) LaasM 7:90 (2) Dennis the Menace (7) Maverick 9:00 (2) Ed Sullivan (4) National Velvet 9:30 (4) Tab Hunter (7) Lawman (9) World of Music. '0:00 (2) Theater By Uoited Press International Saturday COLLEGE BASKETBALL, 4:30 p.m. (2). The Michigan Wolverines play host to the nation’s top cage team, the Ohio State Buckeyes at Yost Field House in Ann Arbor. PERKY MASON, 7:30 p.m. (2). he boss’ son (Tony Travis) makes a play for the office secretary (Andra Martin). After the girl flees from his lonely beach house, he is foimd stabbed to death. BONANZA, 7:30 p.m. (4). Adam Chrtwright (Pern^l Roberts) trav-eli to Mexico to return the "dead” son. of a nearly blind neighbor. Adam encounters a gunman, a hostile town, and a beautiful girl (Ziva Rodann.) (color) CHECKMATE, 8:30 p.m. (2). Dick Shawn stars as a TV performer who denounces a retired --Toiday's Radio Programs-' wxTz nsw) wiBK (isw) wppn (imd CKLW. Alb. Tlmt WPOH. CkadteUfM ::M—WJK. Uoodi WWJ. Wonitor WXTZ. J. Bebutikn CiaW, Bob Staton WJBK. J»ob. BtUboj WCAR. Coornd WPON CbthoUc Navi 7:10—WJH, Town UtatUtf WPOH, Bob Lark s;ta—wra. srnpiuar • :M—WJIt. nataiiM t-WJS,'Daaca Tim* Il:as-WJR. Nawi WWJ. Hewi ll:St—WJR, Danet Tima ■imOAT IfOBNINQ 8:tb—WJR. Farm Rarttv CKLW. Album Tlmt WJBK, Brotbarbood Rr. CKLW. Mareb et Paltb WJBK. CmcUM Roar WCAR, Ntwi, Woodlint , WPOH, Bundaz Bercnada 1:SS—WJR, Parm Porum WWJ, kCarbaer-t Cbureb WXTZ. Outat Star CKLW, Bautbar Tab. WJBK, Protaatant Hour WPOH, Bplfflopal Hr. CKLW. Tour Woribln Roui WJBK, R/rnna Wt Lnt WPOH. Kcbcaa of Calvair S:SS—WJR, Renfro Valley WWJ. Hewt. Muele WXTZ, Rertral Hour CKLW. PooUac Baptlat > Ood WJBK. Sacred WCAR, Back WPOH. SL Ju SibS^WjR. Heva. Baldwin WWJ. Croaaroadi Cburib WXTZ. Radio Btbl* CKLW. Br‘h*ada Tamrib' WJBK, Hawai Bt. Pranda WCAR, Rewa, Patrick WJBK. Warid Tomorrow WPOH. Bun. Sarenadt tSWS-WjR Rymna WWJ. Radio Pulpit WZVZ. BoaUlii WlBSl CRLW, Radio hlUt WJBK, Bowa. Bplieopal WPqw^ kmmnnual Bopt. l6:SP—WJet, Chapel Bow CKLW. Orel Roberta WJBK, Town BeU WPOH. Bra. Bopt., R*vt l:tP—WJR, Layraen’t How WPOH. Central klethodli II.SO—WJR, Salt Lk. Choir WXTZ. Cbrietlan Action CKLW, Rewa. Anglican WJBK. net. SpoAt SVHDAT APTSKNOOH lt;aa-WJR. Hewe. Oueat WWJ. Hewt, Lynker WXYZ. Sunday Beet i;ao—wjK, sun. nuppiemcni WXTZ. Hewi, Sun. Boat l;0»-WJR. RI-PI RoUday i-WPOH, Waraaw Con’et. t:SS-WPOR Clark DavU StOP-WJR, Percy Paltb WWJ, Det. Symphony WPOH, Darla. Rawa *1. Logan et. RlgMlfhM CKLW. Hewt. Knowlea S:SP-WJR._________ WWJ. Hewt. Mayor WXTZ. Sunday Baot WJBK. Bundar Bounda WC/R. Rawa, Logan WPOH. BoundtUgo CKLW. Ron Knowita Iits-WJR, Bpaotm WWJ. Moot Proaa CRLW. Chrfd'phno. 7WP-WWJ, Howe, t____ CKLW. Radio Church WCAR, r --------- lilS-WCAR: Hewt, .Tbemaa CKLW, Word of Uf* WCAR. Hewt, Thomai WPOH. Caady Calling CKLW, Reriral WJBK. Hewi, Stereo WPOH, Caeey CalUng WPOH, Jerry Olten. Hewi P;W—WJR. Requeat, cont. CKLW. Orott* Pt. Bpat. WXTZ. Sunday Beat WCAR, Hewe WPOH. Jerry OUea WJSt Hewt. Concert WXTZ, Truth Hrruld CKLW, Hr. of DecUlon 0;SP-WJR, Aek Profeaaor WWJ. BUmul Light WXTZ. Reriral 11:00—WJR. Schubock. Htwi WWJ. Hewt, Monitor WXTZ, Bun. Beet l:SO-WJR, Hewe. Mualt WWJ, Rewa, Mualc CKLW. Album WJBK. Adoleicenta wxn, leaue* and Anawtr _____ .....1, Ag-clt. WWJ, Hewa. Roberta WXTZ, Fred Wolf CKLW. Parm Rewa WJBK, Hewe, Parra WCAR, Hewe, Sheridan WPOH. Chuck Lewie 0:SO-WJR. Mualc Rail CKLW. Kpa Opener WJBK, Dally Blblt . WKOi. Early Bird T:t0—WJR. Hewa, Mualc WWJ, Hewa, Roboita WXTZ, Rewa. Wdf