Th« W«ath«r V.t. WMtkOT awwa rwtuki Tlwntey. Fair. THE PONTIAC PRESS \ Horn* EdiUon 1 118th YEAR ★ ★ ★ ★ JPONTIAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26. 1060—48-PAGES' > mBM UrnWgattOlUL Gas Blast at Windsor Store Kills 10, Hurts 99 Tired Rescuers Probe Ruins for More Victims Rain, Tottering Roof, Jack, Dick Fighting for Michigan Votes Walls Add Danger, Difficulty to Search WINDSOR, Ont. — Tired, grimy rescue work-era dug iii rain-sctftked ruins today for possible further victims of Tuesday’s gas-triggered store explosion in which 10 or more persons died. Seven bodies were recovered. Another person died in a hospital. Rescue crews worked through the night in near-freezing temperatures to free at least two ' more bodies which could be seen pinned beneath the rubble. Other reports said there were three or more buried. For a time today at the desolate scene rescuers paused in their work for fear a part of the store roof, hanging hinge-like, might fall in on them. Precautions were taken. Sagging wall portions were shored up. At least M persons were treated for Injuries Tuesday. Henry Bird, ciril defease director lor the area, said five store employes u 3 President Kennedy in State Now, Hongs On|jj^Qp Jhyfjday to Report WASHINGTON "nie By The Auoclated Press Tlie two major candidates for the presidency, Demo> White House refused today :cratlc Sen. John F. Kennedy and Republican Vice Pre»i-to make public a re()ort dent Richard M. Nixon, are returning to Michigan to which Democrats contend i continue their battle for the state's 20 electoral votes, shows U.S. prestige abroad i ★ ★ ★ has declined. Kcimfdy arrived today and Nixon Is to arrive Thursday. Each wa.s to cover ground the other covered In a previous trip. •'Everyone was screaming, everyone saying be quiet.” said Mrs. J. A. Anderson of Windsor, one of about 150 customers and Sum of the People More Stories, Photos on Explosion, Page 22 Wixon Gains on Religion^ clerks who were in the Metropolitan Stores Ltd. buUdlRL Mrs. Anderson said Ae mid-afternoon explosion "just shook the place, and all the lights went off all of a sudden.” She said, "There w'as a big swish as the air cam^ back into the store, or something.” Store manager Joseph Halford, 31, said ^ he was in the subbasement with Charles Ingram, a plumber, and Howard Schram, an electrician, when the blast occurred. !lhe store'A heating plant was' being converted to gas. •*We decided to open the main (gas) line from the streef," Halford aald, "and all we got was air. All of a auddea the gas t ame through. I turned to leave the baaemeot when It exploded." Halford luffered bums on the tece and hands and was reported -in fair condition at a Windsor hospital. A Detroit high school senior was driving his car out of the Detroit-Windsor tunnel, hundred yards across stme, when the explosion occurred. of crazy-Uke, covered with blood,” said S^ldon Safran, 19. "There was this terrific blast. I drove my car through customs without stopping and left it in the middle of the street. The street storm of glass." GRIM SEARCH OONTINVE.H — Rescue workers probe on into the night Tuesday through wreckage of the Metropolitan Depart^ ment Store in downtown Windsor. An afternoon explosion, duridg sr ra*taf*i shopping hour.s. killed at least 10 persons and injured 99. The disastrous bla.st was blamed on a natural gas leak. of State (liristlan A. ilerter and glng himself, the Democratic ticket and Rep. James O'Hara of dlnvtor (leorge Allen of the U.S. the 7th Congressional District. InformailcMi Agency "h«ve deter j, scheduled to attend party rallies at shopping 'mido nlm'laS o^t^L'lII. exec^-^‘o branch." Kennedy will make a brief stop at Campus .Martlus in downtown Uelroll, then go to Hamtramck to give a speech in 9,000-kcal Keyworth Stadium. At 9 p.ni . the Democratic aspirant delivers a speech at the Michigan State Fairgrounds' 8.000-seat Coliseum. It will be r . A . . i carried by WJBK-TV In the Detroit area. Je n3uSI^^nSy« ln“ thel Metropolitan Airport at 10:30 field, but ils exact nature has P '*’ i®*" Ctty never been officially disr’los^. | Nixon will visit seven cities during hts 14-hour stay. A train will take him to Monroe, Ann Arbor, Jackson, Bat- Making clear the \l1iMe House backed lip that stand, the statement said Herter and Allen had acted under policies approved It's U.S. Move in Union Fight j By JOHN KRAFT (Spectat to The FoaOae Preas) Richard M. Nixon is gaining strength from the to - called ligious issue.” About one out of 10 people who have decided to V«e“for the'vide president are quite outspdken in explaining their choice, according to the latest Kraft poll. In South-Illinois, a grade-school teacher who bat decided to vote tor Nixon gave this reply: 'Tm terribly concerned about what ta going to happen to this planet II our expto^g population Isn't somehow halted. Although 1 admire Mr. Kennedy personally, I cannot bring myself to believe that he would support birth control Information far tliooe povertT-strieken eenntriea where tt’t deopemtely nee4e£” And down south, in North Carolina, a tobacco farmer couldn’t have been more explicit. Pulling no punches, he said, "I don’t want a Catholic in the White House! He would have to take orders from Rome.. AntL in ^ no time, ^every ’ Rpliginn rank»-«ixth-in thw Hstjis-offset by -the pe«^ who wrere of reastxis for supporting a Repub-j equally outspoken on this religious Ikan ticket, but there's no denying (Continued on Page 2, Col. Temperature WiI]|Fa||ing CafCfUSheS krea Father of Two as Skies Clear vere liJnnin* e«‘ sortlu«»8e tluL bench would be CathoUc, too!' When all the reasons for deciding to vote for Nixon are grouped, here'a what emerges: REASONS FOR NIXON Nixon experienced ......4*% Adndw hto tern .........«<% Castro’s Cuba to Endure, MSUO Protessor Says Belter domestic pUlfonn . Best nt tntematT relations Kennedy too young ......... Religious Issue ..... Nixon likable .'.......... that one out,of 10 Nixon supporten felt no reluctance in discussing their opposition to the Democratic candidate on religious grounds. But this ohe-in-10 pro-Nixon vote Sl'it. Jolin F". Kennedy ol Mas- ■ .sachiisetts, the Democratic presi-l ^ . idential nominee, has been on the] “« Kalamaioo, Grand Rapids and Muskegon. ; campaign circuit contending thej Party officials said he would speak at each stop. They said paper supports his poeilion thotj j,* accompanied by Rep. Alvin M. Bentley, R-Mlch., . Amokfsirsan raMattilF* In th« urArm * Teamsters' Refusal to Submit Records May Touch Off Test of Law that the document be made] *®***''*^*'®*’*** ®**'^^‘***'* Ipublic. 1 ^ -A A A ^ ^ ! Ills Republican rival. Vice, w w w w w w President Richard M. Nixon has But Hageiiy said the ddcuniont KENNEDY NIXON Is dusaified secret.” , ' L • DCTROrr «jp - Sen John F.l' WITH NIXON TN OHIO i Gouds are expected to disappear crushed to death yesterday after- ...taU .clasfiM ... ... I Geoige E. Woods Jr,, United I States attorney, said he would file A 36-year-old father of two waS|a petition in Detroit Federal Court "What you are asking about,” he told reportars, as he read from woids scribbled on a Tlw n-nrrr-f"t .^s aAMernal, gov w as Hciwuu'vn |p,iper similar to many others that are periodically prepared by staff elements within the United States Information Agency for staff use. It is classified secret. "Under policies approved by tlie President pertaining to internal working papers of the executive to take the offensive today In the court fight over tl»c Department — of Labor’s subpoena of Pontiac i Teamster Local 614 records In its I investigation of possible violations of tlie new Londrum-Giiffin labor I reform act. Kennedy demandeil again today • Vice President Richard M. Nixon that Vice President Richard M. I day that he is equipped to deal Nixon release a secret govei nmeni with &ivict.au»ml«M=.-liChgu«hehev------ siirv-ey showing that 10 nallon.si (,i* opponent is too "incon-consider the United States is be-j Histenf’ to do so. hind the Soviet Union in military The Republican presidential strength. j nominee campaigned across Ohio In search of electoral votes that tonight with, skies becoming clear and fair tomorrow. Temperatures will drop to , 42 tonight and rise to 57 Thursday. Temperatures for the next five days will average near the normal high of M degrees, the weatherman says. Saturday will be a little cooler, but Sunday and Monday will be wanner again. Moming southerly„winds at 10-18^ miles per hour will shift tojiQrlh-westerly tonight. Precipitation will be less than one half inch in showers Friday night. Forty-one was- the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The reading at 2 p;m. was 5fr. noon while working under hia car in the yard of his home in Pontiac Township. _Tlieodore C,___Washam of 4613 Jamm Road w-as underneath hia car making repaira when the wheels slippy off blocks, pinning him to the ground. His body was discovered .three hours later by his wife. She had gone out to call him to go to wortc at the General Motors Fisher Body plant. Her screams summoned a cousin, Carl Boston, from hh home acroos the street. He Jacked the car np and extricated Washam'a body. Dr. John Harrold, deputy coroner. estimated he had been dead demanding that the Union capsc why the disputed records shouldn't turned over. branch of the government, the •retary of stale and the director of the United States Information Agency have determined that this paper will not be made available outside the executive branch.” Hagerty had been told, that Thomas Roderick, a USIA coun-told Congress Tuesday thgt Allen was going to check with the White House for a decision on whether to withhold the report. Hagerty was asked whether Al-Federal Judge Fred W. Kaessjicn had checked with the White had given the locals until 2 p.m.;Mouse and what the decision whs.' yesterday to surrender the rccords^Thc press secretary's .short state-! vriluntarily. ___________ lment_was the answer. , The court action developed from j —---------------- suit brought by the locals. chal-^|_QgQ| Pgblisher Dies Local 114 and Istcal tNinUe-fralL home bleat if Teamster President James R. Hoffa. refused In court yesterdny to open their I9M records to Inspection under the new labor act. •Die Democratic presidential can- might help him make up for the didafe claimed the report has been! York in the suppressed to protect Nixon's as-| ® balloting, sertions that Amerlcnn prestige i- at an "all-time high He said, further, "the present ! sdniinistratlon has consistently ! followed a policy of supprensing important public Infonnatlon." (However, the White House re-fu-sed again today to make public report on American prestige abroad. It is termed a few level staff paper aimllar to others that! •e prepared periodically. I Kennedy mM todsy.^4* n spee<-h delivered in .Mount Lie-mens, that the Defense and Slate Departments, the Inter-nathmat (kwpersttMi Addihifi- Striking at his Democratic rival, Sen. John F. Kennedy, Mxon told a trmlnaide crowd In the rain at (he ateel town of MIddletnwn, Ohio, that hia opponent Jumps from posltton to position on International affairs. Police estimated the crowd at 10.(X)0. which seemed far in excess of the actual turnout. But local newsmen said it was larger than the crowd which previoualy t^assembled to hear Kennedy. In contrast to hia rival, Nixon pictured himself as an experi-I cnced negotiator who knows how lenging the constitutionality of the law. I TOLEDO. Ohio UB-Charles If the court issues the show; McBride. 65. fomer publisher of cause order and tho-Uniotv-fightoltW-Tole^Lcgat-NewsT-diedTues- If m IaatoI fACf t\f fl«A Itotar nt«aKecialist in Latin-American history. he dcicribed himself as a "not complete admirer'' of bearded leader. / ‘ENEMIE8 AOMIT GAINS' . "Certaialy FMel aometimes acts (OontiiKied on Page 2, Ool. 1) ___Even the Civil War Centen- nial Commission, sajd^ was given the authority to classify as secret some of its records, •CO.MMITTEK BMM KKD' A l■on•''■ps,siotl.■tf commiitce was blocked from finding out why high bids were accepted and few ernmrnt conlrftct.s. Kimnecly "You have seen the television picture! of Mr. Khrushchev shaking his fist at me,” Nixon declared. "The way to deal with him is just to be as Arm tor the right its'he is for the wrong.” As Nixon spoke, some mcm- ed many school children—waved signs which read;.^"One Mr. K is enough—win with Nixon.” Nixon told sn umbrella-bcarlng crowd which filled the square In front of the Dayton, courthouse, he believes sought about Um administmtioH ] of economit and technical aid f in India. Laos. Pakistan and Bolivia was cefused highest office.' The Dayton crowd was estimated at 20,000, about the same as Kennedy drew at last week's administration does T appearance there from the same not trust the people,” Kennedy platform, said. "It has kept the unpleas- With the aid of President Eisen-ant truth from them In order hower, Nixon will shoot the politi-to convince them that, as Mr. j cal works in Newr "Yorit next Mxon says, they never had it [ Tuesday, ------------ so good. 'Then he will be Joined by Eisenhower, vie tration has classified (declared secret) three times as many documents as were classified in the entire prev'ioui history of American government.” Kenneth B. Keating in what the Republicans hope will be New York City's biggest ticker-tape reception. Nixon will star that night in a television appearance. In Today's Press g — Republican vice presideb- .. SAMVEL SHAPIRO Dsa Ksrphy Clsrk-IU|lMsr. tial candidate Henry. <:abot Lodge, left, and Mrs. Lodged Mrs. Nbton and Vice Preddent Richa^ Nixon wave from a stand in downtown Cincinnati Twiday as a crowd gathered to greet them. The Lodge and Nixon campaign troUs crossed here in Onciiinati. Nixon got one of the biggest-ovattens of tife campaign by a cheer- led partisan audience packed to the rafteri in the 17.a»aeat Gai^ den Auditorium Tuesday night. There were said to be 10,000 outside, and the crowds praetteafiy nebbed ^ vIco pcosldnt «ad Mrs. Nixon as they arrived. Lo^e introduced NtxlSfl. "6"'kty tit" ttic dccCtofi \ TWO THE FPNTIAC PRESS. VVEPyESDAY, OCTOBER 26. 1060 (^TCuba Here Stay: MSUO Prof ^OanUniMd From P««t Om)' ■Uly wid mkku ridicxiloui state-mkita,'* ha said. "But the living standarda ot thrCuban people have railed ta an enormous de-give -> and everyone who visits Cnlba. Including bitter enemies ot his regime, admit it." He said Castroism is spreading! throughout ^th America, and et-' torts by the United States govern. I ment to contain the Cuban rcvolu- ) tton have ended in failure. He staled diat at the recent meet, ing of the Organization ot Amen can States two foreign ramlsters refused to sign the United .* M. DORCAS -wr Urb^n ret ary of State ChriiUan A. Herter i. VYet. the United SUtes Pre^LScLgUe HS^d Monday duties. His successor as commander of strategic rocket force and «s ert McDowell, onl, ^,y minister is Mar- ot Mr, and Mr.s. j. Moskalenko, 60. com- J o h rr R R Troy. Police said wit-' nesses that Robert, artillery commander on the Ukrainian front in World War If. He was made a candidate member of the Communist party Central Committee in 1952. * * * Marshal Moskalenko member of the Communist party Central Committee. He was an jinfantry commander In the Uk-nine and Csechoalovakia in World War II. Hart Visits Political 'Home' Senator Plugs Kliliis. Jock (Not McNamara) at Bloomfield Hills District, parently thinking j the road was free ( called this a great triumph for this;“'^'^^ * a w^vava of traffic, ran into the side of a , dountry. Tgy northbound car on John R Road ■What finally was adopteirwas IValllGU - Sputh Boulevard, milk-and-water resolution which' Tho driver of the ear. Jacob ronUined no specific mention of Former Vocational .Services di- H. Heimiienter, m. of 47475 Bettv ' Castro and Cuba. And South Ameri- rector of the Pontiac Urban league | «(. 16CTAUATION OK d < an nations quickl> disclaimed the Arnold M. Dorca.s has been ap-i jodiy at the prom-eutor’s I Khrushchev said powihility that the resolution was;Poinlr spy flights by firing nuclear-the General Motors Truck and aimed rockeU at the base from Coach Division. The McDowells which the intruder came, have seven other children, five! WWW boys and two girls. I Nedelin held several Orders of Robert's body is at the Pixley Lenin and other decorations. He Funeral Home, Rochester, I fought on the republican side In (Continued From Page One) issue in supporting Sen. Kennedy. A young rabbi in Connecticut said: It's ridiculous to suggest that Students to Get Holiday Friday Howevtr, Teachers Will Keep Busy at o State Institute in Detroit —- Students in public schools gaiety would be there I too. Of the "good-neighbor' Shapiro said; "It doesn't exist, in South America, they despise — and despise each other." The majority of people in South America make the United States a whipping boy for the appalling misery that exists in their countries, he said. < Showers Splash Mississippi, Lakes Areas MARSHAL MOSKALENKO Poll Sees Nixon Gaining on Religion presidential poHcles. He'll figtit Call Off JC Pumpkin Sale Faced with . criticism at City Hall, the Pontiac Area Junii'lr Cliamtier of Commerce today called off its door-to-door, fundraising pumpkin sale and worrieil about the economic future of lis youth activities, w Tlic organization had failed id ask for $10 permits to conduct the aale. which began Monday, and now thinks' It would be financially unfavorable to fake them out, re- nnrt 001^ Watc|»P«>cket, Jayccc ana ..-...... - ----------- County will get a day off Fiiday. All schools will be closed ermlt educators to attend the 160 State Teachers Institute ir the Masonic Temple Auditorium. Detroit. I The annual regional conference is sponsored by the Michigan Education Association. More than 5,500 teachers and administrators in Oakland County are expected to attend. Chairman of this year's meeting Is lUwco V. Crowell, priarl-pal of Avondale High MmoI. Crowell Is president of MEA Region No. 7. president. 'We were In the wrong and 're sorry," said Watehpocket er a visit to City Hall this for what Ike Demooratie party governor hero In enr etato for several years, and he hasn't tim^ Connectient over to Israel In ^diern California, the wife of a retired policeman said; "I’m' a Catholic and proud of it. I'm proud of the great men we have In the fields of medicine and education. I think it's high time that this country shows the pkI of the world that we all stand together—a Catholic president would do that!” REASONS FOR KENNEDY Better on domeotle losneo .. .66% Kennody llkablo.............11% Admire Ms team .............t*% Don’t like Nixon ...........lt% Understando Inter- national problem......... ■% Kennedy’! experience He’f a CathoUc............... l% In sum, one out of SO people were outspoken In arguing that Sen. Kennedy should be elected for re- before Intend to stay put on the Republican line. Not as many former Stevenson voters do—and it appekrs that Nixon has picked up among the Protestants that had been Democrats. Contrast this with the Catholic vote: Other oUicers arc Mildred Williams. executive secretary; William Prewitt, president elect: Mrs. Louise Dallas, secretary; and Carmen Ginter, treasurer -Featured speakers at the mom-jing session will be Dr. Fred J. I VesrolMi, assiKiate^ professor of Teducation at Mlfhjgan State |vcrsity and MEA president, and By The Associated Press M'chael Ference Jr., execu- Showers splashed across wMe Ji''® ford Motor areas from the u t Great Lakes * scientific laboratory. adn't thought about per-mtts, hadn’t taken them out fo the past, but don't want to start any controversy. We're dropping the door-to-door sale." ★ ★ ♦ City commissioners last night ordered Robert A. Stlerer, assistant city manager, to Investigate the sale after Floyd Cremer. director of Oakland County veteran affairs, complained that the city had refused a pumpkin-sale permit to the American Legion Cook-Nelson Post 20. of which he is a director. Cremer asked why, then, were the Jayeees allowed to sell : pumpkins? It turned out that the Jayeees had never asked permission in the fii-st place. Watehpocket said they hadn't in past years, either. There' wasn't any sale last year. i The health department said s LoL pumjMni came within the re-i the one in 10 voting for Nixon on the same issue but viewing it in a different light But the whole story can hardly be told by figures like these. The question is; What are Protestants, Catholics, Jews and others plan-riing to do in this election a^ what are their preferences? When Kraft interviewers talked to Protestants In the course of the survey, they found that not all of them were voting the way they did four years ago when the choice was Eisenhower or Stevenson. IN 16M PROTESTANTS WHO VOTED FOKi Elaenhower Stevenson Now for Kennedy t% Now for Nixon . .77% 16% TKrlHiy in Blnhlnghain Commission fo Review Parking Lot Assessments Sen. P h 11 i p A. Hart, B-Mich.. viaited Bloomfield HlUs—the Republican city where he got his political start 12 years ago as precinct delefate—to plug for the election of Democratic congressional candidate James G. KeQis. BIRMINGHAM ■esaments on the Island View parking lot will be reviewed by tba aty Oommisaion Nov. 7 at a public hearing. Spbdal as-Uwarded a 18,133 omtract to Dane Approximately $127,000 of the $135,000 for the parking lot behind the Reid Building wUl be lavied against 35 businesses in the'area benefiting frem the improvement. The raraatolng |8,taS will be He also made a concerted pitch by the rtty lor pnrk- for .Sen John F. Kenm-dy .s elec- mrtero. t!o;i as pres dent, but di^'t tay| Thoae to be assessed are located anythirjt abou' Sen, Patrick V.[in an area roughly bounded by McNamara, Tiis senior p.artnor injOa’t Street, ^vine Road, Wood-the Senate, up for re-election. ! wai-d Avenue and the Rouge River, Apparently in reference Congrossmanr William 6. Broomfield, Kellis' opponent, has declined a face-to-face debate, Hart said: “I wUh so mach that tha people of Ihto dloMet coMd oee • FACTORS INVOLVED Three factors are involved in spreading the assessment roll, ac-eording to Clark H. Hagstrom, director of finance. They are distsaoe, menhaa- "If I were running against him I'd have to vote for him," Hart •aid at the $5-a-plate "Dinner With Kellis" at the Kingsley Inn, REPUE8 TO ciunasM In reply to criticism that he had been stressing too much foreign affairs in his campaign talks, Kellis briefly outlined whtre hb stood on fiscal policies and the centralization of power^ He said the record opeako for City Commissioners Don't Rate as Critics administration expenditureo were . „ ^ ^ ^ greater the imtlonal dehtlip- “lied "ito esthetic judgment. The City Commiuion deckled last night not to get Into the business of expressing what ODinmis-sioner Milton R. Henry whimslcal- Elsei Now for Kennedy 4S% 87% Now for NIxoa .. .17% 8% Now uncertalfl .. .$6% 16% The very great swing is occurring among Catholic voters — perhaps enough to balance gain.s the Republican ticket has made on this key issue of religion. Furthermore, this dramatic shift among Catholic voters goes a long way towanla explaining the fact the Democratic ticket has made serious inroads into the Eisenhower strength of four years ago in the industrial states—where the Jewish and Catholic populations are concentrated. a retired Air Force colonel, said Kennedy’s platform 'will mean more expenditures. ★ ★ ★ But he said the party's belief In in accelerated economic growth will help pay for the programs. A k ★ The federal government c provide aid for. the sUtes without fear of federal control if, Kellis said, use of federal funds is channeled through the states. Now ancertaln .. 14% $6% 'those four debates. these three important religious groups: PRESIDENTIAL PREFERENCES Protestants Catholics Jews Kennedy S8% 60^'» 67% Nixon ....5t 3.1 30 I'ncertalB 31 17 13 Religion was dearly an issue In September—before the Impact of the debates had been felt. Which party ticket it hurts most Is difficult to assess exactly. 'It appears to be a toss-up. A survey conducted during the past weekend and very soon to be reported in this column will ‘ into sharp focus the changes which have occurred as a result of thei four debates and of the campaigning conducted during the weeks of I - . McNamara Hits Fund Support for His Race DETROIT (Pl-8enator Patrick A. McNamara told a block party In Dcifolt Tuesday night that he Was getting mtlp financial help for his campaign from the Sena-torlal Cnmnalgn Committee. reflects the division within the party. The Southerners frequently join with the Rrpub'*cans hut We are prepartne to offset that." The City ComtnlMiOB has tion. ♦ A g The project Includes installstkm of a 13-lo^ main on Forest Avenue east 6t Elm, and t-inch aewer and 6-inch water main on Oak Street from Woodward to Midway between Woodward and Hunter Boulevard. A requeet from Beck Ctoan-en. 333 N. Woodward Ave., to along a 56-foot otretch to front of the business has been referred to the city manager for toveoti-gallon. * * * In a letter to the comndMian, J. P. Emmett, president ot the firm, stated that the parking problem in the area has bacome ao ____us that a 25 per cent decrease in sales has been experienced recently. Commissioners decided pursue what Henry called "illusive qualities of beauty.” They unanimously agree avoid what Henry foresaw as a "battle over green and black, for Instance, when we like the color green, but someone else likes black.’’- In an unexpected mood ot harmony, commissioners acceded iHthout objections to demands by Henry and CommiHioner Robert A. Landiythat "discriminatory and arbitrary" features be the proposed measure to let Community National Bank put up metal awnings over the sidewalk around Its Saginaw Street building. After the city clerk stnick out provisions reserving to the eom-mlssion the final say so over "the attractiveness of design” Of such beautifying effects, the mensure torney William A. Ewart was crlti clzed for passages reserving to the commission the final approval of the awning. Anticipating more awnings In n general move to boantify downtown, Henry said the dty was headed for trouble If the commission set Itoelf up as atbitor Of what Is an attraotfvo deoIgB. by a 7-0 vote. Landry also got the permissive measure widened to cover the entire city, not just downtown. He foresaw a time when it might ap-W To T>|SM8fnwg msiT letmiy-Dn Pontiac's eastside. When the amendment was presented two weeks ago, Qty At-38 N. Sagtoaw MISS AMERICA BEAUnBOOK /rs COMPLETif LtornNow MedorH $»nlngrnluilfu»$ • in Now Hslrniytoa • HsIrTrlmmlos 'npa o Msko UgArtlotra • OomplOMlon Caro FREEwm./^ REGULAR a GENTLE a $URER wm f 1 ^9 mim Just one shave with a NEW Schick 3^ed and you’ll never be satisfied iiiiUi any other razor! ____ ______into the lower Mississippi Valley today. Mostly clear Be Happy in Your Work weather prevailed In other parts+- _ ___ _____,____1 of the country. DALLAS, Tex. (L'PU—\ sign nJstriotioM^r'he tnoJs| ■a * * a store on "Ea^flTaiulf .Avenue in|law. which was a subject i Sides cleared in the Northeast; Dalla.i reads: ''SeU-Senicc with nitroversy during the recent Jown-after the season’s first heavy Smile” toWn merchants festival. snow in New York and New Eng-i - ---------------------- . ------ land. Cold air spread from Can-; Prize for Literature The Weather Awarded to French Poet Fsll V.S. Weslhtr Ssma Brpart emmsc aud vtcnnT»-o«Mion ala U4»f sa« mrU Uslfhl Hl|h todi i. Cooltr toBitht. law « — - - - -- Hlffe ST. SosUwri] uHtj, thlfUat !• I TMsr "iir rostUc LoVMl ttmparalur* prtwdlnz I n rlin Thurulsr st Bsiratowa TawearaisrM tA* rtcorOaO dowatowni HI(iMt tomparstur* .......... Lovaat taaperatan ........... ........... STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) —jwhere he became a comultant at Saint-John Perse, a Fi"ench poet]the Library of Congress. iMaisra. and former diplomat now a resi-: W ' k ♦ iiariy usi^r 1^6 United States, today; Perie is the 53rd winner of the was awarded the 1960 Nobel Prize literary prize which has been for literature. ^ awarded since 1901, and the Uth ----- * ★ * 1 Frenchman to win or share inihe Perse, now 73, had been men-[award, tioned for the award 8a long ago as 1956. „ The 18-member Swedish Acad-w|emy of letters, in choosing him for iojthe $43,627 prize, cited "tne soar-iing flight and the proviicatlve j imagery of his poetry which in a u I visionary fashion reflects the con-M ditions of our time." REPORTEDLY DAG’S IDEA U. N. Secretary General Dag .. Hammarskjold, a member of the ^‘•• academy and a student of modern poetry, reportedly suggested Perse for the award. Hammarskjokl M In 1M71 himself was not present for the _____________^ today. Though'~gie~^8?niU8 betwiie J ii MiiwsuHw I? famous under the name of n *t MiuUp^i SI II Penic- his real name' is Alexis « 8 Hro tSS" u » quarter cen- « 46 oiB^s^ M 3*|tury in the Prendi diplomatic SAINT JOHN PERSE “HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT OEOROFI BIGGEST ANNIVER SARY SALE?” "YES, GEORGE'S IS GETTING READY FOR THEIR GREATEST SALE EVER TO SAVE YOU ON WINTER NEEDS AND CHRISTMAS GIFTS! JUST WATCH FOR GEORGE'S 'APERl— GEORGE'S U P. MOOfAW STMESr. MSAtt BOItOII m-NEW 1066 SCHICK iSPEED Mightiest shaving instrument ever invented! Not just 3 speeds... but the largest head ever put on any razor! Fit the shave to face... shave faster, closer, without irritation! Once you try it youWnever be satisfied with any other razor, blade or electric. Handeomett carrying case of all, too. 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OQOR-BUSIER SPECIAL’ Xaslmea Kedelt Saapsbel $135 Roll 94* PopuUr gad-iao-137 Ktse — genuine Kodak Koda-for true c<^r snaps, slides color. LUnit 1. —Mils riMf DOOR-BUSIfR SPECIAL' All Cellea—Nob's Umm4 “flppof Swoot Shirt “ $1.97 1 19 Value I Collar styled, half sipper front, fleeced lined. White In sites small to extra large. OOOR'BUSIER SPECIAL' Washable fabric*—Soserl dirh'- SkifH 99* Values to $2.00 Fabrics Include; Corduroys wools, rayons, etc. In gay plaide and other popular colors. Sises 1 to 14. for Wt Woefber Woor CMMrtR'tMhwf $2.98 Value 99* First quality storm rubfcor footwear. Rod, black «r brown In aiaH • to 13. TOMORROW (THU RSD AY ] NOON ’til 9p.ni. SIKHS 1 SITE SALE YOLhBe Here at SIMMS When DOORS OPEN at 12 NOON for 9-HOURS of BIG SAVINGS All Time Bargain Hat Maay More Specially Reiacad THURSDAY 12 HOOK te 9 P.M. Glass OB Steal Porceleia Enamel Bake Pan 9Qc MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Here are but a few of the many Super-Bargains that show how much YOU con expect to SAVE at SIMMS Tomorrow ... all wanted items tor home and fomily ... oil GUARANTEED UNDERPRICED ... oil sold with satisfaction regardless of how much you save. Simms reserves the right to limit oil quontities._ FbII gallon Cab ladeor Babbit E«n Paint Thinner I TV Antenna Ledl**'—Missel'-Cidi' Saddlei and Flati BARGAIN BASEMENT 1 Values 4 59 to $5 1 2 Pair Nr Si.OO Fill 27x4g iBchM ^ For Work er Sporti Carpet Rugs f Men’s Pants SiwcUl srou|i of nrwriil port-hol> urtdir ostorda and lloli Blit tU to S , .tiTOcrr I99" Look foi th Special 9-HOUR Price Tags in Eveiy Department Thiongkont All 3 Floon! MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Ws.shsble cotton pants In most colors — broken size range 39 to 43. No limit. With Nail File Nail Clippers Reg. 25c Value Foi Work or HBBtiaf Men’s Socks person. GroyoiKhoki Twill Solid Red Shirts | Mee’t Work Paale 44 I 2 5^ 85', wool. 15^;. nylon soUd red ^ shirts for dress or hunt wear. ?*“ sanforised twill In 38 to 43 Sizes S-M-L-XL. waist size and 39 to 34 lengths. Udies’ Play Sait hm 149 Short sleeve play suit with full zipper front. Red or blue colors. bSm 10 to 16. tStrlMtoCkiMni't 2 Flaaaal Pajaant ' ^UUC Value Accessories -1m 2M ft. UtV CAN bOcTDCSUDE TMT HgMtNiMta 2.2S ARCUS AirtidBl Wa Cash Pa/Checks FREE AQ CmmShmw No Pumhm. Nec.ss.ey jOginaW r: FOUB THE PONTIAC PRESS. VVJBDyKSDAV, OCTOBER 29. 1960 Citizens League Tags Preferr^ Candidates Opponentii of •ome incumbent Mintv randktatni — Inchiding Democrat James G. Kellis, ron-grt-nional candidate — have been preferred" in the annual election year ratings by the Oakland QU-zens League. Inc. Kellis. . of Berkley, retired Air Force officer who served in the Central Intetlifeence Agency, ceived the "preferred" tag over Republican Congressman William S. Broomfield, a veteran of four yc.ini in Washington. Twenty-eight men and women Iniervlewpd candidates of the Republican and Democratic parties for 16 county offices, including two seeking nonpartisan probata.judge-ships. (JKTTINtJ AROIT — It's difficult for anyone afflicted with a disabling disease, and that's when the Pontiac Visiting Nurse As.sociation steps in. Trained nurses visit Ihe homes of the .sick, injured, aged, and otherwi.se disabled, area residents. Through the 'help of these registered nurses, the job of rehabilitation is made much easier fur patients who cannot leave their homes. Helping a patient learn to use a wheelchair after a w-rious illness is Florence Rourke, 8l Whitte-more .St. This type of service is made possible by your contribtitions to the Ponliac Area tJnlled Fund. Mauver Blames 6old Rush on GOP "jSanta Fe Road Eyes was a major factor In the Londonjl market speculation. "There is nothing in Mr. Ken-i ■ ew » iwrw nedy * Speeches to Justify Mr 1^05fg|rp Pg^jf eouBty oUtcehoMers — Sheriff Frmak W, Irons, Clerfc-Regia|er Daniel T. Marphy Jr. and Treas-nr«r Chnries A. Spnriu - were preferred over their Denwcrallc The organization said there was! ‘BO preference" between incum-|bent Ptxmecutor George F. Taylor Democratic opponent ^ George J. Fulkerson, or between! Drain Commlisioner Daniel w ' Barrjj and Rjiy J, Russell, a Dem For the new two year Judge Surveyor candidates Ral(>h A. Main, the incumbent, and .Stanley Dunn were not intervic^ved. The l.«ague advocated "yes" votes oh three stile queilianS dh Nov. 8 ballot. ttee of the pence, ever Sen. L. Hnrvey Ledge. Among the county's six seats in the House of Representatives, political newcomer William len, aawion attorney, was preferred over incumbent Rep. William Hayward in the District 3 Mackinac City to Got New Shopping Center Rep. Farrell E. Roberts. Republican. was selected over Democrat S. Jerome Bronson, Oak Park attorney, in the race lor the county’s 12th District seat in the State .Senate being vacated by Lodge. MACKINAW CITY (UPD-AJd-wyn C. Wager and Rene Menard Jr., both of Harbor Springs, have announced plans for construction of a shopping and entertainment center here, with accommodations for as many as 41 shops. The structure would be called "The Black Pagoda" and there would be a 75-foot-high pagoda surrounded by a center mall. Work is expected to start this fall. Executive Predicts Hike in Newspaper Rates FRONT-PORCH POLITICS — Muncle, Ind., I>mocratic Rep. Randall S. Harmon, sometimes known as FVont Porch Harmon, looks out of his latest campaign gimmick. He la capitalizing on ... ^. . Phrtrisi national publicity over his charging the government rent for hia front porch which he uses as an office. The structure on the back of the congresa-man's Car is a replica of hia^lroot porch. News, said Monday the pubUcjmuch about our current troubles," for long has been getting a pro-< Hall told the National Newspaper duct that costs more to produce Promotion Association’s regional than the aggregate price of its convention. CHICAGO UP — A newspaper executive predicts that simple economics will compel more papers to taise their price to a dime a copy. Atthtfr E. Hall, executive vice president of the Chicago Daily "We put our product out each day. and have been doAilTit lor to long, that readers and advertisers class us with death and taxes and rarely stop to worry A Mack granite statue of the head of.Ramaes II was discovered recently at Luxor. The 3,500 year old statue was intact, the features all clear-cut. In ntatricl l. Rep. IJoyd I-Andernoa, a Re|nibHcan, was preferred over hU Democratic challenger Patrick k. Daly, a Waterford Township jiMliro of the peace like Adams. "Ibe committee r&Tcd aS "no preference" the District 2 (Pontiac) contest between Rep. Arthur J. l-aw, a Democrat, and Richard I. Moore, Pontiac Republican. Birmingham attorney and Republican Henry M. Hogan Jr. was favored over Democrat James M. ^Ni.xon's charges. " said Kelauver. \ I ' The reason is the increasing lack I J NEW YORK iP—Son. Estes Kr-‘of confidence abroad in the Re-' CHICAGO (UPI> — The Santa| fauv-er, D , Tenn , said Tuesday! publican administration.'’ 