CKLW. Hewt, Toby Darld WJBK. Hawt WCAR, Hewt WPOH, Rewa, LawU S'WO-WJR, Howa. Oueat WPON, Oonreraatlon Pteot WJBK, Hewa, Stom 0:00—WJR. Hewi. Murray WWJ. Newt, SUrUna WXTZ, Paul Rarrry, WoU CKLW, Ntwa, Toby Darld lt:0O-WJR. Karl Raaa WWJ, Hewe, Marten*-WXTZ. Braakfait aub c::lw, Jo* Van WJBK. H*«e, CUrk RaM WCAR, Nawe WPON. Jerry Olaen CKLW. Joo Van WJBK, Raid WPON. Uwte , WXTZ, McNotIty U:SO-WJR. Tlmt For Uuale CKLW. Joa Van WPON, Olean, Kawi MONDAT APTKRNOON lt:00-WJR. Nawi, Parm WW4 Hawi, Pyfa WXVz, Hewa, MeNaalty CKLW. Hawt, Van WCAR, Newt, Purit WPON. Man on Bt.. UwU WPOH, Uwlt, Howa l:SS-WPON, (Xaen, Hewa t;0S-WJR, CompoalU WWJ, Maxwall. Mualc WJBK, Laa CKLW, Jot Van WPOH, Oben. Ntwi t:so-ma.w, Htwa, Bhirt sk • :00-WJR, * CKLW. Dartaa WCAR, Ntwa. Bhertdan WPON, , Jerry Olean mobster once too often and finds htm^lf a marked man. HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL, 30 p.m. (2). Paladin (Richard Boone) and four other ixNmty hunters are after former slave Isham Spruce (Ivan Dixon), now ly gunfighter. Paladin meets Spruce and is impressed by the man. NATION’S FUTITIE. 9:30 p.m. (4). Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, (Ret.) and Thomas G. Lanphier, industrialist, debate the subject: "Our Nuclear Arsenal — How Much is Enough?” PLAY OF THE WEEK, 11 p.m. (7). Vlvlca Lindfors stars in a play set in Budapest In 1930. entitled ‘The Emperors Clothes.’ Sunday NBC OPERA 00. 3 p.m. (4). A rebroadcast of last season's production of "Fidelio” with Irene Jordan in the title role. PALM SPRINGS GOLF, 4 p.m. (2). Final four holes of pro competition at the Tamarisk Qxmtry (^lyb, Palm Springs, Calif. ’^OMNIBUS, 5 p.m. (4). "Abraham Lincoln: The Early Years," a newly edited version of the five-part filmed series that was first presented in 1952. twentieth CENTURY, 6:30 p.m. (2). "Ireland: The Tear and the Smile,” Part II. Irish life is discussed by actress Siobhan Mc-Kenna.*Premler Sean Lemass, designer Sybil CbnnoUy and others. DENNIS THE MENACE, 7:30 p.m. (2). Mr. Wilson (Joseph Kearns) trembles at the news that Dennis (Jay Nmth) wants to buy Tommy Anderson’s (Billy Booth's) saxophone. ED SUUJVAN, 8 p.m. (2). Featuring: actress-singer Dorothy Dan-dridge, jazz pianist Eiroll Garner, operatic basso Cesare Siepl, raconteur George Jesael, comedians Tommy Noonan and Pete Marshall and Pete Fountain's Jazz quartet. DINAH SHORE, 9 p.m. (4). Dinah visits Denmark to ihow the various attraefisns in Copenhagen. She meets Ingemar Johansson, the Swe4>anes, some ballet dancers, film start and vaudevilllans. (color) VAUANT YEARS, Chapter VIH in the "Winston CSiurchill Series" concerns Britain’s struggle to con-■- the Mediterranean during rid War II. I Gl Smugglers 'MustPayTaxes U. S. Checking on Those Who Sneaked Liquor in From Cuba Bose in '59 JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) -Military personnel who smuggled liquor into the United 'States from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 1959 are getting billed for customs du-ties-or they soon will. ★ * ★ The U.S, Customs Service said more than 12,000 cases of liquor worth $750,000 were smuggled in aboard military aircraft that year. Customs officers, with the help of the Navy, are checking records of every bottle sdd at the Navy’s Guantanamo Base. So far 1.040 purchases have been traced to flights that landed in Florida at Jacksonville, Mayport, Miami, Sanford, P)^-cola and Key West Another 100 purchases flown to