'Fe Railroad said it filed applies-|McNecly of Milford in the District frat London market speculation, lion with the Tntei-state Commercel-I race. Commission asking approval to, ★ ★ ★ Rep. s. James Garkson, taising the price gf gold duo State Civic Leader Dies to a "lick of conAdenre abroad (he Republican administration. \ Kefauver said Sen. John F. Kcn-»edy. Democratic presidential nominee, was not to blame. Vice president Nixon, Republican eandi^te. has said Kennedy had groused feiu^ over the future of (he American dollar and that this XHtAND HAVEN UP - Inaurance: .iHcquiie control of Ihe Western Pa- I for-K'^i<' Railroad through purchase man Fred E. Ehrmann, 73, mcr member of the .Stale Liquorjand exchange of stock. Control Commission and long a Ernest S. Marsh, president of Grand ilaven civic leader, died|the railroad, said that subject to Tuesday at Grand Haven Munici- ICC approval. Western Pacific pal Hospital.' He was admitted i stockholders will be offered lt4 last Sunday with a heart condition.'shares of Santa Fe common stock Ehrmann was a former member | in exchange for each Western Pa-and chairman of the hospital hoard.,citlc share. Southfield, "on the preferred lection in District 4 over his GOP opponent Raymond L. Baker. Because District 6 Rep. John C. Hitchcoflk "did not cooperate” with the League, the committee could not make a comparison with his Republican opponent Robert J. Turner. Three Incumbent Republiran 6-P(. TWIN BED ENSEMBLE yau tiff - 2 iwm siuwmtmuas .2 semes rw vfcf * 11 ■ 2 mieseme Mstmssis ONLY $500 $4995 A Regular ’IBB** Value Buy Now and SAVE ’40“! Hara'i a truly outstanding vdluol Ths bods aro in hand-somo Solom moplo finish to fit any docorativo schomo . . . sturdily mads to toko lots of woor. Mokos on idoal outfit for a guost room or ths kids' room. You got oil 6 pioess ot ono low pries. Quontitiss limitsd. Hurry in for yours bsfors ws soil out Motching drssssrt. doubls drssssrs. and chssts also ovoilohls ot sxcsUsnt low pricss. coins sss thsm olL Aikfti Wybai'i Tiadiif SUapi SjjrniturS PaiUBf If Afiikblf at Eitkai Stale 17 [.Huron St. 18 W. Pike St. THg pox nAc riifcss. \v>;i)\\T (h ruKKir Ti»«o Fivt: — Stody Finds Beit WveftrSmmEnuikvt^ Debunk Bad Driver-Broken Home Link By PHYLU8 BATTELLK NEW YORK - A man It a bad driver. He has a vtolen highway accident. The authorities investigate—discover he comes from a broken home. His father was an alcoholic and beat his mother. Does this mean that a person’i sociological roots affect his driving sKUls? “For M years we*ve tboogkt so." said a ColumMa Uaiverslty psychoiogtst today. “How roold we help IIT We found so many violators who raipe from broken iMSU Syenfe Wi~ . . . ;legislnltve nffirinls and cohimillec • *rj- I Intern in legislaturem His Hers? - TVp graduate po-iliy udents at Michigahjproj Tlie pnigrani rmnnced fivm a ■lai fund at M-W, w ininniH u, rnvate rJanes I l.ANSINGiW-1Vp graduate po-i lay the loundalion lor ......... lilh-al science students al Michlgahl program ol inlet nshiim lo lie li l»AU.Aa, Tex. il FIt "For too long we have taken haid jrt) getting (hem on an cla-|of 51 and .55 that a driver tends to Stale University wUl serve •■intern- nama>d hv the IrgWiAture and the man Marru*. which operates Ual oor driving standards from mis- 'vator. for Instance; theyd let [perform at his safest. ships” In the legislature under ajKonl Foimdati.m The louiHliilion las and Htpisiun »ueclaltv stores fits, and assumed aayoM who (everyone «et on first, and then And the IntelHgenee of the in-experimental program. . ihas eatabUahed ilmilHr PWriims hi manv Tesas mH. could do better was doing aU look around for someone else to dividual appeai>4o have a bearingj ('hosen (or the first assignment;in Caliluinia aivl Wisconsin legis i moiled «ul Us laot i^t. Now we’re taking the peat- enter before them. When we triedjon his propensities lotlnve safely, [were Stephen V. Momma. 21. and|laluirs . t hrtstmas honk and It fentnres ■................ ; ’IV persons at either end of the I WUliam C. Spragem. 34, who hothi ----——----------- | ’‘hers” and "hla" private plane*. The two plones—n oeven plnre Hen-hcraft Super fits for •’hhii" : and a fanr-plaw ■eartisfalt lo — nansa for eher” — ar* pHm “ af a fatal of fllMN. The llenaasa le while, wiOi n trim, and there ta a Hisrii white ermine Jnchat to nwleb N.w The jarhet add* |S,»1g h* Mm MB. |.nst year, the Nrimnn.MareM I IJI»> negative ap- Out of neariy 300,000 of the nation’s safest drivers (as recommended on their performance by to prod thertl li^o angeri, they ■wined completely unniWed. ]ihtenigencc scale tend to rsuae!“fo working for doctor’s degrees.' a female house fly In.vs ihdu" TBOUBUE bCIWIOUNTED problems on the road." I The pair will supplement profes-lsands of eggs in her lifetime 'And they wetr happy men. As I A gas will fill any vacant « I In which It is plac^ -------- ---- ,.---------- .. I gome came from broken the National Safety Council) Dr. homes but they had ovei^me this MalfetU sifted the six "beat" men.,psychologically." * * * Jtevond the p«vehal»gieal ob- He discovered certain character- «.n,iloii* mi the wle driv**-jistics that these men all had in ihned^i common—the characteristics that quaUttf.. "But this year we e.xamined the made them exceptimally good Hhat seems to be a in nation's safest drivers. In depth, autoists; ’ cant faelor is the driv And we round t^ about an equal They were a. careful In runn-pereentage of^gopd fivers « bad ^ thel, earn. Tlmv - ones came from broken homes; , eerlala physical “Aad slKairi ablllt.y lo organise insIsnHy all of the fartors in a eowpleii VUttsllon so that he does the appro|triale and ! rorrfH-t aelloii inimedJately. where pop was an alcoholic and Dr.^amn Malfetti, diiector ‘i'Jd m'.d"e“''In.Te iU* o' «hl* higtv of a broad new oroaram to dis- • ' speed computer mechanism which cover what makes drivers sale in- dicated that this development—so " *’ driver. I dntrary to a Idng-held fheory—* “They were nonaggressive, yield-1 Other discoveries: "proves we're on the right track in ‘‘d thd right of way in their person- Experience lioing equal, there is testing known safe drivers, rather life as well as on Ihe highway, no differences between the poten-than the violators. No competitive or gambling spirit, jlial of men and women to be .safe -----------r- - --------- [They were so polite that it was a autoists. It is between the ages Will Carry Cameras in Launchings to Help Conquer Hurricanes KANSAS CITY. Mo. (APt-| Camera-carrying rockets will join planes next spring in tracking] down the mysteries of tornadoes. "It will be the most concentrat-[ ed attack ever made on the study, of severe storms, ” said Harry; Wexler, head of meteorological! research for the U. S. Weather! Bureau. "More planes and equip-j ment will be used than in even thei hurricane study project. ” Twenty-nine scientists from five governmem agencies are meeting: in Kansas City to plan the pro-| gi-am which will start March l.^ Headquarters for the project, will be Oklahoma City, Okla. i Special rockets will be launched from Ft. Sill, Okla.. to photograph clouds from a height of 175.000 feet, said C. F. Van Thullcnar, project director. Joining in the ^rojeel «re th« Weather Bureau, Air Force, Navy Federal Aviation Agency, and the National Aeronautics and Space; Administration. i’Jt . must be rememberel that' we are looking for something very small, very illusive and of short life wheri compared to n hurricane,” Wexler said. "It will not be solved in a year.’ Here Is a^‘Can’t From Be Missed” ^Featurel^ SALE IMPORTEDWOOLIWEED They're Ticketed a Low' THE PONTI^AC PRESS 4I.WM IftiPod »nn PtonttM- WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 36. I960 HA*M A. mXOimALO — — -------, TrM«ur«r tad , • Utat, _ ... ^ j^^Adwttotni Embargo Against Cuba Not Likely to Succeed Emb«rgo of American supplies to Cuba, other than food and medicine, is the heaviest blow the United States has yet aimed at the Castro regime. Administration oincial# hope that this, action will cause more trouble for the'UuBan economy by cutting off replacement parts an4 chemicals for expropriated American plants. Cubans already have stockpiled such items. ★ ★ ★ However, the result could encourage more dependence on Russia and invite an attack against our naval base at (iuantanamo. Castro can use the embargo to further inflame his foibwers against this country and thus strengthen and prolong his political support. Trade with Cuba at the present time is down about two-thirds because U.S. business can’t sell where it is not paid. This alone has had its effect on the Cuban economy. ★ ★ ★ Heretofore our policy has been based on Joint action by the Organization of American States which had decided against economic sanctions for Cuba. This was prior to Castbo’s performance at the United Nations. Strictly speaking, such sanctions ought to be imposed by Intemationai action. part of the Malay Peninsula. Its population of about 6.S million live in a country 80 per cent of which is Jungle, swamp, forest or mountains, somewhat larger than ^ew York state., ★ ★ .\ decidedly pro WeMtern stance by the government can be traced to ' Malaya’s British upbringing and the 12 year war it waged against Communist terrorists in its jungles. The emergency was formally closed on July 31 and only about 500 Red guerrillas remain to be controlled, virtually all of them along the Thai border. ★ ★ ★ Malaya has shown no Interest in establishing diplomatic relations with Peking but in August did promise support for Red China’s admission to the United Nations, provided Red China recognized the independence and sovereignty of Formo.sa. When Chou En-lai turned down the condition, Malaya abstained in the U.N. voting on the China issue. We hope that the Prime Minister’s visit to this country will enhance our mutual friendship for the years ahead. Voice of the People ‘Drag Ship Would Reshrmn Hot Rodding on the Streets* I agree with the people who want to do aomething about the hot rad-dert on Woodward Ave. Moat o< the hot rodden an young “hot doge" using their parents' car. y ★ ' W ★ Om m way ef earing thl« darii«.. Ih» araiucr «h«| aMMftelltgaaaaa,lileepeaadngBtrip. Itwaa already tried aad wae dleoemianed by petUlene by eeme el the peeple wha warn eeoM- thiag dene abont radag ea Waodwaid Ave. ★ ★ ★ ■ Our sheriff, Mr. Irons, when asked a tew years ago about a strip seems more concerned about go-carti whioh are not nearly the menace as is racing on the strwts. I am 100 per cent in favor of a drag strip and wodid be a frequent ‘Nixon Could Use Jack Elsewhere’ ‘Republicans Won’t Help Commoners’ According to Democrat headquarters it will be the women who elect Sen. Kennedy. The Senator is a nice looking man and I have noticed that H is the younger women who gather to see him and go into ^ some kind of swoon or faint. The ordinary citizen can easily .see that Republicans are the representatives of big business, and the Democrats are for the conunon people. Lome D. Weaver 1512 Hiller Road The Scary Season David Lawrence Says: Uvis Prealey, Prank Sinatra and quite a number ef our gnat reek aad roO etan, also kad that trouble. Maybe after Mr. Nlxoa Is elected be caa appolat the Senator ta be our ambaaeador to all the conaty fain, beauty ‘Missouri Windbag Goes Too Far’ Russ Capitalize on Prestige Debate II oemiaas, We eepeclalfy need one ben In Itachlgan staee Soapy ■ “’*-----for office. I used to enjoy the Missouri windbag, but when he swears at the opponents, calls all Republicans “bums" and says Nixon only "speaks the truth by accident,” he goes too far. The old false alarm ought to he retired to pasture and placed in the back forty on a short tether. The Man About Town Quirks of Frost In taking unilateral action the Administration may have created in I.«Un America more sympathy for Castro which could render sanctions ineffective. Canada, too, has expressed con-cern over our quarantine. ★ ★ ★ The CASTRO regime has been Inviting retaliation for months. Provocations have been many and great. Endless patience has got us nowhere nor are sanctions any more likely to succeed. First Frigid Touches Are Starting the Leaf Rakers Nov. 6: When it's all over but the shouting—or sobbing. .Pavements are liable to be damaged If you burn leaves on them. A tiumber of local offtclali have regueAt.eri an Item warning against the practice. In some municipalities It Is prohibited by ordi- The family cat of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Preswell of Rochester heard somebody say that a heavy frost was predicted, and promptly commenced moving her kittens from the garage to the kitchen. WASHINGTON — If American “pre.stige” isn't at a low point in the world yet, it soon will be if those who are playing up that idea and making it the central is.sue in a political campaign continue blindly to pursue that course. The .Soviet Union is alread.rre-joicing at America's self-made embarrassment. Here, for example, Is an Associated Press dispatch that came LAWRENCE ^ Monday from Moscow: "Prttvda devoted nearly two columns today to quoting a television statement by Sen. John F. Kennedy and a speech by Adiai .Stevenson saying American pres— tlge Is at a new low. “The Democratic presidential nominees of this campaign and the last were quoted as saying American prestige is low in Africa, Asia anrl South-America. members of Congress are demanding that there be made public at once all studies conducted by the State Department from the time, three years ago, when the Soviets launched their first Sputnik. Have the.se legislators considered the damage to American prestige that can come from an officially autho*-ized pronouncement on our own “prestige" abroad? appreciated If Hems nnfriemily to the I'nIIrd Statea or at least thoae that gave away vital Inlor-matlon were not pnbllshed. This Maybe Nixon could anioint Soapy to chief baby kisser. That way they could both feel right at home. Tm For It ‘Next Government Will Be for People’ Newsmen were told by our gov-emment during two world wan that, white no official eensonhlp was being Imposed. It would be Both Vice President Nixon and Sen. Kennedy are patriotic and well-meaning men who served in the armed forces in World War II. Bu: is off-the-cuff government wise? Shouldn’t both candidates have declined on television to answer questions about the mUitnry defense of Quemoy and Mafsu? ‘ ‘Change of Heart Seen in Truman’ Dr. William Brady Says: Congenital Hip Disease Needs Early Detection According to Harry Truman last July, Kennedy “wasn't readb'" to be a candidate tor president. Ifen-nedy certainly must have improved very rapidly in a very short space of time for the Missouri blow-hard is out stumping for him now and cursing those who are against hhn. Not only will Nixon and Lodge be beaten but they wdll be whipped .so soundly that the entire Republican Party will collapse. We are returning the government to the party of the people and that’s the way It should be. Forecaster The Almanac By United Presa International Today is Wednesday. Oct 26. the 300th day of the year with 66 How come this Kennedy “grows more in T up” over night? Pnsiled Portraits The moon is approaching its first quarter. The morning star is Mars. The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. By JOH?r c. METCALFE BV DR. WIIJJAM BRADY ,Son»e years ago an orthopedic .surgeon came from Europe to in- snrgeon offers these suggestions to help parents or physicians in the diagnosis wa.s also quoted as saying that the Communist world 'look.s more dynamic’ and we 'look static’.’’ U. S. Sugar Price Cut Sours Dominican Deal The Dominican Republic is not going to reap a profit from the reallocation of Cuba’s U.S. sugar quota after all. Unaccountably, some legislators were in favor of giving Dictator Trujillo that windfall and Congress refused to give up its control of foreign sugar purchases. This left the, U.S. in the inconsistent position of giving a bonus jto a regime with which it had just broken relations. ★ ★ ★ To arouniL Ihis diffimlty The leaves on the pumpkin vines of Geoffrey Manwaring of Drayton Plains were so large thjit he couldn’t find all of his pumpkins until after Jack Frost made his onslaught. Covering her tomato vines with papers on frigid nights, Mrs. Alice Strtsser of Waterford says she finds that a printed sheet is more frost repellent than a blank one. In addition, Pravda ha.s broken its alleged “neutralist” position and published in full an article by a prominent American writer which is highly critical of Vice President Nixon and which appeared first in many newspapers in this country. Will Pravda now print an article In defense of Nixon? Probably not; Pravda, a daily newapaper. Is the official orgaii of the Soviet government and the Uommnnlst party. Its spare Is limited. When treating congeni-lal di.s|oi« Dec. I to stockholders of record Nov. 19. erally poor nine-month parted sritb iiri ra«u APK8 URAMP8 - Oregury S<'oll .Soiiey. Ti months old, Rpp<'Hi's irady for his fh si three-alarm bla/e as he looks «k)w n at his graixi-father, fireman Guy Oliver of Indmnapulis. S«‘enis to lx* hoping for a hot time in the old town, doesn't he' LONDON — l.,oid Ruasell — philosopher BeiliHiid Russell—reigned Monday as president of Britain's leftist campaign (or nu dear disarmament after a row with its chairman Canon John Collins of St. Paul's Cathedral Russell said he believes, noneth’ campaign is doing good work and he will continue to sup- Wo/na StOtfl ProfoStOr The quarrel arose after Russell,.^’®* NoplOf Hotol NAPLES. Italy ta-Valentlno del* belt De’ Fazio wore under his| protest the H-Bomb. Collins,- « teacher at Wayne Stale jacket. officer of the established church, Tue^uy Ml enme to Italy from the| refused to join Russell’s call. • •'***'* attack. He was 40. United States two months ago to| -------‘----------- I * * * 'visit his father, Btislllo, who lives: Salt is used in making steel and I His body was found in a bed-^ in Acraria. a hamlet In the south-yarious chemicals. I room at the Metropole Hotel where em most tip of Italy. tuM l)e Kazio had Iteen stay mg stnec -his arrival heiv three wts'ks ago j Police said they (ound 750,000 lire iSL'/OOi and 116,000 hidden ini! MIRACLE MILE Repeat of Two Sensational Valnes ^The Coat of the Year^ Fine heavy wale corduroy with an all wool fleece plaid blanket lining. Available in Black, Olive and Antelope. Sizes 36 to 44. Modestly Priced at sonss Use a Lion Charge OPBN EVERY NteHT TIL » . . fv* ■ j* jp-^-r-' "irr-r ■ r ' .... THE POXTiAC PRESS, WE0yESP4V. OCTOBER 26. 196^ _T Both Candidates Pull International Boo-Boos I WASHINGTON * will be New diesel kx'omotives driven about the same agalq this year." h>draulically though torque con-j Graham’s organization is seeking verters instead of by electric drive the removal of lolls from the Wel-tram are now being put into service. . 4und Canal, whistleslop tour in Washington the official .shuddered other night GOP National Chaii-maii: ■ railroad engineers still re-Thruston B. Morton was address-,Ih-wry " he said with a ing a crowd at the rear end of the,*’****'*’ r*tucKlc candidate's car. It was In IMS that Thomas K. "We are going back to a won-i Uewey, then running against derfully romantic form of trans- President Trunian, exoloded one portation." Morton said, "the old "Ight while addressing a track- • whistle-stops.' Canada's Auto sWe rally. The train suddenly began to move backward into I the rrowd and hundreds scat-^ lered In squealing alarm. Dew-I ey reacted by roaring that hia I engineer ‘'muni be a lunaHc.” And everywhere Dewey traveled I'after that night, he saw written in the dust on hundreds of I cars, "lunatics for Truman." I One of the shocking things a Low-Volume Market, campaign traveler encounters this! High Tax., ond Impoml^S, All Blamed for Trouble display a harsh, cynical atti- (tude toward both candidates,_L OTTAWA UP-High taxes and a , J* an unattractive fact but low-volume market were among T'\ the Uls of the Canadian auto Indus-“I" ®*"' try specified Monday i three-General Motors. Ford and A clerk in New York, a cab driv-j Chrysler—before a royal comniis-^*' Chicago, a bellhop in Den-| tion. ver, an entertainer in Los Ange-j Prof. Vincent Bladen of Toronto. '''’'’ <'««'ntially the a one-man commission studying thing, the automotive industry now hit "I don't k.aiw who to beliexe. hard by low-priced foreign imports. Roth sides seem to be promising inaugurated week-long hearings by! so iiiueh: so inueh that I know questioning representatives of the they won't be able to deliver." ' three firms. » j .. And the even sadder aspect of E. H. Walker, president of this disillusionment is the next! General Motors ol Canada lAd., :sentence one hears too frequently: I aald hla company is "closer than 'i may not even vote at all. ’i you think” to turning out In this Perhaps the fervor of the con-' country the Vauxhall car produced by (icncral Motors ‘ yitines t» MILK-WHITE, HEATPROOF Ws Sale Only 57> ZUH Guaranteed two years against oven breakage Serve directly from oven to table in this betutiful white ovenware! You save three ways! First, you^ve time—your food needs no transfer! Next, you save energy—no extra pans to wash! And you save money —up to 39/ ti unit—during onr^jaUI All casseroles have clear crystal Fin-King covers. mora than oaa^ and sova avail moral pay only once a month WILLOW BASKETS An anticipated government step would shift the basis for duty valuation upward ai of Dec. But Walker indicated this isn’t expected to end duty inc S SO MILLIO^OAYMODB LIOS \ r\ lew low prices fo Pebqey pdys on our all-tii^> GAY^tibDEM 1* lAzor7fUnie...wittiata8troii8 look and soft toadi t Qualitytailor!ilg...En«falattentionpiidto«f«rydetail a Newaatitylea... fresh collar and caff treatments a Proportioned fit... graduated body lengths, tapered waists a Laboratory tested... checked to insnre quality, construction NOWI MORE MEN THAN EVER CAN KNOW ONE OF AMERICA’S FINEST SHIRT VALUES! COMPARE FOR BEAUTY plI^Ibu^ • Quality tailored... made in finest hosiery mills of finest nylon yams I • Nationally famous ... our own nationally advertised top brands, worn by more women in America than any other nylon hosiery I • Proportioned to fit... meticulously made to exacting Penney Standards of superior comfort, long wear and fiattering fit • Newest styles, colors... Seamless, full-fashioned and stretchable styles. New beiges, faslfion neutralsi Sizes SVz to 11. SPECTACUUR PENNEY DAYS SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPT! STARTS THURSDAY, OCT. 27th SAVE on NEW PERCALE PRINTS w PERCALE SHEETS ond CASES Full steaiii ihMd (or -th« MWMt percale prltatB. Bee beautiful prlnu. and new color **—•— —■»<-aUe. Peimey’s famous percale Rheeta and pillow cases speak for (%mitiTe^ stock up now for winter. PUfow Casee crxnH” 2*9 FAMOUS PEN.GLAS DRAPES Klotant Pen-Olas drapts. Beautiful p^95 solid colora. Easy to hm- White, ^ light b«^. toast. M / - 5^«M“ LATEST BRENTWOOD STYLES Penney’s Brentwood sensation that lets you fashion splurge, yet aave. 198 Fine percale checker board prints. *** / / SisMl2(«20 PENNEfS-DOmnOiN Opgfi Evtrr Mon. nnrf Pri. 9:30 A. M. to 9.-00 P. M.—AU Otkor WooUayi 9:30 A.M. to 5:10 P. M. PEmEn-HMCLE lllf Opon Ivory Wooki to 9>00 P.M. "I TWKLVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 2«, 1960 Oktahora* cwnet tram the Choc- md meciiing red, hence Deals in Pontiac and Nearby Areas OMKK W. DODD IJpntlec reikJent Om«r KRSONAL SiRVKI ^ •* ^ |home in WatervUet after a iMkfltlltdifftriMt UtaeMHewa.67 , ,______. m Ah empioye of General Moton tmm$9nK9fW$l Truck A Coach Division tor 30 yean, he was a charter and life member of Brotherhood Lodge MIW, AOMKPH DtlSHEITM lNOEPENDf34CE TOWNSHIP-Gravealde service tor Mrs. Joseph (LUUs M.l Dunaelth. Si, of MTS Waldron Road, was to be held today at Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak. Mn. Dunaelth. a member of the lOrder of the Eastern Star iSO. F * AM, and had served as the White Shrine In Royal Oak. died Monday at her residence after a long illness. Surviving are a soh, F. Grant Dunseith of Dearborn; two dau^ ters, Mn. B. F. Chamberlain of Royal Oak attd Mn. Cecil Jennings of aarkston, with whom riiej of the organlzatVon. Surviving are his wife, 0mira; [tSro sons, Robert M. of Madison, |Wis. and Omer W. Jr. of Pontiac; isix grandchildren; two sisten and a brother. iRoa^iBl Park Cemetery. Berkley. Mn. Schmekbel. a member of Holy iCraea Lutheran Church of Qxfanl, tted yesterday at her real-' dence after an illness of one year. Surviving are three daughters, AUBURN HEIGHTS — Mn. Wil-tMrs. Ernest Muller ofi Royal Oak, MBS. W11XU.M GRt'SMICK Ham iy|th a mob that: broke into the grounds of the Diet! building. Alleiihurst St., Royal Oak, died !•* th** Phillips ^^lneral Home.'Bur-jLapeer County G^ral Hospital I plays aa ;>este>’d*>’ ■hee a long illness. he in the Sooth Lyon Cemi iaipiMttai part in gaidiBg our ygaih i Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. | . .. .. - nusy of OUT pauia Opif^ of Franklin Hills; i Grubb died yesterday at his kl relatioat. ,two grandchildren; and a aister. home after a long illness. w ' Service will be held at 10 a.m.l, ^ « ""ember of the State Thursday at the Sparks-Grifflnl^“ Conservation Department 2Ti*S;S:iSffSS.'s:. ««, ,a E-n.,,.,® «' MtertiM. «mI aromiw. t>metei-v. Deii-oit. |uvingiion County soil fah StimaH s/rtf you have as 1^ Mhnring a short iUness. He was a member and past g commander of American Legion Post 16, Lapeer, and was plant . isuperviaor of the Mason Tackle, The maximum penalty for the * Manufacturing Co. in Otisville. i"ha«e is three years in prison. I Surviving are two sisters, Mro.i Atoong those to be tried ai-e per-' Monroe PhllUps of Lapeer and *®"* accused of mobbing U.S. Cemetei-y. Deti-oit. IMrs. Glenn Stevens of M^ and a!presidential press secretary tlm pr^m tor 16 years. brother Gaylord of Uocer. C. Hagcrty June 10 at MRS. JLSSK T. I.KE ! He also belonged to South Lyoni ' 'Tokyo Airport. The mobbing, from Mr*. Jesse T. (Emily K.) Lee ofi^Se 319 FkAM. | r.ilRTAV urMMrirHri iwhich Hagerty \\r>n rescued by !70 Fiilrgrove Ave. died yesterday' daughters, ’ ‘ 'helicopter, forced cancellation cf -------— ,------------ - • jaftcr a long itinoss She was 93 Naundas Halbie of East ORION TOWNSHIP — Service'Prc.sident Eisenhower s •s wen as the services of the ns- ! ^ __ .losing and Mrs. Lois Wimberly for Mrs. Gustav (Pauline) Schmei-!Tokyo ttoowidc^m orisni^ion ^1 ' Ind,; a son. Gordon chel, 80. of 1380 Holliday Drive, '------------------ ^ he at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Agricultural products account Spaulding A Son Funeral for 90 per cent of Paki.stan s total Idren. iHome, Ferndale. Burial will be in exix^rts. When you buy SB ^ina CaMuhy poUcy from n you eei the plus ! value ®f uuf personal service — ; e P.S.” Well be glad lo II I Gtt Hitre fiMM |mI iRSRraRCf. • • 9^ BR iilRoCaiRakyPoKcy P.S. * PtrsRRil StrvicB Thatcher, Patterson —^ 4 Wemet 711 Community Notionoi SEE THE All New COLOR RCA TELEVISION [Slar, Chapter 333. SjTviving are a daughter. Mrs. Maude Lamoreux with whom she' made her home: two grnndi'hll-dim; and a sister, Mrs. Jerome P.’terson of Pontiac. ’Service will be held at 10 a m. Saturday at (he Hiintoon Funeral Home. Graveside seiviec will fol-low_*d lUM a.m. at the Hadley-Green Cemetery. CHARI.iW H. SHKRRARD Charles If. Sherrard, 87. of 4353 Highficid St,, Drayton Plains died yesterday after a long illness. A fanner, he leave.s tw-o daughters, Mrs. Walter Woffsinger of, Drayton Plains and Mrs. Fred' Jahr of Traverse Qty: three grandchildren; three great-grand-chiWrcn; and a brother. 1 Seivice will be held at 2 p.m. 'Friday at the Dunn Funeral Home j in Onsted. Arrangemems were by I the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton I Plains. I I ROBERT L, TROMBLY Seivice for Robert L. Trombly, I, of 3442 Loon Lake Shores, Dray-' Ml Plain-s, wHl be held at 2 p.m.' Thursday at the C. J. Godhardt Fu-1 neral Home, Keego HarbQr^_with^ burial in Perry Mount Park, Ceme-' tery. ' Mr. Trombly died early ye.ster-'day at Pontiac General Hospital from injuries received iit an auto-mobile accident Friday. LEO L. DKXIMNCK WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Service for I^eo L DeConinck, 68. Of 280 Tower Road, will be at 10 a.m. Friday in St. Patrick Catholic Church. Burial will be in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Detroit! A retired plumber. Mr. DeConinck died of a heart attack at his home yesterday. : The Rosary will be recited at .8 p.m. tomorrow in the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. I His sole survivor is his wife I Viola. WANT MORE FOR YOUR MONEY s KEEP YOUR EYE ON GRANTS Men’s and Boys’Event Grants has th* stylus that man and boys favor ... at pricts to plooso tha thriftiast. Don't miss this spoctocwlar ovont . . . sovo os n« COTTON FLANNEL SHIRTS IN BRIGHT PLAIDS. SANFORIZED TO KEEP THEIR FIT wonderful sight! yjiu withdutglasses! contact •less tense ?es “Theat do not touch the eyat” We’re So Sure Youll E^joy Them, You May Try Them oil Our TRIAL WEARING PLAN THERMAL KNIT SHIRTS, DRAWERS • Specially knit of select cotton yarn • Keeps body hoot in, cold air stays out ■ 100% Dacron flllinR • Sturdy fTylon outside « Soft cetton«nylon lining • Quick 'n easy washable 4-OZ. DACRON* INSULATED UNDERWEAR ‘8< W FIRST-Profeniontl CONTACT-LESS LENS specialists esamine yew ayes using newest scientiric instruments. NEXT-4lia proper visual prspeription is prepared is yew leasts. THDI-CONTACt-LESS leases art pre-tiseiy fitted is they will not loecti tfie eye, but rest se-oiiciyoMliywof naturaltsur. FINALLY—You ictually WEAR your loiws lu sot younoN us you rooUy ire— withoat flmes-thert's m oMigrtion tP buy. bnitet ternts up to i year to pay Developed by the U. 8. Navy after World War II, underwear of thermal knit has tiny air pockets which trap body heat. 8, M. L, No weight—just warmth. Peiuileifh’a guarantesL Stay-dry 4*01. bonded Dacron quOted inside Nykm. Higlily absorbent liking. Strong Kylon*eottoi!,, knit crotch. S. M, U MCN^ SHIRTS Printed cotton flannels with long sleeves: whiz through washday, are Sanforized to keep their full-cut fit. S. M, L. Fine super sueded cotton: in a wide choice of colors and pattei-ns. Long sleeved. Sanforized for perfect fit. to 16. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPEN DAILY 10 ta 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1960 PONTIAC. MICIUGAN. THIRTEEN November Gladness in Store Its Fair Weather for Zonta An intematioml theme will «et the aceile tor Pontiac Zonta Qttb's third annual fair, augmentinc t b e traditional booths ^will be travel posters and decorations from all over the world.' The fair which is set for Nov. 3 from 3 to 10 p^m. at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building will feature a number of new booths as well as the favorites of past years. The needlecraft booth will feature apnau. Home made jams, jellies, baked goods, herbs and delicatessen items will be offers at the "country store" concession. Hm jewelry booth wiU la-rludr anti<|ae pioceo aad aO-ver. A boo;: booth aad canteen will again eater to popular demand. New features include an antique booth and a painted china booth. Feature of the Christmas booth will be iU teenage gilt earner, AUlts, cards, wrappings, decoration.Au.xitiary of the Village Woman's Club of Birmingham. A preview performance of "The Girls in .509,^’-^ topical ed as a benefit for the Child Guidance Clinic by the St. Dun-stan Players at their pla>- Mrs. Edwnrd Parker. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Jones. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. McDonald Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith. Fall Bridge Tourney Set Wont Psychiatric Aid for Offender NEW YORK (UP!) - 'The Association for the Psychiatric Treatment of Offenders wants doctors to help push through Congress a bill that would proride federal funds for the treai- and for the training of therapist* in this specialty. Sirs. Harry Wiaston Jr. ami Mrs. Karl Zint are general chairmen. Committee heads arc Mrs. Jolm Dixon, tickets^ Mrs. Robert Grierson, publicity; Mi-8. James Dodds, promotion; and Mrs. Fred WbiL-crt)ft. ushers. « A ★ Entertaining at before-theater parties will be Mr. ami Mrs. Robert Saffell. Mr. and •Mrs. Robert Scott. Mr. and ■.Ntrs, J^n PiXOT Mr. and Mis. Harry Winston Jr Also entertaining a The Chief Pontiac Swtionat Rrifige Championship, spon-______ sored by the Southern Michigan Bridge Association, will be through .Sunday. The flist annual fall tournament sponsored by the association; the chainriFd^shlp wilP feature two limits novice games Saturday at 2 and 8 pm. The regular championship games fqr individual, women’s pairs, men'.s pa^s, mixed pairs, open pairs and mixed teams will be offered. Eisie.st Guy of Biwkdale Si reel is loumament chairman. Mrs. II. II. Smith of Edgefield Drive. This year's fair will reflect an international theme with many new booths ferUiired. Visniski-Degg Nuptial Peifotmed Before 250 White imijKlrHgons and pmn pons isinkefl the main altar in .St. Michael Churih fo'-Saturday morning vows of Tn7»d)TTtr Agnes " "W iTriir kram'is A. Vlsnlskl pledged Wfore the Rev. Charles E. Cushing In the presence of some 250 guests. Traditional white .satin clios-en for the bridal g«ns-n -featured inserts of Alencon lace along the Sabrina neckline pnd on the liouffant skirt wiiieli swept into a ihapel train —......T ......* " * ^---- Silk illusion veiling, caught by a pearl liara, and lioii((ue' of mlnialii'e while [jonipons i centered with sn oi’chlfl, c ir.i-pleted thi^Dride's pnspnrWr Her parent.s, the Lcon-.ifd J. Deggs of West Rutgers Avenue, were hosts at an evening reception in the AMVETS Hall on Oakland Avcnuiv AttemlHiils in street - length sleeveless drc.s.sfs of CbiHui-h.igen liliie eliiffon. eame Degg .sei ved n.s her si.s-ler s honor maid, with brides mails Miu'y Taylor ami Mar-P*ne Tadlock. Sherjl Ann \1sni.ski, niece of the bridegroom, in flooi'-length white satin, canned a basket of blue carnations. ♦ ★ ♦ The bridegroom, son of Mrs. .Stanley Vlsniski of Oliver Street and the late Mr. VU-niski, asked William DeRousse to l)e best man. Guests were sealed by Walter Annis ami l.eaving on a northern Mieh-igan honeymoon, the new MnL.. Visnlski was wearing a royal l)lue wool sheath dress and . .black accessories The couple will reside on Lakeside Drive, Carpenter Lake. A plum wool jersey sheath dress witlr gray accessories was .Mrs, Degg s selection for the wedding. The mother of the bridegroom appeared in an olive green wool knit suit with beige accessories, Both wore yellow roses. Five Pages Today in Women's Section .MIW. FKANt IS A. VISMSKI Oakland Women Plan Show Tl*c Oakland County Federation of Democratic Women will s|ionsor a public fashion show >»:ith..