Panama atV, St. Petersbuig and Orlando are being tabulated. ★ ★ A Other purchases went as far iKH^h as Minneapolis and as far west as Texas. The checkup has already brout^t $31,000 in tax payments. If all the bills are collected they will bring in about $300,000 In federal taxes. Pedestrians Will Hove Rear Lights in Reich ANSBACH, Germany (AP) Pedestrians in Ansbach will be issued “cat’s eyes” as a protection against being struck automo-bU^. Comb Northern Utah for Missing Pilot SALT UKE CITY (AP) - Ai air and ground seardi was w dered in northern Utah today tor a missing light plane piloted by William D. Kelley Jr., technical director of the AUegany Instra-ment Oo. of Cumberland, Md. He was alone, as far as anyone knows. Kelley, about 34, attended skms of the American Rodeet Society here thia week. He took off from the Salt Lake City airpnt about midnight Thurs^ and north into a snowstorm in sna 195. His last radio report indicated he was four miles west of Brigham Oty, about miles north of here. Steering-Arm Firm to Leave Detroit for South DETROrr (I) ■— Gemmer Manufacturing Co. announced Friday ft is moving its iteering-arm-maldng operadoB finm its Detroit plant to Qit’i eyes are brooch-type gadg- a new factory at Lebanoo, Terni. ets that Mdne brightly when hit - by automobile lights. The police suggested they be stuck whne in your rear." The expoimrot is beingj tried after an increasing number of ac-ddoits In which pedeetriant walking home late at night have been run dorni from bdihid. and trucks an the only producU made at the Detroit feefflly, where aoo woriwn win be afleeled. means of breathing <• known ni the pogenophon. . • (2) Love of Lite. (4) Trudi (7) Camouflage (9) Snsie (56) Lab 30. • (2) Search for Tomorroar. (4) (cdor) It Cbuld Be Yon (7) Number Pleaae « (9) Mary Mor^ 0 (56) La Douce France 6 (2) Guiding Light 9 (9) News • (4) News 9 (2) My Uttle Margie ■(4) News (7) About Faces (9) Movie 6 (4) Bold Journey 9 (56) Pariez Francais 9 (2) As the World Turns (7) Life of RUey (56) World History 0 (2) Medic (4) (color) Jan Murray (7) Day in Court 9 (2) House Party (56) Neustros Vecinos (4) Loretta Young (7) Road to Reality (56) Tomorrow’s Oaftsmen 9 (2) Our Miss Brooks (7) Queen For a Day. (4) Young Dr. Malone (9) Movie (4) lYom Theae Roots (» Verdict b Yaws. (7) Who Do,You Trittt? (3) Brighter Osqr (4) Make Roqpi ter Dtotey (7) Americaa Bandatapd (2) Secret Staim. (3) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Adventure T^ (») Theater 56 (3) Movie ' (4) George Pterrot (color) (7) Johnny Qbiger (9) Looney Tunes and Jingles (56) Sing Hi-Sing Lo (7) Rin Tin Tin (56) Americans At Work (56) Ncwi (9) Newa SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearing Tests Ftm ParUag at Rear of RMHUiic "Opoa Ertt. br Appobtimtar 143 Oakland FEderal 2-1225 PONUAC, MICH. 24 Hour Sorvico FOR GAS or OIL FURNACES JOSEPH GAUTHIER OR 3-5632 Chandler Heating Co. oa S-4492 oa 3-5632 RCA COLOR TV veet's Radio TV WHY ]^OT? Yes, why not give your home tiectronic' equipment the msinten-•nce It deserves.’ To most people, the TV end radio In their home is their favorite entertainment. Enjoy this entertainment regularly by using the best in professional electronic service, your OAKLAND CCXINTY ELECTRONICS ASSOCIATION service dealers. It costs no more to buy service becked by the skill that only years of full-time electronics service expferience cen produce. 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