‘Tioliday Fashions ’ by the R. B. Shop of Birmingham Thuraday^T^ affair is at' 8 p.m. in the Waterford Community Activities Building. Mrs. Ernest Felice of Waterford is general chairman, as-Hirted by Mrs. Donald Lee of Farmington. '*:'*’* Committee chairmen are Mrs. John Hitchcock of Hazel Park, refreshments, assisted by Mrs. Robert Chapin of Drayton Plains; Mrs. Clyde Nelsey of Davisburg, hostesses, assisted by Mrs. Samuel Danfo of Huntington Woods: and Mrs. Ikl-ward Mathis of Gawson. tickets, assisted By Mrs! Robert P. Scott of Dra>1on Plains. * * ♦ Others are Mrs, Frank Hal-sema of Keego Harbor, gifts. as.sisted by Mrs. Guy ^Iden of Clarkston; Mrs. Alvin Rappa-port of’*Birmingham, ^tecora-tions, assisted by Mrs. Edwin Adler of Pontiac; and Mrs. Scott, publicity. Modeling will be Mrs. Zig-mund Niparko of Hazel I^rk. Mrs, A1 Pollack ol Pontiac. Mrs. Ralph Dalton of Gawson. Mrs. Donald Johnson of Sylvan Lake, Mrs. William Huffman of Madison Heights, Mrs. Seymour Devereaux of Royal Oak, Mrs. Patrick Daly of Waterford and Mrs. Lee. Refreshments wiU be served and there will be ah admissioa charge. Wosh Hose JFuloF------------^ (NEA) Beat way to wash those filmy hylons that you wear tor evening is to rock them, dean in a jar half-filled with lukewarm water and soapsuds. "Tlian roll them in a terry towel and kang them on a smooth rod to dry. FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESSrVEBNESBAY, OeTOBER g», WH> bM irttboot Mtt t IMustcOuHd Uses Studio for Meeting Members Answer koll With Historical and Musical Items 559 ORCHARD lAKE FE 2 0l27 TWO DAILY DILIVIRIII TO DITROIT AND INTIRMIDIATI POINTS The PonttK Mule Guild met in the Flnt Conicregatlonal Church studio ol bo^ Chsries Wilson Tues-dsy morning. For the roll call members responded with Itetns of historical or current musical interest. Mrs. William Heitsch, president, announced a concert by, Dr. Rcfy Underwood of Lansing in January and gave a report on the Michigan Music Tetchers Association fall convention which she attended as a delegate. The 75th anniversary of the MMTA was celebrated at tte exmvention. After Mrs. Lester Snetl's review of a lecture ‘’’Basie Nature of the Piano and Its Relation to Dynamics” by Arthnr Lsesser of Hie Clevelsad InsHtute of Music, Mr. Wiloou, chslrmsn, sanounoed the nest student redtal Nov. t> at the Morrta Music Btore. Amy Hoglc, program chairman, introduced pianist Mrs. WaUec Schmitz who played "En Bretagne’ by Rhene-Baton. 4-pc. Colorful Doggie Relish Dishes (other types also to choose from) DIXIE POTTERY 5211 Dlilo Nwy. Mrs. Phillip Schurrer, Mrs. Claud Kiniler and Mrs. James Morris assisted with the social hour. Memben will meet Nov. 29 at the Auburn Road home of the Lea->r Snrils. Music teachers of this area Inrtr-eated In affiliating with the guild may contact Mrs. Don Derragon of Whittemore Street or Mrs. Morris on South Telegraph Road. Daughters Laud Their Parents on Anniversary Choral Clinic Here Nov. 7 Pontiac's secondary schods have set Nov. 7 for tfaleir annual fall vocal clinic. Guest conductor for the all-city affair will be Maynard Klein, nationally known choral di- Peter Hott Married in Pa. Rite Set for «: 15 p.m. in Pontiac Centeal High School's gynmashun. the affair marks the third appearance of PTofeasor Klein as conductor ot the clinic. Director of choirs at the University of Mldii-gan and the National Music Camp at Interlochanj iOe}p appmed in Pontiac In 1963 And 19S6. The cHnle la dealgaed to eom- ally I s add buptratfon of a natton- Mr. Klein will direct the com- .o£""'T08''V6lc8W""lii "filjjht' massed numbers. Spe^ sembles and choirs from both Pontiac Central High Schqol and Pontiac Northern High Schflol wlU be highlighted at the festival. Also conducting will be moaic staff members Doreen Voltman, Melvin Larimer, A. Michael Dempsey and George H. Putnam, siqier-visor of instrumental mu^ and secondary vocaL.muaic. Tickets are available from students or through the department of music office. A breakfast-reception in the New Castle Country Club followed.) the marriage of Carolyn Hayes Seyffert and Peter K. Halt of Washington, D.C., Saturday in the First United Presbyterian Church, New Castle. Pa. Dr. Robert Mayo perfpnned the double-ring oerenwny.. Daughter of the George S. Seyf-ferts of New Castle, the bride chose a princess-line gown ol white peau de sole trimmed with Alencon la^ embroidered with small pearls. A panel of the lace ran the langtket Hw bouffant akirt which feO Into a chapel traia. The veil of silk illusion was caught by a Mary Queen of ^coti crowp of Alencon lace. White stepbanotia aand ehiysan-ns compriaed the bridal Wearnig Blanch! gowns of peau itin were maid of honor IQlia-beth French In sapphire blue and Elizabeth McGraw in emerald green. They held white, blue and green ehrysanthe- MAYNARD KLEIN Don't Swallow Pills, Just Swallow Life Mr. and Mrs. Hugh MacDoug^ By RUTH MnXETT Life Magazine can boast the most charming cover girl of 1960 In its recent cover photograph of Grandma Meaes, taken in honor of of Charnt Street, Waterford TbW her 100th birthday, ship, were honored at a surprise open house party Saturday marking their silver wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. William Tlns-map of Birmingham were hosts. flAlR FASHIONS . . . for fall ’60 require a Professional Permanent CilXIE’S BEAUTY SHOP Mrs, Jim Mahar of North Tona-wanda. N. V. and B Higgenbotham of Ponflac. A daughters of the honorcM. Mr. and Mrs. MacDougall were presented a tree trimmed with 25 silver dollars to signify the occasion. Twenty-seven guests were present for the evening of dancing There she is with her eyes as bright and merry at a child's wearing a dress almost as colorful as the pictures she paints, with a lei of flowers around her heck and a nosegay In her hand. The MacDougalls Rrandchlldren. have four STAFFS. carry full stocks at both stores of.. picture to inspire any woman — not with the promise of 3 that can be bought at beauty or found in,bottles, or in the kind of serenity promised by tranquilizers, or of the kind of fame that can sometimes be arrived at by elbowing one's way to the top. lag that you don’t have time to grow old. The way to cultivate tranqiMlity is not by taking pills but by taking life as it comes: working hard when itore is work to be (Jone, tak^ pleasure in the beauty all around you, putting your , talents to work for your own pleasure and — if you are lucky — for the pleasure of others, and having the optimism of a woman who can say with a twinkle in her eye on reaching one hundred years, 'Til just have to start all over again.” No, the birthday portraU ol plainly aa words: The way to live to be a bright-eyad, iwpnr-(aped did tody b io be ad biclf-esled In living and doing and be- Chapter CL of the PEG Sster-hood met Monday at the Holly home of Mrs, J. W. Keasey. Following a luncheon and business session, Mra Wmiam— Ls Miller of Chapter AW gave a report on '"The United Nation’s Today.” Mrs. Charles Matson. Mrs. H. W. Chapman, Mrs. C. J. Morgan Jr. and Mrs. J. F. WllUams assisted the hostess Mrs, Robert McDougall of Atlanta, Ga. was a guest. I. for one, am tempted to frame that birthday picture of Grandma Motes and put it on my desk remind me that a woman can sparkle at 100 - U she is still interested in the people world and the life around her, that a - hidden ^fidenf can be^brought ■ forth and nourished at any age, and that the greatest sin against oneself is to endure life instead of reaching out to make the most of eveiy happy momehf along the way. Report Is Read at PEO Meeting are from New York aty. The bridegroom, mb of Dr. Robert T. Hatt of Btoomllold HUb and the bte Mrs. Maroollo Haft, bad William Adle of New York aty for Me boM maa. Hb brother Richard Hatt of Berkley ushered with Martin Van derCamp of Washington, D.C., WiUiam Cobau Jr. of New Carib and the bride’s cousin William McDowell of Richmond, Va. Club Dances The Allemanders Square Dance Club met Saturday evening at John D. Pierce Junior High School with Sam Joan calling. Sweet Georgia Brown, the round dance of the month, was reviewed. New members are Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Hurteau, Mr. and Mrs. Burt Burnett and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Frase. Beautify Eyes (NEA) — Small eyes can be made to appear larger by applying eyeshadow a bit higher than the crease in the lid and extending the coTor outward slightly past the actual width of the eyes. SALE! Starting fhursday 9:30 sharp! THE SHOES HE GREW UP IN.,. GROWING WITI+M- - Built to take it... yet not one extra ounce of needless weight. Man-styled, with important boy-fit. . . handsome flexible leathers, long-wearing. The shoes he grew up in ... still growing with him. Style os shown in boys' sizes 8'/2-)2, B-EE $g50 Sizes 12 Vi-3, B-EEE Sizes 3'/i-6, A-E Stter eVi-9, A-D $ 8.99 $10.50 $10.99 ( Extro-Support Styles os shown ----------------^ Sizel^ SV^-12, C-E $ 9;50 Sizei iZVii- 3, C-E Available at BOTH of our stores $10.50 ■STAPP'S 28 E. Lawrence St., Downtown (Open Mon. end Fri. to 91 FAMILY SHOE STORE 9» W. Huran « T,l,gnph. (Open Fri. and Set. to 9) wool dresses farmerly $14.98 *8 Carolyn Seyffert Becomes Bride in Princess Gown Alpha Betas Hold Officer Election Alpha Beta Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma Sorority has elected Mrs. David Hlcka pmident. Other officers, who will serve through 1962, are Mrs. Stanley (X-exak, first vice president; .Mrs. Geoige Yansen, second vice presl-dent; Mrs. Emil Bruestle, recording secretary; Mrs. Olive Lord, correapondlng secretary; Mrs. Clare Hubbell parliamentarian; and Mrs. Cecil Myers, treasurer. For the wedding Mrs. Seyffert wore an amethyst faille costume suit with mauve-amethyst hat and deep pink corsage. Mrs. Hatt, In sage green brocade with brown accessories, carried a corsage of deep red roses. The bride attended Bt. Mary’e Junior college end wee gredn-eted from the University of North with CU Omege Sorority. Her husband, a University of Michigan alumnus, is a civilian design engineer at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. For the southern honeymoon the new Mrs. Hatt selected a raspberry wool costume suit with matching velvet hat and black accessories. The couple will live in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. Tells af Wedding af Daughter Mrs. Mat^areTBpalding^ W-terford Township announces the marriage of her daughter Karen Edith to Array Pfc. John T. Lein-enger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Lelnenger of Waterford Township. The bride is also the daughter of William Spalding of Berwick Street. The couple will reside on Lorraine Drive, and the groom will leave Nov. 1 tor Fort Knox, Ky., where he Is stationed. Mrs. Leinenger will join her husband in three weeks. She was graduated from Waterford Township High School in June, and her husband is finishing his education in the Army. Masterpoint Game Held by Bridge Club The Pontiac Duplicate Bridge Club’s monthly masterpoint game w'as held at the Hotel Waldron Monday evening. Juniors, misses! All-occasion dresses in wool jersey, blends. Full skirt, sheath styles in fall colors. Winners were Allen Rososky and Donald Stephenson, Mrs. Charles TTavls and Carl Vo«^urg. Mrs^. Sam Feldman and Mrs. Sam Cohen, Mr. and Mrs. A. K. MacKean and'Mrs. Ernest Guy and Robert Segifia. Others were Dr. and Mrs. Zac Endress, Dr. and Mrs. W. Barron and Mrs. Margaret IHtkin and Steve Learmonth. MRS. DAVID mcau Oommittoe heudi are Mrs. P. P. Whltmer, comqiniilty roniee; Mrs. Habball, edpoattonal awards; Helea BMIa, flaaiie^ Mrs. Edward Ombb. hospitality sad oourtosy; Pstrieia Kandsea, Fay Ealy, legislation. The list continues with Mrs. David Turo, membership and iiiltia-tlon; Margaret Snyder, music; Mrs. Albert Kohn, necrology and Iva O’Dell, Plo- Women; Mrs. (Xczak, program; and Mrs. Richard Penman, publications and publicity. Mrs. John Kent, research; Mrs. George Yansen, scholarship; Mrs. Lynn. Rohrer, selective recruitment of teachers; and Mrs. Irene Albright, teacher welfare and morale, complete the list of committee chairmen. The sorority’s first meeting will be jointly Tuesday with Alpha Gamma Chapter whose members will be hostesses for a birthday dinner at Devon Gables. i)ah Steen, Michigan State Unh versity student who participated in a student tour to Africa this year will speak on political changes in Africa which affect the Western Hemisphere ___________________________ Uniforms for STYLE CONSaOUS Women in White The NEW BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Sagfaww St. FB S-6M1 wool jumpers farmerly $10.98-$14.98 Wool flannel in regular and new shortie lengths. Sheath and pleated skirt styles. Junior sizes! The perfect fashion mate for oil your .fun-filled days! TOrtURON fashian shap ta 9 p.m, manday, thursday, friday, Saturday Sibleys Fashion Spotlight! GOLO time means fun time! NieUgoa's Ingmt nofshsisi Dsolac tMtmcia Mile Stiopplng Center S. Tslsfraph SI Seasis Lsks M. V THE rOXTlAC PRESS. WF.DXF.SDAV. OftOBEH 2«. lono Tea Honors Beta Mu Pledges ■ Plcdgfs to Beta Mu Chapter o( Epsilon Sigma Alpha Sorority were honored it a tea Sunday afternoon Inj Adah Sheliy Library. * * * Blue and yellow ronages were presented to Mrs. Lloyd Burton, Mrs. Thomas Schmidt, Mrs. Richard Hoehner. Ann Schachem. Mrs. Tlieodore Womack and Elaine Vanitvelt. Mrs.i Franklin Morton, rushing chairman, gave a Wef histoy of the sorority. President Mrs Jack St. John presided at the tea toble. ♦ * * A Chinese initiation will be Wednesday evening at the home of Elizabeth Rockefelle. FIOTEX GOP Women Talk Politics Mrs. Robert B. Lowry was guest speaker for the Pontiac Republican Women's Club at Adah Shelly Library Monday. ★ ★ ♦ Alter the talk Mrs. Thomas Hollis reported on the campaign coffee hrars. Members discus.sed issues before the voters in the Nov. 8 election and planned details for a motorcade to Southfield High School i whOTe vice-presidential candidate | Henry Cabot Lodge spoke Monday.' Hostesses were Mrs. J. L. Slay-hnugh, Mrs. Joiin Boardman, Miw.l Cora Harrington, Mrs. Frank! Irons, Mrs. Lulu Luby and Mrs.i Harry Sibley. College Personals Three young men from the Pan- awarded to John H. Ilac area are among the record 0*lw**-number of 4.17 freshmen enrolled at St. Joaeph s College. Renaslaer, Ind. I calm Beauty Clinic by Edythe McCulloch Change of Pace . . . With No Money to Spend Try anyone of the new ways to wear old pearls. Pearls, in single strands grouped strands, ornamentation. Try new and more exciting tricks with them this tall. Braid several strands together to form a bib. This is^ dramatic on basic black. Tie a length around the waist of an evening dress. Pin a medium length of pearls asymmetrically toward one shoulder with a jeweled pin. Wear a long strand, knotted and reaching below the waist el a sweater. Spend an interesting hall hour trying other pieces of your cos-tume tewelrv- in new -and unusual places. Phene Edythe McCulloch Beauty Shoppe, FE 2-7431 SW Pontiac Slate Bonk Professional PERMANENTS ^ Styled os YOU yke It! HAIR CUTTINO -TINTS FRER PARKING IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 No Appointment Necessary irorra 8T«N80N, owner MR. THOMAS’ HAIR FASHIONS Wtl EUukvU Lake M4. FI 4-4SSt Reaeinary MeCIeary McCleary DRAYTON CAB Servica — feenemy WATERFORD "Wa Ge Anywhere" Preparing for Saturday's appearance at Madisntl ^ is., are University of Michigan Imndsmen (from left) Frank Carwford of Commerce and Robert and Dennis Carrels of Orchard l.ake. They ore with Many Hedge on Sacrifice a.ssi.stant band director Ceorge R, Cavender,.The JTO-memlter band will be travel guest of the Che.nolct Division of Cenernl Motors C.orp. Most Teens Want College By ElKiENE GILBERT laded they have studied as hard Gilbert Vouth Keeeoreh Co. Moat high school students want to go to college, but they begin j !to whom we talked before school hedging when you mention the pos- activities sibility that they might have to make sacrifices. We discovered this when questioned 1.042 teen-agers about ! their college plans and ambitions. Nine out of |0 of the youngsters say they hope to enter eol-lege, and almost that many — — say they expect to Ihteffer^i.'' Lawrence Rockwell, 18, of Tam- 1, Fla. said “no need to do so.” * * tk There are other sacrifices besides study that many of the youngsters are not willing to make in order to gain entrance to a coUege. Only 60 per cent would sacrifice make If. jiheir summer vacation — 64 per - L«ut o% about sliin llLsttyiheyi?^ ?* «nd 56 per cent would give up such things as sum-;of the gTris. Only^ per ceh! w6uld mer vacation, dating, sports and | cut down on their dating - 63 per limning around with friends if it j cent of the boys and 55 per cent twerp necessary to pave the wayjOf the girl.s. iward college entrance. ; only 6* |»er pent would cut * * W ; down on sports — 11 per rent of But one thing they would cut the boys and 5.1 per rent of the girls — and only 41 per cent would cut dowa on their conver- idea of the r«s^ Most experienced parents would regard these figures as pretty opiimislle. More than half of the youngsters expect their parents to pay from three quarters or more of the coat. ' Sixteen per cent expect to lean on their parents for half the cost, while 11 per cent expect less than half. Eight per cent say their education will cost their parents nothing, and 13 per cent don’t know. Only 2 per cent expect to borrow money to finance their educations. down on is television. RELY ON PARENTS Most of the youngsters expect Mom and Dad to pay all or most of the bill, which they figure will come to something like $1,000 to $2,000 a year — which on the face of it seems a bit bn the side of wishful thinking. In expressing their hope to attend college, most of the yoang-sters agree with 17-year-old Lisa Bourkard of Tampo, Fla., who saya; "It la becoming more and more necessary to have a college education In order to get a good Job.” ■ But some have other reasons. “I don't want to go out and vork," says Larry Kosowsky, 18, !of Brooklyn, N.Y. BOYS MORE EARNEST? And Patti MacKauf of Miami Beach says. “I want to get an education and get married.” Eighty-one per cent — 86 per cent of the boys and 75 per cent of the girls — would be willing to reduce their TV watching time if it were necessary. ★ ★ ♦ The boys appear to be a little more Willing to sacrifice than the girlsi Many agree with Steve Gould 15, (if Webster iGroves. Mo., who lys,-"! am willing to do anything I get into college.” Most of the yoqnglsterB have definite ideas abwt how they will finance their college educations. OPTIMISTIC ON COSTS But first a look at costs: Sixteen per cent believe they can get Scholarships play a very small part in the college plans of most high school students. It seems. Sixty-seven per cent of the youngsters expect no help from scholarships and 13 per cent more don't kiww whether they will get help of this kiml. Only 1 per cent expect to get complete scholai-ships, 3 l>er cent expect scholarships to provide more than 75 per cent of the cost, cent expect scholarships to provide half the co.st, and 12 per expect some help — but less than half ■— from this source. Among the rollege-bound teenagers, 67 per rent will attend oul-ol-town sohoots while SS per cent will attend home-town colleges and Hie at home. Ten per Michael II. Fraaet, aon of the Donald E. Kraaen of Niagara Avenue, will major In pollHcal aeleace. rianniiig to major in liberal arts (XMirses are .lohn J. O'Reilly, son of Hie John L. O'Reillys of Whltte-Slreei. and Michael J. Zlm-. mer of La Brosse Street, Waterford Township, sun of the Edgar A. | Zimmera. * * * eaiut MrKntght, daughter of the Russell McKnlghts of Birmingham, recently has been Initialed into Alpha Rho Tau,~ art honorary society, at Denison University, Granr vUle, Ohio, where^^she fii a Junior. * • * ♦ Attending the semiannual meeting of the tioard of trustees at Antioch College at Yellow Springs, Ohio, Saturday were Mrs. Theodore Yntema and Frederick J. Huoven, both of Bloomfield Hills, ewe Enrolled at Kansas City College of Osteopathy and .Surgery from the Pontiac ai-ea is Alliert A. Neater, a suphomore. son of the M A. Nesters of Cooley fjikc Kiiad From Hoi'hesicr Is Uonalit L. (Iiie^cke of KraiikMin Bond, a junior medical student. A * * . Jean C Heury and Beverly : Wells have Is-en chosen to sing In ('ential Michigan 1 'hivei-slty's Om-|ccrl Choir this year. i .Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, jWcsiern Michigan University, has j announced that Steve l,ewi8, son of iMr. and Mrs. Roy lx*wis of Ellza-i belli Lake Road, has become an I active memlsT of the Michigan ;Beta ctmpler. John D. Meikic of Cameron Ave-i mie, a missionary Intern and Wheaton College alumnus, attended the 38th annual homecoming Inst weekend on campus. Approximately 2,000 of the worldwide alumni association membership of nearly 12,000 were present. -..Ik----.......... ........ Judy RIghter of Uloomfield Hills, University of Colorado senior and member of the student director staff, attended the recent fifth ! annual Freshman Camp near Estes Park. 1 ♦ tk tk EIlKible to receive degrees and certlfleates at Central Michigan! University this month are 60 students I'cprcsenting 3‘2 counties in From Pontiac are Katherine' Johi#ion C.ehner, bachelor of seeondary. eheniistry; and Coiccn Mary Killian, bachelor of arts, secondary, schisil librarian. Paul Pf»n«»l nf ci.irhf Shall We Dance? iNEA) — For evening, one Parisian designer showed the billowing liem. This Is supposed to extend a sort of li>-vitattdn to the dance. Squofe Doncers Have Fun ot Elks Tho Dka S a a h a y - Quadrille .Square Dance Oub met at Elks Temple Friday tor an eveidng of square and round dancing. Howard Bond was Jnaater of iremonICR. Callers were John pePaiiw, Oscar Denham. Mra. ‘Thomak B Brookes and Mra. DePauw. Elwyn Hall, president, Introduced new membera Mr. and Mrs. Earl lloisington. / EXQUISITE crosomc BY BALDWIN Come In and let us show you our latest models of Baldwin pianos. Built to tha most rigid urufesatoiial sundards . Finishes in Early American Maple . . fTench Provihctal Cherry . . , Contempor|iry Bleached Mahoaany . and many other models, at conveniently IX)W BUDGET TERMH. Open Monday and Friday Evenings 'tH 9 P.M CALBI MUSIC CO. — Park Free in Rear — 119 N. Saginaw FE 5-8222 FALL Falls for Beautiful Hair! Make jQur'Jialr your featured attraction of the (all season. Let our experts use their magic touch to create yoiir personal land most becoming) hairdo. Call u.s soon. BUDGET DEPARTMENT PERMANENTS Keg. $7 A* Complete Reg. |I«.M »65<» ’'•Jnrr' *8"** .-_____TONY’S gluf Main Floor .l.'i W. Huron FE STYLE SHOP PRICES START AT SK.M ■n’t I Many who wish to go away feel as Sue Pamperin of Green Bay, Wis., does. “For me,” she says, 'I feel that I would like to try my wings and get away completely so I will not have the security that parents can get you out and help you. out whenever you have problem. I feel their help Is wohdefful. but 1 want to find what ill receive a secondary certificate in speech, and Harvey L. iSchroeder, his inasler of arts j tiegree. ! Plca.se a young snow scout with! Harold F. Blum of Leonard will I bold, bright helmet 'n' mitten; • * in history and political science. ! set in cozy knitting worsted. ^ master of arts degree will be Knit a colorful. Indian-style ski; _ mask that doubles as a beanie foriy- > . sports, .school. Pattern 764: charts; knitting directions small, medium, large. Send Thirt.v-five cents (coins) for thia pattern—add 10 cents for each! pattern for Ist-clqsx mailing Send to The Pontiac Press. 124 Needle-craft Dept., P.O. Box 164, OM Chelsea Station. New York 11. N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, name, address and zone. ' PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11 Vk $■ $atlnaw, Eagla Tkaater RMg., Pontiac, Mich. Eatollmenls Arallable la Day or Eeeniag Cfoaioa Write. Phono or Call la Poraea lot Free Hatphlel PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 JUST OFF niF PRE.SS! Sendi now for our exciting new lilfil Needlecraft Catalog, Over 125 designs to crochet, knit, sew, «>m-liroider, quilt, weuve^^lashions.l cent think thejr education______ cost from $1,000 to $I~5iJff a year; ‘X per cent from $1,500 to $2.000.[lean do on nay own.” and 12 per cent from $2,000 loi A * * liroider, quilt, weave $3,000. But 16-year-old Judith Murov of homefumishings, toys, gifts, bii- Whlle most of (he .youngsters ... . Flushing, N.Y., will live at home zaar hits Plus FRFF—instr nre eonfident they will be ac- Six i^r reiii pan to spen - i ( my parents for six smart veil caps. Hurry, by W eottoge of Ihrtr T tmrre choice, only 4l per cent are sal- ti per cent My they have no | _ 1________________ ___________________ SPEC! Ar SELLING! on tho go... ITS GREAT LOAFIN' IN It's you for the classics, onej Larks ore the ones. Happiest shoe feeling! Limber, light, spinning along compus. Hondsewn mex: vqmp and kicker seams . . . unlined construction go along with the most flexible soles. Get in ond hove it loofin' easy! Shoo SoJoo—Moitonino WELCOME PARENTS . . • while school is out ... we invite you to take advantage of this Fur Event Extraordinory! SPECIAL SALE ... Thurs., Fri. ond Sot. mink trimmed dyed bloek----- PmSIAII UMB COATS mode to measure ..; 17.98 Othari 14.98 to 29.98 So versatile, so useful ... for every casual daytime activity ... the CAR COAT! Brand new versions in 100% wool or smooth poplin or twill ... oil pile or quilt lined. Extro wormth for tongy foil and winter days. -Sizesli Cor Coots — Mato floor at 0 very special price. *399 Select your own bundle of lustrous lightweight skins and we will custom moke a coot just for you! Choose from o variety of styles in fingertip to full length. Choose youroton silk lining... we will interline if you wish. Trydu^^reTo trimmed coot, select Mtnjk in Autumn , Haxe* CerUieon* J«*krt..$299* "™saa®“ SIXTKKN I 1 THE PONTlXC PRESS, WEDNESDAY/OCTOBER 2C. 1060 Cut ironing Time ' (UH>—inmiliK (imt by doing all rayom flnt, then ailka. cottona and llnraa. In ’ thia way, minutea ai* not waatcd in waiting tor the iron t by Mk iWo* t4 Nw •WMb •( MCfc «yil Dbu'l 4tiay At fi««t REDMOND'S - Jewelers -•^ Optometrists - 81 N. Saginaw St. FE 2^612 Mcfmbers Will Play Cords, Dine Oakiand Dxmty Council of Republican Women'a CI a b a membera will play carda when they gather for a deaaert brl^ Tueaday. Showcaae, Inc., in Birmingham haa been reaerved for the 12:30 p.m. affair. Arthur Elliott Jr.. Oakland County Republican chairman, and Jack OiMw. executive aec-retary, wiil apeak. Reaervatkma may be made by calling Mra. Robert Eckert of Birmingham or diatrict campaign chairmen by Friday Junior Leaguers Set Puppet Show The newly formed Puppet Group of the Birmingham Junior Lragnc will present the puppet show "The Stranger" to all Birmingham elementary achoal. youngatent beginning Nov. 3. The children'a tale fea turea "Phewle," a akunk, and hla friends, a family of rab-blU. Mra. Thomaa Qagett ia chairman of the group. Puppetfvrs are Mra. David B. Molt. Mrs. James Burbott. Mrs, Norman B Ch-lstle. Mni. Rlch trd .Sted-Ing and Mrs. Fred Crosby. Slate Vision Slides for Twins' Moms -Dr. Robert Bernard, optometrist from Richmond, will show slides on children’s vision for the Twins Mothers Club Thursday at g p m. in the Rose Kneale Room of All Saints Episcopal Churrh. Assiating Or. Bernard will be Dr. J. Raymond Kuzara, Dr. Georae Harkless and Dr. Milton Hathaway, all of Ponliar. and Dr. Kenneth Steward of Royal Oak, A panel discussion will follow the public meeting. M«kt T»«r CralM SMfrysUsas New WIST INOIIS CRUISB “„P >«<* PISB your W«.l InOle* GrulM- for th*. wtotor. Oom-pl»t# Trsrtl HtTleo. BIRMINGHAM TRAVIL SIRVICI naaci PU'MMaa bbillt nt HoaiilUu BlruUnilioa New! HdeM; Ru Beauty Bath for Dry Skin Tree of Life Beauty Bath Discovery Both Silkens and Scents You AH Over! Only Helena Rubinstein, First Lady of Beauty Science cbin3 tii\n cfM^ Beiuly Bafbt 'rhis superb therapeutic-type discovery smooths all of you to silken softness and envelops you with delicious lasting fragrance at the same lime. Ho bath oil ever penetrated like this. Dryness disappears in the two minutes it takes your skin to drink in the precious moisturizers and lubricants. Chapped heels, knees, elbows are pampered and smoothed. Taut nerves and tiredness seem to mch away while you bathe. And only one capful in your tub. . .'BO little does to much. '"^Strelch out in the fragrant luxury of a Beauty Bath tonight Yon will riae from your bath silken^ and tceiaod all over! A oc. 3.00 8 oi. 5.00 plus tax DOWNTOWN STORE 148 N. Soginow $». tNaar Sasrsi WESTSiOE STORE Huron Street Comer Telegroph NORTHSIDE STORE 4895 Dixie Highwoy Drayton Ploint , These St, Dunstan $ Guild supporters will turive chauffeurs (from left) Mr, and'Mrs. Francis T. M. in ^tyle at Friday evening s formal first night of the Loud and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Himelhoch of Bir- guild s new comedy presentation “The Girls in 509." mitlgham. A number of dinner parties will precede Rolls Royce owner Robert Raisch of'Lathrup Village the affair. II iPlanPlay 300 Guests at OES Installation ion Politics Over IMO guests attended the inslallation of officers lor Pontiac Chapter 228, Order of the Eastern Star, Monday evening in Roosevelt Temple. Mrs. Mary E. Erickson, worthy matron, and Oarence D. Curry, worthy patron, presided. Mrs. Samuel E. Smith was mistress of ceremonies; Mrs. Paul K. Hagle, installing officer with Robert Calvary, assisting installing officer; Mm. Roy Wilton, instail-Ing marshal; Mrs. Ronald C. West, installing chaplain; Leland Dennis. installing soloist. Installing anxilinry officer was Mrs, Sylvan Clark, and Mrs. Stuart M. Allan of Wauseon. Ohio, was tnstatling organist for her mother, Mrs. (larenre D. Curry, Iqeoming worthy matron. Installing flag-hearers were Wal- and Mm. Ted Mamhbanks. Serving with incoming Worthy Matron Mm. Curry will be Chasles H. Moore, worthy patron; Mrs. Joseph Minton, associate matron; Sylvan aark, asaociale paTTOBrtiniKgr' Mm. Claude Coons, secretary; Mm. Floyd L e v e I y. treasurer; Mrs. Charles H. Moore, conductress; Mrs. N. D. Vincent, associate conductress. Curry and the officers of Masonic ifor Weekend Lodge 21 formed the honor for Mr. Moore, as his daughter, Mrs. Darrell Judy and Charles H. Moore Jr. escorted him to the East. A ★ ★ The presentation of the jewelia Mrs. Erickson was given by Mra. Levely, Mr. West presented fhe jewel to Mr. Curry. * A Signatures for the guest-book were obtained by Mm. Earl Roas, Mm. Asenath MacAdams and Mm. Davy Gilpin. AAA Out-of-towners from London, Ont., Montrose, Ovid. Ionia, Flint and Detroit attended the ceremony. Mm. Gayton Randolph is chaplain; Mm. Fred Geland, mamhal; Mm. John Batch, organist. AAA The Star points arc Adah, Mm. Stuart A. Choate; Ruth. Mra. W. Cleg Bordeaux; Esther, Hilda Vis-wat; Martha, Mra. Glenn Jolly; Electa, Mra. Orville Cummings. Mm. Virgil Newton was installed as warder; Mm. Elizabeth Seelye, MRA. CI-ARRNCi: CVRRY st'ntinel and Mm. Donald Kibble, degree olfleers are: Mm. arshal; Mm. Leo Morrison, Adah; Mm. Duane Roughton, Rnth; Mm. Albert Robertson, Esther; Mm. Os-ear Ferrell. Martha; Mm. Grace Snover, Electa; Mm. Mabel Reynoids, Christian flag; Mm. John Phillips, Eastern Star flag. Pages and candeiightera were Karen Antolich, honored queen of Bethel No. 5 and Rita M. Lister, honored queen of Bethel No. 40. Jobs’ Daughters of Bethel 5 formed an honor line for Mm. you’ll love LIGHT-WEIGHT CLINICS! (Ui»h-n-crepe wedge loles so light.. glove leather so soft... comfort so heavenly you must wear Clinics to believe iL Profeaiionally smart slip-on or oxford styles with famous Clinic fit and quality-crafting! 89.95 3S N. SwUaw SI. PAUU’S SHOE STORE “Serving Pontiac for 75 Years" Op«n Pfl. Evgni^ ’til 9 p.m. Try Swansdown Puff tor Soft Natural Look (NEAi—One of the very best helps to a“ beautiful skin Is the powder puff that’s made of swansdown. A A * Theie are many reasons for this. It fluffs the powder onto the skin rather than fibbing it in. Thus it neither spreads grime nor creates wrinkles. (A soiled powder puff is the origin of a many skin troubles.) AAA It enables you to fluff on lightly and swiftly two dustings of powder which create a beautiful veil for the skin. Women who use an eyebrow pencil will find that the swansdown puff gives the penciled Many women regard the swansdown puff as a fluffy piece of frivolity, pretty to look at but expensive out of ail proportion. Actually, it's a very sound investment It lo-|s f-aglle and is really very durable. It's both long-lasting and washable. A topical comedy liased on the election scene will be presented by ,St, Dunstan’s Players at their playhouse on Lone Pine Road Friday ^nd Saturday evenings. A A A "The Girls in 509,” originally presented on Broadway, will be repeated Nov. 3, 4 anich rob the skin of its natural artificiality moisture, it is important to re- place it. Team Lace, Suede (NEA) — Washable suede gloves with inserts of nylon lace come in the eight-button length for all-winter. They’re trimmed with flat velvet bow an^ rhinestone button. Dinner Plans Completeci nual public Harvest Dinner Nov. 8 from 5 to 7 p. Ruth Group was entertained by Mrs. Howard Cate of Elizabeth Lake Road, assisted by Mm. Haig Barsam. Mm. J. Noble Smith read devotions. Mm. Rolla Hall of Haddrill Court was hostess to Rebecca Group with Mra. Wallace Joyner as cohostess. Devotions were read by Mrs. W. C. Dennis, chairman. AAA Naomi Group was served a salad luncheon at the Mohawk Road home of Mm. Etta Hibler, chairman. Mrs. Adele Allen read devotions dnd Mra. Maurice Baldwin, program chairman, reviewed an article on "Missions in Haiti. A luncheon for Farther Group was served at the home of Mm. Basil HartI on Stout Street. Mm. Walter -WillsDiL .iAaiimm., the devotional leader Mra. Harry 'Taylor and Mm. Qarence Myers who spoke on "Home Missions." A ^ A ■ Mrs. .1. W. Davis of Wenonah Drive was hostess to Dorcas Group luncheon, assisted by Mrs. M. C. Worster. Mrs. Lawrence Taylor, chairman, announced plans for serving the next dinner for the Men’s Fellowship of the church. Mrs. D. R. Veazey led devotions. Deborah Group planned a Nov. 13 toy party at the church when membere met with Mm. J. C. Smith on Pike Street. Mm. Smith offered devotiims. Finest Quality Carpeting ^ Mm. R. J. Boynton of Osage Circle opened her home to Mar-tha Group for a hmchcon. Mrs. Jennie Riehmond’a devotions highlighted the life of Moaea. AAA Lydia Group met at the home of Mrs. Florence Miller, chairman, on Chamberlain Street. Mm. Aden Thornton and Mm. Mark Cheney cohostes.ses. Mm. Thornton spoke on "Baptist Mission Fields.' Tip to Pony Toiler (NEA) — The teen-ager who weare a pony tail (and no one else should wear one) mast ISe lcaretar ttiSt she doesn't wear it on the same line as the note, if that particular feature is large or long . The tail should start higher on her head or her nose will look very large in- S- For the ultimate in Furniture and ^ Carpeting elegance, see Elliott's of Waterford. J “ In business for the past 37 years, they have established a policy of customer ^ satisfaction through top quality workmanship ^ and merchandise. ^ Sign Here, Please You had to sign your name twice, in two different books, if you wanted a bath as well as a room in a Kansas hotel— that it, some SOKxid years ago. A guest had to register for a bath in the wooden. c(g>per-lined public bathtub — otherwise, BO bath. loi 3-2<01| rigidoire KEASET ELECTBIC 4620 Dilie Hwy„ Draytea Georges-Newports fewelry Depl. ]%adon^s __for Juniors Miracle Mile Sheppint Center TtiMrMk il Sewn Uk« U. o*M DiIIt 'ui t r M. WM. C. McRATH CUSTOM PAINTING WALL COVERINGS FE 5-8486 Serving the Pontiac Area for Over 37 Years 5390-5^ [^ixic Hwy. OR 3-1225 For Your Wedding QUALITY At Prices Yen Caa Afford and Quantity • rtM ciaaMiiaf 0 S laMl kMk * S Ian* l^aMrrM itta a S ailaiatan awrriafa wrtIflmU Au iQQ95 FOB JUST C R. MASKILL SpJDK) 1 ML CIcaMEM St FE 4-«a — THE PONTIAC PgKSS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOHEH 20. lOfto Let Child Be Free to Draw Impressions SEVENTEEN By MLRIAL UWRENCK That evening we had a roomful of young artl«i-talented. Krious, hard-working students of our local univdraity s school ot painting. But whan I brought in the coffee and strudel, I waited to serve it be-<;auae they We involved in a vio-l^nt argument. • ♦ * * That morning in life claas tbeir teacher bad called a feltow atu-dent'a work an “abomination” and told her to Uke up bookkeeping. VI- vianl shouM Imv«, (.k** aside Is ten hef a tUpg like that." pratosled a giri. "Why?” demanded a boy hotly. ‘What's the sense of his letting her kid herself? Did you ever watch her work? she can t make a free, sweeping brushstroke,on canvas to save her life. * ♦ # ' ‘Everything she iuiiala is stiff and dead. Keeping rows of numbers in neat litUe lines is exactly what she ought to be dokg! " “She once told me that she'd been raised on coloring books." another girl said. “You know the kind that outlines pictures clowns or seals balancing balls on|Sters imagination One goes like their noses that kids fill in wtth this: crayon or water color." There was an appalM silence ^ Then someone said. “What dopey ***?**•” flawer bed parents can do to kids! If you ever! "f ^*" "**'’ . Just Ask Her to Look Over Silver By EMILY POST Pear Mrs. Post; Recently the daughter of dur next door neighbor was married. She had a rather large reception at home. - One evening shortly before the wedding the mother came over . and asked if she might borrow our punch bowl and some silver. My husband and I entertain a great deal and have an ample supply of silver, f was only too glad to help out. The day after the wedding the bride's mother came over and returned the things she had borrowed.' After she left and I was putting the silver back in the silver chest, I noticed that two forks and a spoon were missing. I am veiy fnuch upset over this and don’t know how to bring up the subject to ray neighbor without seeming to accuse her. Will you help me? Answer; Just ask her please to look through her own silver to see if your missing forks and spoon were put away with it by mistake. ★ A ★ Dear Mrs. Post: Two of the girls with whom I work sent me a very pretty nightgown while I was in the hospital. I wrote a thank-you note and sent it to one of the girts. At the bottom of the note I asked her please to send the note to “Mary" after she had finished reading it. I understand "Mary" was hurt ove^ this and feels that she received “second hand thanks. .Will you please tell me if what I did was wrong? Answer: Yes, you should really have sent a note to each of them. If they had lived together, one note addressed to them both would have been sufficient. --JL had any talent, those thin^ would I ” be enouglyto wreck K.“ j A "A A I Ifyour child enjoys using crayontj That is an opinion I recalled thisiand water color, you might'inquire aek upon receiving a review oopy|about it at your bookstore, of a new kind of coloring book tor; A painter's talent is not to repro children. Allied The Poetry-Draw- duce the world aiound him but to mg Book. Its -pages are blaftk ex-j recreate It. To recreate what Iw cept for delighful little versos dras-i has seen a talented child should en by editors wniiam and not be restricted to the outlined! Julia Coltnore to evoke kitrigulnglyldi-awlngs of whal other people have palhtable Images in ynir young-i scon in the world. Cashless Society Near By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP tUaft Writer NEW YORK (AP) The new catalogue of my favorite mail der house has a special Item: A the English guinea — they know about any place he might land lof what it stands tor, but hobody he can sign with a flourish. It i« increasingly po«.ible to get' fact, don t make guineas any ^long almost indefinitely without' cow^ waUet with windows!pilces in terms of this old e tary » This is completely in line current trends. The American dollar is obviously on its way to obsolescence. Soon it may be like Dear Mrs. Post: I am involved in a question of courtesy which I would like you to settle If you .will. The question is: When going through a revolving door should the man go first so that hemiay push the door, which is quite heavy, tor her? Answer; She gets in first and he pushes it around to the next compartment where he gets in. From this he can control the speed of the door and quite easily let her out. AAA Dear Mrs. Post: nie other day a woman came into our flower shop to order some flowers. I was.waiting on her when a telephone call came in from another customer who asked to speak to me. The person who answered - tJte. telephone came over and told me about it, and I excused myself to the customer I was waiting on and took the call. When I returned, she was very indignant for my having left her to “wail" on someone else. She thought I was very discourteous to her and left the shop in a huff. Will you please tell me if I was wrong? Answer: It was not wrong of you to leave your customer to go to the telephone and talk briefly on business with your other (mstomer who asked to speak to you. i*L ■ ..t .... CSIISIUOI IllUgrilllUCI^ Wlinuui Cl; jwliir The foxes, social security,* P«’n8k)n hmdt hospiultzatlon. in-! " . “ surance already removed. At the moment, the last bgs-you even can have your savings' tions of cash seem to be parking “utomatlcally dedu.'led. The check meters, five-and-dime stores and does go intact Into one's checking, supermarkets. And even the su-iuccounl. One signs and charges all j [ permarkets are adjusting to a;”»onth and eventually comes the ^ cashless society. Most have es-jday of reckoning, consisting of tabllshed a check-cashing facilitycheeks. their “In” door. Then the! * ♦ * cash Is collected at the check-out! .,i . n, i . u counters. But at lea.st-shopping ** '"‘.‘‘'y housewives have a chance to the greenbacks Ahae taking their'Iraas^rtutg aR (hose 1 whirl around (he sheivea. - » . - - ---- ---- -case conlawmg up J0..7B criihossci. ) iVlTXJAR GREENBACKS Ideoorated cards of unyielding But it is the males who areloardboard. somebody is going to [really having it rough. As is welljit'diacover flexible slim money, [known, in some rircles it is now Just think back how handy not only craMv but IstatHk-revealing to handle 'a' restaurant tab with vulRar greenbacks. The man who would be considered by his peer group to be a cosmopolite, a sophisticate, must have credit established just greenbacks are; A $1,000 doesn’t weigh an ounce more tlian a $1 bill. And users need i to the bother later of writing, checks, gluing enveloiies and buying stamps. Wait until some status leader finds that o Fashion's most flattering shhf-* waist features a dashing, wide collar above a-shapely waist and! skirtful of unpressed pleats. Sewj it in faille, cotton, rayon, or ini a sheer wool to go everywhere. | ^Printed Pattern 4874: Misses' I Sizes 10, 12; 14. 1«, 18. Size 16 re-j quires 4% yards ^-inch fabric. Send 50 cents in coins for this pattern—add 10 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of Tlie Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West! 17th St. New York 11. N.Y. Print j plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. Our Annoof CHRISTMAS BONUS Offer . . . OUR FAMOUS FRUIT CAKE is our gift to you with ony $7.50 order (B.kt SMSa, (M*'. fla.r ..4 )al«« This oHsr toss not restrict yo« te Msms s4 say s«m brsnd Mine but tpfHM te Mr eiiHrs stock witli tfcs tew Mcssssry exesp- Natsral Health Food$ 8 Mt. Clemens FI 4.4601 BARGAINS CAlOREDDRIWOtfii SALE Solid Color CORDUROY 94*’ $1.29 -3«" to 42" Wido— I Colors Wothoblo. PRINTED CORDUROY $*119 Yd. Reg. $1.49 yd. Washable—forge selection in potterns. WASHABLE WOOLENS $1.99 « Popular. Scotch Plaids — for drosses and skirts. 34" . M” _ i»i% ASSORTED WOOLENS VoIhos H $S.9a *2.88 Phone FE 2.0642 RPSTICK OPEN DAILY 10 A. M. to 9 f. M. MIRACLE MILE V SHOPPING CENTER S. TsIofrspK at Sqosro Uko Rd. FREE PARKING FOR 5,000 CARS IMPOnTAiWT MOIYTH-EIVD CLEARANCE! MODERN and CONTEMPORARY FURNITURE Regutorly $359.50 MODERN WALNUT DINING ROOM SUITE $319.50 WALNUT DINING ROOM SUITE 41" luffot, 4 Chairs; Choico of Squora, Round or Drop-loof tohla. $ 99.50 MODERN WALNUt DESK, SIZE 48" x 18'/j" $289.50 DANISH MODERN 2-PC. SECTIONAL $oi«d-wolnutr-oil finish; looto foam cushioni. ZIpporod soar and btcVj»)»hinni. $ 59.50 OCCASIONAL CHAIR Wolnu.t Legs, Persimmon Cover $114.95 5-PC. DINETTE SET; TURQUOISE FORMICA TOP )6"i4S" Tibia with oxtonsion I4"x$0“. 4 hoifo chairs. $468.50 MODERN 3-PC. CURVED SECTIONAL; SEATS 7' Foam rubhor cushions —. tipporod; Muted stripo fabric in Mack, blue, froy. $ 79.50 TURQUOISE PLASTIC MODERN CHAIR IlKh IH*. $214.50 CONTEMPORARY LIGHT GREEN SOFA $409.50 WALNUT BEDROOM GROUP BY FOUNDERS Oilod finiok. Douhla-drostor, chott, penal haadhoard and frsma. EARLY AMERICAN, FRENCH PROVINCIAL $ 98.50 GOLD UPHOLSTERED CHAIR BY SHAW $ 79.50 BEIGE OCCASIONAL CHAIR 'f- Solid Ckorry frama. Antiquo satin covar; Dacran-fUted, ravarstMa cushions. $119.50 FRENCH PROVINCIAL LOVE SEAT laipa antiqua satin (loilad i. SALE $29950 $25950 $ 84" $24950 * 3950 $ 7950 535950 $ 59$o 5169“ *349“ $299.50 EARLY AMERICAN DINING ROOMlSROUP..................... China, Round Drop-loaf tabla, 2 Captain'i chairs, 2 matas chairs. $569.50 3.PC. PROVINCIAL CURVED SECTIONAL DuraMa, wovan e'*on covar; custom-built; team rubhor, ravarsibla cushions. $112.50 COLONIAL PRINT UPHOLSTERED CHAIR BY SHAW Vary spacial — to clssr ter now arrivals. $119.50 CHAIR-AND-A-HALF BY SHAW Rlua-eroan covar. Colonial wine-back — vary attractiva. $414.95 COLONIAL 101" SOFA Laosa back cuchiant. laaaa pillow arms. Raica and rust covar. Dacron and sprine-filted $ 69“ *^9“ s 69“ *199**r $469“ 5 69“ $ 7950 $29950 BEDDING SPECIALS by STEARNS & FOSTER Full or Twin Sixe SETS HOTEL-BUILT SETS . POSTURE-MASTER SETS $89^0 LADY MADISON SETS SQOOO 837 Coil Msttreis First Quality. Guaranteed Sat' includes Mattress and Box Spring 5PECIAL GROUP POLE LAMPS Choico of Colors Regularly $24.50 to $49.50 17” "TV" SCATTER RUGS BEDSPREADS • RUG SAMPLES 6 All-wool carpet samples • 18''x24'' sixe 6 Lerge choice of colors K YOUR CHOICE! M # (Floor Samples) Choice orCofors and Fabrics '/2 off PEPPER MILL SETS (including salt shakers) Wolnut Mople or Block '/2 off OVAL BRAIDED RUGS (slightly soiled) WOOL ond NYLON Reg. 49.50 Brown 9x12 ^29^® Reg. 39.50 Brown 8x10 5]9S0 Many Other Items Not Listed CONVENIENT BUDGET TERMS Interior Pecoroting Service ot No Extro Cost 1680 South Telegraph Roiid • FEderal 2-8348 Open Thurtduy, Fridoy, Mondoy Evening! 'til 9 ^ Immediote Delivery on oil Items r "Ilr ^GHIKKN THE POy ilAC PRESS. WKDXKSDAY. OCTOBER 26, 1960 •-li Their Works Ye Shall Know Them' What Makes a Camera Click? The men in the [lirtuiy abos^- h(> fiwkr to 10.000 in front of arc nrely s*M>n by nowspapci i ,ho Auroro, 111 Oty Hall re«lfr». But their work often is ^ photORrapheVs u e . e * * * ' ' Ktmpped on their I’ar-top perrh They i-e the I*oUi8raphwv - ^^avinnwrt I^ traveling with Demorratir presidential candidate John Ken-iWdy. Elven of them are pereheil atop a caravan ear — « fyplca working position. ReauHa of their efforta In elude: (top renter) Kennedy bopping from a ear hood over the windshield — the (|ulrkeat way bark In — during eatir palgaii« at JoHel, III. At top right, an Elgin. III. guard in the Kennedy caravan gets caught off guard and bumped into the car as the crowd surges forward. ★ ♦ ★ A scene that has become familiar to Kennedy lensmen is his attraction for teen-age girls (lower left). This young girl who took a dive across the auto's hood to shake the candidate's hand was the the Elgin crowd. As part of every campaign, tire's the inevitable campaign speech. The camera caught Kennedy gesturing (lower right) as Baby Gridder 'Breaks In' With Unfortunate Results ROCHESTER, III. iAP)-Mich-ael R. Head, 18 months old, prob- nation's ,vounge.st football casualty. He fractured his right leg Tuesday when he kicked at a football and fell. IJMTED SHIRT DISTRIBUTORS TeUHurun Shopptng Center .Some showed signs of near .•xhvustion after elmging to the car for dear life as it turned and Picture at Top Left UPl Photo; All Others AP Photofax WAKE UP RARIN'TOGO without Nagging Backache MotrlYoannntttwfutrtlirfyMUMd from BMtginc backaeht. htadam aau nniKolar aelm and palm that oftan amaa mUfta alcltu and miurabla tind-ont iMlinta, when thaaa dlacomforU coma on with OTar.«zartion or a1. ' SPECIALIZED SERVICE • TV e hi-fi • RADIO •TAPE RECORDERS •P. A. SYSTEMS •OFFICE INTER-COMS • WEBCOR FACTORY SERVICE BLAKE RADIO-TV Menial Care Hospital Observes 50fh Year GIUND RAl^JDS (^) - Pine Rest Christian Haspital Tuesday ccle-: brafed ifs ."iOlh anniversary with al formal program noting its promi-^ nonce as a Icadoi’ among private -mental eare 'HKHUutMms' --------- • Adminislcrcrl by a iioiipronr cor ' (joration, the hospital's $l,.V)().nOO :.anuual. operating budget comes in. . p:rt (lom contributions by member ; of Reformed and ChrisUan Reformed Cliurch group.s. The institution. lm;atcti in uriiun Cuticrvlllc, is the nation's largest church-oriented mental hos-i pitaland third largest private men-i lal hospital. * ♦ ♦ Arthur S. Flemmin.g. Cniled-Stales secretary of health, education and welfare, took part in the celebration as principal .speaker. He also carried a message from Prr.sident Eispithowerrommending the hospital on its ."tO-year record. Pakistan has three official languages - Bengali, Urdu and English. SMI SELLING OUT _______ UHOLEUMaidPAIIIT ______ OUR STOCK OF 6'-9'.12' LINOLEUM . . . OUR HUNDREDS OF GALLONS OF PAINT MUST GO DURING THIS SALE! SHE Plutic WaU Tilt 9x12 Liarieoa I191 \i u. I $395 Paial Afmttront InUid laterioi LINOLEUAA Exterior TILE $179(w.| 7^ WaU Liaeltaai ViRTl Liaoleaai Never mee4m 29* rm. n. 59* 8«. Jt. « w s-ft. wM« \MANY. MANY MORE BARGAINS, STOP IN AND SHOP! SMITH’S TILE OUTLET 257 $. SAGINAW PE 2.T755 OpM Mm. and Pri. 'HI 9 / 736 W, HURON FE 4-4266 OfM Mm., Thun., FrI. 'HI 9 YOUR SAVINGS GROW FASTER With 4 % SEMI-ANNUALLY comings ot current rate COMPOUNDED Established in 1890 - Never missed poying o dividend. 70 years of sound management - your ossuronce of security. Assets now over sixty million dollars. t « PASSBOOK SAVINGS IN BY THE 10th EARN FROM THE FIRST OF THE MONTH! > Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. Emblished 1H90, 7S W. Hnreo St. PoatUc ” PE 4-QSSl customer parking in rear oV building Archie Barnett We Are Proud To Announce,, IBamett's estli ANNIVERSARY SALE Starts Friday! MYPApQa An Epoch in the History of ■ Cltllye Barnett's of Pontiac — of All Ooklopd County. * Barnett's—A Lonidmark in Pontiac One of the oldest if not the oldest stores fiC yCAPC” Pontiac. Certainly the oldest locally owned ■ store. Established 1895. ...We ore proud our reputotion - established leodership in good volues - fine quiafitie'S -petitive prices - the lotest fashionsbig selections. mC YClipC" It adds up to merchandising that has brought ex- Wlf B iefflltWe ceptionol values to the men of this area ... A policy weorededicotod to continue . . . dnd this anniversary sole will perpetuate. Now, with the cooperation of our valued resources, 65 YEARS* exceptionally grand values celebrot- * Mllilia jng ihjg grgQi event. Rood our big od in the Thursdoy Pontioc Press, be prepored to get here eorty! Don't buy a single item in men's ond boys' weoring opporel until you've seen our sole! SALE STARTS FRIDAY MORNING 9:30 A.M. IBamett's ISO NORTH SAGINAW, N«» fo Snars '-r:i 1»QNT1AC PRESS. WEDxksDAY. OCTOHKH 2(5. ONE COLOR t‘ XIXETEEX Slow at Probing Misuse of Indiana Suf fers in Highway Scandal (Editor's Now: In i profrui In-TOirlng MduWtioa of TMt droms of idnd Md U)« dwdrd o( Usausdadt'Ol coBiracU. sour appltt srt Uktly to crop up. This socood of tour articles By BEM PRICE WASHINGTCW (AP)-Sooner or latef Congress will lift the lid on the nation's greatest highway program in history, probably after the November election. And there's no doubt that some phases of the $41-billion program could stand a thorough airing. is not all. A spedalf Any effort to check these hidden paid $117,350 for land not needed,thal since some people arc uoing Florida legislative committeejrelationships leads ultimately to for the road. {to make a fortune out of lend ac- ^rd at^tions at a publlC|the Indiana Department of Secu- Land U still a problem in ln-j<|ulsltlon. then the local people, teanng that at least eight state rities, which keeps a record of dlana. {whose land has been appropri- department employ major stockholders .in Indiana' „ , jatrd. should revive a higher fee had been i^ing under-the-table firms. There the check ends. The *"^;*'***’ ;^ !,h«„ they are entitled to nMa federal figures, however, arm <5«. Handley oluwi^ "AR pleted (» moM autboHlaUve available Mt could haiw. been said was'ardii"'and l.fB miles of second-1 comparison ol the thn« sB&~ia »t the program would be con- ary, primary and urban readsiof ieur montha ago. tinued and expanded. Why em- built or improved ! phasize the obvious'" * * * j In the election campaign, one TV same report crwllts neigh-! ________________ of Welsh's main tslklng points boring Illliwis with 97 miles of ______ need to move faster auprrliighwsys and 3„107 milea NtWSpopBr and more effidenily on highway itnprovement or new construct Ion jEndorMf SbR. KBnnwdv construction. in primary, secHsidary and uriam ' ' ' roads 1 VENTURA. daW. fUPI» — En- Indiana's neighbor on the othcrl**®''**^'''^* ^ Sen. John F. Keime- subconunittee on the federal ald'J,,^, j, Indiana $2 300 io iry **‘*‘’" highway pro- A staff member of the Bouse estimated in III v^iuii pfaitorin of Gp>'. Harold W. Hand-inicr\i( w Uraig's suixesSor. was ere- OOP DUMPH (HAtRMAN ^rly in the the Re- up lii thTreriul '«»■ president was aimcMnced of Vnnghways M-i-_^ .bv JH. M«ic-.y inde-. program was asked why the tn ^ cmw. mostly becauv the S'-**™* diaim rumors ^dnt been investl- ^,^,, pay, Wpendent lee ap- * * * “O ’*® * ‘‘nv each! The GOP platform “ complicated, he a court appearance The coses November gubernatorial contestj chairman, ^ prVmary,’ ms mP™**”* Ventura Ooumy .Star-Free John Peters. Omlary and urban i-oad Improve- U*'^'**- ii Peters sought nojuinution as or new constriction An ediliorial of the--John T*. state treasurer Literally at the diiKtomarily there Is, a paper-Scripps Newspapers member said. Democratic nominee has Itobert 1^' ^ Jiind against i, finished and appearanee in th*- emerged as a man of first-riaaa , I eters at Parker s behest and was n„„..,u of Roods "rompleled , intelligence, studious, with a de. lor the nominated. roliimn. Parker has said during veloped phllosophv of government. The latest Bureau of Public his eampaign that Indiana wiUj* wllUngnesa to (ace stark facts thf^mannlwerTo^d^* JT" * ***^|«n7'y «« '"«n wo days, oetween Kepumican Crawiord F.'Roads report, listing figures as of have finished 124 miles of super-fa sense of htatoru- direction and ThT^^nal Indian^ scandals Malliu'w E. June 30. i960, credits Indiana with highways by the end of this year, broad human understanding the 200-page report of a co suiting firm hired by the U, Bureau of Public Rolids to i vestigate Ma's.sachusetts. resulted in the indictment of two' juries in Indiana have had .... top aides to former Gov. George; almost unbroken wcord of grant-.... * ‘ - ■airn'e STRONG PRKSSl'RES A covering letter on the still-secret report indicates strong bribe Virgil W. Smith, highway! rommissTon chairman, in connec-} „„ Three'-eaJs picked .it tion with the purche.se of highway : equipment. ^ | .,^^35 y„. Smith began sorV’ing a piisonj^^ji) Memorial Gardens. p!innliff. sentence qf 2 to 14 years lastjiT,^ j.(aip nffored $570 for a piece „ month after conviction on a;o( properly Court aonai-ers pressures were exerted to have'charge of suliciting and accepting I me vahw ;il $14.,i'JP The land appraisers place unjustified bribes. Three others connected Hwarded $23 600 values on select^ properties. with this case and another involv-j (-^se 90;)6. Jackson Coui>'.y, ~ properties wero on|ing charges t»f conspiracy to em- j Bi-incr. p'ainiif These In West Virginia, certain contractors reportedly charged the state for road building materials that did not actually go into the roads. The Florida report deals with conflict of interest cases and around Miami there are reports of speculation in land for rights-of-way. rights-of-way acquired by Massachusetts (or the nation's superhighway program. Standard procedure in right-of-way acquisition for the interstate program is for the states to pay (or the land, then submit a claim (or reimbursement to the federal government for 90 per cent of the bexzlp $28,000 in state funds to^juatc offered Brincr $12 ill speculate -in righls^)f-wa.v h«ve|apprai.scrs set the proiK-rtv s vil-heen convicted but are free on’up $21,673. The jury awarded appeal bonds. I $28,475^ Case 31963. (Talk Courty,, cost. No Massachusetts claim for rig^t-of-way reimbursement has been honored by the federal government since last January. There were also indictments against three Carpenters' Union officials and Harry Doggctl, former state right-of-way official, for conspiring to sell land to the slate at a $01,000 profit. Their trial now is under way after almost three years delay. One of the officials Is Maurice Hutcheson, Carpenters' In Indiana, site of the now well-1 Union president, known 1957 scandal, rumors still 1 A state Investigation of land . _ _ circulate of secret "deals’ among {purchases uncovered five propciTyj the great publicity given the politicians, businessmen and con-jowneri along Indianapolis' Madi-idison Avenue affair, 73 per v.... tractors. Ison Avenue Expressway who werelof the people in this county led James E. Hawes, plaintiff. The state offered $2,887. Court uppniis-l ers fixed the value at $3,.W The' jury awarded $10,730 CONININK HIGH KEi: Why? Steers asked Judge John" M. Lewis of the Jackson Circuit Court for his opinion. Ik not mentioned in any case," Lewi* wrote, "bui due to IF YOU LIVE IN PONTIAC, CLARKSTON or You Can Ride the Bus Downtown WATERFORD FREE Take any Pontiac Transit Bus Downtown from the Pontiac area . . . Take the Airport Bus Service from Clorkston or Waterford. Ask the merchants for your FREE BUS RIDE TOKEN . . . they will glodJy give them with a two dollar purchase or more. PARK DOWNTOWN FREE Drive Downtown ond pork in any one of the lots marked with the Medallion. All the lots ore just steps from your favorite stores. Give your parking stub to the clerk from whom you moke your purchases. She will gladly stomp your ticket. The parking lot attendant will then chorge you for the difference in the parking fee and the amount stamped on the ticket. Be Sure to Ask for Yours Next Time You Shop DowntownT witit Lanazur ABTHUB'S DIEM'S SHOES McCANDLESS CABPETS SALLAN lEWELRT CO. 4S N. Safinaw St. >7 N. Saginaw St. 11 N. Parry St. $8 N. Saginaw St. BABNETT'S riRESTONE.STOBE McNALLT MEN'S WEAR SHAW'S lEWELEBS ^ CLOTHES SHOP 140 N. Saginaw St. 106 N. Saginaw St. 24 V4. Saginaw St. ^ 150 N. Saginaw St. DB. B. B. BEBMAH, WATHE 6ABEBT T2T N, Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN'S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINT 1 0. D. OPTOMETIIST GALUGHEB'S 71 W. Huron St. 17 N. Saginaw St. MUSIC SHOP FRED N. PAUU STAPrS JUVENILE [ BOBETTE SHOP 17 1. Huron St. JEWELERS 2t W. HnrM St. BOOTEUE ’ 14 N. Saginaw St. GENCBAL PUHTING 21 i. Lawronca St. _ CLOONAN DBU6 CO. Ft.; 72 N. Saginaw St. & OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W. UwronM St. PAUU SHOE STORE 15 N. Saginaw St. TODD'S SHOE STORE 20 W. Huron St. GEOlGE'S-REWPOirS 74 N. Saginaw ». RUB CLOTHIEBS It N. Saginaw U. POMTUC ENGGASS lEWELIT CO. 25 N. Saginaw St. PONTUC GLASS CO. WARD'S HOME OUTHTTIHGCO. 41 S. Saginaw St. W16GS 24 W. Huran St. COMMOUrS lEWEinS ’ 16 W. HnrM St. / ? DICIINSON'S MEN'S WEAB JACOBSEN'S FLOWEIS Saginaw at Lawranca St. 101 N. Saginaw St. 2]' Wi tawronca St. - THE DeCOI SHOP LEWIS FUlNITUn CO. THE PONTIAC PIESS WTMAN FUINITUBE 17 f. Hurwi St. 26 W. HnrM St. 62 *S. Saginaw St. ^. 41 W. Hnron St. II W. Pika St. j; absorbs in seconds... protects for hours! Never before a hand cream like fragrant, fluffy, heavenly-bfue Dream,Touch I It looks different... is different... and fastacting LANAZUR mak^s thellifference! This exclusive new ingredient helps Dream Touch penetrate deep, deep to soothe, soften and moisturize your skin — instantly! Only an invisible, completely greaseless veil of protection remains to lovingly shield your hands from water, wind and weather — for hours on end! Money-back guaranteed-if you’re not convinced new t blue Dream Touch with LANAZUR is the loveliest, most effective hand cream you’ve ever used! Only 33<, 59^ and 98^. DREAM TOUCH... from the makers of famous Jergens Lotion ■ / ' ■ TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRES^. WEDNESDAY, PC TOBER 26, i960 [Electoral College Votes Are at an All-Titne High • WASHINGTON (AP)-The oum- K«ch st«tp Ims «» many clrr*or*i •ber of electoral vote* af stake In as the total number of its U S. I this yeai’s election is 537. an all- s e n a t o r s-and represenfaiivos [ ■ time huth. To win, a candidate Ala.ska’and Hawaii have Iwti sen-; ;musf pK-k up a majority of them, alors apier e and one represenla-, ’oi 369 live each. In WiB the total number of o * * leleeloral votes was 531. The 'o- Here is a breakdown by states • crease, of six sim-e «ben came^ the i960 electoral votes. ' i about because Ala.«ka and Hawaii iwere admitted to the union. Alabama 11, Alaska .3, An/.ona ---tr Arkansas A: ('altfornia 33; Co!o- ! Th» srhooi i-ado 6. ('onnccUcu* Delaware. 'S«^'»ii**r*^'^'*'>w**tor°°1^^^^ .1. Florida 10. Geor>;ia 13; Hawaii Illinois,•.’7: Indiana 13. **h7uM» ir* u h» rrmovni fiom l"*‘i 1®' Kansas R; Kentucky 10: ihtiiu upfr.-f To m-,l>Kiisiana 10. Maine 5; Maryland Massachusetts 16: MichlRan 30; Mntsissippt ft: Mrs»-irt .sV- souri 1.3. Montana 1; Nebraska 6; --- ^ Nevada 3; New liamp.shire 4; Nrv ; Bird by a ffrr.n»3^ ■TTr,. ■m-Jersey Hr:—New MeM«s» 4,—New-c th< b^^aayJbfi'ta'thc ?I.ni*iiif*8*'iw»'i l >i North Carolina H; North! ootrKt ira»B«art at MmaiMo n>-i/takota 4; Ohio 2S>; Oklahoma ft; ■ * Ore|{*i a fishbowl, ! Arbor is served by Mk-hi- CARACAS, Venezuela lAPi - * * * ;gan Bell Telephone Co. and Saline President Romulo Betancourt i The blast killed and injured sev-j by the General Telephone Co. claimed Tuesday night lhat ifteirpraT. fThert wfll be no increase In rates six days of riots, his armed forces! phniographer Bill Bishop of the i®f Ann Arbor for the extended have ciushed revolutionist? trying; Star found two goldfish 'areas service but rates at Saline to impose ' Cuban methods" in' j„ ,1,^ basement of the demol- !will increase 80 cents a month for Venezuela. building. ‘be average household customer. * * * . .. Similar extended area service Army patrols were ordered '"‘o! ? with'^wXr" wh?^ Iher “ aPP«Tved for Fenton and Lin-. ««e» .. Ca,«» „„r piS S"*'" ''IW. rpn.o. I. .en,cd the streets onstnitors m.it*-d in dow^m areas and rhceird the Soviet! .. i Union and Cuban Prime Minister Kidd Castro. Troops all over ,he' (c^ountry were ordered la break up., ^ Hein .. "by Michigan Bell and Linden by ently bl(wn into, the pot from Teiephow. T ^ dcmonstration.s Belle and. Lucky George, were inil Michlfin Rm plKf _ - ’!?* II} said. Id rather lie right than he Oouniy of Osklsnd Slits of , . TuiisUy. Nov I. 1»M ’ 4 - Emminurl ChrUt Bi & Wi»hlniton actxwl - ,r Hlih It presidi'iii' ' ' And oiie kid answered, Tjttcly, nobody" . . We all work for the government, hut the |sili-i the only one who gets ,1 paid for it. —I3irl Wilson, NKW TO I'O.N'TWC ~ A proud, new blue and while pennant 1* waving today over the Pontiac .Stale Hospital. It proclaims Michigan'as national ehanipion state in the field of pede.strian safety for the pitsi .vear. Shown here raising the ban: ner are Di. Walter Ohenauf (lefli, hospital su-perintendeiil, and Donald T: Brown, assistant managei of the Automobile Club of Michigan’s Pontiac division lie represents the American Automobile Association of Michigan, which presented the grand award to the slate for winning Ihc National Pedestrian Protection Contest. The flag flew atop the State Capitol in Lansing for two weeks and is now being transferred around the state. It will be flown here for the remainder of 4he week liefore it goes to Detroit as its next slop. good condition apart from , By Tuesday night Caracas "asi^j^ing g^-aieg 1 Iheavily patroled. tense but quiet.| _____________^_ ik,3S. 7 Arob. Sent lo Jail , [Riots also occurred at the seaport TwO-Yeor SpV Trial jof Coro, in wertern Venezuela, ' [Ciudad Boliv;::-. in the cast: and' HAIFA. I.siapl iAP>—Seven ls-| jin Valle de la Paseua, in Guarico raeli Arabs were sentenced Tues-: .! .State. day to prison terms .of 2 to 14 ; A * * I years in a spy trial that lagged Betancourt closed all flaracas along for almost two years. Most[ ■hools. He said boys had been of the seven were charged with! HALF SOLES T’® Mfil't. Women’s. Children’s Leatilef #f i RUBBER HEELS 79 [CPr. Krdort 7—Herrintton School Kccinct t-WtSttcr School . Prcrlncl t—COBlril Hl|h Schon rrrclnct ie.--Crolooi s-’-—' Keeping Hobgoblins Safe on Halloween An esIlmaM one-half of the na-The decimal coinage that will be' , . . , . . c. .u 4. ■ 4,404 iM Th^ largest tomato producing leftists, and "the police could not public, passing information, con-, non s Indian population is presently in u.se m South Africa in 1961 will California, Ohio. Indiana move against 1'.’- and Ij-yciir-old[spiring to help the enemy and 1 ronecntraled in the three slates of Include a two-and-one-half cent New Jersey, in that order, 'boys." lillegal arms po.ssession. New .Mexico, Arizona and Okla-silver coin, equal to the present ’ - homa three penny coin. Neisaer Sho« Repaii 42 NORTH SAGINAW iv_l lnfnln School — PTtcmcl 14--l,tncoln School ** Prtclntt 15-0«n School ••Precinct U-I-cB«r«n School •> Precinct 17- Emcr.on School „ PrccthcTTr^cCii r i oil -School » Prcc Precinct SO- 7 «-J^unior-Hiiui.----- • Pperlnct 24 Lonilelli • PrecIBCl 2*—McConni «. Precinct lS- -McConn( — precinct J2—418 4. Pnremet S4—Bell _ Precinct 2»—LeBat _ Precinct •' Por the purpose of rlectlnt %«Hit officers, vli , - Netlonsl—President end Vfte-Prei the United Steles •• Stetd—Oovernor. Lieutenant Oovi •ecreUfir of Stale Attofner JItate THSaurer. Auditor Oinersl _ Conirtaalonal -United Statei *-Jtepreeeatetlr- *- ---------- r.4*l4latlva- ___ — Consreae Lefislutlee—Steta Senator. Repretenla- - «unty-Proeecuttns Attorney. Sheriff.| ■•ounly Treasurer, Clerk-Reilster, «t Deed!. Auditor In Counties electing •an™- nrain' Commissioner. Coronere, Juryevor. and suefT other omwTx ner-ire eiecUd at that time “ Non-Parttean nectloa toe the pucpoael TIT eleetlBg the lolloping atllrare. vla"4 e Seles Tex Limliatl nstliutlonal Amendment .oeed Amendment to ecction 4. Article XVII of the Mtchlgin Constitution I polls tloo Las ...too 72S [ the polla I Elect Farrell E. Rokerts STATE SENATOR Your kind of nnan, because he's An-riapolis trained ond able to give the kind of representation you wont in the state senate. His brijliont 4 yeor record as a representotive in D,ansing gives him the • experience to serve\you. REPUBLICAN sstsef byr OmUami Commir MapublicnJattr V# A Y-7 “Back-to-Business” Bonus jor the nian IT’S A THICK OK TRK.4T-■ Doorbells will ring on Halloween ' : and standin;; there will be shaiV be •'’*’'Mish faniasies — in eosluine. t-oatmuo^y (k»o’uBVir* In the! Fun.ixJun but these hohgohlin.s il«vw*“pre*scnt”rndTan“''Vt%^^^ nt the hour prescribed for tha clo^ng Health.'' Amcrifan Medical **’T^pouJ'of*^ard**°f"«%on p^ba open' ^^soeialkm magazine, suggests ii 7 octocit am and ptii remain open the above safety tips Secure all viection. "*• movable objects around your ADA It IVANS, i home. Remember: Dick or city Clerk I . . Oct 21 Nov. 1. itgo treat. Save ^5t) on the MS Stenorette* COMPANION PORTABLE DICTATING MACHINE To acquaint you with the advanta(«$ of using a cuiplalt StitiBritlt dictating sylttni, DeJUR otfeis-for a two week period only-it's $199.50 Stenorette Companion for $149.50. But you must Kt now to reservo your SO MANY PRACTICAL USES Pop it into a briefcase, pack it in a suitcase... the Stenorette Companion is small as a book, light as a camera, and travels with you wherever you go. Salesmen, executives, professionals... the Companion can save you hours of tedious noteJaking whether you’re doing market research, interviews, holdingxonferences or taking inventory. THE ONLY PORTABLE TO MATCH ITS OFFICE MATE Remember, the Companion is not a scaled down tape recorder. It’s a workiqg tool-speeiallY designed to keep pace with your thinking... to record your ideas with clarity, ease, economy. Most important of all... Stenorette Companion is compatible with it's desk model mate. You dictate on your Companion in the field, mail the tapes to your office lo be transcribed on the standard Stenorette! Save $50 now. continue saving every time you use the Companion because Stenorette Magnetic Tape is endlessly re usable! HERE’S PROOF OF STENQRETTE’S SUPERIORITY After testing aU leading portable dictating machines, one of the nation's, fifty largest corporations standardized on Stenorette because the Companion scored 90 out of a total possible score of 110 critical points (nearest competitive portable, costing much more, scored only 69U HERrS WHY StenoretteCompanidirn » Lapel microphone lor jnterviewing, resoazrtrefc,..... t Up to 45 minutes of continuous dictation r'Pushfaulton operation ------ throughout e Duplicate microphone conlroN for all functions COMPATIBLE, TOO! I This is the Standard desk top Stenorette-T only n99“y,„.rr Fully transistorized, one button microphone control lets you dictate, bxk-space. review... end if you say it wrong, erase >s you sey it again rl|lit! Error-free dictation with a Stenorette makes it easy for secretaries lo do everything right the first lime! SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER AT: General Printing & Oflite Supply r ^ PHONE FE 2-0135 For Solesman Demonstrotion 17 West Lowrence St.* Ponfioc -i/.r;?i//.isNEISNER’S (!liine1oiiarbij HMnSALE MEUaW CREAMS 35* A colorful assortment of pampkins, wheat »he«v«, c«T* of corn, snd other feH figures. -CANDY com Jl.’JT vT/T97 COSTUMES FOR TINY TOTS • BOYS AND GIRIS CANDY BARS 20^3% TABLE DRESSINGS TABLE COVERS < NAPKINS, PAPER PLATES HOT CUPS Look at the wonderful assortment of Halloween costumes. Whether you prefer to bc funny or pretty, youll find just what you want at Neisner’s. Brilliant fluorescent colored rayon taffeta decorated with sparkle. Glowing fluorescent masks. All fidyrics treated to retard flame. U7 Quality lined rayon taffeU “Satinsheen.** Rame re-tanlent. Walt Disney characten complete with mask. ------------------------ 2.97 Make this Halloween a fun time. 042 NORTH SAGINAW OPEN DAILY 9:30-5:30, Mon., Fri. 9:30-9 v> THE POXTtAC rRKSS. WEDNESDAY/ (K'TOKEH 2(1. IIMO Predicts^ Margin lor Kennedy in N.Y. ~T' TWENTY-ONE .Ru'hikrd M. Nixon, the R«*PUWiq«rt n-.JU |nomlm>#. mpsmnp. iiot the taursilxBuS ufdQ Oil KOulO mrsiion end jasaimt him in ciUe* wteerp Catho-i jflht are matiy and JMtt *re NEW YORK (ft — Time maga I iliw aaya that Sen. John F. Keo-1 of Suppliant U.S. mHu tiw. rw./v^.tu i! Th** **“l« >• traditionaBy Re|aib> Democratic preridei>tial:„^^„ preaidential racea. though ‘atands to carry New York State by a margin ranging from 250,000 to 500.000 votes. The Oct. 31 edition of the news magazine said the conclusion was on soundings by time correspondent John L, Steele in New York City, its suburbs and upstate. ♦ * ♦ The magazine said "Republican tradition goes with" Vice President native son Franklin D. Roosevelt won its 45 electoral votes four times, the magazine added. Dwight D. Eisenhower won the state from Adlai Stevenson in 1906 by a mtUion voii^margtn. Flavored bread crumbs had sales of $10 million in 1958 and may! reach $15 million bv the end of 19p0. TOKYO, tUPi) — C'omn^nistslcommuniam. China and North Korea Tuesday! celebrated the 10th anniversary ofjEx-Flint Mutic D«VOt«« China's entry into the Korean War', r\ J * /* 1*1 with boasts of their victorleg ,over|« U«Od in LalltOmia "U.S. imperialism Holli aatloM, In a sertea of speeeheo roported' by the twm-munlsl Now (3ilna NeWa Agfsicy and broadcast by the Pelplag Kadte, saM the UiUtMl !Mal«« taunched Hie war and "Was forced to sign the armUHee." j«i< si-ouw b. ei.c«i. United SUtes. They Mioved iljSavS Hit Moth«f Ro$* I wm a nuijor etfui i by the Pi'iplng • government to win auppoit fwanj URAND RAI’IDS - Mrs ■ North Kofm for its own iwind ♦H*R«*e Kwuaw^, muthur of DeuKE! jerata standani bearer Sen, John| |F Kepnedy. said Tuesday her aonj jwas "a very noitnai hoy whoj I should b«’ eliH'ted prestdenl of the I United States " ! Mrs, Kennedy was in Grand Hap-FLINT Wi — Dr William ,M. Nor-|,ds to campaign for her son. It ton. formerly prominent In Flint jwas part of her tour through Mich- mustc cireles. died Monday Stocktgn, Calif He was 79 Dr Norton was a one-tirne ordinator of music In Fhnt public schools and exei*ulive secretary of the Flint Uommuriity Music Asso-Otwervers in Tokyo saw ipore I elation. Igan Diarlfs Lindbergh had five ham sandwiches as his only food when he took off for Paris on May 30. 19*27. on the flist solo non-stop trans-Atlantic flight. SUNOCO HEATING OIL ' MEATS MOGIST fUlL OIL PROMIM' ^^^^Hrmns noM um utiNO oioiNAiT Sunoco contstni « tpe^iil Inoredirni livit prevents clogging of burner nottles and liliari. principal cause of burner failures. This means worry.fra# haatmg servica c|lls arg virtualfy aliminatad. GNUROH's, lae. riV/S".?;/:::".:: in S. Syriml M. lbl|lil> By A. W. Muller. D.V.M. ' j (). Is there such a thing as I "lung worms’* in a dog* How are Hiey tranled?—Becky PUiUo of Cleveland. A. Common as the worm problem is among dogs, lung worms occur less frequently, thank goodness. The irritated lungs will cause the dog to cough,sand the apimal will usually show a pronounced los.s of weight. * * A Diagnosis can only be made after j the dog has coughed up the worms, re-swallowed them, and the worm eggs are present in the stool. , A A * We re not too positive^ *bout the life-cycle of this typ« worm, and until recently we could only attack the problem while the worm was in the intestine. We now have a new drug that is given by injection _andJ» showing fine success in coping with this trouble. Ex-Ambassador Asks 5th Debate Cuban Diplomat Says Whole Hour Neded to Talk on Castro Policy WASHINGTON (B-Arthur Gardner, former U.S. ambassador to Cuba, said Tuesday that proposals by Sen. John F. Kennedy, D-Mass. for overthrowing the Fidel Castro regime "could easily result war." "Even if somehow war could be avoided over Cuba, inetdents of a highly provoking nature would be multiplied and world tensions greatly increased," Gardner-added in a statement. tiardner urged Jkat a Hfth debate between Republiran preaidential candidate. Vice Preai-denf Richard M. Ntxpir, and Kennedy. the Democratie nominee, lie “limited to a dlNciMkion of Cuba." _________________ "This subject is too difficult and too complex to he handled in the five or nx minutes allotted to each of the issues in the debates so far," Gardner said. Congressional testimony by Gardner, who was ambassador to Cuba from 195.3 to 1957, and Earl T. Smith, another Republican-appointed ambassador, has been* widely used by Kennedy and ofhei^ Demo-| crats during the current rampaign. Both Gardner and Smith told the Senate Internal Security subcommittee that warnings from them, about Castro's prior associations had been ignored by the State Department and the Eisenhower administration. Gardner said Kennedy "has proposed that the United States adopt a policy of supporting tl^ who seek to overthrow a lAtin American government whirh is unfriendly to us.”----- “.^•h an approach has a sufx>r-ficlal appeal to those whose patience'with Castro is exhausted," he continued. '■ It cannot help but dismay those who have be«;n seeking; ttarraghpatientx-and w-ise conduct, to overcome for all time dis-j trust of the United States which! for so many years led our southern; neighbors to label us ‘Yankee imperialists.’ ” Dem Says Woman 'Smears'Kennedy WASHINGTXIN (B-Democratic National Chairman Henry M. Jackson said Tuesdhy the Republicans “have adopted the astounding l3Wfce“6I hiding* bffiiSid a woman's skirtii to launch the most vicious underhanded attack imaginable" on Sen. John F. Kennedy. ♦ * Jackson hit in a statement at an assertion by Mrs. Styles Bridges, wife of Republican senator from New Hampshire, that Kennedy, the Democratic presidential candidate, "has a very, very soft record on communism.'' Addressing the Bedford, N.H. Republican Women’s^ Club Monday night, Mrs. Bridges also said: AAA "This maa (Keaaedy) Is not a Oommniiist — at least I don't HHak he is his record Is soft. lackson, calling this A vicious smear, said it was a dnperatibn effort to save Republican presidential candidate Richard Nikon from defeat. ' He said it Aas intioneeiyable that, Mrs. Bridge would say this with/ out clearing it with h^ husband, whom he called Nixoh’s top strate-girt. 7 ■ •nVKNTY-TWO THE^ PONTIAC PRESS. WEPyKSDAY. yCTbBKR 26, Shopping Trips End in Death and Agony Toor Man Pinds He's Very Rich > B> i>\vi; Dii.Ks >INDSOR. Oni s Zebic, 3<. is a poor man ami hp hju» ;io itiom in hi? lilllp hump for traepdy , * ■ ♦ * ‘Up nPv-Pr oompUinprI abmii the p«\'prty lhai bPSPi him* Three ywn of uwemploymtiiL raeagpr welfaip checks had not Mjghled h» i4»nt. A fdhr Thai pained hrm ptmsfant' io feel soiT>’ for himself The metai worker hail i nriip to ('Bnada seven years ai{o from his native Yugoslav ia. Tie WBnrnl a better li(e lor himw lf and for his “cfiDdr^ He and his wife. Kdith .15, had managed to keep the family together. That was the impoidant thing. There was Debbie, 7. and (Tjico. 6 They were at St. Al-phonsus .school Tue.sda> afternoon. ____I.010S ami hi.s wife !is»k Zora. t. Tommy. ami Polly, IX tnonihs, mto downtown Windsor for eonie shopping 1/iuis: .'is^tall. Mllowa-heeked man. left hiS wife and childi-en in fmnt of tile ~depii1 menF ”Stof?“ where she planned to buy mx-ks He walked a few doors «{uwn the street to buy the meal lor then-supper •BKTTKR ■ ^V, ^ ''.........\ , V I If, A - 1. _.I, ‘/.T A-''-— 5rw rEXTY-FOm THE PONTIAC Pfe^SS. WEPyKSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1960 ALL PRICES ^/HASHED FOR THIS SALE! /OULL ALWAYS SAVE AT Phtlie HOUSEWARES SPECIAL PURCHASE! Portable Pocket 6 TRANSISTOR RADIO REALTO»^E" Wtbcor Modtl 1152 SP01WO, Hi'Fi Phonograph EQUALLY TERRIFIC BUYS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT...SAVE NOW Introducing the All New 1961 WEBCOR LINE See Trade Fair's Complete Line of WEBCOR'S Famous Sound Line for 1961 SPECIAL PURCHASE 30 CUP AuPomotic PERCOLATOR Mokes 12-30 Cups si 188 \ I Universal 8-CUP Antomatic PERCOLATOR CHROME on COPPER lOOKATTHESE! HUNTING SPECIALS...SURE TO SAVE PADDED—ZIPPER—SUPIR QUALITY HUVY DUTY GUN CASES ALL SIZES 39 $7.is Value* ^ Heavy Load Shotgun Shells SPECIAL PURCHASE $189 12-CAOGE 4 SHOT •eietZS 30-30 SHELLS ISO or 170 CralNS 30-06 SHELLS ISO M- too Cralm 29 ~ kODAi^HROME MOVIE FILM SLIDE FILM KODACHROME 3Snmi 30 06 PRACTICE AAc AMMUNITION ^9 klodel IBI7 Army Re-Issue 30.06 ENFIELD RIFLES Excalleiit Ctnditien JMAC 100 SHELLS FREE !!! 4 V YES WE HAVE HUNTING LICENSES iON-E Hand Wormers SMALL LARGE $329 $429 JOM-E Hold WaiaMT Fliid «.T 65* 89* SCAGWAY INSULATED UNDERWEAR -Man'r* $788 WstkaMr f Newfield GUN CLEANING KIT Kate It Clean Cl 40 Keog It Sate ^ J HUNTING GLOVES •Si' 39c Pr -PRESTONE le Minute RADIATOR FLUSH Ret|» 21.00 Preatmie AuU.Ru»t and PUMP -LUBRICATOR Reg. SI.M 69- PRESTONE PRIME Fuel SyaUm 49' PREST0N£ SEAL AND STOP 69' CONDITIONER Reg. 65e LEAK, Reg. $15e PRESTONE Wtmtahtetd WASHER SOLVENT Ree. 65c 49' PRESTONE CAR POLISH and CLEANER Reg. 81.96 ‘1.29 3t-0e MeAel 742A REMINGTON AUTOMATIC 12 Oa. or 1C Oa. Medel itCAP REMINGTON PUMT SHOTGUN .n er 3C-M Model M WINCHESTER LEVER ACTION Model 220 Slaxle Shot SAVAGE _______- mSJmMON AlfTOMATIC SHOTGUN T 41 -RO $108.90 $ 72.10 $ 66.45 $ 29.95 P«N Zio^ CloMiro 3-PieeeSe» . .. _____ .$5.99 STRUCTO Live Action Sturdy—Sirens Steel TOYS Spoeial PwcIum Gams! Mobile Atttl-Airenft Miwile TRUCK AND SEARCUUGHT WHh • MlMlki. $7 J5 Valw ........................ . 12-Piooo Air Force |7 JB Value ANTUtlRCRAFT SET L TERMINAL SET 2 Trwka, Lota, $3je ValM U-Pteoe Track, Bolldoaer, Steam Shovel HIGHWAY, BUILDERS SET. 11255 Value C.UtPERS SET, S4JS Value It Trueha, Ugs, iBlgm. HlGHw *3“ *3“ »2« *78* *2** 530. $4 lackie Gleason TV Game $4 Tic-Tac-Toe "S3 Two for fht Moiioy $3 Strike it Rick $3 Prim M piflit $1 Break tfco Bank $4 Boat the Clock S^^oinj^toJarusaltni YOUR CHOICE 129 PLAY-DO 4-PACK . . 49* RIDING SPORTSCAR OR LOCOMOTIVE Regulor $7.95 SpocUl PnickAM T loM It Yourialt MODEL PLANES to«. SIM 66' OIL PAINT PAINT BY NUMBER SET R#0. fIJB 66' Hasbro PENCILCRAFT Bog. SIM 66' TRADE'^AIR rsE-CHRISTMAS srsciAL Ws BsTiavs Ws Hava PONTIAC’S LARGEST SELECTION OF Q Lowest Ever $088 At Adv. on TV MR. MACHINE SUM $088 Velue A A^S. POTATO HEAD • In Her Car Reg. SIM 66' MAVE IT TO BEAVER Ambnth e«M Rev- SIM 66* ■1 T THE PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY/ (X TOBRR 20. I960 RAISES RARE DEER — Springfield Township resident Dale Wilder feeds one of the four Japanese Sika deer he raises as a hobby and for an attractifon at his "new, used and abused mer- r*Bttot Frm PbkU chandise” business on the Dixie Highw&y. Wilder, owner of.the Whoopee Bowl, also raises white squirrels. Collects Pets, Knickknacks at Whoopee Bowl on Dixie Band Concert SetTomortow Mayor Proclaims/ Day in Honor of This Widoly Known Group OXFORD —A precision-drUled military unit will take over this village tomorrow. But the K> servicemen who march iiL here will be armed with trumpets and .trombones rather, than rifles and fixed bayoneu. All «r them are members of the Intematloaalljr arelalmed U.l. Air Force Band which will pre-soni (wo concerts at the Oxford Area Coiniminity High School. Higli school students from Oak-nd, Macomb and Lapeer counties will turn out 2,000 strong for ■’s matinee performance at 1 p.m. An adult audience of comparable By JLM LONG SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP -Daie Wilder Is a collector, quite discriminatory in some respects, very haphazard in others. He’ll search for years trying to hnd a particular rare animal he can breed for a hobby, but again not sdways^nire fconL one minute to the next Just what strange items have accumulated at his place of business. white squirrels, true albinos, him at a rate of two ti-uckloads shipped in from Wisconsin after a five-year search. "As far as I knew they were bred In OIny, Ind., but somewhere along the line someone has got their storieo mixed because only last week I read where the sqalrtels cmt’I swvlve outside that conimunlty,” Wilder Wilder, U, Is a Junkman with The junkman tag doesn't upset Wilder at all. However, the reference to the 50,000 odds and ends on sale at his establishment is another story. "It’s new, merchandise, but never Junk," said Wilder with a genuine sense of imagination. y the creatures also serve on the Dixie Highway, The Whoopee Bowl. Currently, the stars of Wilder’s menagerie are four JapancM Sika deer that romp over a large area of fenced-in property adjacent to the Whoopee Bowl. -------- Unlike' "deer of this country, the animals, instead of taking long strides when running, actually spring up and down, uncoiling forward with each motion. Wilder purchased a pair of the animals from a Massachusetts breeder six years ago. WHITE WtUIRRELS Another of his pet pets are live I size will be on hand when the men I in blue present their second performance at 8 p.m. The village's main street will be decorated with red, white and blue flags for the arrlvai of the bandanien and Mayor Allen E. Vnlentine has proclaimed tomorrow an United Stales Atr Fofee Band Day. The afternoon program' is de- The Indiana community Wilder -jferred to has a claim to fame -knack for raising nnusual of having the only large white with cemetery operations * ■- squirrel settlement in the country. I abreast of state,, coun- More than 700 of the animals *y and township legislation pertaining to parks and cemeteries. Wilder lives above bis store wlthl»*»*<> to appeal especially to the j teen-agers. Modem music will be presented in addition to classical and semiclassical compositions ol great composers. HIGH SCHOOLERS TO PLAV Eight area high school students! will join the band tor the matinee.' The colorful musical organlia-llon has played throughout Ibe world and Us members hav-e been selected from I.tM profes- his wife Marguerite. Oakland Group Organizes Over Cemetery Plans ARRANGE OONtlCRT — A final check on an'angements for two concerts to be presented by the U. S. Air Force Band in Oxford tomorrow Is given by three members of the Oxford IJons Qub, which is spoiuioring the double event. They are (from IrfU Carver Board*s Dissolution Near Robert Dick, club president; A1 Post, band committee chairman; and John Humcrfell, matinee emmittec chairman. Proceeds from the cuncerls will be used for the Lions Club’s charitable activities. fine is levied should anyone take a white squirrel from (Kny, since used and ahusedJ** “ "Ported they can only live useo anu aousea g^-- unexplainable rea- son. |. flflh in said he would lay odds that under his care the squirrels ccnild auc< vlve. Shows Michigan "Actually. I liad planned building a r«:reation center on the Avondale School Fair site smee 1 own lakefront property," Wilder explained, pointing tO Be Thursday Night ri K I. Kf . tft the two laicM hchinH hie nmn _ Lions Club charitable projects. 1 o ^ c • it The annual fall festival at Avon-i __________________ erty. Bridge and Spnng lakes. School will be'^ • . . , "But I ran short of funds after I presented from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.'Sc|Uare DonCO Friday P* making a start and decided to deal I tomorrow by the school's Parent- . in used merchandise since I al-!Teacher-Student Assentation. COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — A Hammarskjold forwarded ready had some recreation equip-! Booths, shops and a greenhouse I square dance, sponsored by Job’s; record appropriations request to ment lor sale." 'will be located on the midwiy.I Daughters. Commerce Bethel 23*'the General Assembly’s Adminis- * ♦ ★ Ifeaturing baked goods, white ele- will be held Friday at 8 p.m. autrative and Budgetai-y Committee He said that for the lii-st fivelphant items and gifts. I the Commerce Masonic Temple, |Tuesday numiing. years all his goods were purchased I The lair i will be held in the, 4833 Broadway St. Tickets can be! soviet delegske Alexei A. Ros- at auctions but now it comes to junior high gymnasium. for Con-Con - Poll Givos - Proposal -53.1- to 32.4-Pct. Lead; Rural Opposition Rises DETROIT (B—Despite what it termed growing rural opposition, the Detroit News reported today that its poll shows Michigan voters proposal on the Nov. 8 ballot by 53.L1P 32,4 per cenL The News said 14.5 per cent of those sampled, throu^ indifference or lack of understanding, declined to vote. ago It fonnd rural voters almost evenly divided, bat now found SI.* per cent opposing and only .11.1 per cent favoring the pro-ponni. The proposal would change the representatum for constitutioral conventions from three for each senatorial district to one for each House and each Senate seat, also automatically would fix a vote next April on the specific questkm ■ of whether a constitutional convention should be called. Gold Rush Hardly Dents U.S. Supply WASHINGTON (B-The Treswry discloeed today that the outflow of gold from the United States was only a trickle last week deqiite international speculation in metal. Ihe department’s daily financial . statement showed that fore^< buyers reduced the U.S. gtdd supply by $1L8 million during the we^. This compared with an average mdflow of |47 million i^a week since July L ' As of last Friday, file Treasury said, the gold t«q>pty stood at 818.571,000,000 - down about S7S0 nillliop since midyear. 1* yewrs. WUdtX Aot stdetradud. !^^ .original Intent when he moved to Springfield TownsMp from De- Nominated as president of the Oakland Aren Cemetery Assoris-tloo, was Raymond Graeosle ol Waterford Township. Vice president is Harold Doe-bier, Independence Township clerk, Arcand, superintendent of Mount Hope Cemetery was riect-ed secretary-treasurer. The group will meet Wednesday nights, once every two months for dinner at designated places. Following dinner there will be round taMg discussten on- the be*C ways -national to serve the public, how to keep projects standardized and how Represented in the Air Force', Band are former members of 201 different symphony orchestras " name dance bands. t^t where he owned a print jj^vidual problems of van- |Ol ROYAL OAK TOWN.SUIR _ The Oakland County Boaid of Fklucu-tion is awaiting the ri'sults of a school boai-d election here today which is expected to pitidiKT no winners. ‘w scliool lioui'd is elected, the way will be paved for I the dissolution by the county of the township’s all-Negro Carver School Cmuiuctor of the aggregation is USAF Col. George S. Howard | whose background includes experi-' ence as a soloist, composer and I educator. He has a doctorate ini tnusic fix)m the Chicago Conserva-1 tory of Music. The Air Force Band and td-volce ehonia known ns Soviets Confirm Rofuso to Pay U. N. $66.6-Miliion Share of Peace Mission Tlie concerts will be staged in the multipurpose room of the high school. The performancA-are he- ^^rv-.r^r, rations (UPl ing sponsoi-ed by the Oxford Lions . •’'Ai lON.S (LPi Qyjj Soviet Union formally announced h It i, -,|Tuesda.v it will refuse to pay its . . . ! share of a $6fi,625,000 appropria- All piweeA will go toward tnc ^^ich .Secrotai-y General Dag Club charitable projects. j ,^^^,kjoid reque.sted to cover .! I the first six months of the U.N. peace mission in the Congo. . District so it could be annexed to Oak Park or Ferodale or both. No candidates have filed nominating petitions for any of the five vacant posts on the Carver school board and the only way new board members could be elected through write-in ballots. A write-in candidate would have I get 10 voles to be elected and five persons must be elected if th« board is to continue. The five. former school board members resigned when It was learned that the school district could be disbanded in this The this when ninth fiw Chrvor dismet were not s«. cepted in Detroit high schools they hod been in the past. The Carver School District has no high school of its own and neighboring school districts would not accept the students. The Carver ninth graders now are attending cIsmmw which have been set np in (he township until the situation Is resolved. School officials from Detroit, Oak Park and Femdale say that economic factors rather than racial ^discrimination is their reason for I refusing admittance to the Carver students. With all indications pointing to diiuolutlon. the question ,pow is to what neighboring community or communities the Carver School District will be annexed. purchased at the doof. : chin told the committee shortly ______________ (he t'ongo funds 1 were hpent In violation of He-eurlly Coune.ll direetives In order to su|>port "Western colonialists" and thkt Russia and the Com- partlcipate in paying the costs." Roschin said the njajor jihure of the burden should be paid by "those mainly responsible, particularly the Belgian colonialists." ★ ♦ * The curt Soviet statement set the stage for a severe U.N. __financ4al crisis which some Western sourc3S described as possibly "disastrous. TAKES HORU; TO OtMXElGE ~ A White the 9-year-oU a Lake Township coed attendiog Central Mtehigan University, GeraJdiiie Berry, U, is shown here Mr. and Mrs. with her horse Lucky, that she took io college Road, this year so siW could be near him. She keeps 1 in a'barn juat a short dis-I. Jerry is (be daughter of “. Berry od 9665 Caprice Parent-Teen Guide Mailed Rochester Community School Book Based on Extensive Survey ROaiF^TKR - Copies of the "Guide for Parent-Teen Cooperation” were mailed yesterday to some 4.30 families of new Junior and senior high school students In St Rochester Community ifirict. The guide was drafted by the code «qpmlttee of the Rochester Area Youth Guidance Committee. It w(ts based on results of a survey conducted last year of some 1.000 teen-agers and adults in the irhftftl diitric*t. 11m putpow at Um gMp is t Navy Junks Plan to Sink Old Cars hr Artiiicial Reef MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The U.S. Navy has vetoed a Dade County plan to slnlp 1,060 scrap automobiles off Miami Beach to create an artlftclal reef. The Navy isn’t opposed to good fishing, xuch as a reef would provide, but is worried about submarines. Submarines — and the Navy doesn’t mean ours—could hide alongside the reef. All that the underwater detection devices would report is that something wax down Uiere. Whether the something is Just pile of barnacle-encrusted aiUoa. r a pile plus a lurking enemy sub, is a question the Navy doesn’t wan to be forced to answer. reaponsIMIIfies healthier family living. Further, it is designed to stimulate discussion on issues where there are conflicting opinions rather than provide a substitute for family-made rules. According to the code committee, It should serve as a springboard from which family agreement may be reached on such Issues as dating, diinking. smoking, entertaining and other activities. The guide has the endorsement of area governmental agencies, the ‘ Rochester Board of I->lucation, Ministerial Association and tite local Parent-Teacher Association Council. Tractor Magnate Fergosoirls Dealt LONDON (JD — Harry Ferguson, tractor magnate, died Tuesday. He was 75. Ferguson was inventor li^fweight tractor which sold all over the world. He once fought a muttimillion dollar law suit with the Ford Motoi Co. in the United States, ♦ "k ♦ Ferguson charged the Ford com-pan>- with conspiring to destroy his company and infringing on his tractor patent. The Irisfa-bom inventor sued for S342 million. In an duT-oRtm Uement. he got S9,250.000 Defense to End Case Against Carpenters INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) -The defense was expected to conclude its case today in the bribery trial of three top Carpenters Union officials. The three. Union President Maurice Hutcheson, Vice President William Blaler, and Iheasurer Frant Chapman, were charged with bribing highway officials for information about proposed highway sites. The prosecution accused the i three of purchasing the land on| I proposed highway routes and then! Supreme Court Aspirant to Spook in Lake Orion ORION TOWNSHIP - Speaker oL tonlghtifilmier jnceUng_of Jhe Orion Republican Club will be Judge James R, Brcakey Jr. Ann Arbor. He is a nonpartisan candidate for Supreme Court Justice in tile Nov. 8 election. ir it it The meeting will be held at 7 p.m. in the Lake Orion Methodist Church House on East Flint Street, it it it A question and anBaw period will follow Judge Breakey’s talk. Barrymore, Pals Ordered to Court in Ringing Feud ROME (API—John Barrymore r.; the girl he plans to many, and her two brothers have been ordered to trial Dec. 12 on charge.s they have been pestering the young actor’s former fiancee about an engagement ring. The four already have been in court here because of a brawl over Barrymore’s beard. The new charges were brought by Mrs. Medea Maser, mother of Italian actress Georgia Moll, to whom Barrymore gave a diamond engagement ring earlier this year. Ban-ymore, 28, wants the ring back and plans to marry Italian film starlet Gnbriella (Gaby) Pal-azzoli in a Roman church Friday. Mrs. Maser charged that Barrymore, Gaby and her two brothero have been making trouble about the ring and trying to force their way into her apartment. “ThP^Tlng toa Imptw^ by court order until its disposition is decided. The waiters in a local restaurant went on a slow-down strike — but they stopped' it when nobody noticed the difference ... A youngster was asked if he said his prryepi before eatlnf , aref Iw said, “Don’t have to—my mother’* good cook. ” -Earl Wilson. _____fjelling^Jt-back-ta thtjrtate^ Couple Heads for Florida Three Counselors From Area at GM Conference } WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP I St. Patrick Catholic Church was Counselors from three Pontiac'or "oe"‘ wedding area high schooia are among l»|o' ^ Shearer and Walter counsekmi attending the General ^ L®wis M. Ellis Motors EducaUonal Relations Sec-!P®rtormed the morning rites tion’s.8th Annual Conference fori brtde U the daughter of Mr. Counselors at the CM Technical land Mrs. Harry Shearer of 800 En-Center in Warren. 'nest Road. The bridegroom’s par- ents are the Walter V. Naboznys Soy South African Gold Being Flown to London JOHANNESBURG, South Africa t API—Mining sources reported today that South African is being flown to London to steady the bullion market. The rush to buy gold wifii dollars continued in London Tuesday, pushing the price to S8.6 an ounce. The closing price was S7 80. as against Treasury price of S3. ! ) / The '^worid-famous TaJ Mahal structure, known for its archt-toctoral b^ty, is said to hav« SlSinilUon. ■ sj r Says Vows al SI. Palrick Detroit. Then the newlyweds left on a honeymoon trip to Miami, Fla. The conference, which began Monday, ends today. Area counselors are Mrs. Maty M. White of Bloomfield Hills High Schod, Merrill Miller oi Seaholm High School and Virginia Lewix of Groves High School, both of Birmingham. Purpose of the,„<»nference is to acquaint educators with GM per- Michigon Mon Elected to Tool, Die Unit Post MINNEAPOUS tjfl - Harold S. Murdock. Los Angeles, Calif., has been elected president of the National Tool, Die and Prdciafon Machining Association, holdii« its annual meeting here. Other officers included £.' W. BarnwcU, Roae^, Mich., secemd yioe peeiddent. of Detroit. ♦ * * For her wedding the bride chose a tailored white satin gown featuring a bouffant skirt, long sleeves and a chapel train. Her seed peart crown held a fingertip veil of il-lurion, and she carriied a cascade' arrangement ol white Fugi chrysanthemums. Maid of honor was Rosemary Reamer ‘of Detroit. Mary Lou Blair at Pamiae and Mis. WU-Ham BUIock of Detroit were John Nabozny of Detroit assisted ' his brother as beet man. Usher was William Billock of Detroit, and Detuifs Shearer, brother of the biMe. was a ^ndor gsher. Fafiowing the nupfiab a reception was. held at Carpenter Hall, BiRB. WAURR NABOmr , f J TivEJTTY-SIX kr^A^KEECO lam’auml iSUUi^iUa! mi* ■ *»IM PBUBBVMEMaNi 4 ALSO % Judge Uses Probaflon Citizen-Offic^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OC^qBER 26. 1960 Royal Oak Tries Out Youth Court ROYAL OAK « - A protetkm proKnun that is as ^facdw as it Inexpmsiva la brine here. It may point the way lor other communities worri to make law-ahidtate dtiaens out of youthful first otter Uiwd at the levrilof municipal court, which tries minor crime, it hopes to keep the offender from ever Rettin* Into the kind of trouble that will take him to circuit court, where protMtlon is a standard effort towards rehabilitation. Special Limited Engagement! SUrts FRIDAY Ur 6 PerUriances Oelyl f earfomancss Daily—t p.m. A • p.m.' OAKIAND TICKITS now on ULi lY THIATIR MAIL and at lOX OPFICI Smnejpmt {Htmuit (KunM J develop a probation ‘‘depaitmsnt'* as a regular tool of his court. A ♦ W He sUrted it last April after consultation with the Michigan Sute Cbrrectkms Go Director Gus Harrison hailed it aw unique among lUcM-gan communities. Jut^e Leenhouts' plan is simple. He asks local ci^hens with special Interests or special training to act as “probation officers.” They give sympathetic understanding, counsel and help, if needed, to the offender.. All are volunteers and are expected give a minimum of five hours a ihonth of their time. A "chief prsbatlon officer" YWCM tnni tineuptoSioOora Jail ten to 90 days. Most leiitsnecd to 'probation in the Royal Oak court pay a finr; some may also serve a brief lail term. "We try ta combioe the nega-tive and the*posltlve approach," said Leenhouts. "The negative — punishment only — just dc seem enough; we ought to help the offender if we can.” How tiocs it wortt? "fto far we’re battli« MM per Those sentenced by the court usually are on probation from U months to two years. Jurisdiction of municipal courts extends normally only to misdemeanors for which the maximum penalty Is a may buy veur *‘Ca»«an'’ ttekris by mall______ Js wW iwt be iMMiibored, but there be a seat r every tiskat up te the capacity ef the theatre_ No Standing Room. if m»uB noKK ^ MnniwiunTuM MAKI CHICK OR MONfY OROIR PAYAIU TO OAKUND THIATIR I EAGLE NOW thru FRI. Sales of Flint Pleads Guilty ^Wo are Iryiag it wHh csnie pretty roogk hoys. We expect essne fallufoa.” ^ There are now 56 men between the agri of 17 and 25 on probation. * ★ , * Is probation preventive? 1 This is one case, and admit-jtedly an extreme one, cited by the $5,000 Bond Continued * w e in Abortion Charge Otj X youthful car thief headed for Muskegon possible imprlaonment was I charged only with a miademeanor. iinstvAd of a felony, to bring him “rt w. within Judge Leenhouts’ jurisdiction. MUSKEGON (UPI) ................ Sales. 61. h nint real ecUte dealer, pleaded guilty Tuesday In circuit court to a charge of perform-ing an abortion in a caro In which the prosecution's main witness was! found murdered a month after Sales' arrest. W Judge Henry L. Beers ordered pre-sentence investigation tor Sales and continued his bond of 15,000. Sales had been scheduled to go on trial on the charge this morning, but Instead entered the guilty plea. Hales was arrested at a motel in Whitehall In April and accused ®» perloraUBg._|fl_ Mrs. GloHa Engtand. 97, a Muskegon divorcee. In May Mrs, ftogland’s body was found In the Muskegon River. Her wrists and ankles were bound by wire and she had been dead several dajrs. Prosecutor Harry Knudsen said Mrs. England had been the chief witness. Sales' hearing on the charge had been postponed twice because Mrs. England could not be found. He was placed on probation and referred to a “probation officer” who alao happens to be a psychiatrist. He was known to have a serious personality problem, and it was arranged tor him to undergo treatment at the Ufayette ainic In Detroit tor six weeks. ★ ★ ♦ This young man later told George A. Martin Jr., the'chief probation officer; "I owe yon everything. Now I can look forward to having a wife and famUy and amounting r I Paul Adamt to Stump in Northern Michigan LANSING (UPI) - Atty. Grit. l%ul L Adams will begin a canv paign tour through Northern Michigan Monday. Adams scheduled stops id Kal--isks, Antrim, Cbarievoix, &n-mri, Oieboygan, Mackinac, Luce, Schqolcraft, Daita, Alger, Presque TAB HUNTER Find Tab Himtei !s Innocent of Beating His Dog GLENDALE. CsUf. (AP)-Actorj Tab Hunter has been found in-' nocent of charges that he beat his' dog. I ----------—--------------—T Isle, Alpena. Maniuette, amd C3ii^ pewa countlea bptween Mooday and Nov. 7, the day befon the dec-tlon. : * * * ITie attorney genenl said Sen. Philip Hart and Prenti^ Brown Jr., the Democratic candidate ft>r Congress from the lltfa District, would join in his "Meet the Peo-ple" tour •^kesttaqr In Alpena. A jury of 11 women and one man deliberated three hours on cruelty-to-anknals charges a_ the blond leading man. He shook hands with the jurors as they left Municipal Court here Tuesday. CLOSED TIL FRIDAY BLUE SKY DRIVE IN THEATER 1150 OpilfW Rd. 2 ' ’ Authorities still are investigating Br death. j Knudsen had said records seized whcji Sales was arrested indicated he was with a laiYe-scale abortion ring That had been operating in West Michigan. Reno Principal Keeps Eye on Rising Skirts ^EW, Nev. (APT-A ruling discouraging girls at Reno High School from wearing above the knee skirts brought two comments Tuesday. •h ★ * David Rush, bachelor principal of the high school and tauthor of the rule, said: “there was no edict to the students, only a statement to faculty members to watch tor girls wearing short skirts. We felt that short skirts could lead to serious difficulties.” I The other comment came fromi Robert Clogher of San Joro. Calif., | a spokesman for the National Nudist Council. ★ A ★ “What is surprising to me is!* that a state which permits bare* bosoms in Las Vegas should be- H come perturbed about bare knees , Reno,” he said. youth Although the cost of the program ii negligible, the 3S-year-old judge intends to refrain from an attempt to institutionalize it into a regular city function. FE 2-1000 SgRore Loto THE WORLD'S NEWEST AND FINEST ELECTRIC In-Cor HEATERS AT NO EXTRA CHARGE! ELMER GANTRY IS COMING TO-MORROW PREMIEB-Oaklaad CouIy Skowing RIOW FOR 3 DAYS So Hurry — T OpBH 6;30 P. M. Show StorN 7;00 P. M. TWO GREAT.GREAT FEATURES ON ONE PROGRAM! —FOR THIS WAS THE TIME OF TEMPTATION^AND THIS WAS THE DAY OF SIN! ^ nllthepeopfe...alIHiepBsMon ..aU the ofveiipoMrerifig grefrtn^ - AND - Furnace Repair Bill May Exceed $1 Million PORTSMOUTH. Ohio W - A pre-jliminary inspection showed it may cost 1750JfflO 40 $1,500,000 to repair ia ruptured blast furnace at the Detroit Steel Corp.’s Portsmouth Di vision. That's thO estimate made yesterday by A. E, Rcinhard, geQcral manager of the suburban New Boston plant. He said the lesser repair figure is estimated If damage is confined to the break-out area. SINNER! ELMER GANTRY WANTS YOU! all sinners... YHYUaU burn in hell r '4 JACK. ' emiooucMc MUL ! M^AKSEU-flUANCE.NEWMAN low! iSEBSSa 1 AtL-TIME •RUT MOVKSI nr~~ InoHd Curt nobMt^ {‘^BergmanJurgensDonat) The love story of the whita ■■■■ i missionary and the Eurasian 3:M soldier ... under the China sky! anil 7tlS =ALSO '’-4rB7Sai3lgiSi5^Air' Shown at 1:15 — 5:35 — II HERE^S Ytir-Royal-~©ak““e«irfa-'-‘^eoba-tion dement’’ now includes 17|{Mtz. He iaid’he’had merely bwi men. They include a psychiatrist,{disciplining the dog as directed two psychologists, two ministers by trainers. Veterinarians testi-and a priest, school counselors and Ified the animal showed no in-pnncipals, a personnel director, an Junes. ‘ ^ assistarit city manager, a former Navy pilot with long experience in GOOD = NEWS The amount of water which flows out of the Mediterranean S less than the amount which flows I largely because of a higher | rate of evaporation on the water {surfaces. THE ----------- TOMORROW HOW IS IT POSSIBLE TO BRING SUBJECT MATTER LIKE GIRL OF THE NIGHT TO THE MOTION PICTURE SCREEN? ... BY STICKING TO THE FACTS OF A DEUCA TE THEME-BY FOLLOWING IN PURPOSE AND EXECUTION THE PREMISE OF THE WIDELY-DISCUSSED BEST‘SELLER-BY MAKING AUTHENTIC, EXCITING AND UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT -BY RECOGNIZING THAT THE STORY OF BOBBIE WILLIAMS HAS A MEANING FOR YOUNG WOMEN EVERYWHERE ^ RtconntBM FOR ADULTS ANNE FRANCIS LLOYD NOLAN KAY MEDFORD -JOHN KERR -vxscwcAiEs-svsaouaomcipocTioa.roESCNTEOBvwAmsutBiws He's Happy With Arena That Bears’ His Name , THI^ POXTIAC PRHSS. WEPyESDAY. OCTOBER 2fl. im Louis Carlisle Walker made this watm-bearted remark after touring a new brick and steel structure which brightens the UMscape of downtown Muskegon. The building is the L. C. Walker Sports Arena, which costill.5__ lion. The building is a gift to Muskegon from Walker. Thnraday niglit, bi the wind up of eight days of ceremonies, the handsome arena will be of-Ocially dedicated and presented to the city. For Waiker U is the “fraltlota of a derades-o t d Walker’s father was in the lum-dream." ber business in Alpena, but he de- col2d'bv“uinf, >'•" tea Diaii ordar Vice President Richard Nixon makes the dedicatory speech and Mayor Donald Seyferth accepts the arena from. John C. Beukema, chairman of the Arena Dedication Committee. recent tour, of the arena made in a wheelchair. ‘T can't tell you ^ow dear to me this visit is; how treuurad this opportunity to see the are s^ Walker after looking over the facility which will be used for public community functions as well as sports. Walker Is a native of Farming-ton, a graduate of Alpena High School and the Inivendly of A short while later Walker and another man, A. W'. Shaw pooled their savings of $450 and started a business of their own in Muskegon. Since then the Shaw-Walker Co. has prospered and become a , leader in the field of producing But the retired businessman hasibusiness aids and equipment. I. W. HARPER OISTILLINO CO., LOUISVILLE, KV. BOTTLED IN BONO $661 $415 MELLOW SB PROOF $570 $357 V» QT. PINT GET OUT OF DEBT! O STOP GAENISHMENTS S AVOID BEPOSSB8SIONS ic Weekly PtymenI *yi All Yssr Bllli DEBT PROTECTION INSURANCE BUDGET AID ASSOCIATION If You Owel At Lew At Sl,000 $l5perwk. $2,000 $25perwk. $3,000 $35perwk. lOM W. Huron S». (I Vs biki. W. sf Tslsgrsph) FEdofol 4-0951 TWENTY^SgVKy Her Purse Vanishes —With $400 Inside I ' Mrs. Helen R|chter, a Pontiac housewife, was $400 poorer after | going shopping Tueaday afternoon | —and she had nothing to 2iott- fori Beef did not become importantl The original jazz style of In the American until after ak was created In the late IBBif thi| Ovil war. Icentiify la New Orlems. | HELP FOR YOU 0-JIR,WA UKATIVI HIRR TEA 111 Mrikteadlsf tor asssllputtoa, mtasl-1 Mi-s Richter, 165 ('.age .St., toldl clt.v is>lii-e she left her puiwe un-i HFI,PI.\U CHILDREN — For the third con-seculi\T year (he Pontiac North Kiwanis Club is co-sponsoring a tlierapeutic swimming program for handicapped children in the area with the Pontiac YMCA. Here club President James Mann watches 11-year-old Terry McBride enjoy a session with volunteer instructor .Mrs. Thomas Pmllkc PrtH Pkrto Lu.sk. ‘'Tlie program is working out wonderfully well in helping these children adjust to a more normal life," said James Templeton, physical iHiucniion director at the "Y.” The club presented him with a check tixjpy to cover ex|)enses (or (he coming year. Living Costs Rise to a New High WASHINGTON (APr Uving costs rose two-tenths of cent in September to a record high. The Labor Department’s living cost index went to 126.8 per cent of the 1947-49 base period. This is 1.3 per cent higher than a year earlier. , - Practically every group of major consumer costs increased except for costs of new and ased automobiles. Auto prices were due to additional. dealer discounts. * Higher prices for housing and . seasonal clothing cost increases ] exerted; the most significant up-jl [ward pressures between August' and September. The living cost increase will bring a pay Increase for about 100.000 woi-kers, chiefly in aircraft plants and other metalworking Industries. WORKER RAISES The increase will be one cent an hour in most cases but about 5.000 workers are due for two or three cents an hour raises. The pay boosts result from adjustments required by labor contracts geared to the government index. Robert Myers, deputy labor statistics commissioner, said a further living-cost inci-ease hits been indicaled in October. Figures for October will become available next month. He .said he aniicipates higher costs for clothing, food and I cans-1 portatlon. the latter because of seasonatty higher prices for new; model automobiles. | A ★ ★ ■ The Labor Department also re-1 ported that the after-tax earnings j of factory workcis remained practically unchanged between August' and September. At the same time,! their buying power was down slightly due to the higher prices. factor^ worker with three dependents averaged after - tax earnings of $80.87 a week in September. ★ * w This was down from $80.91 in August. new hoitieowm'r complains about his^dampxellcr: "Why, it's! .so damp the mouse trap catches . . Librarian Bertha Bell of Toledo tells of the youngster | who came in asking for a book about Jim_ Bowie — ‘'You know, the man who died in the ali-i mony. " ---- Earl Wilson. 1" FREE SHIFT BBOOKFIEU) LINK SAUSAGE To FiraE 100 CusTomort Thurt., Fri. and Sot. Tender Cuts .. POT ROAST 29- Pre-Cooked i Home Smokod Picnics 29- Branded Steer Beef SIRLOIN • CLUB or SWISS STEAK GuorontBBd Tender 59 SAVE AT HOFFMAN’S OVER-READY YOUNG HEN TURKEYS 12 Lb. Average WITH $3.00 OR MORE MEAT ORDER! OX Steef “ Trimmed BEEF LOINS Just Tkinkl Sirloin, T-Bone and Porterhouse Stooks—Only Just ThinkI Sirloin, T-Bent A Porterhouse Stooks—On 29 59^ MHi- ---10* 35-lb. Average -sas*- TTw.. Sorry No Deslersf LOOK WHAT A DOIIAR WILL BUY AT HOFFMAN’S! n SUCED BOLOONA SUNLESS FRANKS STEER BEEF UVER 1 OSCAR MAYER SLICED BACON ROLL or COUNTRY BREAKFAST SAUSAGE ^ ^ lbs. ‘ $•100 OSCAR MAYER SMOKED . AdR. LIVER Lk. V||*^ SAUSAGE PAN READY _ FRYERS u.2yc FRESH PORK niDd JbV ' SNOW WHITE CHinERlIIGS »^99 GRAIN-FED STEER BEEF HINDQUARTERS 90^^9104 -- CUT, WMrriD AND SHARP PROZiN FREE PyLL SIDES ... . 45< ik ' 49i SetisbetitB Giaianteed— Tenjhst FORE QUARTERS . . 43^ lil HOFFMAirS OAKLAND PACKIMC MARKET 716(iLENWOOD (Acfom from Poirtioc Motor Officatl Phono FE 2-9114 retail market open THURSDAY, FRIDAY ond SATURDAY ONLY-7 AM. to 5 P.^. WE^RE qEllTlIVCi EOR GOOD! DRAYTON HOME FURNISHINGS ‘ 4479 DIXIE HIGHWAY DRAYTON PLAINS, MICH. GOING-OUT-OF BUSINESS SALE! 3 $89.50 LOUNGE CHAIR Cufttom quality, classic style and years of comfort . . . and all at save von monev going out of CP'dWQR business prlc-esi Buy now $49.50 COCKTAIL TABLE This genuine cherry French Provincial cocktail table ha.s extremely graceful lines and an excellent — finish. Close out price I :eful lines and *29“ $119.S0 WING BACK CHAIR H«ra U on »«rly Am.ricsn wini bsek RWlrel rock.r with »n .itra hrkvy cover, msple irli si $99.50 PAIR OF TWIN REDS fwoTo for JUB fxp^ct to pw¥ dard *icp twin ralU and Rlat; '69 95 Sensational Days of Bargains Thursday Friday Saturday lOAM. 9 P.M. $79.50 CHERRT CHEST »1bm*------------------------ •64- $179.50 U-Z-BOY 0 .'ha "klUR of kll lounn c Thu itnuint LA-Z-BOT h hl-to Mak *nd tha automal ' It U now prlcad to ao $13950 $59.95 BOOKCASE BED Full size “butternut" maple bookcase bed. Save a 120.00 MU on thU ■ turatt\ire.O(it it goes tor Save a 120.00 mart otooe ot •Sr $335.00 SLEEP 'R LOUNGE *269 50 READ! REALIZE! AND ACT QUICKLY! $295.00 LAWSON SOFA This classic style Lawson sofa is M" of pure luxury! Reversible foam rubber cushions, fine heavy quality cover and kick pleat skirt. It'r yours at the close out $395.00 MAPLE BEDROOM Suite ThU solid Vermont maple bedroom set has the dresser, mirror. 5-drawer chest and panel bed. If you see this fine quality sulteVou'll not rest until its In your SIR AEOO S41S.00 $-Pc. DINIHG SUITE Save $100.00 on this flawless 6-piece dining room suite. It has a drop leaf extension table. 48' buffet and 4 chairs. Each piece hand crafted from solid cher- ^00 S41Q0 ai9 $79.50 STUDIO COUCH •69‘ DRAYTON HOME FURNISHINGS 4479 DIXIE HIGHWAY - DRAYTON PLAINS, MICH. Still Doseu of Fioo Qttolity Chiiri At Goiag • Oat - of • Basiness Prices. Act At Oaco for Big SAvings! 1494* Modefn swivel roekers So OSO close out for O / $79.95 Early American wing back $CQ85 chairs, now only DaJ $99JW Jamestown armless ladles . Sra|\95 slipper chair /SI $110.06 Grand Rapids built *QQ^^ platform rocker Oaf $119.56 Early American $qq93 swivel rocker S179A6 Hi-Lo back LA-Z-BOY S-fl rccUner goes for lOaf All lUiM In itMk H tbia «4 ga«« U »ma. TOP QUALITY TABLES at CloM-Out Pricos! fM.a.l (alonUI Meola CacklaU TaUee *!(** ril.aj*PI»»iM Ta» SInOcal Daeka *17** llTai Mu/tkerry $fQM Itorelte Table IS8.M Graalne Miketaay *29** Vkerry Frearh Prnriaelel >90** raekUil Table S49..W -Imocrlal'* Cherry *99** Caff.e Tekle SM.Sa Cherry En4 Taklee *34** cleee oat oriee Jnel $29.95 DECORATED END TABLES ... the perfect accent or conversation piece! These decorated end tables will lend a note of interest to <1 COK any room. Out they go . . . ▼ U BMkOH rar UnSlorO will Ml rt-MW aor UiM w* lure na alker ehalee than la i# aal af baelaaM. Bal lirti arcry flilara aaO alara at tiM fnmilare aia.l ha eaM . . . M Bullar whal tha taas ar •aarUlaa. Caua aipactlaf kar-salae . . . wan caarantaa yan’ll Ml ba eiaaspalolae! 27 LAMPS D6C6rot6r Tebi«AFl66r Lomrs Vi OFF! For yeart Dnyten Bobm Farnlahingfl baa been known for honest deaUngB and better q nail tv aaerehandiae. New we are cleelng enr doors forever In ene last sale ef sake .. . n sak with a reason, not an exense! COME SEE - LET THE PRIDES TELL THE STORY! BUILDING MUST BE VACATED! “ TOBNTY-EIGHT hvenf a Dessert, Gals, and Win a Trii tAe PONTIAC PBESS. WEDXESDAY. OCTOBEh ; ■AIX^NTOWN, — Hm*S{thr name of tUs , ___ Fftlai. one of America'a moot !'"’*•> •* Hooo’t Novel'oeaaert j unk|M defwrtment More reotau-j*^** Worn Deiaert Recipe ConteM deaaerta or one you have iuM amg food page leadem. It wac ----------- ^ al^oaaced by nationally known ratailer Max Hns, PreMdent of ifn's Depertnent Store in Allen- l*TO. r fbe Patio aeeks a wK-d deoaert Wadd to its unique menu, famous foe its tempting desserts. All readers of tto food page are invited to enter. There is no age limit. Even Uie men folk The recipe ran be for any type •tesaert (Mill aaoh as a eake. pie. padding, gelatla. toe cieam. cas-tard. fralts. etc. The eaatest starts an November 1. itM and ends mMalght, November 21, ISM. Announcemeat of the win-aing recipe will be made on Noember M, ISM. expense paid five 'day trip to New York Oty and Allentown. Pa. Accompanying the winner on the trip will be the food editor of the newspaper named in the winner's recips entryiform. In Allentown, the winner will create the prize winning dessert recipe for the chefs of the Patio. It will then be added to the restaurant's menu. of a womra's ctob ar Mvto organisation. If the whmer'a entry *- name of a dab or or- wHI I enter. 1! Is simple and easy No' The fudges' committee onti7' ~ i|K)l(>d gourmets - ..t' The reader su reiipe.'ning recipe will receive an SniOMO SAWNO e palatei j af Iho asaal - the is mart dtoh.' and delight the palates of ow dtasers/’ added retailer Hess. Bdr. Fluncd tor its desserts, Hess's Patio features a heaping strsw-*- pie, served with trea^ straw-s every day of the year. M-so on the imusua] menu is a fi^ dtiM Is a conversation pioco wHh tion, originality and allegiance to fCalail Talfar i&Spatroas. o Just write down your radpe or lyiK jpO JCHOU IOK6S it on a sheet of paper or i^card. Hess advises that many of the "wmi is a flOe- p>»w> - u i. ***** ****** lemon meringue coco- Pattos desserts have been *qr-,nut pie, toaMed to a b.^ de-gestcd by iwtrons vifitlng the un-|Ught. Other lamoui Patio deaaerti which bring patrons there from far and wide, arp fresh fruit cream pies and tarts; filled cream puffs with fudge ,sauce and nuts; de-UciouB southern p#can pie made arith choice aoatbiem pecans. A popular dessert at the Patio is UKEDRHHES'TR Hess revealed a recent survey conducted at the Patio showed that women who have Mopped mak-iiOg desserts at home because of their tremendous diet-consciousness, do look forward to dining out several times a week and fea.sting "The Patio is famous for Us un- “* * deiiclous and exciting dessert. "We am eertatn tbe contest lie fudge on vanilla ice cream, diced pineapple on strawberry ice cream, crushed cherries on chocolate garnished with slices of golden ripe baiuina. and many M Ms servings are In truly heaping Pennsylvania Hess's Patio is a continuation of including the name of this newspaper and mail to: Hesa's Novel Dessert Recipe Contest, Alkntown, Pa. Entries must be postmarked no later than November 21. 1960. an idea of Mr. Hess's father. who|$250 Million BOfTOWed founded a soda fountain and tea i parlor in tbe store in 1906. The ' . opened tf|e Patio on the site of the s^ foiaitain thirty-five years ago. Mr. Hess poims out that one of the main reaabns in creating the novel dessert recipe conteM is to NEW YORK If^-Amerlcan phone A Telegraph Ca Tuesday borrowed $260 million by issuftig 32-year debentures in the largest new financing of I960. The big utility awarded the curities to an underwriting group find the country's most original!headed by Morgan Stanley A .Co.j ^ tempting dessert by a non-pro-1 in competitive bidding. The win- Place of Relish SS-JSfi' OrMB food cokoriBf 1 cap diced eooacd plamppi* I cup diced eocmiher Vt CUP diced eelcrp Soften gelatin in cold water; ado boiling water and Mir to dlsaolve. Add sugar, vinegar, pineapple and lemon Juices; Mir to dissolve tug *" Stir in a few drops of green fessiqnal cook,^ announced the[jfmg bid was 1O1.O.‘)09 for, A 4!4!food coloring, pineapple, cucuni contest to be an annual event. iper cent coupon. iber and celery, "him into Individ! generously sprinkled with pecan i Remember, Its simple and easy The debentures are to be offered I ual molds; chill. Serve unmoldon our menu which will niMc jPjw'M. topped with whipped cream. I to enter. All’you need is imagina'publicly a* 101.636 to yield 4.65 perion salad greens. Makes 6 I „ V lasty^Mooth cheeseition originality and allegiance to'cent. servings. National's 100% Pure Fresh Lean Ground Beef iVALUABLE COUPON Lean Small Dsiirobl* Sits Spare Ribs 39* Yhuhf TanShr Slichd Buuf Livur....“. 39 BEEF TENDERLOINS CHECK-COMPARE Our Ground Betf Is Bsfttr Nhifor's SptM ^SAVE $1.00 WM Tbit Cmpm CANNED HAMS 10 *6’® CtaesN Is^trof B«t., Octeher Sfth. lCi5 One 50 FREE STAMPS • • • • f. • • • • • • AllPurpost — Enrichtd Flour Gold Medal Notco All VhgttobU Shortening Dixit's Pridt — Swttt or Biscuits Chtf't Dtlighr Cheese Spread Bordtn's Cream Cheese Coloniol Froxtn Chopptd Broccoli ^ Libby's Fintsf Pumpkin ........ lH] Northtx Ptrmontnt Typt .ApiUreeie .. .... m ♦I®* REAL ’ '5e off; label—KRAFT'S Spaghetti Dinner . 2 !iS. 39'^ Whipped Cream OID FASHIONED FLAVOR VAN CAMf'^ Dad's Root Beer . 3 *1°° Kidney Beans . . . 4"J.!."59 •& 39' Lokt Orchard Frozen PUMPKIN PIE SAVI 20-0. lOe Pkg. 29 Top Tot«o Roof, Ckicktn, Torlioy, H«m, Sollibury Stook or Mo«f lo«f - FROZEN DINNERS SAVE 6c 11-Os. Fkg. 49 MICHIGAN Potatoes 10-29 U.S. No. 1 Ail Purpoit Cltontd & Washed U.S. N*. 1 Lart« SVi" mM Up Mkb. "Hand Piohod" Waittm 6nwa, Tap QiwHly SNOW M iiAcD'ANJOU APPLES O 49 PEARS . . uh KETCHUP 19^ SAVE 14-Oz. 11c ON 2 Bit. Heins Stroined ^ Baby Foods ... .®19^-98‘ Heiiu Chopped Junior Foods Heinz Concentrated tomato Juice Heinz Cream of TOMATO SOUP i€ SAVE 9c 11-Oz. on 4 Con Sweet Pickles . . 2 69' . 7'^iif 95' 55' HEINZ White Vinegar . HEINZ Cider Vinegar . HEINZ SPASHEHI OR Pork & Beans HAMBURGER. HOT DOG OR SWEET Heinz Relish ". . . 2"™ Heins Soups 0 Cmam M Cbickm 1 VUL. • Tarboy NmdI. e cilicktp Nm4I« e CikiekMi VomoeeMm ^ $^00 lUN. VIGITARIAN e Coot PSMe OR VIMTAILE 6 79* SAVING YOU MORE SERVING YOU BETTER SAVING YOU MORE 'I'-nriTii'/li "Sver-Hh^" BIST BUDl CUTS "SUPER-RIGHT" IS FUUY MATURED GRAIN-FED REEF Not Young, Immoturo Boby Boof Not Groii-Fod Bongo Botf • ^“dgot |oof "Super-Right'' Reef U SeUclud for Suporh Totio onO TonOornot* . . . ONf WOH OWAUTV—NO CONOUSKMO-ONI ORICI AS AOVfRTttIO Halibut Steak»39c Frtili Whiti Bast FRIth . . >• 49c Fresh Dressed WhHe Boss » 39c Medium Shrimp S!kt» . . » 69c Seo Scollops....u 55c Ducklings “SUPIR-RIOHT " All MIAT OOVIRNMENT INSPECTED ORADE “A" "SUPIR-RIOHT " BONiliSS BRISK IT Arm Cut » 49c English Cut » 59c A&P Bacon Sale Skinless Franks39c Corned Beef 59c "SUPIB-BIGHT" THICK-SLICED "SUPIR-RIOHr QUALITY "SUPIR-RIOHT" BONILISS Ground Beef >• 49c Stewing Beef 69c ELBERTAJREISIONI Meddo-Land Peaches 4 SPECIAL THIS WEEK! SUPER-RIGHT Luncheon Meat 3 l-o® MOTTS TASTY Apple Sauce . Cut Green Beons ^ 8 'c% 99c Corned Beef Hash »DAV. PC TOBKR 20. 19tW Only the Bees Can Make Honey- A Universe ■91ANBTODBIX In tliw dnyt of ______________ fobrks. synthetic drugs and cheni-Icolly preserved foods it is good come. Which kind you and your|OiaU cakes turned npaide dowH|three ttmes. Cream shor1eniiig,| Remove cakes from cups. Invert tan^ prefers is just psrmalLm| frosted wtth a cooked hane)r|add booey very gradually by taMe-j^ ftortag. Ifrosting. Try the (raating «— has a delicate flavor on other kinds'after each addithmJo keep mixturci h spoons at first, beating very hard eoeonu Makes about one dozen large cup- j^aidlR affi jpMH. R«MVe from hot. tterdtsed glwset and seal. ----rater. Add 14 teaspoon!Makes M glasses Id beat ! nkMlc or until i * * * tlpck enou|li t» a|Mtil | Nut and fruit quick breads taste Tb' toast n^^ewiiTidler they have amHd thinly in ahalkm pan. IWt In fiUh*- tW totfwsing one shouk* moderate oven (350 (kgreeo) 5 to 7l be good with nut bread. minutes, or until gqlden brown ! Hsw>y4>rai«s Saadwleh niUag ; |of cake lleelihe (Uprakes r ass s CUM CCS* (iser f hr I Last summer, down 4n-the Great I it. iis. a«on ' Smotoes. we had some of the best You may. howex-er. use honey in honey ew’vs ever eatea It yrsa --y recine calliiw for iwdasne* ... aemd With the little hot biscuit. that appear at most meals down . . .. «m c there. baking powder in place m"rV»rinf! u* You know, of course, that the •‘■‘‘b *« teaspoon of soda called *“» flavor of honey depends on the tor Ui the molasses recipe. | Sift fkwr once, measure, flowers from which the nectar Beehive cupcakes are little^choc-soda and sail, and sift together degrees) about 25 minutes. thick. Add one-fourth of the flouT| ownbine in top of a small double JeUy is a dear golden jelly; Biui until smooth and well • ♦!••• *• I boUer: fleer la tUrda. alleraaMy wHk wmtnr, beadag very well after each addlOaa. Add vanilla; Mend. that is excellent with biscuits,! waffles or toast. ! I uaiMpoon llfkt Mrs >rrus .'-4r Combine cream cheese, honey tid orange rind. Yield: Vt cup, tor 2 sandwiches. ndd remaining lagretflents. Beat or ihake weU to Mend. Makes 114 cups dressing. * H it An easy hooey cookie is our last redpe. It to the chewy type ol Measure honey and water into a “ vanai^. vne oij* Beat about 1 minute, or until iaige kettle and mix. Bring to thoroughly mixed. Cook over rap-1 boiling point over highest heat and “**" to this one containing .Spoon batter Into greased custard idly botling water, beating con-|at once add the pectin, stirring '”*^ ‘cups, filling each about one-half stantly with sturdy egg beater or constantly. Bring to a full rotling| full. Bake in moderate oven (.150 at high speed of electric beater, boil and immediately remove from: 4 minutes or until frosting will the stove. Skim, f SSSThU^*' 1 *St. will bMtni 1 cupi eoooBBt Combine honey, salt and egg; coconut. Drop mixture by ipoonfuis on a greased baking sheet. Bake in slow oven (325 degrees) 12 minutes, or until slightly browned. Makes about 1 dozen confections. Food Club For those who shop hr QUALITY . . . and don't mind paying a little LESS . . . Swtetly nourishing, deliciously refreshing . and ripened in the golden sunshine of our 50th state, Hawair . . FOOD CLUl Hawaiian Pineapple is of the same high caliber as the best-known brands of Hawaiian pineapple. But compare the prices! spf: fresh I Ground Be®* “49‘ : plain or GARLIC : Ring BoM"® 45‘ Leg-O-Veal Wrigle,ys Tender, Sno White, Specially Selected Milk Fed Veal Knuckle Bone Out Veal Shoulder Roast THE PONTIAC PRESS. #EPXKSl)AY. OCTOHKK 20. 1900' ZTp^ Optivir THIRTV-6NE, Here's » twty wy to preperej liver; Dip slkedtliver (1 pound I in French drMsing then dredge Inj Food tastes turn with the two4hlrds 09 englched flour ht|M^ and as tiU eamaa _______________ which H teaspoon garlic sat. the bend Into winter, wa teaspoon salt and % teaspoon pep-l^^f!"*® As an u.-.- paitlcutariy enlosr per have been mixed. Cook Uver slowly In. lard or drippings until Need a quick and ddidous party punch recipe? Combine 1 (4/5 qt.) bottle any California dessert wine with 1 quart of the sherbet of your choice. Stir just until the honpa are out — it will be of milk-shake consistency. Serve it In punch cups as an afternoon or evening treat. serving breads piping hot Let's begin with one o( the simply best—raisin bread toast. Thke it as a crisp golden slice of goodness or discover its many match-mates. Some of the best am fruit mixtures which give the touch to toast. FniH tepped toasts ge olmg de-lighthdiy with hot chorolato or soiree for foe fote mslng refresh ra«il, and they nuy aho add the sweet toorh to bniecb or Makes Simply Elegant Toast Peach-Onnamea Team or I moving friiSi ovim. fheh invert dishl^*'^ pertoet lor thooa oeeasioao. Te it or Ooeoawt Toast, a Iww-B certala to please Mon-age Sion -French French for the a little more preparation, y serve a French toast ver-- Pineapple Upside-Down Toast or Apple Butter Toast. These, too. are day's little meals. ^ •uwatWasS, $rmht j lebWawse steooawe ima K^pTiT Melt buttei^ In a <8- c osiinge rind, | orange movini«-mh. fhen Invert di.h!'^ ***“ ^ Spn»d over a serving platter so breadi*** own** mixtum on jtUpa out, sugared side up. Servelon* si- YteW; 2 servings — Place toast, spread side up, on an 2 slices toast per serving. Ppaok-Claasmon Toast 4^U*ipo«m t isMetpaast brawn (iMiir. •Ittwd squam baking dlth. Blend in brown sugar dnd pineapple and apread evenly over bottom of the dish. Sprinkle sirup over pineapple mixture. Combine beaten egg anid milk in a shallow pie plate. Dip bread i Spread butter on bread. Arrange aliccs. one at a time, into egg mix-j four slices canned peaches on each turn, turning them to coat boUv slice of buttered bread. Sift brown sides. Place bread slices on lop of,sugar m'cr peaches and bread, pineapple mixture. * Place on a shallow (^n and bake Bake in a hot oven (400 degrees) l*n “vcn (450 degrees) for alx until lightly browned on top» nbout|^fP minutes. Yield: 4 iwiA’ings. twenty-flve. minutes. Let stand Ini Orange-Katsln Toast baking dish one minute m-' , j^MnseoMstiwe wsMt ungreased rookie sheet. Tbast under low broiler best for five mln-Serve Immediately. Yield; servings — 2 slices towst per serving. Apide Bullrr French Toast S6fe greased •he^ iUci ai iBMt irtik I browned. Serve immediately,ItaMeepoan sugar mixture and toppetj with confectioners* huger, spriidile with 1 tablaapoon pechM. , Does not need sirup whenjpiaoe toast, spread ihla up, ew an Yield: servings —2 slices I ungreased cookie rfieet. Toaat un- toast per serving. jour broiler beat for flve mbi- Caeomit Toast jutes. .Serve Immediately. YMd: 4 iin wmiraihsMri' tuisr ktaf aervings —• 2 slices toast per eerv- (t buttor 1 Ubktpoon coii(tt(lan«r>‘ iucsr Combine apple butter with beaten eggs in. A shallow dish. Dip breatl into egg ml.xtuiT, one slice time, turning them to «>al| t lUea rsMB brasd W Spread 1 tablespoon Icing an'~t, , . . each slice of toast. Sprinkle 2 ta-iTnil W Q SurpriM ^ blespoons coconut o\er each slice. I . _ Place on a cookie sheet and broili . f* ^ - ‘T®*’’* under low broiler heat for flve!*“'‘*y ^ ^ ^9^' minutea. Yield: 4 seivings - 2 AgriCidium sh^ that slices toast per servlnx : homemakers who moat often um ' i-onventence foods (such as pre- III llullerscoleh-Peean Toast lK)lh sides. Hake in a pared flour mixes, frozen foods, !frozen complete meals, soups, etc.) 'are not those who work away fnwn ' home, but those who slay heme all r. day Wrigl^ Ws MMtvs the rieht It Hmlf qaanlMss. Blue Ribbon Farms Specially Selected Chuck Roasts Center Blade Cuts 49V Round Bone or English Cuts 59V Pet Rooit Cut! 37 Lb. Th# Kin* of AH Beef Roests Real Beef Flavor Standing Rib Roosts 69- Table Trimnned Fresh Ground Chnek Lean Tender Cubes Boneliis Bestow 691 m uesserr topping c«o$ V. ~~ . c■' i '■ w ■ GE.X RIIMER GIRTS RASTRRl WITRI GOLD BELL GIRT STAIV1RS TIIIRTV-TWO TOl' PONTIAC TRESS. WEDXKSDAY. OC TOBER 26, I960 Try fo Appeal Sentence Fincrr-Tregof! Jury ' ' ICity Receives Las ANGELES ing a fabric ‘‘aoefc" over a corru-cated paper form. After the fabric had been hardened with min the 'torm is removed. ' $567,822 U.S. Ch^k Opens Door to Deals for Property The city has received a IS67.822 check from the United States Treasury to begin initial property negotiations in the urban renewal program. Ada Negotiations won’t get underway, though, until urban renewal au- The doctor nmi Mi«s TregoW." his ex-misiress, aic accuscil of the , muittof of his estninged wilr; Bitr- isii'a Jean,' ,TB. -on J«|,v IJ, King i h 1, King's counsel argued the pro-'tive secretary of, (he National As-1**’®”*'‘’* Chicaj^ Approve the '1‘he ludgf- denied numerous de *<‘'’tence was invalid since; sociation tor the Advancement of' ®‘^‘***'**°"® ' ns,- motions lo dismiss the pro- '!’' months Colored P^ple, wlo was a spec-j Robert A. Mtlerer. aiwlataat iHlingx to revoke probation and ”” *^”“’<^*** Th^v alsoltalor in the crowded courtroom | i-lty manager and urban renewal The r bail gilding who led the Mont-! laimed the antitrcspa.ss law isj , gomerv. Ala . bus boycott, moved| D. I.. Hollowell, head of King's; ^•ray ma<-hine.s are sometimes, to Alianta last February. He en-i five-man legal staff, also calrndj • iised by the r S. post offae to ipi^^d a plea of guilty lo driving'officials of Rich's Department check for goods mailed in viola- Mithout a Georgia licen.se iastlStore to testify that no formal lion of the law _________________ .i^ptember and was given a 12- cusation of violating the law bad —^----------------- month- probated senteme. 'been made against King. TJnough steel latl.v have been Georgia sells 1- and 5-year { But Dekalb County Prosecutor made in the C to btpld a single driver's licenses which expire on | Jack Smith said thaj no formal track 33 times around the world. April 1 King said at the time of accuNtion was necessary to re- RAZLEV CASH MARKET 1. 78 NORTH SAGINAW LEAN SLICED BACON k< ROUND SIRLOIN SWISS STEAKS ^ ‘"59* TENDER BEEF I SIRLOIN TIPS TENDER RIB STEAKS 49‘“l 1 CUBE 1 STEAKS 89'“ T-BONE STEAKS 69'“ CHOICE BEEF CHUCK ROASTS "‘49‘ BONELESS RUMP £Qc Lb. ROASTS MEATY BOILING BEEP 19"' MEATY BEEF POT n^OASTS 33'“ FRESH PAN READY FRYERS HI “27‘ LEG OR RUMP VEAL AQc Lb ROASTS 09 MEATY VEAL BREASTS Ttcbthtloin---- 49‘“ GROUNDBEEF He'.said, ’’ its intent will 4ie fellj coordinator, said he expected MBti^ as -a-peraecu- [ -«t:quiMMiN.ap|um8l--slWiabu.^ lion rather than a satisfaction ofi Tj,p cKeck represents federol ap-a violation of a traffic rule. city's request for $700,000 in initial funds. Deducted, as expected, were several items, SM.Ilt FOR PLANNING They indude a deduction of Ihe $90,112 advanced by the federal government two years ago for planning; interest on the $90,112; and $38,067, the estimated federal for auditing and inspection of the project over its anticipated five-year span. |£ye True Debate Between Candidates NEW YORK (AP)-The te aion and radio networks have proposed that if the presidential candidates decide fo hold a fifth The networks, in telegrams to I the television advisers of Sen. John F. Kennedy and Vice President Richard M. Nixon, suggested that each candidate make, a statement on an agreed-on subject, jwith each getting time for rebuttal. !.........* ' w ! The men then could question ieacti other, with a moderator keop-|ing the time—and the peace. This format originally was suggested by the networks but turned down by the candidates. I The nominee® have reached no agreement on a fifth debate. The $700,000 is covered in the $5,165,044 revolving fund the federal government has set up to cover land acquisition costs. Nitrogen, being a nearly inert gas, is useful as a guardian in many industrial applications give protection against phases injurious gas reactions. PURE LARD 13ARMBBB 0 save with these Hot Dogs tefiriar OP Loehy HILLS BROS., CHASE A SANBORN, BEECH.NUT OR Maxwell House Vacuum Packtd Coffta SAVE IVc—CHUNKXI6HT Star>Kiif Tuns ... SAVE ««—FOOD FAIK CALIFORNIA Whole Pstlsd Tomafoei. .4 c’l M' 5 POPULAR FLAVORS THi KIDS WIU LOVII Canada Dry Pop - V___________,_____• 3’^ 25‘ SAVE IOc—FRESH BRAND IWB—ruBon erv/M^i# M POTATO CHIPS........... .., 49 SAVE lOe—TOPS BRAND .. FRESH FIG BARS , ,,,.2 fi, 29 3 GOLD LABEL Ice Creom i At Any P 4 Limit: 0 39* 100 A Lar,e $M( f lettles I nv» D*POtrr PIECES 1 STEMS Cavam Mushrooms ,... 4 4.0z. $ I C Cans I SAVE tic ON 1 ROLLS Food Fair Wax Papar . . '°Rol? I 9* save lOe—FLAVOR KIST Chocolate Chip Cookies I 9‘ SAVE Ic Personal Ivory Soap I2.T.79* SAVE 27c ~ California Yellow Cling Halvas Hunt's Peaches $|00 SAVE 4«—ITALIAN STYLE Hunt's Tomato Paste...................3 c«V 29* SAVE Be^FLAVOR RICH Hunt's Tomato Sauce..............3 cf«V 29* SAVE 13c ON 1 CANS—UNPEELED Hunt's Whole Apricots.............. 29* II 50lxtraS&H | SAVE Be—HALVES Hunt's Bartlett Paari VALUABLE COUPON I r GLENDALE'S : Skinless Franks VALUABLE COUPON 29* TXTTtVTnrrrvTnnnnrrryrB'Bf * Mecwell HeuM, Hillt IreL CliA.e 1 SAnbern, or laeck-Nitt C^ee One CO* *1*” 12 Mb. Cap 9 w cotipon { 2 at aar Fair tbn Bat. Oct. aWh I ^ LtmH: Ob4 Oaonan. ABnna OMy. P j ^WrrvrmTryrryrrryywcl Green Stomps i I r wtrb Pareba.e ol 4 i f I i er Mere Pliga. ef ^ HALLOWE'EN 4 CANDY 4 SH Ska eW Ue 4 fe tMf Omdmi at aar PooB Fair 4 ----------■ 4 nuf^i e Catsup • • HUNT’S TOMATO h Juice.... 4’^89* save I7e California pRuir 3 FjOO Shop and Save at FOOD FAIR in the MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER w. TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD V > 1 THIRTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC l»RESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1960 Stuff Gotden Onions Wil Macaroni Airtight Wrap May Harm Contents Aotanni’B goMen rays turn broth are “mated’' and topped with|Top each serving with a pat if a chilly blue at sundown—a tlme a golden pat of butter. jbutter. Makes 4 servings, when hnnyiivborne to the warmth Great golden onions whichi Ooidea Staffed Oalw of a good hot supper makes pleas- abound at this time of year, are • rtirSS’*^ a***SS‘'2e!^ a bacon<.hee«.-m«ca- In airtight plastic packages to de. Now collecting sample bowl of hot a«g>. ready to bew eiTbaturwi wwd wwas. termine exacUy b«»w harmful these smoked fish and other non-steril ! ladled into mugs cupe to be Perfection. A side serving ol parboil onions In salted wster 13*'“‘****’'* News-foods wrapped In airtight plasticj sipped before, or along with the stewed tomatoes might rouild out minutes. Remove centers leaving,Jpackages lor study, the FDA also meal. this menu, and baked custard top . .z study follows tte report of|repcNts an increasing number A a NEW YORK The Food And Drug Administration will make an intmive study of foods wrapped In airtight plastic packages to de> termine exactly bow harmful these iCheese and Onion Give Muffins Special Appeal . Want something to make aland grated cheese over the tops leal something special? Cheese-1 of the gems, which are brushed Ionian gems will do that trick. with melted butter, gives them Hot gems or muffins give a a touch of elegance and en-!meal'special appeal and are ac-[hanoes their flavor, tually not difflcnlt to provide. of it is a cozy, warming affair. It stimulates go^ feeling, and warms ;ihe way’ for good things to follow. It’s ’’friendly " toward other fond.<, too . seems to point up and-complement th«' foods w'r%ed with It. Best of all. It needs'no prejairH-tlon, and is only minutes from <• ■ 10‘» while cook bacon until crisp. Drain; crumble. Add to macaroni and cheese. Toss well. Fill onion siKi«n>rd er»»B cavltles With macaroni mixture; eoiui«n»r« beri tup with buttered crumbs. Arrengs »»irr-- baking dish. Bake in modersW oven i3M degrees* about 30 min-i)U|>s in saucepan; add utes or until onions are tender. two deaths in Mlnnesoto W weekjreturns of these produJls to super-whlch were attributed to botulism,.markets. Consumers have oom- tin«d tarlchttf I a usually fatal type of food poisoning. In both cases a ready-to-eat brand of linsterillzed smoked fish airtight plastic wraps waa blamed. 'The FDA confirmed the presence plained of a high percentage of| spoiled fruits and vegetables whichi contaminate their neighbors more rapidly In the abaence of air. far they eootala OM-tklrd of lard, an egg,, a halt cup of | mllK and twwtidids cup 1 Ubictpcioa lard even enunb. Stir in ^ cup cheese.^ Cook onion In will be otUf.) FUl muffin pans % fuU. Sprinkle tops of muffins with remaining cheese and sesame seed and spoon H teaspoon melted butter or margaripe over each. Bake in a hot oven (400 degreet F.) for Yield: 12 An automatic letter sorting ma-Grease 12 medium-size muffin chine, which lx believed to be the 'pans. Sift together flour, baking world's largest, handles 36,000 let-A sprinkling of sesame seed powder and salt. Cut in cup ters per hour. PAUL'S IGA FOODLINER 1980 Auburn Rd.-Pontiac (Corner of Crooks ond Auburn Rd.) (Following Items and Prices good only at Paul's IGA) Delicious HOT DOGS Only Served het Hi our tters wiHi all the trbmnings. Bay as many as yen want. fri. and Sat. only. 5 39 Chuck Roost “ 49* TobleRito Short Ribs 39* TobleRito, Boneless Beef Stew Lb. 69* TobleRite, Standing Rib Roast Lb. 69* fm Raoittsr for one of the many pritas beiny yiven sway :$s “Fyeexer Beef Sole'* i SIDES lb. S2c FRONTS...............lb. 44c i HINDS, lb. 62c CHUCKS, lb. 46c ROUNDS, lb. 62c CUT AND WRAPPED FREE OF CHARGE TobleRite Ground ^eef 49' Brasd Prize (PHILCO PORTABLE TV) Brand Prize Sweet APPLE CIDER •ii. 69 Delicious With Cider FRESH DONUTS 3 1” 19‘ DOZ. Bicycle • Spece Ro^et • Cathie Doll Set ^ «-|1irtlitffS^^ -------- • Balloons and Comic Books foi the Kiddies • Coffee, Chocolate Drinks (Fri., Sat. Only) • Pumpkins to Fint (100) Cnstomors (Thursday) • Cottage Choose to First (100) Cnstomors .(Friday) • Loaf of Broad to First (100) Cnstomors (Saturday) BASKET of GROCERIES Every Hour Fri. and Sot. IGA .Ingl^nl llsbSSwA - inilflllT vOTTfB . 6-ox. 59* IGA Strawberry Preserves.. 20-ai. Jar 49* Dalicioui Amon-Tnel. 39* Fresh Angel Food IRKE 39 McIntosh APPLES 4 ‘^ 39‘ Fresh CARROTS Lk PkC. Cello Packed 9‘ 3-Lb Bag . jooKiiiG onions TgE POOTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 19M Give the ^mily a Dinner That's Different Mo wodgoohoped ptcctt; Mrvt iminodlately. Yield: 6 tervingi. 0 how good « cook yoa , pooner or later alnraat any family 1* bound to biecomO accua-tamed to the meala you aarve. If you aenae thia reaction, it*a time to throw a culinary curve. CSiange your ityla of eooUiy a Uttia at a time — or put together a menu tbat’a • complete InnovaUan fWi you. In taking the latter course you might.begin dimer with a chilled soup. Concoct a atmple version of vichyssoiae by heating a can of froeen condensed cream of potato 3 Witt part mun and part as liquid. Beat it smooth, then chill thoroughly. Serve the soup in chilled bowls, topped with While the aoup is chilling, prepare Chill Bean Pie tor a sesty A well-aeaaoned ground beef mixture forms the "crust” of this pie. The filling ir simply canned chili be with whole bran cereal add an exotic dessert touch. Garnish these little cakes with diob shot or a few curia of ahavpd chocolate. I awoUai aad a lasy an- stripe to be dipM la mayoa- DDINEB THAT'S DOTEIDr Quick Vichyssoiae CHIU BEAN PIE Sauteed Zucchini Carrot, Cucumber and Green Pepper Sticks' with Creamy Horseradish Dip MOCHA SPICE CAKES Milk coffee ChUl Beaa Pie t rapt hraa rtakM 1 nruc ttoti 1 tMtpOM e XI — (IIH-M. CM) ehlli bcc 'H MS SrMcd CbCddM CbMM Oruah bran flakes slightly. Cbm- garlic, chill powder, milk and bran flakes; mix well. H cos vlielc bcNi ctnal H cue atni •% cup urua nwir Vi MMpaop bpkUs caac (STI) degrees P.) »•» mlmitss. Prost with Mocha Icing. Yield; ‘ cup cakes, 3ii Inches in di-ameter. ft Sip c milk; let stand about $ minutes. Sift together flour, soda. Salt, stdoes and instant coffee powder. meat mixture around BideS|Blend shortening and sugar; add and bottom of Mnrii itie^ pan to form shallow shell. Pour undrained beans into shell; sprinkle with egg and beat until light and fluffy. Bake Flounder With Cheese I rap dried cearccttoncri' cuacr I iMtpeon Inclul rartra powder h Weipooa eeatUa nererlas Melt bu^r in hot milk. Combine sugar and instant coffee powder and add to milk mixture. Add vanilla. Beat until mixture is of spreading consls-tency. Yield: sufflclent icing ter 9 cup cakes. tag. If yos have a whols floiMM, a delectable way to prepare It is topping, Uks thte; iwwMer laPMl iw totae #r I le«M W rap riBc dry tnpad enua y« rap ireled elieeee tv tup minera • Have your fish dealer drei^ Am fish for you. Which means remov- Ploundleri can be any tiu from little Band dabs to giant halibut. National Plahetiea Inatltuta n _________________ tells us. Thay are all flat flahilng scsIm. insides, head~iuid'tta. which swim on their lides and Jiprinkl® A* with salt and lemon apend a great deal of time floun- i'^^t'*'- A*h in greaaed'^ahailow dering around the bottom of tha| Asking diah. Cover tWi wHh bread ... '^'Aat we buy In the ptores ‘*™”»'»a. cheese, hirops of butter Note: Hot strong coffee brew|», flounder is usually either grey,and minced onion. Km •Stka«l»ii9dae< ...til. a ............* ^ . A« dnr h«redlenU allemntely|may be robstltutcd for mUk andi*jie. yHiowlaU. winter flounder or I Bake fish in a moderately hot whole bran cereal mixture,iinstant coffee powder, if desired.[lemon sole — all among the mosf oven <375 to 400 degrees) 35 fo stirring only until combined after ea, I Salail Dressing <»■ 39* Dog Food Cons Chicktn of the Seo TUNA FISH Vi flot $^00 MARGARINE 6 99‘ . , 4^-“' M®® 0 300 Ole Ole Tomato Jiloo 9 com I chill Hot Beaas m c«m ol Qiakor Dais Doiry Fresh lOTIBGE CHEESE 100 ei|g Mr. Tsai's Fresaa • itr PIZZA is. OA« 'CA Presea g.©,. $4Q0 OH meat pies I Campbeirs Tomato CARAMELS EOUP CAN 3990 BALDWIN AVE. - PONTIAC (Following Items and Prices Good Only ot Gingellvillo IGA) Deiiciout HOT DOGS Served M ia aiir Were, with all Hie triaiailafa. , Buy at aiaay as yew wsat (Thurtdsy sad Friday Oflly CraadPriie - (2 BICYCLES) - Brand Priie • Dotl Sot I# 4 Tumbler Sots • 1 Shopping Bog • Rockot Set • Balloons and Suckers for the Kiddies • Coffte, Fudgosicles (Friday and Soturdoy) • Pompkiu to tlio tint (100) cistomeri (Thutday) • ColtagB Chceia to the tint (100) caslomers (Friday) s • Uai oi Braad to tho first (100) castoneis ~ (Satudav) PONTIAC There's an IGA Food Store Near You, PONTIAC LAKE ORION Poui't IGA 1980 Auburn Read S) OFIN DAILY 9-0 F.M. —^ SUNDAY 10.7 P.M. 1 Gingellvillo ^GA Morket Woite's 3990 Buldwbi Avo. Market Phipp.' IGA Foodliner OFIN DAILY 9-9 P.M. 'SUNDAY 9-7 F.M. THIRTY-SIX PbXTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 26, 1»60 U} 1 yPjf SPOYLIGHT KROGER Vac Pac CHUNK URGE BOLOGNA LIVER SAUSAGE BULK KNOCKWURST Your Cfcofct 49< LB. LCOFFEE SPOTLIGHT COFFEE........3.*-A'on^* 1-LB. BAG 49* - 59* FRESH DONUTS ......‘“.19* SAVE Bc-KROGER BAKED—PLAIN. SUGAR OR COMBINATION Dotlar Sale! rREESTONE SWEET DWAN^S PEACHES 4 SAVE 17c ON 3—KROGER ORANGE JUICE . . .StiSinoo SAVE 4< ON 3—KROGER BLENDED JUICE .. .3'it's »1'«’ SAVE Sc ON 3—KROGER GRAPE JUICE.......3SS1M?® •.v:( I .KROG£RGEVTLT{?OOD,BOU)EN5Ram^^ SWEET 'N REFRESHING —--------- PINE ORA................ 3?!SI SAVE arc ON 4—BREAST.O-CHICKEN ^1 Ik. 11^ Tl Ik. I A At LAYER CAKE .. . .t39 SOLID MICHIGAN Schoolboy APPLES... 29 50 EXTRA V WITH THU COUraN AND PURCHAII Of t.OZ. WHISK AWAY RUST REMOVER SAVE Sc—KROGER FRESH BAKED SLICED CRACKED Wheat Bread .... . LOA*F 17' CALIFORNIA'S RNEST Vine-Ripened Tomatoes . 19' FRESH BORDEN'S Cream Cheese . . . . . . *«' 29' LARGE 9 SIZE Fresh Pineapple ...... EACH 39' FROZEN BEEF, CHICKEN. TURKEY OR COD Birds Eye Dinners . . . 49' PEACH, BLACKBERRY OR GRAPE Preserves . . . , 2 JAR 49' 25 EXTRA VALUE STAMPS WITH THU COUPON AND PURCHASI OP II ez. PK6. OP KR06ER CHOCOLATE RAISINS n valid at Kroger In Ditroit and Eaitarn Mich-hru Saturday. October 29. I9A0. PLAY GAME No. 5 t ^mJMBERS 1 ro put' /9 2 B 12 16 20 2^ f ( 32 36 38 40 42 41 \ ** 54 56 60 66 68 70 ‘K'.-V \72 76 SO B2 SB 92 96 IMPERIAL MARGARINE I lb. «c O'CEDAR BROOMS .........................$1.49 each UPTON SOUP....................2 pack 29c COCKTAIL SAUCE l|IAve novice divisions. jare scheduled to bo "freed" from Le|«ue history. ” jliawkeyes will win in a thriller. • lion about the backfield either. ! In the women s open class. Micki | the probation on Oct. 27 after a Mississippi over Louisiana Auburn over norida: The coinjKing took second^, while in Ihejyear in the NCAA dog-housc NCAA Reviews Pfobation Cases additirm. Bticktye quarterback Tom .Mofte has carried for 392 yard*. Overall, OSU has net- ’ Ited 1.691 yards nishing to 1,069 for I Michigan State. , EigRi divers represented the Pon- , tiac Swimming Association at AAU I •''AN FRANCISCO (UPI I—W.vo-diving meet at Warren High School."ling and Mississippi, under NCAA over the weekend. probation for the past year, gel Alex Hiller and Carl Hiller took “^^y on whether their first and third in the boys’ novice i*>«n will be lifted tomorrow when iilvision and in the girls’ novicepolicy committee of the Na- „auu.nni, .-,a,u ujn. ..nun 1.1.-11 division Gail iMunay to (rrmi "As far as we are concerned, the perfect time for the draft would be in the spring after the class ha.s graduated," said Byer Fuss said in Dallas that he pro-| fonse U getting a good going posed that both the AKL and NFlI over IhU week. Tho liiigor la rhange their by laws to prohibit P"*"****! Fergoaon and Matte the slgnlng-^not jti.Ht (he playing— *’* ***** •’**’’ *“ “*"**• of college football players iintil| Coaches are almost sure now after their football eligibUity 'lasj they’ll meet Ohio State without i Charon, one of the top defensive I players as well as the leading offensive liaek. W "Rix-ky" Ryan, Seymour Draws 1st Blood groomed to take over for Charon. TTie AL clubowners first must solve internal problems concerning possible realignment before they can tackle the expansion movement. They are pretty much in agreement regarding Los Angeles. ’They feel an AL franchise in the rich Los Angeles territory would somewhat offset the ad-vaSitage gained by the NL in grabbing off such plums as Houston and New York. Tbe rub, however, is in the manner of acquisition. One group, headed by Bill Veedk of the Chicago White Sox, wants the league to grant an open franchise to LA, along with Dalias-Fort Worth. There was a time when LSU had the Chinese Bandits, but this year the Rebels' have that famed non-Oriental, Jake Gibbs. He will decide. Syracuse over Pittsburgh: Twice beaten, twice-tied Pitts-could take this, but Ernie Davis and his mates will pull it Another faction, headed by Dan -Topping of the New York Yankees, would tike to see the Kansas City franchise moved to liOS Angeles, thus opening the ^ iwy" Tor' the leiague to approve franchises in Minneapolis-St. Paul and Dallas-Fort Worth, comes up tails. So it is Auburn, iJ®**" La ^otte. -jf report is okay, then the Purdue over Illinois: A rough j P*“c«* ^th and Al Gilford was 6th. I ^g,, day ahead for John Easterbrook.! Another meet will be held next the mini's Torn Thumb quarter- nionth. back. I the Syracuse li Against Former Team row, ” says Walt Byers, executive; Rv THE ASMK1ATEI) PRESS i Hagrn scored 16 points lo go down with a knee sprath. The game won't be entirely a matter of steamroller tactics although both teams tiAve stressed Duke over Geoigia Tech: toughie but the home field gives Duke the edge. Oregon State over California: Everyone wallops California this year, so why shouldn’t Oregon ?tate? ^ director of the NCAA. Big Upset Features West Side Classic Navy over Notre Dame: Joel^ 1 tt Benino gets better and belter tts\{^entTal HaTrleTS the season progresses. rtATTT • r*- ^ over Nebraska: The Nip PNH W FlTSt Tig^s are one of the most under j — rated teams in the Midlands ,i lOT 1 TOphy Minnesota over Kaiusas State: breeze for the Paul Bunyans ofj pon,jg(. central, tr>ing to retain the football North. (|,p all-sports trophy for another west Cohfofence leaders. year in its erosstown feud with Pontiac Northern, picked up 100 into the headlines for the South- points Tuesday at Beaudette Park by barely downing the Huskies, •27-29. in a dual cross country meet. \Ii<-higan Stat^over Ohio State:; i, ,|,p fj^sf athletic compe- jtition-o Second Time This Year Moore Loses Crown Again tween the two city rivnls. The next 'battle in the trophy competition will be the PCH-PNH fooLball game Nov. 18 at Wisner Stadium. S<»re first blood for Paul Sey- The strong West Side Mobil team |met_a weak Coca Cola team and buffered the biggest upset of the West Side Oassic season when the Coca Cola boys took all 3 games from their stronger rivals. Joe Fos-ter led the West Side Mobils and the league with a strong G;"*! but 15 year-year-old boy proved their downfall. John Chambers had games of 191-211-2^ for 622 to help his team win it all for the night.' On the strength of a victory ovei ^ Drug moved ahead. Wyoming was placed on proba-jmour, the new coach of the St. on a year ago tor lecruiting Loujg Hawks in the National activities and too much .financiaLj^^o^ team the Syracuse Nats, aid to athtetes; -..MississippL :wasjBarite!h«ll ASaot-ianon. - against given the same ban for over-zeal-j his old team, the Syracu.se Nats, ous activities trf an outsider in be- seymoMv'k Hawks, led by Bob half of the whooL Ippjjj, ,hp Ng,* Tuesday inighl 123-100, It was the first North Carolina Stale, on |>ro- jmeeting iK'tween St. Louis and ballon for four .veam for Illegal | Syracuse since Seymour resigned ret^rultlng of a basketball play |as Syracuse ewich last March, a er, also xwmes np for rlvlew move that led to a ehnrge of tanv with Pettit’s 35 ptiints and '21 re- rOnlrol ball. Ohio State has com-plcte Its ban lifted O W a- srBArrsf: **• The l»s Angeles lakers nip|)ed Stmui Other schools still under suspen [the New York Knicks 120-118 fur akm are Indiana, tinder rteur-yeurrtheh* fir#l vietory of the season ban which started in April of this'; in the other scheduled NBA con- Htibmok y^arf Montana State and Arizona test. Pistons Open ^^aUlonieJoday Lake Center leads with 24 points State, off nprbballon in October, i 1961; Auburn, off .Sept. 1, 1961,, Alex Hannum. who coached Ihci followed by, West Side Mobil.j““'*^^'"« the NBA championship' •tple X Lunch. Tony’s Remat and!®' CLEVELAND (AP) - The National Boxing Association has striitched a ^qnz. arm across the Attantic to snatch its light heavyweight crown from the balding brow of Archie Moore who won it in 1952. Moore failed to meet a 3(Way time limit set at the NBA convention last Sept. 6 to complete rangementa for defenae of his title against Eric Schoeppner of Ger-tna&y, David Ott, NBA, prettdent said. Moore, who lisU hia age at 43 but whose mother lists It at 47, now is In Rome (treparing to fight a non-title, 19-rounder Saturday night aalnst Giulio Rinaldi star aind cuiTcntly runing the California state assembly. Archie has defended his title eight times. He also got knocked out a couple of times trying for the heavyweight title. His last title defense was a third-round knockout of Yvon Durelle of Canada on Aug.- 12. 1969. This is the second time this year the NBA has stripped Moore of championship recognition tar failing to meet Schoeppner. Now, the NBA giiminnttnn matches will be held to find a new light heavyweight titlehol^er. Sdioen>-ner rates bdtind Harold Johnson of PhUadelphia and Chick Calder-wood of Srotland- on the NBA's list of contenders. TVirmal notige went , to Moore in a letter frwn Ott dated Oct. 22 and addressed to him at San Diego. Calif, But jii releasing the letter to newsmen Tuesjiay. Ott said Moore knew before he left for Italy that failure to arrange a bout with Schoeppner would cost his Ni^ crown, in additioii.to becoming a movie one point back and a three-way tie exists between Bicmar Inn, Blue Cleaners and Cafoi’s Music at 20 Northern’s Ed Murray finished points for 7th place. Sparks Griffin 1st In yesterday’s field of 14 run- jat 19. West Side Lancs 18. Oakland ners with a llinp of lt:t7j over j Coin 14, Judah Lake Mart, Slaters I Beaudette’s tw^mile course. Cen- land Pizutti’s at 12 points and Ha-for tnti'g Ken Johnson took 2nd zelton Lettering at 8 points com-sith a time of lltIB. jplete the lineup this week. The NBA took back Moore’i 175-pound division crown Feb. 15. but restored It three weeks later wh«i arrangements were pleted fori a Moqre-Sttneppner title bout in Toronto. Thone plans fell through when, after a time to enable Archie make the wei^t limit, a deal on te^evisto Baled. Coca Cola at 22 points. Pasqualc’s j’ ™ ^ Seymour as coach af Syracuse, year to go; and Oklahoma, which had llie Nats in contcnt’wn umil,a«r« is under indefinite probation be- ,hc last qiairter. Then Cliff Hagan JiXi cause of refusal of a non-staff scared eight points to .stop a Syra-'0“';;"> supporter to disclose contents of eugg threat ;sei»r» some bookkeeping b*»* Byere refused to give any ui-; dlcation pn whether any ’’.’w rrr . / 1 ^ schopis would be penalized. ; Vr QlGr/OrCf ^Q^e , J DE'mOITjfl — The Detroit Pis- _ I 5 zitons open their home season In -J J “iOlympia Stadium tonight against, * 7 15: the uneaten Cincinnati Royals West Side Lanes had the high ga^ at 1035 while Triple K had high series at 2853. Other high games were rolled by Bicmar Inn and Triple X at lOOl each. High Series were West Side Lanes 2851 and Sparks Griffin 2831. Jim Nelson, the CbieFs’ No. 1 runner, was taken to the hospital early Tuesday afternoon and he mis^ the meet. Completing yesterday's field, ini order of finish. Were: Gary Holtz, PNH, M; Bill Campbell. PCH, Darryl Patterson, POi. 5th: Todd Twicbei, PNH. 6th; Wade Pormer Greots Enter Wilkinson, PCH, 7th; Dick Poin- vrwaia emer PNH, 8th: Harold Davies, PCM, 9th; Brian WWeinan. PCH, 10th: Ted Lorenzen, PNH. 11th; Wmie Ratliff. PCH. 12th; George Henson, PNH, 13th; Phil WUliams, PNH, 14th. Women's Senior Golf ^ Sitoters Poss Tests Tlw tint pntleWner tnU of the IIM-Sl trafon wtrt b«fd Tuesday nlfUt at eha feUadluiD. Ttot fonowtaa t^Urt •uceeMlfiliT darry Daarlat. No. t. danct: Parbara Bebiilta, Na 1 Santa aid No 1 tn* ttai; Backjr Poraloiid. No. 2 danor Na. 1 flhra: Iroaa StUra. Na. 3 and Na. 3 flnra: Inna danca: Narbari DonnaUay-Janlca Wllaen. No 4 da 0«Kdi, No. 1 ttama; tylTU 3. T. I and 3 fifurt: Ann t^«iin;{ DariJ MMStr. Bloomfield Hills JVs Hond Holly First Loss PINEHURST. N. C. (AP)-Both former winners and two greats of another era were in the field of 220 today as the third annual North and South women' golf tournament began. Brookline. Mass., is defending bqr title in the twexiay, 36-holc stroke play event. Mrs. Harri»n Flippin of Artj-more. Pa., who won the inaugural two years ago; Mrs. Estelle Law-son Page of Chapel Hill, N.C., and , Maureen Orcutt of Engle- wood, N.J.. are among the chief ****** taiEoi'Li: challengers. ______ ieaihje Rut he did Indicate Uiat jhe NCAA wasn’t getting Ihr hopedn^'^^P meeiimj Thursday at 8 Wings Carry 3-3-3 »4j'iM fops the Western Di- n_iS vision of the National Basketball Assodetion wtth-lflur straight vte-^— 0 » T tories and Robertson, known as 1 ^ 3 "the big O," is ct^W with set-1 6 IS****® ***‘’"* ****• *’^'*'8 the club’s li I leading scorer, playmaker and re- 1 i {[ bounder. First place is a strange 7 * 1* spot for the Royals, who’ve been [ 0 I second-diviaiOn-dweltow for years. 2 M im' The Pistons, who have lost <1-11*: their only aUrt to date, raok ; third In the division, trailed enly by Los Angeles which kns lost three straight and won none. men’s basketball play will ^ held Mark to New York Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Waterford CAI buUdingon Williams Lake Rd. The Bloomfield Hills junior varsity handed the Holly reserves their first loss of the season, 7-0, Tuesday afternoon on the winners’ field. The lone score was marked ui> I the first quarter on a 12-yard pass foom Rick Frick to Tom Melrose. Neither team threatened the remain!fer.j>t4h» i«ame.^ “ Bloomfield Hills JVs now have a 34M record. Holly is 4-1 Rules and regulations, eligibility and entrance fees will be discussed. All interested teams should be represented. The league will he sponsored by the recreation board of Waterford Township, Yanks Lose but S^ate Gets Bua' Tax Money NEW YORK (Jft - The third —Dnrmg-his fabulous rotlege ra-,rcer, Robertson wa.s a unanimous all America three times and was voted player of the year dming the same three seasons. In the 88 artlM Am wmAT' NATIONAI ... 3. UbolfM . _ . . WTtalNATIOlm. place Detroit Red Wings carry their 3-3-3 record to New York to-night for a National Hockey League game with the New York Rangers. It will be the first meeting of the season between the' Red Wings and the fifth place Rangers who are 3-54). The Wings currently hold game lead over fodrth place Tto-f Imlay City ranks 3nl at 53. Anchor Bay now owns three of the top 10 places. Bob Stanek moved in with 19 in a game and John Funk scored 17. Barry Wickstrom got all 13 as Lapeer beat Rochester but is still short of leaders. OAKLAND COUNTY SCOftINO I o TnrATTr N«wten, W. BIoemneM... 6 11 1 74' C»t«. Tror ..............S « 11 «; J. a*ymour, Bhrln* ......6 • l M McOonkId. ATondill ..... • t 4 SI Shaw. Avondale ..........s S 4 S3 McCauley, PCH .... « a n « Damrtck Cranbrook ‘Mlcheau, Perndale Jacobson, Beaholm |Knnla. HoUy _____ McBrlda, C, Da, ... Stan. HAaal Park . ..S S 10 4S a hospital with what appeared toUjvp secretary be an injured ankle. However, I pa„l Tuesday resigned m gen- hospital authorities later “|eral manager of the Cincinnati Goeyette was discharged after Rp^s to become general manager X-rays showed no damage to the'of the new Houston club In foe - iNaiional League, * * I At the moment the organization The victory put the Hawks two; consists of one scout, Jack Tlghe, points ahead of Montreal in the'former manager of the Detroit National Hockey I.A>ague race.jTigers, and Paul. It has two farm The Hawks have played two less clubs, Jacksonville of the Oass view vnoir /ad\ n Igames than the Canadiens, ^A Sally Lea^e and Salisbury of ..f t ___________________s Jonas. Bloomtifid ........S 8 SchuUa, Cranbrook ........> * Shutter, Parmlnaton OU. 8 Alban. Laka Orion ..... . .8 -----ty. rymdala ...... 8 . COUNTY ABBA 8CORINO ... QTDPATTP —,..a. L'Anaa ............8 II O 71 Owena, Capao ............ • • •• ^u**snfrfnitof"t::' McClaesa, Roaerllla . Stanek. A Bay....... Punk. A. Bay ....... Man, Brighton ______ Folan, A. Bay .. . Jacublak, Memphis .. 1 331 1 11: 1 311 nw 8 48 4 48, 8 4S' 0 38 Sophomore of Year Honors to Broglio I Only one game is scheduled to-the class D We.sler Carjlma Lea-' inight with IJetroit at New York-igue. SEAGRAM’S IMPORTED known by the company it CJi keeps a rookie with the St. Louis Cardinals e year ago, today was named the Na-; tlonal League Sophomore of the! Year for 1960. ■k The big right-hander, a 21-game | winner, was an overwhelming choice In the annual Associated Press poll of baseball writers. He; receiv^ 165 of foe 189 votes cast., Shortstop Maury Wills of Los Angeles ^as second with 20 votes. Outflelder-first baseman George Altman of ^cago, and pitchers Jim O’Toole and Jay Hook of Cincinnati and Larry Sherry of Los „ Angeles..each collected one vote. J Broglio really arrived after last; years~Tl7“Avon-lost record “ 4.73 earned run average. Hie 25-1 year-old hurler lost only nine games and posted a 2.75 ERA this season whUe working as a starter and in relief. Elliott Wins Debut CAMBRIDGE. England (AP) Anstralta's champion miter, » Elliott, made his track debut __ a Cambridge University freshman Tuesday and won the half nUle in 1:57.1. Hertr i GIRL. OF THE_ michT STOP WITH ATLAS MUFFLERS FOR LONGEST USE! I88T All 8LIV8VT 1^0 ein.,n.T.icd,'U-'ii ltd.'H 'H wmrrnm^ m jm MIAMI HATES MOMIIfl Dally I to 7 —Satarday to 6 121 WAYNE ST. Behind Federal's — FE 3-785*5 CUPPER CRAFT your fall wardrobe 'wth elegance Not jim any topcoat will do this fall. The trend is toward trim elegance, and Clipper Craft has tailored a special coHeetien—die "Elite Group" ~_thAt_Aet8jjbLfl„pacfl for the season. They're luxurious, they’re versatile, they’re tailored of superfine woolens in distinctive new patterns and cok»ings. But with all thi*, diey’re not expensive. Better come see them. $5500 Sk.ppiBt CeaUr luiitst V. a ibpoiTei II rn Mrm riM uuiL etuiiti wiitnr-«umi wMni(t M Ttttt ou. nj moor. lutuN-iitmuit coanir, in ran em Nflit Saicty ContGi ^3'^ 12M23 I. XoBtcila FI 3-784S—R 3-7M|” ^ SHOCKS IS.OOO-Mito $Q75 T. "^7"" TkE PONTIAC rR>:SS, WET)NKS1)A^^ 0( 'POHEK THIRTY-NiyK Jlladtson Square Qdvertited in ’ FIELD & STREAM • cushioned insole • 9" outdoor boot • insulated against cold and heat • moccasin toe • vulcanized sole • fully leather-lined • SYL-MER* treated leather • leather laces •T. M. DbW O^miof Cbrporatkm SHpES Miracle Mile Shopping Center Good Drivers: STICK TOGETHER Through the Insurance Exchange at the Automobile Club of Michigan, the good drivers of Michigan stick togeth^ for their mutual benefit. They know that, as a group, they have fewer accidents. They know, also, that they have purchased their auto insurance at reasonable rates and have shared in an unbroken record of safety savings returned on their premiums paid because of their fine driving record. If you are a good driver, you should stick with this good driving group to earn savings on your auto insurance. Apply now! Detroit Aatonoblle iBter-lBsnranee Exchaage at Aatomoblle Clab of Mlcblgaa VISIT 01 PHONI YOUR NIAREST OPrici ~ A. i. Bo9u« — Mfr. 76 Wilttamt St. —K^5-415T R. A. Wirkn, fS t-*tU R. R. TraAn, FE 4-S*»l K. V. KMurr (Mil;) MEIr«M H. M. McNaIIc; OL t-;ill R. L. T«rt. FE >-mia r. R. WtlMD. FE !-••( C. H. Barnn. FE C. C*nn, GR M TwpjiMMIjili ' Pass Defenders to Get Touqh Test UnHod States Leods Horse Jumping Show ()( WallpRfk. NJ,, 1^1% Di«mcnt4 lie won by tIlfhUy mori than four Odhie Morrhr of the IJnMed WASmWiTON- 4AP4 I nitcd SiHleE xnAKRrH Rh niaht test lime vietoi-y TueiidHyi^***^* Night Owl. night in the Internalloniil jumping | event o( the WaKhIngton NallonHl Horse Show ' Rich Doily Double touted! p«.S!ieiK, mettle against several high<-lassi aerialists this ^ason likely will: get its toughest test on Saturday. ' fehse 'thls week In preparation for the Wis(x>nsin game at Madison. I He is probably the best passeri Halfhaek tJary MrMII l«>ad« ve seen yet and may b»' the| with hair Inlrreeptloiw. ami the ^ ,best we ll see all year." said El | other five are dlsIrilMited among of Coach Bumn i Badger signal | IIm> same number of player*, essinc pass de-pt'^wntage ofl Miller Is a kind of mystery man -year-old former high * * * ! NEW YOUR IAP) - The dally Riders from Mexico. Canada, |double at Aqueduct Tuesday paid iiwludlngIand Ei'undor comiwled lnj|l,7TR.20, highest in New York In ^ I Woti by ‘fruiik (TiapoTHbree years------------— 0* A«|*Im. outmSiM CUrlqr (HmRW MW) SmRb. 14SH. to* AiitM*. W. )l ---AN*mM|0. foam, wf H STJ •llrln; I____ „ noSTOI* - Tommi •utpeOiMd Uttf (AF) SwiU^ TIMw. iUt iA.'^?XA"rAF"«. Is.’LMMimr 1 RRA AT A OLAMfR Tt'RAOAVk REatlLtS That’s Ihc'belief Elliott, who is stressing pass de- r^ j ‘He's hud some pas.ses igter- hool i Icepted but anyone who throws as!^** America who says he chose ! Like Mlimesota, which dumped j often as he does must expect I jhe Widvertne*. 104 laid weeh-end, WiMonsin Ina a Ug Hae (averagtng about tU but Elliott aay* the Badger threat la carried la that.' The WolveTihe pss defense. In five games, has come up with nine interceptions and disrupted Wisconsin btti^iuse "it didn't have j a passer." ' | Ife dropped oUriiT^TioCT years after an injury and scholastic trouble. His name Isn't ewn the aertat communirations of sev^ ftsterf ln the Wlsconatn grid Plum Keeps Passes Away From Defending Backs “But Miller has come on strong | this year of rebuilding lor coach [ "If ' Bnihh, ’wlio' 'lost licavTTy'l through graduation after winning' In 19M Wisconsin's-first undisput ed Big Ten title since 1912. ■Mni HEW YORK (APJ—Milt Plum itcrmined on a formula that of the aeveland Bnjwns,' whoLiirfcs number of completions i hasn't had one of his tosses in-L„^ i , . . j tercepted all season, leads the|y^"*‘ »ou<^hdown passes.jj ! National Football League passers. IP®'' completed, per cent ir.-and his teammate, Jimmy Brown,]tercepted ahd average gain heads the ground gaining eaoeT jyards.------------------------------ Official league statistics re- Plum could break the complc-lea.sed today show that Plum has [lion avemg^of 70.3 per cent setj completed 41 passes, good forlby Sammy Baugh in 1915. Plum's 770 yards, six touchdowns and shows an average gain of 14 yards per pu|w. NFL passing rankings < average is 74.5. Plum is followed by Norm Van] Brocklin of the Philadelphia Eagles, Jijhimy Unitas oT the Baltimore, Colts, Ralph Guglielmil of the Washington Redskins and I Bobby Layne of the Pittsburgh' Stcelers. MUD AND SNOW TIRE DISCOUNTS Wh; Ba; > Brra*T Bran* Nrw Flril Ctatt Ta»n and I’aantr; "Wer Part of Title LONDON surrounding fields to feed. BOOTS'^ .... _ ^ i This casual, comfortable trend is on, the rise, augmenting every sportswear ensemble with a dash of derring-do. Lined or unlined,^ Bates boots are the answer to cool weather and easy living. « Other from $1295 up SHOE STORE “fhara for Iho Eatiro raaiUr" 20 W. Huron Street FI 2-3821 THE POXTlAg PRESS. WHDXKSDAV. CK TOHytU l»oo^ FOK i V^OXE Buy Costly U.S. Residences African Nations Open Purses AP PkaUtK CHOKKD UP — K. T. Keller, former chairman of the board Chrysler Corp., mumbled somthing about a cold and watery eyes as he tried to respond to Wilber M. Bnicker, secretary of the Army, as he was awarded a medal for distinguished civilian service Tuesday night at Ft. Knox, Ky, The award was made at a meeting of the Army Scientific Advisory PKANEL. B.V RITH MONTUOMRRV WASHINGTON - Teen : agers and the new African nations have much in common. They resent parental control, but perpetually have their hands out for 'allowances." They want what the other kids in the new neighborhood have and in a hurry. They insist on sharing the family car and pocket-book. but are reluctant to work their i^ay up in the world slowly, like Dad did. Not a single one of the African republlrs expert to get along without foreign aM. All of them have asked us for financial help, and most are perfectly willing lo. a II /nim. Red Russia as weii. „ Moscow — like the dope peddler on the back street — is so anxious to make juvenile delinquents out of the young nations that Uncle Sain is in an unaccustomed rush to shower them with dollar aid. It therfore comes as a bit of shock to Washingtonians to » how lavishly they intend to live among us, while counting on our largesse. ♦ A week or so ago, the newly recognized government of the Cameroon (once a Fi-ench protectorate) )>aid SlflO.OOO for a field-stone mansion located In our most exclusive area overlooking Rock Creek Park, The house, with its gracious drawing room, eight bedrooms and servants' quarters, changed hands six years ago for less than $75,-000. The new owMer added a swim-" pool, and pleked up a neat profit In re-selling to tho naive young nailon-ia-a-hurry. This nearly quarter -million -dollar transaction provides, only a residence for (he Cameroon ambassador. The nation is still shopping tor a cljanefiry. ig Jiquse for him and his staff. ........: ★ ■ A few days earlier, Guinea proudly announced that for $225.-000 it had acHjuii-ed the residence of Frances Knight, chief of our State Department's passport division, and her husband. This also produced a whopping profit for the owners, and seemed to indicate that the new African nations may have an inflated idea of what it takes to keep up with the Joneses. Ghana, a slightly earlier new-' rmer to the family of nations. Might an equally lavish mansion ist' year in the same exclusive area adjoining the park. * * * * These eatahlMinients are far superior to many of the Wash- ! Ingtun emhaasles of larger, more ! prosperom and belter estab. jished foreign nations. Ceiialaly i the pricea paid are setting new highs for extravaganif. >> Two years ago, the Kingdom of I Jordan paid only $150,000 for a ’ house and all of lt.s furnishings, which serves the ambas.sador both as a residence and a chancery otfice for the staff The house Is not luxunou.s, but ii" WMs cod-sidcTM adequaTe T6' pfot" vide The setting for a happy party' honoring ■ the brave young pro-Westei-n king, of Jordan during his stare visit here THE BEKKYS By C»rl Gruhert 530 Adults Take Courses at MSUO Night School More than 500 adult students are| taking fall term courses in the continuing education program at Michigan State University Oak-Hand, according to enrollment figures released today. ★ ★ * Dr. Lowell R. Eklund. directm-of continuing education said thatj the ,530 adults in MSUO's evening I program are among 50 million adult students who have gone back! to some kind of schooling thisi year. Textile Output Shows Decline Wall Streep Chatter Says Mill Production Near Low for Year NEW YORK (UPI)-A clear-<-ut making, according to Prentice-j Hall, Imv After a fal.se upturn in May.' mill production has resumed its decline and is now near its low; for the year, the publishing hou.se | • profits are also beginning tn falter as second quarter returns dropiiod I a year ago (nr the first time In two y P-H seports that selected textile securities will soon offer g portunities for cyclical capital gains. ★ ★ ♦ 0ark. Dodge fe Co. believes most unlikely tb^ the market lows will hold more than ^tuL temporarily and It is entirely possible that the 520-550 area will be reached before the election rather than after it. Moody's stock survey says that no one could be surpri.sed by a postelection spurt in the event o(| a Kennedy victory but it is t(w | early lor a well-grounded bull | markeTToT)?'^'."" ★ ★ ~~^r^~t^urie of Joscphthal Co. says that next year’s earnings | of neere A Co. may double tly 1 $2.50 a share that s«ms likely in| 1960. There's a potentially big re-j placement market in farm equipment, he says. United Business Serivcp lists 10 slocks the mutual funds are btijr Ing: AT&T_Gilklte. IT&T. N.Y. .State Electric & Gas, Pepsi Cola, Philips Lamp, Reynolds Tobacco. Swnft. Upjohn and West Penn "ETedne. —* It Will Be Chili Instead of Talk at PTA Meeting A chat supper from 5:30Jo 7; 30 p.m. 'Thursday wilT Be server in Waterford Township In place of McVittic School’s regular Parent-Teacher Association meeting. The school is located on Midland Road just behind the Drayton Shopping Center. There will be an open hbuise at 7:30 tomorrow night at the Cooliqr PTA meeting. Following a short business meet--btg and coffee period, Mrs. Phyllis Greenberg, coordinating number-aid consultant in the Waterford Toaqvhip ichoed system, will talk on new instruction in mathemati-al^ discuss a mathematical sub-‘ Dr. David Wells of the (takland County Board of Education will ask) dikeuss a mathematical sidvj ject'. "New Trends in Maljiema-| llct." Eklund called the interest in the' adult program part of ‘The Cul-i tural Renaissance of the 20th Cen-; tury. Adults have been attending col-j leges in increasing numbers since] World War II. he stated. More than half of the adults j at MSUO -• 5.5 per rent — are enrolled In rouraes in the hu- | inanitieK, languages and liberal arts classes, Eklund said. The rest are in courses leading to professional advancement' t by^ special lecturers drawn: from industry in the area. * * it The winter term, offering continuation of most courses and some courses, will begin in January. All are noncredit courses in which any Interested person may Rmivii rtJijf iiiiri^airu prisuii iiiojr i --------- .r.......................... enroll. No previous college back- *1'* f'™'* busiest season. But I MAKE him. What's ground is necessary, Eklund said, i being his own boss?” fiOU MUST BE UOOPLE { kllDS OMTtAETEAM $AlD \ tKElR Mew COAC^ 'I / like the peaxored BALLOOiM^ > (M A 'Tl4ANUrS6\Ml M6 PARADE / I'M FOPS SLURG, AMD MDVJ, tuat I'm oviei? tre measles < X6UE55WEWONVT BEMEEDlNiG YOU AMV MDF.'B UMLS55. OP , ^ COm^SE.YOU'RE HAMC^ATMEiMD^ tMGEOUlPMEMT AMD REPAlhJT-.; iMSLDCkERS/ ■nM> watermelon in lan^st ol Jlhej •cticumber family. FORTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRKSS. VVEDXESDAV, OCTOBER 26. 1960 Business and Finance Spy's Brother to Be Paroled .News in Brief Death Notices Market Recoups ! markets (Grain Prices stay Some of Loss r yI)rk ^ Steady to Easier >.Wn»>i4n« (;iT^ngla#Mi. brother ot exmjted ioroduc/ broueht la (fk-Prlce* tor grauis atom'apy Kthd Rownberg, will be rrom.pri«n NoV 16, a Market by g^m and sold by ler the future* market today. 1 Justice Department official said mer. M 8. tJaM Btvd., reported the theft of a bank book and miieoUaneoui paper! from his car to Ponhae p^ice i , - yarterday. The car was parked Greenglan, Relative of at 921 Baldwin Ave' Ethel Rosenberg, Due toi Theit ai $g Be Out Nov. 16 W roUrtrf albums during a break-in at her ^ home was reported to aheriff’s WASH1NGTC»J lUPIi - David;deputiea Tuesday by Mrs. Edwin *“'* Knight of 8909 Shady Point, Commerce Township. i OCT ». tsss. Lao t. ~r‘ T*w#r IlMUl. iThlU Lsk* Toviubia: tat SI; iwiMtd bu»-baad at VM» A. DtCooIck. Ract-uuaa af tba RaMry «UI ba NEW YbRK i*»-Thc stock mar-;itu«m m wholesale package lots. 'W T ket made a partial recovery from Quotation* ah* furnuhed by the , ^"*’^*®* rommercial demand,today, seven straight sessions of decline |D«.troft Bureau of Markets, as of nearby wheat cxintracts, pre-in moderate trading early this. Tuesday afternoon. After being battered down (« a two-year low in Tuesdays s.t DftfO^ProdUC* back, the list had ground l Pmnrl, dm.^cht -Ooiuds, - U . bu, — HorMrsdab. nk. I^likbi. d»k Isumably reflecting exporter sales. J Selling of new crop 1961 deliveries apparently was based on re-iports that seeding progress was jgood the past week. M*s| Demand for com was slow, j j^lThere was some rain over portions jjSi®C the Com Belt but this jTsjexpected in slow up^ harvssting| .. ^ ___ ______________ 4^1 very much. A large elevator-export IJulius Roaenbeig. The couple was VTOjrhouae was on the selling side of!ele<*trocuted in 1953 lor slinung "ithe market. |atomic se os ®®^* minor. juHug Rosenberg while working iw L CHICAGO OBAiH '®* ® technical sergeant at the lutr^bti^ “ Opeoini I Atomic Research Center in Los ?» —?. - 'Alamos, N. M , in 1945. The thHt of a SW paand chain loader from the City Ice and Fuel7-Gfr.r-183 N.-€Bse Avei.-was reported to Pontiac police yesterd^. The SUver Uke Uolf Uub, Walton Blvd., Waterford Township, was broken into last night and $223 worth of golf ciuba and equipment was stolen, the club manager told township police this morning. ‘Onlonit. SO tbk. U S. Sted, was up a full point following Ttmday report of ajp»fii»r r«ot. beb«........................ sharp dip in earnings below the LeJJit!!J‘rr'cfJ?n **'“ preceding three months. !F»pp»r., a«Mt ‘!»•'"J "tiirb- TWH B.C “ a OP. July lOO'i Ryb-IISH Dm .07% New York Stocks Pinnlp*. dos. eiPeppyri, C»yni_, IPrpper*, S«Mt. bu. jPumpklot. 107% kl»y M7% July r I IS% UM 1.17% Dm. 1«: I. WblU. dot. bcht. y>. bu Acorn, bu. .. . DSTROIT STOCBS IC. J. Ncpbltr Co.) tfsor dodmol potato b: He Started his prison sentence meat*, beer, ^ July 6. 1951. Under the law, the b mandatory date for his release is May 1. 1961. But a Justice De-ipartment official said he will he [released Nov. 16 “because of cred- t OttbMiol*-- lid AfkodI As a Melvin gtaebler of 6M1 Rtick-crof^ Road, Independence Township, reported to sheriff's deputies Tuesday that his home had been broken into and ransacked. Nothing apparently was taken, he said. selection of iiMiu (jiLocu nil varieues. Presh sweet cider, large selection of pumpkins, Indian com. gourds and bittersweet: squash $130 'm bushel, cooking onions 10 lbs. for 49c, 50 lb. bag $1.05. Groceries, meats, beer, wine, and liquor to take out. Hours 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. iSdUkib,' Buttbreup, I ' panjleor Giwri'i^ass ^ibe under official federal super- ewidren. W^nuil Mfyici’ iilFbc •I J KrnnMolt h ^Gi.«i |?» n I Lone S Cem 10 ] Lon. 8 0*i lat Lorlllbrd I MIchliu acbinlcM Tub* Co. . ,* Propbn Co.................. Rudy Monurorlurtnc Co ^ Sh.ttcrproof Olti. Corp. L. Toledo IdlMU Co OBBBNI ^ Ud(ltry7'c*bbift. dot. ^jgCollo^. h- ‘Nomlaol ouottUdnt. Death Notice „ Srandinavian Smorgasbord, Thurs., Oct. 27, St. Johns Lutheran iChurch, corner of Cherry and Hill. .Reservations call Mrs. Murray iSchluchter FE 4-1483. Service at 5, 6. 7 pjm. Freewill offering. Adv. Am TH a Ttl so t Mock Trk Am Tob ... SI J ABbraodo . 4J.i Armeo StI . St ? ° ®‘' , Armour * Co 10.1 CP ' 24 4 Mpl. Ron I . 40 Minn MAM 3( I Monitn Cb 21 > Mont Ward III Mot Wh*tl 44 7 Motoroln ...... ’,Lottue*. Bibb 1 , L*Itu«t, L»*l. jiMuiUrd. bu. > Rontont, bu. l|6old Price Is Down lion London Market [ t Spinach, bu. iSwIIMI Cbt'd. t > 0 Turnipt, bu . Not Bite I Nit Ctih R I Not Dotry Poultry and Eggs LONDON (APi-Tho price i.oO Kold on London's bullion market llfioas fixed at $36.40 an ounce for t it the start of dealings today—down I $1.40 from Tuesday's close. The price hit a peak of $40.601 horoptimUt Rummage Sale, FrI., Oct. 28. 6-9 pjn.. Sat. Oct. 29. 9-12. 7 N. Saginaw SL —Adv. I Ntt Oyp> i Ntt Uod SOI I NT OotrtI . IS.S! I Norf a Wcit 11,4! OCraOilT POCITBT DETROIT. Oct IS (API—Prtcr. pc pound dellvbrtd for No. 1 dutllty liv: Hetty type hens JO-lt; Clark Eotttp CKO Crio 835.'^ Con CdU Con N Oni m^l Owens Cnt Ml Owns III 01 . 44 4 Pu O A Bl .. .441 Pad aw Air 2S Poah BpI Si Pnrnm net 14 41 Hetvy type roasters over S 1 I,] broilers and Iryera 3-4 lbs. wbl 5?"^*** ®®*'‘ ‘•’•'tllnii II ,in frenzied speculative buying la.st' For many years the Bakers [week. This compared with the U.S.imade their home on North Lake TYeasury's officii price of $.35 an Angelas Road, ounce. i Surviving is a si.stcr, Mrs. Ro- bina Davis of San Diego. MRS. JOHN E. BAKER Word has been received of the death of former Pontiac area resp dent Mrs. John E. (Ophelia) Baker in her home at San Diego, Calif. Mrs. Baker’s husband had been secretary at the former Hupmohile i Cb. in Detroit and had bcei „ sociuted with the late Edwin Den-! ton* Plains! by when he was Secretary of the I „ „ , , _ . N»vv ' Rummage Sale. St. Paul Luther-1 ^ an Church, Joslyn and Third St..i *- * a Fri.. Oct. 28. 3 pm. to 8 p.m. Sat,, Rummage Sale. Fri., Oet. SR _m. to 1 p.m. Saint Andrews «®-iehurch. 5301 Hatchery Rd. Dray-' aaral &»t. -Puntral 1 b* arid Priday. Oct .. a m. from at Patrick I latamiMt iti Ht. Ottret iiT, DrtrolT Mr. DaCcolck *a lUU at Urn Danalaaa- _______ _ smaini: oirr. m. iiss, ulOs liit^i2^‘s5rsI‘=irs^Si ttiUr of Mri. Bdna Skidmore. al<« tarThrcd by tcreD Bnutdcbll-dm and two (rtat-ETandcbll- hrW War*”*** **" "** drta Oravnld* terrlea —Tar. Oct. lb. at 11 --- — OakTWw CamaUry. Royal Oak. with Rat. TWomaa W. KiNiman olflclatlAt. Punaral ay- um'-wSTpSsniinuiij: Clark atop.___, _______ CUI08MICK. OCT. IS. TidO. DORO-th. ^a4i miiaincld. Auburn bttevtd wilt at dear motbtr Otaptl of Sparkf-OrMila • VU...I Rom*. Auburn Ril(hl-wbara Mri. OruanUck will Ua IS. IMCL JULIA, t. Royal Oak; att ^ «... »„.AeF of Idrt. PaiOa Oplti; dtar titter of Mrt Olicllo Rortt: lUo turvlvtd by two irtndchlldrtB tad trandnifc* Mrt. Claud# Parccllt. Puatral torvlot will bo held Thuridty. Oct. 17, at IS a.m. from aporkt-OrUIla Chkml with Rev. Robert Winn* otricUttnc. latermeof In gyertreen CenMtery. Detroit. Mrt. Kreltch wUI II* In tint* at tho aporki-Omiln Punerol Home^______ Ln. OCT. M. ~iNo. ndar •. 70 Palrirove; ato N; daar mother of Mrt. Maud* Lamoreux: dear lifter of Mrt. Jerome (Carrie) Peterton: alto turvived by two irandchlldren. Puneral i e r v I c e will be held Baturdav. Oct IS. at IS a m. from the Huntoon Puneral Home Chapel with Rev. Wallace offlclaf" -------- . . - . Hadley. Mich. Tlclatln^ ariTlJ a ni'“'Mri. Lee w’il',.. •tate at Huntoon Puneral Home LUTTRELL, OCT. 14. ISSO. NORMA Oct. 2 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. —Adv. 44*1 DETROIT. Oct. 3^ Detroir; DETROIT BOOS. S’.'!"!???.*® K'i?. I API—Price# pild rteelrtri delivered le In 10 doien --- _____ Included n «> Wfhlte—Orade A Jum.. larx* S1.87: larfe S0%-SS .... — ’• btowne—Grad* I SS-S7; ) n4,». imall IS-IS, bi ^\h f___ ^ Livestock nmMe. mples. Fri, and Sat. Youth Cen-r. Lake Orion. Adv. One of the five dealers who fix the London price at Uje start of each day's trade said this morning’s decline did not mean that the speculative bubble has burst. Lodge Calendar Service will be held Friday afternoon at the Bonham Brothers Mortuary, Fourth and Elm Streets, 1 - - —----------- '• San Diego. I ' P-*" *____ I Work in P.C. degree. Raymond —------------------ Dobson. W.M. Adv. "The fall was caused by some |t'e n NaniA Thnf Rinnc ------------------- ^ TOLEDO. Oliio (F)-Toledo's first KILL^, Tex. (UPI) - Back,United Appeal Fund Drive came --Ima^ he toM a reporter, - Un the 1930's when the Bell broth-lto a snecessful conj-luslon Tues-1 Ben. decided to day night tvith a total of $2,302.-! 24 4 Renal Out 27 Siueway St *7 A Mui '• *’•' from tho Continent and consider-lomi „ ______________________ ________________ DETROIT LIVMT04 K '"•‘''''’s' P«Tsists.' ' they named their tow'n Ding Dong!! $3.V) DrraoiT, Oct IS lAP.-Cattle iOS I lauihter ileeri and '— ---------- ' community near Killeen. 467 pfedgtxl “or roHecleiL. Thai’ fled their town Dine Done !siv, mm-o th-m (he drive's goal. I?C*II^ CAREFUL If You Split Ticket ie#r» SO. ftw up I ® Five Steps on Voting Machine County aerk Dame T. MurphyiSt rong. repiesentative of Ihe. 4-To .select nonpartisan can-|has laid out in black and white Douhleday Brothers printing com-'didates, turn pointers down ;^e five steps voters must follow ;pany of Kalamazoo, explain the 5-Move handle to the left ;Nov. 8 in using voting machines. I steps that must be followed on! This completes your job as a ! At yesterday's annual school of ejection day. good citizen. Murphy and election clerk ______ Mabel M. Child also remind voters the bwt«r points he the vote in left down all instances. “This is of the utmost impor-iahce." Murphy gaid. For persons wishing to study the ballot in advance sample copies may be obtained either al i the cburthoiiae, or Ihe olltoe! «t : township or city clerks. Some ciUes. Murphy said. ,.e making machines available 4 for i trial runs. Pontiac is one of them, r ;^having put one in the city hail, i [ Out of Oakland County’s 311 vot-, iing precincts only three—one in! Groveland Township and two inj [Brandon Township—still use paper I EASY AM I $-1-4-$ - County Oerk Daniel T. Muirhy jJr. points out to City Qnrk Add R. Evans one of the five instruction stickers bis otfioe didtribut^i yesterday to all township and city clerks. ' > - ■ 1 :! They are to assure tltat voters on Nov. S^complete all five steps ii. voting. Munihy recommend^ that all cle^ post them on voting . j Mrt. LuUrell will 3_p.m. Wedncid^._______ SHfiTRARa OCT 15 isso: I H. 4151 Hishfleld. Pray- IH LOiriNO MBMORT OF OOB pattad Awai Oct. M. ISSS. Otar Mother, ye* are not fertotteo. Tb0U(h oo rarth you are oo more; suit In Bomory yeo are with a*. At yob olwtyi wire belort -Har daa^rt. taanaa d Uada BfTjjtftNO MirildRt OF OUR daufbttr. Alma Alien, wbo paired away Oct M. ISSS Too are not torfoUen OaMSkMr dear. Nor ever eholl you bo; . Aa toot At life and meBOMoa latt. W* than rtBoabor Um*. or AiOimG- 4aeMORX=QE, jrjb,.,, -Boebar Mlldrod SneU who pata^ A prMloai on* (rom ua l* fan*. A vole* wt loved It ttlU, A place It recant B our boat. Which D***r can be fUled. Some Bay utlnk you art lorsottoa Tho-on cortb you are oo more. ^Rllha Ra*. Dlck^ IN LOVINO MEMORY OF MARIE In ay heart your meaory Unferi.. Always lender, food aiuL truc;^ There’! not t day. dear Mother. I do not think of you. Sodly Bbted hor doushtet. Insurance Salesman OAKLAND COUNTY AGES 27-45 r;jr2roSSfiS"tp5SfhSSi plan. Bonuaoa up to tJSt per aowlb wUl bo ooraod by MW Mutuol Oaaho'a oorbor aon iu e-roTwn nivHioi Lotoot trotnhM ■aoirsri REAL CBTATB SAI.BSMAR, FULL SHOE SALESMAN Funera* Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR HW 1,0^ ) JBTAl Wilktr' STABLM MAM FOR CARE OF Donelson-Iohns •YtSfiSf.?# "Detlsnod lor Funeralt"_ ________ -NO TELEPHONE ryovoatori wanted lor modrml. aoUop tsiea. Top coamlaaloq paid. OR «^«S4. ^_______________ Voorhees-Siple talei work. Life tlmt career. Eamlngt unllaUed. Aetlrt otflea. K. J. (Dick) VAI.UET Realtor FE 4-3531 MS OAKLAND AVENUE Open » to S_______Sun. 11-4 Economy Spark Plug line Iractlva commltaloo. Writ# It irrvlew Craft Tool. IJTl Boy I Rd.. Caro, r"-*- FOR WANT ADS DIAL Fi: 2-8181 ... Mri. Fred iVivUni Jahr; brother o( Floyd Sherrard mrvlved by tlireo trandchll-tnd three grCit-frandchll- ..... Funeral tervlce will be held Friday. Oct If. at 1 p.m. from ---------Funeral Home. Onited. ________ . Mich. Interment ____________ Cemetery. ArrangemeaU cemplet. ed by Coati Funeral Home. Dray- ton Plaint______ aCHMBICHEL. OCT It. •ibllltT for Orion, (ormorly of 471 W'lthlnx- if Mri. Bmeit iBdnai Muller. Walttr B. and Fred B. achmcl-chel. Mrt. Max lUllltnl Mellnet and Mrt. Fred (Bertha) Allman, dear iliter of Mrt. Rulde Lyoni. elio turvlyed by 11 erandcbildren end If greet-grand^lldren Funeral tervlce will be held Thuri-Oct. 17. - ---- IlIlT ... _________ _________ n to cancel the chargee lur that porUop of the first iniertlon of lee advertlie-mest which bat baen rtn-dered Ttlucleia through tho aro^’^mada*’"* iura**to **t your "*k*U number." Ifo odjuitmcnts will bo glvcD Cloahig Umt for advirtlie-mantt containing typ* ilftt larger than regular agata type li 13 o'clock noon the oev prevloui to oubUcatlon. I Milo Road, Ferndtle. wiin nee. O. B. Behnke officiating. Interment In Roieland Perk Cemetery. Mrt. achmelchel will II* In itate at the Bpauldine a Bon Puneral Home. fOO W Nine MHo Hoad. Ferndtle. The family will reoelve their friendi from 3 to f and 7 to g p.m. at the Funeral RoBt.____ _ TROMBLY. OCT. If. ijMO. ROBERT Louli. 1443 Loon Loko Bhorei. Drayton Plaint: age ]g; ' — .. -------- ...—. L. 'Trombly; dear brother of Edwin O. Trom-)ily. Funeral larvko will bi held Thurtday. Oct. 17 at 3 p.m. from the C J Oodharcit Funeral Home with Rev. Robert H. Benedict offl-cltUag. Interment In the Perry Mount Park Comotery. Mr Trombly win lie In Itate at the C. J Oodhardt Funeral Home. NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS Tba deadline lor etneeUa-non^rt IraMMt^art A^ publlcaUon after tba llrit iniertlon. CASH WANT AD RATES LInei 1-Dar 3-Daye g-Otyi 3 tlM i.M s An additional i Walled I.akc - Part Time 1 men needed Immediately. For Information call MA 4-I4U, 4 to g p.m. daUy.__________ 18 TO 28 Large International organlre'.lun to begin training for publicity and promotional dtpartment. No experience necoieery but you tereited In o tecure future. You opportunity to earn flO.OOO the first year. Thit la definitely a llfetlmt opportunity. Only energetic men need apply. Car furnuhed. For Interview appointment ghen* Mr. WIepert. PI Help Wanted Female 7 ------------Ig OR OVER. GOOD “7e_Ltk* Road^__________ BABY SITTER, p.m. UL l-Jlfg.' COdk, RELIABLE POLISH WOM-an^or prVrtte hoB*. BlooBlIald HIIli. 1 dayi. Ref. required. Writ* all particular! to PonUac Prcii COLORED technician' WANTED — Familiar with Lorcal to taka ovtr following at DeLorei*^ Inc.. Hm*’'MI*6Hllf. ""*'*■ ®*®*®“**'® CUPRE 8TEN0~IH"‘<1)FFICE OF Director of A(__________________ TYolng. procMilng. filing. Quill. ticaUoni. Completion of high I. Doral Wltelcy a iCamp Jr ; alio «i grandchildren ■ leld T— I. from tl Help Wanted Male vlved by four gran,________________ nerai lervlc* wlU be held Thuri-dey. Oct. — ■ - AhMPnMJrisi aht'rpe-Ooyctt* Funeral Horn t U jonet. Mrt. Susan Wllion, WIIttain and Oil# Burnett. Puncrel •ervlce r'" ■“ Oct. 17, "*■■■*■—BiDi* cntnci w.... Inter- ATTKXTION! Special type route work lor qualified married man. 31 to 40 wUh good car and phunt to service customer! on in ettaMuhed routa. till guaranteed to start. AUo Mrt-tiim ogeninga for me^n . Mrs Vogel will * Voorhees-3lpl* AFTER 6.-(X) P.M, Immediate opening tor a presently employed man who needs a part time Job. Call Mr. Rounds. OR tan 8UI r, Michigan.________ dependable FERBOH FCM child care and housework. Lire to “ * After 6 p.m. _______ hoiisekeopliig. help wfth children. Referencet._MA t-I5M. EXPEHIINCID SILK FINISHER Apply In person Ul Oakland. E X f E RIENCED SALESWOMAN r **lgh? person Apply a MIRACLE MILE ajWs Tf^ were replies ml The PreM office Id the fallowing and roll production. Tel.J^I J-lllf^AfUr auio p.m. BOVS IS TO If it) TRAVEL ‘hroufhout Michigan. Good pay-ng job with advantaaei with he firm. Handlcapj>cd boys -- .........Jlcappcd ___ ,, 'Ptable. Apply to Michigan State —•-—env a*»»tMv_b*tw**» f r f p"m: Wed;,Thtiri. and Pel. IRS - RETIRED OR PART-' time men thoroughly experienced In bread and toll#. 1 days ,per week. LI 1-1111. After 1:00 p^. CAB DRIVERS PULL OrTaRT lime. 4JS Orchard Lk. 30 yri. or CAB DRIVERS. IS OR OLDER Edward's Department Store uoi Auburn Road^ Auburn Heights OOtw; CAR son ' Pand*s Drty**^!^,’' slf‘^8. _ Saginaw and Drayton _Plalni, FULL OR PART TIMT Keep your Important Job os wUe and mother. Weekly poy check ?*?. -•“***?*“* or wjBimhW 'll " over H. Say* a car. FSir Apdornt-' ^ m.n. c.i, ww; 4.2407 Wed. S-II p! JO .WORK IN drV~Siah: %!’*»*£**'^ Excolilor aean- era. Ifg W. Huron St,______ °*H(i °0 HOUSEWORK. day and n____ part Uwe I01_W ™ron __ EXPERIENCfED RADIO AND 1 preferred iw* 'Tn.'' ®“'«t help em-ployed. Ref^enc^_El^Bln g-glfc FULL OR FART TIME REAITeS- Thousands tunltv tor one with mtnegcrUI ahUtty. State experience and tal-ary expacted Reply In own baiid-: writing to Pontiac Prcee Box- Hr EXFERIENCED TViTECHNIClAN, full or pan-ltmc PWn* FE W7«l. EXPERiEHCED 'BODY MAN’wITH tOoU. SUPERIOR AUTO BALES. ISO OAKLAND. -w-wvll ■ HELP FG FREE TOYS — FUN "IF^SFmSTRTBXJTOFr mas. Call FE d47H HbU8iwSRS~^BABV^ Full time Part ?, tau „ In. PrlTate quarters. MI Ago; HOUSEWIVES SELLlnTASTAib: (guaUtled llactort: '- *--r*by given, tho_____________ be held In tha city of < 1110 week. UArl PONTIAC PRESS WANT . ADS LADY TO LIVE Of carw OR WOMEN WITH 111 Ttcaneles w*,u .. . Opportunity tv LIVE Three children, Chang* tor wile s eeryteet ( ..»*»*>«»)■ womaiTtouvF Light ^usework. Car* ol d 3-4431 ***'*^ ***''* *■ 'R'T , TIME 'oPENInob ^F ChrU'roas seaton. You o ' — • - wwwp'-ee wweJiiiV to oftrn 3(f**"** 150 R. Krry, S M FULL OH'PARf •nME'RBAiTES. Ffrontag*. f U 4-11in I ti.iiaimnaiuB and ue ablo to i Apply Thursday mi (And tliey’re interested folks, tpo!) School Representative to place YOUR ad DIAL FE 2r8181 5SHEP limited travel. PREFER A 'PART TIME BALE8-MAN 8EEKHO SUBSTANTIAL INOTME. TOP COMM. ERT E. jEWNOF'DiHEcfbR'lJY BO. dearborn, CHICAOO. ILL. OPENING FOR 3 MEN wUi? Mtda' opened m*£olM a SmI ^ - THE PONTIAC PRESS. \Vi:i)XKSl)Ay. (K IGHKH UMK) CAnRXIVAl. By Dick Turner ^ Rent Houses Furnished 39 . Ponttoi;. rdtmo WOMEN » to « part time 4 hour, dolly. U6p ihn. PrI. DbUy tolepBoM tooulr our oMlco. Short trolnlnc Bolora. Pm tatorvlr- -HM4 momlin. only. Esir -*5“ *es“,a;gr; ^ tor y i Por*totori»>otloo CALL' RoiiiiiMd DAINTY MAID SUPPUBB — 13» PART Rii™«n * Oototoln. OL 1-em. UenomlOM. Mr. Wonoto. Pt PART RETIRBO AND WOULD LIEB inira --__'---- A-Tin euitodlto or molnUnonro work "?I‘7hiS5fi-2T2?. Ail Tw _3jreeri_r.pori.Bce._PS 1-Mll , »»d r^lr-work. DL ON_ AN QUALITY CABniSTS AND RBrNI.;-, ___ built •r. 'r'eoionibie'cViit i BULLDOXINO'- EXCATATINO Pboturlpy dl.ploy end 5ookcoM»i 'TSPSni*"® I toWo*. bullt^.. poneUno, »b4 -AtElSL I'lt . „ ' oil type, of roblneu. If T. wwto/ ?lLijfPW'*SA _ siu aAE coll Mr Wo(ner. PS 3-I»l» CEk^T WORX. N^HINO TO THIB IS OUR iOB. WE ENOW OUR' Commerclel i butone... WiBdow end well weeh-' frivT"*' ' ■“ * lB«. pelmlng. yerd work odd lobe. U(ht heuUni. Thte le Moore-1 CUSTOM ' Milton^PS 4-3351. _ _ i ttol eto Nrede eipertooctol full time reel i WHITE. 3* Y'b*. OLD, INTERS « ‘-*W4 otoelo^ teloBDOople. Excellent lo- i '"Wd le tmploymeni due to In- COMPLETE REMODELINO SERV, ceUoo — Meny Lletlnii — Coo-! eUtence of creditor.. Experienced R'. Be.emenu under preiriit e«ni pooplt to work with. Phone in rorled Itnetr Inci truck drly-; home., ed^tloo.. eltoreUm. eeV Mr Bruoe et PE 4-0454 end come ! ln|. clerking end Elect, tech *"«*•. .S£lf» »“1 *1«>«S Licen»ed. eboerd Pontlec Pro.. Box 3 rE 5-S3TI _ CEMENT AND BLOCE WORE I, Hell. Employment Agencies 9 ^ *8iS?e.iung* EVELYN EDWARDS VOCATIONAL COUN8ELINO 8BRVICB . 41k BAST HURON SUITB PE 4U»S4 — PE 4-05g5 __ EXEGUTIVE Secty Job PE 3 Eetth O. fWTWBTt. PE" APW) , AND eN DESIRES WORE OP *>^®D|.TAL, FS |>li04. HnU^h^d. Fret citlmati I YOOf4d~MAN'l:t41RBB~WORE’ Mechenicel ebllll.v OR 3-4313 , — --- .. — . r-«f\insLi ■eirctnc. r ■. a'9«dtP . Work anted Female 12 cxcAVATfNo and TatncHmo r,sK?-jE' tN DEm** ' IF SO , . LET US.. (live ^ till 1 i’lace to Pay I'.ase \ our Mind WE .\Ki: NOT .\ * t.n.VN t rtMI^WNY MlGHEi.W ( KEDIT (•( I NSEI.EOR YOUNO i-riiii ___________ “p^HEY''E"!torte:''r“5.S5 "« ’** rt yywrwaWmpi AMn •rsvWp'tstMA ”^^i4*mder , —T’\ w..—.. niiirniaiii nsAOC. Credit COUnMlOIR 3 WOMEN WANT WALL WASH-: doling OL MIchtgen A»oc Credit CouneeloiA. tug end houmlcenloe. P^i-1'*l_i 3-4404..... .......... ....... LOSl WBKIHT SAPBLY AND EXPT^WAiTREM WANTS WORK “^“fTR'C H®AT INSULATIO^N econonilcellp. with newly relre.r' evening.. PE A3334 “fl. . ------- UM I3CSC TYPIST ' r'DlCTAPHONl' -- [..“Scroll ®Re- ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR- Free to trere, on kn ocee.lonel --P'O-tlec^ P-m. Bo'?^4*": k^cctrT.^’co T«So / h"o„““‘’'"" -...........•' ^“toMTp7n1;Tm".-5S:, "°‘“' « “ ^ «r>flce"n»y Ru«/u'^ie%n/rE LAD Y blSIRtt' HOUeSWOWt. HOME.TrcRToX'CABINS. ADDl ---•Min. nr gltchOn tl*'“ - ------ -- • Ability _____ helpIuL I ehorthnnd. \ poelttoo with excellent ------ Mldweet Employment. 4IR Pontlec Stete Benk Bldg. PS 4-g337. JR Secty Aged li-33. with good tyt-_. — tboithend very olee«ent otflci ■-----; bebyttnin|^ c Dgyii Instructions Finish High School Licen.ed builder. PHA PE 4-43M _ --- ------ ------------- ^ liToviNO fully Union Leke EM 3-4P44 equipped PE 4-3440. L A Young MOTHint WANTS BABYSITTINO. LAVALLIA BUILDING AND PAINT and ironing. FB 4>6034. tervlcc. No )o*3 ‘oo big or loo I MlMEbORAPHINO TYPING SEC- .mail. Cell JTE^-4414. » reterlal .ervloe EM 3-2443 . PLASTERINO A REPAIRi. REAS ONE DAY IRONINO. EXPERl-i Pet L«e PE 31*33._____________ ^ *p^“?:i4i7.‘"*““' *” • R(X>F REPAIffS WASHING AND IRONINGS PICE EAVE8TROOOHINO .... j..„ _ •\ I’.i I'fl.K W.W TO Pay Your Bills IIO.ME.N SERV E'ES n. Ml neei, not itk MY l-i*3t OR liBAOE POR i MONTHS . iwupw vmwm-. Newly decorel.d I bedreoea ham. .huwer PE Pieil _.ed letMf BUS STOPPINO AT DOOR “tog : PE Tni$ m E Semitot ‘ (mnt eMMtoiee lUf'-PE 4 1333 ' •LOVEIY 3 BEDRf^ HOME c,.**b bLEtPINO ROdil BEDROOM HOME j.r.g., newly decor ed Veeetit lit manth A 30M AON REALTOR PE 4 3411 AROB HOMS NO CNILORBN I 3* Nur ■LBAN COMPORTABLE SLBSPINO rMm. eorklng men PS 3-3MI SrOROOM LAROE'CLKAN room POR OER.' — 1-1134 llemen ^rt entrence. 341 N.lten PISABANT' NSWLY DtCORATlO Iroii' an Poniiac Lake Uerei. .lilt boat hou.e Tey'or OR 4 «jJe C lo» In Ph PS 4-3301 MobSRR I SBDROOM I.AKEPRONT iLn home Auiomeilc ga. heel we.h- ^ mV^ Kx! aSl« PE ei dryer Purnl.hed or untum- ! ♦ J!.P "• * Pike Slreto. PE l-he. OekloMd A«a PK ConvKicsccnt Homes 44 S75 I'ER MOMII El- 4-7RU , 444 EAST BlVn N AT VALKNllA BDRM HOUBI COUPLE ONlV WJVILY HOMS FOB 3 ^1LDBJU,Y liiqulie 141 W Hiileet. people aaoellent care. PS 4-M4I wgDwnrrti nil, mbat oaRAOB VACANCY IN NUBBBB HOMS POR baby welcomt. gsl a monlSrinr—ied> Pmetg rpom 3>t *-**1L pel. 1 Mock, from OMC W J »<»« '.......... ~ Rent Stdres IKXIk* HOUBE WITH garden ItdOOakWMid Rd Oekwund Mirh pop pSHT BTOKB BUILDINO 111. IP YOU NIBD IMS BBS aBABOARO%fAjicf C-O 4A IIM N Ptriy St PB 1-1 oo . ya*'R* Tww.i.rta------ - ■nv OLive 1-II04 ai .AKI-. YOU WORRIED ()\ I-:R tDEBTS?' B YOU h High School : ^ ” ~*SWla^s%>a-v - itelog WAYNE WOMAN 33 WANTS OmeS WORK I WINTER RATES “ “ PERSONALIZED .............. “”J‘e,r.'’T”*tol:. Christina?! Cards _131 PE 5-44«* BNTDER FLOOR LATINO. “Ydii go right ovi-F aivl ii(Kilogi«« to Mrs. lliggiiw! You doii‘1 go around trlling iH'iipIc she s a vunnibal pvt>n If she I KIRS riMst Mr. Higgins'■■ Rent Apts. Furnithcil 37 Rent Apis. Unfurnished 3K 3 ROOM TURN APT 30 W CO- 33 CADILLAC 3 ROOMS OAB _lumbie. heat, hot water PS 1-1063 S WKBT SIDS REURM KXECunvr type iumr Went r.lde loc.ltnn III* per i nonlli Call PE 4-P4* ! BEDSM RANCH TYPE, AUTO, m heat *14 EM 3-MI* BEDROOM BRICK. CLEAN healed.^^rage. dote to MSUO HEbllOOM HOME FOR RENT i'N*'ELA RKston ;'~iT~3wii kR ■" i bedroom brick raneh. ... NEW iTOIIEII WEST d««n Mjrmrnt. MA i nuif rp. 11144 ' ApPU DiiTt ________ Rent Offlcs Space ~ 47 ‘'*1^* K.^r.nr5r OPPICES OR WILL DIVIDE Ur?aT*to'"mliR' "* tumiahed or unfumlthed Very . 7..'. iea«mab:e PE 3-1310 EAKEWOOD VlLI-AGl BEDHdblS HOME - ."‘OHT ON " P'' Eluabelh Lake Rood Aero.. Itom I Kroger Store.*ooe block from Tel- fJIMi-IP.s- egraph. Make good ollice lot at- 13*.3*0 Va , torncy. doctor, etc Rem only IBEDRIKIM HOME NKAR PON 1 PE Vai* L H Broi • ^-------—n. Or 4-004*______________ Michigan. _ Lake_Rd^CalL Work Wanted Male -,_PE *:00^_ ___________________ II A-I wall WA8H1NO. CARPET h i Upnot. Mach, cleaned, FE 4-1071. , A-1 CARPENTRY. LAROE AND •mall Joba. FE 4-4310. Ad CARPENTER. NSW AND RI- palf work. PI 5-7340. ___ 1ST CLASS CARPENTRY _ _ PE 402*3 _ CABINET MAKER AND CARPEN-ter Kltchena a .peclalty. FE 4-5000. ___ _ _ CARPENTER WORK OP ANY Building Service 13 •»« nmahio* Phone pk .. Caplr oTement ReaMuable "LESS 10%" oiler OooO Until Oct 3* Hackeiistose Rook Sion- 1* EAST LAWRENCE FE 3 1414 HAYRIDE PARTIES PE 4-43M ri5 8C0U l^e Roud. ™n3l‘“‘_____ A-1 BRICK BLOCK A work. Alto Ilrcplaci _____ additions' ' REMODELINO _ ___ P?M.hL*‘’'^.r?entoS ,S h'fWfA'M CLEANINO, AtlTa Cflllnx' TlIe Rec. roomx _ Cabinet. — Ml.cellaneoua HeaTINO. FURNACES CLEANED • ■■ *u—1.4 mi PE 4-l»»______________and eerrlced. C. L. Nelaon. PE Wtd. Household UOOdS 29 1 ROOM BUNGALOW, UTILITIIfl athlnilon 8t 3 AND 3 ROOM APTS PVT ENT . j Wlitlr 300 Otmun. FE 4-4140 i3l 3 ROOM APARTMENTS tXOBB ' in ^Pd^ enL^aiid bath. PI 3-0301 1 ROOMS AND BATH~UPPER’ Pontiac. Ill OR -I-OOOT 3 ROOMS A BATH PRI ENT < • N. Saginaw. FE 3-0000. 3 ROOM and bath, CHILD WEI. ----- ... .... ... ordiaru ROOM nuPLix O Rrni 1*0 mo call rx »0*i ORCHARD IK -34 3 room, and bath, cl quire K O Hempitea^ AUBURN HEIGH-ys aiid bath, yuund ^fl month Call Partrld 3 BFIIROOM RANCH ATTACHED garage Large lot 1*4 prr munUi 47.1i Indepeiidance Ur . Drayton Pr.ln. Call PR 3 1401 3 BDM BRICK RANCH OAB HKAT 'I.'iln*’*(3l" V Ills* •" ,r HIDHOOM BABXMINT OH I BEDROOM BIDROOM HOMR ' NEW UOCHESTI'.K Office Spare 401 Main « __OL I-OIM For Rent MiBcdlaneouB 4S I DOUBI.K OARAOE 30 LEXINO- wa.it. I ton Place FE *-*31*_ l-or Sate Houses Cule-Faslick _ Restricted Communities West side I'M ,1-0065 MU 4-8825 lea anlT 1410 II* DOWN bfdrm brick, full bamt . anly t *• tod Wa will pay your moving Many other, i PACE OAK . V043* Builder. I I.OW DOWN PAYMT OB the., looauon. wtd. Children lo Board 28 « l CLINO Pike, raoue PE 4-30*1 5 ~ -------------- ------ ■ RELIABLE day CAR- » iiiediata poltaaalon. PB 0-0313 , tJl'.U . I HOOM HOUSE OAS HEAT IM Sir PE 1-1114 4ROOM HOUSE. PARTLY MOD J BEDROOM HotiiTTQuHRfflfr large 1-car garage, ranih tXK I I,A K. KW OO Le.e than 4 yaara old. ft 4-flW cuetom raneh I 3 BEDROOM MOM—W room. From |15 ptr montto. FB %4\n, owntr Fh UlorMi BulldlOf Co. __________iroST SlLL^ a 1 ki:?‘,*or. R'J^r. :wooirvfiXA(;i': I ALTERATIONS ; ___I TAILORING J[ospllal. PE 4^331. I DBE88MAKINO. TAILORING, AL- plete^ 3 ANd"3 "room" apt!"every thing fi- ■■ ■“ ■'- ----- --- tlon. 3« 3 ROOM 180 per month. WlMter Street. COLORED PE 4-7*47, 13 rooms! 1 Aluminum A t ALUMINUM SIDING Deal Home Building 1 CUSTOM HOME BUILDINO, WILL bul'.d mi your Uu: Model Open at Sv'van Village, 3148 Pontiac Dr Albert M Catlell. Bldr ELgln . 8 1434 __________ ______ Landscaping ■ Garden Plowing 18 PLOWING. GRADING. DIBCINO St cuttuig. 4-4338 or OR 18. __ ___________ Landscaping 21 ... rr r 3 BOOM At'i FURNISHED! UTIL- Share Living Quarters 33 uie. 30o sander.on. 1 ROOMS. PVT! BATH AND ENT -■ - — abeth Rd |3l week 2 BDRM HOUSE UNFURNISHED. - FE 4-M51 ' i Nicr LOE'RMS BATH ' . 331 Orchard Lk. COl.OKKii 4 room apt . private bath and en-Irauce. heat and hot water furn . 114 per wk.. FE 4-7481 I-.fficiptrcy A^iartninits 3»o"n. P^Iddock‘'ric"2-30*8‘''^““‘"' Lower'5 room 3 eamily i Wt^^^MOpERN, ^Ijm ^VINE-4 ROOMS AND BATH SEMI-FUR-PE 3 2085 4 RM MODERN, OAS HEAT, 814 FE 8-3104 4 ROOMS ON DIXIE. NEAR M-14. Clarkaton Inqulrt 33 Auburn ROOM TERRACE ON B BLVD TpE Mlii. I ■T-iWn.Vlph* M^4'S&**“‘*^“ 1----------------------BELL 1 BkORbOM HOCBB. 1100 DOWN altachad a a r a g a. unllnlahed . oeuroom. lull Vatam^. aUltor ,o„„„ gy lgg j,,h ri 1-0410 horn., on bur lot. *5.5*0. OR ■ altar 5 _ __________ 3 0*01 or Y'* - abSOCIATBIrOKEM -' BEDROOM BRICK RANffl. I mveetment Co. tac, FB t-0003 land.caped. lanced, ^ raeraatim i ggg Orchard Ukt Avenua room. Highland _Klt^a, NEAR B. PIKE GAB HIAT, BBMT equity to 011.000 PHA OR I-WOI ------ ------- ------- i BEOBOdM BAHCH BY OWNIR I _toi Lake prlvllefct. OR J-**00_____I Lake prlvllefct. OR l-**#0_ | “ l" BEDROOM BRICK 01 MORT-i gage, equity. PE t-**1*. _ 1 BEDROOM RANCH TYPH H05IE ' I with Otage, nlc# landtcapeJ yard, torma. PB 4-0*14.. ... | 5 ROOMS. ROCHHBTEB. IWHPg torn* r«p*lr, 3 Ul*. Irfft. Tm ' 11131. : omiA owMt. vacant a trevfc. EM 3»4(n3. 4'aoioil D TERRACE apartment TO furnished Automobile Repairs SHRUBS AND EVERGREENS > I overgrownf Prune for longer plant life and a hralUiy plant. Pruning and trtmmtng. PL S-313*. AA-1 MERION BLUB SOD DB-llvary or pickup, 3(01 Crooki Rd. UL 1-4*43. _ BULLDOZING. LANDS C A Lumber and automobilb repair*, no mon-ay down, u Ilttla a. (1.35 weekly al Lloyd Motor.. 333 8. •*•»»•». ^ PE 3-5131. Llncoln-Mercury-Comet Roeg wool tneu. Dealer._______________________ Genuine Import! PrefIn Plywood >4 trimming, general fall th^rh Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 3.S AUILITY lowe.t poa.Ible dl.count i. the tervlce Ted McCullough ha* glv- equUv Yiid* moi?li»geI. 8 m • ' ' mortgages available Ca.h bu walUiig call any hour. FE 4-3 ARRO REALTY 4143 Catt-EllrabeUi Road 3 CONTRACTS TO BUY OR tell. Earl Garrels, EM 3-3411 or EM 3-40**^ _ _____ IMMFDIATK ACTION On any good land conlyacle. New or aeatoned Your caeh upon a*t-liraclory Inspection of property and title Ask for Ken Templeton. K. L. Templeton, Kealtor 3330 Orchard Uke Rd_PH 4-4483 ----- HAVE BUYERS FOR CONTRACTS JUST ARRIVED PIANO. ORGAN AND ACCORDION 1-.^ Keflucetl Kates ; HrPwer Real 1-state 5Sf IS.S550™: S5K. „,^S I'oWo'gS"- fif.%. -‘ja, „„ 3X4-^ FT ECONOMY 3»c EACH ^ ‘ ‘ ‘ lion bftg six* dfffi a^oov'e ROYAL" Trb SroVT^ ^™iM- ‘'*^“„,?°ElJl*SS?r.l' int fin- i-----, — 3-1514 a OR 1--7881 4 ROOMS ALI. UTILITIES IN-cluded at 500 00 per mo Neer Tcl-Huron Shopping Center Call Partridge A Aasoclalei. 1050 W. Huron FE 4-35*1 4 NICE R00448 AND UTILITIES 4 Liberty PE 4-46*8 4 LARGE' ROOMS PLENTY OF closet .pace. Pvt. bath and utilities-FlffraiOT - ---------- 4 AND 8 ROOM APARTMENTS Clo^e to .............. 4-014*. jr^^.. rent rea.onablf FE 4-t6#1 MODERN 4 room' APARTMENT, stove and refrigerator turnti-hed. 4S4 month Plume FE 4-3331 from g to 13 and 3 fo I p m M0DEBN"T»ANCH TYPE APT ground floor, heeled, volt water, parklox beauUlul mrrouiuhnsr. 128* E. Highland Road iM-4|p 140 EM 1 3440 modern' :! bedrm terrace 6 ROOMS W^T SIDE ROOM BRICK, OAS HEAT .'l Ar xsrast 34 Glenwood. Alter : 4pm Cell FE 4-8438 ROOMS B^ldwr*a”d St^^MUh ..I . arhnn. eai to ^u* ^*0 i?*" fe" 3 8*?0 *' 1-133* efter | R 0» M S A*«7-Bi^._mTH„- 'pACf NO MONEY DOWN Loeely 1-Bcdrm. with brick front AH newly dee. 8 per cant hil. ind only *11.800. FE 3-3*04. YOfcFNTi HEAL ESTATE * BUILDER FE 4-3300 __________ OR ROOM : Beauty Shops '^7.h« to^h«.e Tromtru «: *m i-iiu after 4, COLO WAVE «.ECUL.^54 5;^ “'n ^of or'^S’^rw'^rM* ^Oving .lid TfUCklllg 22 l?1-i«.‘ b,”:pA CO.; t.,,, sdi ---~tx '*!I j~iu’. *31 Oakland Ave PE 4-*tlll Light and heavy trucking ” - Boat and Motors . jy:'--—r!E .buh. nii dm, r---------- Repair and Service^ Music Instruction I HENDERSON 3 rooms and bath, utihtlr. nished. gas heat. 814 per v Inquire K O Hempsleed East Huron. FE 4-03*4. COUPLE AND BABY,_ PRIVATE near OENFRAL hospital 3 rooms and bath Stove and refrlg turn Clean, well heated Call FE COMFORTABLE, 1 HCKIMH NEAR downtown 2 ' tar garage newly dvcoraiad. Inquire 33 Auburrt.---- ALMOST NEW 3 BEDRM . RANCH garage large yd 810 3111 James Near Walton and Blue Sky Drive In. LI 3 4830 liter 1pm I-0004. OATLORO REAL BBtATf t.tgra^ln^, s* and e clean ' QUU......... apt. AdulU 10 Horton. COTTAGES, " A L L UTILITIBS iir..bi« til un ^^Ruatlc Cab- apt sise washer 814 Phone OR 3 11*1 new LY" DECORATED n kitchen. i . oil furni OPEN DAILY 748 JOYCEIL SACK I KICK LARGE vdroom. ... ... ................vceptlon htU. Butli-tn bathtub TUa (loon mo" Fl(*8‘ll4i( DRA1TTON PLAINS 1 {•"IJjjffl Reasonabl^r! LARSOH ARO CDTTER^Boni^ - ji Harrington Boat W ork<> r -^^-9 ... trucknq. day or IIN 8. Telegraph Rd FE 3-00331 Painteri & DeCOrators I night Reas, ratca. FI 4-1700. •-------- I' ------------------------------------— HAUUNO 41 RUBBISH. *3 LOAD ! ttoo^ Partridge, tiL ISl cilh . O'* ev^ng.. Call Ee*lvor g*ragt, pHvato ownneg. 1 ■: ri %5ill 1050 W SHu-' _ trenrirrs6tv:-C»irBetorr V-prmT-- Boat Storage & Rentals jkterior and exterior' - Anytime, fe 4-03*4.___________ cash, roR j.ard^,co^mctb. . , . ------------>1 painting, waU vaihlng. Frea eaU-hAULINO AND RUBBISH. HAMB INSIDE ] matei. FE 0-0315. eves ,__TJO'"- price. Any _tlme^FB_l-0*05. W'INTER STOOGE Pet* Shopi-Supplies O’DELL CARTAGE -,!ie^,l?a*'DELIvSRV Local and Jon^jH/tonc. moving. OR i KITCHEN AND BEDROOM, LADY , ___________ only *1 Henderaon_8^___________ 4540 Dlxla Hwy. '^aroE LOVELY 1 AND BATH, near Airport. Odult* only. OR . kitchen a UN 4 810* ev DR RENT — 4 YEAR j »j00 down 1 bPdroom. full bavvmvnt laragf, gA8 hval. Broker OR _ sasoo ^ win build 3 bedroom ranch ityla I ‘ ' ma on your lot. Full baaemant, I floort, tilt bath, birch cup- ranga la largt altad I Quick poaaaaalim. 11,000 you tn. No other ceeto. F« only 014.100. Cox Realty Pet' Shopi-Supplies Local and long d Phone Ft 5-0*0* OET I } jg Painting & Decorating 23 1ST CLASa" PAINTINa ANir DEC= PAL'L A. YOUNii BLACK molum .... STORE irdUR INBOARD QR OUT- 11 UN I’S PI‘-1 .SHOP S?^rlT?a«d tor“lsi^i**r.iy to «'>‘*CLE MILE FE S3U2 ,3^ CLASS DKXIRATINO^PAINT- JpXg. pur skilled mechanic am Plastering Service KELLY-8 BUMP SHOT______ 154 ORCHARD LE FE 5-43*5 Complete Body A Fender Repairing Wanted Real Estate ^ large lovely 4 and bath. glaased .Pofeh. f*rage^ your'*’"*'*' E-'.h-k ' FE am*. ........ .tor-„., ' _F-"-r*®* — - , Adjoining lot AVAtltbl« OR i NBAR OMT, 3 ROOM UPPER. 4i i Ki? ‘r.lr »e‘i' ’;[i«;y?4S^ParV.* Soe?," very cH„. modern Near bus ^^,Tn vttUOE . iJ^MWICK AUTOMATIC GAB HEAT THREE FAMILY INCOMB Is dealrable property GUARANTEE OF TOP YOU^HOMK \V "ll ■* B As’^^ReXir — ...pu.. Adults. Alao - Trade q^th OR 3-1*43 MODERN 4 BOOMS' AND BATH. SHARP 3 BEDROOM APARTMENT JII’A. overlfKiklng like P, Irate Ju- »r1cl Uance^ garage.......Stfivf and r I.AKE i. FE 4 BEDROOMS, ___________________ tot with tut available. Hat * peach and large garden tpace Bu ROCHEBlim _ IMio r*etU0Y# trgftrfgmwTFtar >b«»-room ranch, baaomant, Stotr ga-ra^^e.^ Haa avarylblnf. Sbapard. OL ROCHESTER n first ftor and 3 a^ri- SMITHA-ULLY #!!!?. real estate company rlvale entrance ana ^ ,1^,^ Roehesier tf od*^retIIn tn OI- 1-»1« __Open Eve. SACRIFICE 4 BEDROOM. Oa! 1 blocki from court house 1140 down. FE 4-3131 Suburban Living ktalled ----------all BULLDOZING - FILL DIRT AND' |«i Makes Of Automobtle*_____top aoll OR 1-1040. FE 0-0140 L_S;‘ Iniurance Makes Bowling Alleys LAKEWOOD LANK rn snack bar. Open _ Ida re -ty 0:10: Sat 'til closing, Sun. t a.m- RAYS iPAINTINO. PAITIRINO. ww s.«si SAW A LAWN MOWER SERVICE ! »* Wash— - MU s-wmi 3g73 8 Wiford Ro .PAIHTIHa........... ...... ----------------I p,p^., lemoval. UL 3-31*0 TelevUion ^rvke Sporting Gooils Buiy^ SuppHes-Sve. Carpet defers ^ ^ PROFXaeiONAL CARPET t^. Ptae est. Reas. 141 7-3180. A-1 RUd"AND'FURNlT^'ClJ^ art. For plek-up caU FE 4-1110._ WE TRADE NKW & USED GUNS ARCHERY EQUIPMENT D8COUNT — CRE8TLNB ^______ KELLY HARDWARIT 30*4 AUBURN ROAD » OPEN BUN 10-3__FE XML . . .. TAYLOR AGENCY 1133 HIOHLAND ROAD OR 4-0308 D*T special'ized realty service Call Louts Borst. Realtor. FE BTRAIW^FB 5-lW. _ jensen-s -tv bbrvici. aftkr- ------■ awgj^^CaB FB 1-04S4. | • • • 25 ROOM APT IN 4 family FLAT, 344 Liberty FE_2-0033 dbys__ 3 LAROE rooms! NEWLY I3BCOR-eied. Utmilet furn. Close In. Ph. »E NEED HOU'si^TO SELL OP 3"R001tt'^ AND Rent AptBr Eumished 37 8114 Cooley 1 Oxbow Lake, t, LAROE'~B6dM8.~UFFlR~FUT! Television Service I cBEsTAxCA'i^ouB^service , Day. night and Buadayt. FE - Oranbn Oeramtea. —OB 3-5154. Hoor Sanding Furnace Dealer^ HDB. B_ k 5-151. Oct Um best to •lS.“”&50f»r.toc. and Ductwork. 191 convertloo* W. W. Keller Reatlnt __Truck RenUl__ Trucks to Rent tb-Ton Plc^s l>^on SUkea TRUeiJs — TRACTOTS Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 930 B. WOODWARD X **m rm o-ten , Open Dally Ineladtng 8to|0«y THOMAS UFRrajiTERIMO Ml NORTH PERRY ST. FE 5-8888 __Lost anei Found 26 I LOST: BLUB AND OlUT FARA-I kaet with white face. Band date 1*05. MApIe *^1. I FURNISHED ROOM. CLEAN. , _elote to town. FE 5-01*2 __ ‘l ROOM AND KITCENET^ - WEST SIDE - 3-ROOM APT over an office . strictly private Basement. Hest. lights and gat furnisAcd "Only 515 per week Mutt be goM reliable - J"!**** . — Rent Houies Furniehed 39 1 BEDROOM iiooth CaU OR :i-7i*a __ _ .cMALL "bungalow on DIXIE Hwy , Waterford Nr euper mar- I - ktML eto 1 ^gdrm . IuIjl bas t. oil furnace ideal Tor couppr »W per month OR 3-3MO_ ____ CK HA 1934 Bete ZY, CLEAN, ON DUS une oca- grjeery. PE 3-4*oa 3 LAROE ROOMS FULLY IN8U- LI 3-211 Wan Cleaners WALL WABHINO Bir_ MACT4 LOST; AFOHAN BOUND 3* INS. ton. bk»d hair matted, black Boaf; ret. mdnlty Northera High and Faatbtrttoiia. Oanetoia re-ward. MA g-3S3l or Ml 4-***». LOfr female BBAOLB, late ‘ beaiiOMr~'px'3- near OoodHeh. left word *• *™"- Ml Norton. FE 3-1131 ______ _____ ________------------------« ROOM APTS; REFRIO'- UlilUlee 51 Pine St FE *-0i» yrator and stove, adults only. 464 r'BEDRM DLX 7 EirCHENEfTE Auburn Jive. FE 3-00M____________________ apu . newto dec.. Ut fir., parking j ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE, lo frool of door, gaa haat, pvt stove and refrigerator funlabed. showar. FE 5-3H1. _ i 3101 Opdyke FE 4-OJO* _ - —g-sSTC si_ 1 ROOM ANDEITCHBHETTE. PRI- 4 ROOMS AltD BATH. IN DRAY-vata bath. P* 4-0*01^ ton Heat, hot water furn, re- 3 BEDROOMS >A-m. AUTO, r ROOM FOR LADt 51* WEEK | *^on. *45 mo. Oaft fl ; J« Btove and relrlserl^. Close to i towii. n Dougtoe |i? FS 4-11*1 4 ROOl or FB 4-*Tll. J__ ^ _ carpeteo. owve ana an uniines i "Vwt” 1ST FLOOR. PITT., WARlf. CLEAN. _furn. Injulra at 714 W. Huron | Mav M^w 3 and bath. (Si. FE *-131* i 4 R005B* AND BATH. OAB HEAT, - - I8T FLOOR. WITH OARAOE i Weit aide FE 4-731*. _ Alwavp warm, attraetlvt modem i g itocMg aoUBB. $$f~A MONTH! mplelely fumlehed. 1 roome a^ oos heat. Immadtote occupancy, t " .............. -..--.-.u jy. M,. pKderal 3-1114. f. I. Ftra- . ......... .....ed eor- .... Lake prlvllesci. *10.10* Will duplicate Albert M. Catt«ll. _ Builder....... _ "fo"BinrjR^nax'ali CL-\KKSTON KK.\l. KSTATE. INC. M S. Main at. vuranee Im- ' FE 4-4*03 unto- BY OWNER. WE8TRIOOE SUB! Open to T SUnitoT 11 ti- - prlvl- Waterford. 3 bedrooms, brick. 4 ^ ______MAple 5-5*31 -gSD "»“hid ora,*.'’ M‘rS^‘’.xtraS“B«I' TRi-LEVEL STARTER ma'4-1031 7*: »:»3!________i . . rate?"*FE SMALL LAKEFHEINT HOME-31*. S??*,**^rtter®"*Vm! OR WK TRADE ---- WIDOW MUST BELL. 1 kedroom SMALL HOUSE. monto. OR MIS*. Waaber. naar EUiabctb 1 _ FE 44M3 --------------- ROOM APT, StJITABLB FOR --- — - 1833 WTE^^imrs _^ke^AdulU_o 1 ROOMS h BATH. OTUPLE. AFT- ! ----- 3030 Joalya^___ r~AF^ 3 HUOM8, MUPERN EARTtY -furnished MA 5-5000___________________ _____________ auburn 5 RbOMB. MODERN. |30 00 PER Heigbte Auto, fas hast. Private month. Lokc Orion. PS 1-13*1 entrance Chm to etorea and 4 ROOM ROUin NBAR ^EL-HUR- echool UL 3-^0___________on *. monUia. Adults 'only FE ............ ^ATH. SOU-ni >^33 'BEDROOM ROME. HOT WATER' w'eSt' SIDE BRICE. 8 ROOMS, j ggeo DOWN. ASSUME OI IfORT-WHITE, MODERN.. »_ BEDROOM, 4 RM8 AND BATH C 104 Poreat. 4 ROOMS. 0 Have Your Business or Service Listed Here. nscwiMv. ww WARD. UL 3-531*. ' ---- _ . _ . . ------ ------ ------- ------- _ wntiol cleaned FB 0-3430 'i LOOT ’ IfffilMITT OF W KEN NETT > 1ST FLOOR BACHELOR AFT. rB M004. ______5----------- nphol cleaned. FB B-041*. 3,3, working 4~ROOlii AND BATHTon 33*3 Wlllot wife btoc* apccka. FE^IOH! I man. FE 4-I3E J__________ side. FE 3-4*30 or FE 3-83W ATTRACTIVE CLEAN COZY L0if“wHifS'*riLACx'w rrr mm jUl.. fmo^ and BAm upper ' toy fox terrier nis elctolty a*. clean, »14 weekly Employed ecu- Newly decorated. 1 ehtM welcome L welcome Now til Ju RocMfter ft Avon Rd Re«*rd. pte_FE_i-0*II. ____________: _ 0*0. FE 3-0000._____„ _ OL Moot______________________1 LAROS ROOMS. NEAR TOWN. * ROOMS AND BATH. LOWER. IN town. Afato 3 room opper near 1 bdrm fpra. or unton Meat ai_ ----------- _ ^Ira I .Fontlae Motor, all pyt. Inquire 31 I garait Inchidcd. 1* Newberry. FE ecoool.! Mil* ' ' Aoburn. ' 5-3333. • farae. flxturaa In Huron. Fontlae j- BY OWNER—3 BEDROOM. FULL ' baicment. oil boat, 5 yo*to *''' low down paynioat. 4M, por FE 2-8181 FE 4-15*1 mn'ZV.nto’i'l'ooM.TbSiiS.i ■»«"- low* 31*00* (toll Psrtrtdic soctatec. 1040 W. Huron — FE FOl 4-3401. Detorated Cornell. Call U famUbod. axccUeru Rent Lake CottB^CB 41 t AflD K. 1 ROOM KITCHEN- I baaemont. ' vacant 550* FS 4-0034 Bvea poaalbimy. Cheerful kitchen h dinette, carpeted U^g room wtth nreplsce. PartiA baaomant, OU fumnce. Larie lot. Bldo gtirc. Oaragt. Ellsabotb Laka Eatatoa. Only MISO. Terms. __ ELWOOD REALTY FK V53M__________ W.\LTKRS LAKE ^ bedroom, ftreplaea. tcrMn^-la Koh. 1 cstr garage, 1 lota. tM.- . MApla _*-8»*L___________ WE'^ SIDE l-room potential Ineama. Ooly (11.10* with low down poymaat. OR 3-4014 Srokat.________ YOUR OPPORTUNITY To bay a lakcfront al a low prtee. **HxS*r tondacaptd lot. Lart* •-room bangalow tlla bath. *« furnace, double garago. tU.li* *PONTL\C REALTY 131 Saliiwta - PB »4ft* FORTY-FOUR For Solo Hot fW* Sole Houses 491 For Solo Houses TIIK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26. 19^50 ................. ^ .'Onmi' <^TOT TTC: '$500 Down O 1 U./ 1 O H*rt > < • ROMARKABl Best Buys Today 3^“"TIZZT' BATEMANU-Ohnson 1 For Sulc Houses 49|f=^Sulo^;uttoiVopofty4l4 Ju^nooi ^ A-1 TAVERN______ CCDAO ISLAND LAOIFHONT M Uir b«it: Orw tor to* t Jr*»r« o»»r No food, ttrolfht b«r IiKlad** • D*«W «|uTpi>«d balNUBt with „ „ *p«rt«*Dt CAll Wxtoir _ hr*-1 Peterson Real Estate LAKE\)R10N ^ MV 3-1681 !?*“* Jr.*' h*Sr;.’*nr*X. '?5i DSaLSW to sou, I-S KAUPIR b,» i. A^AlIorl^hwto, mw. T,,u.r 8.1*. PA^P 3»0 S Roch^r Rd. 01. »-«»• NIC! CLEAN RSaTAURANT ILL-n.w fore »»le Very reAn—‘■** Oood lOGAttoo. rs 1-IS» t complouly ______ nt«r. itool. I UbleiT^iodA founUln. it Uyr"lM~NORTH~8IDi 'CASS^lk; ‘ \ Rov Annett. Inc.. Realtors —--TtAKE OAk4A^4j----^^^^ w nwfm s» ■ i fk 8-w66 DRY CLEANING B08DI188 FOR Ml*. 107 E. Huron. I n.m. to ( y 1-4 HAGSTRQM MONEY maker FOR YOO -Orlv*-iD wltoin b mllei of FtolHut. Plenty of ptrklng. RESTAURANT — Helfhu. *k*U*ii4 |ro*». uatlnii ropacUy U Biulnes*. ftxtur** nod equipment only II.ISO down. ' R. H.AGSTROM FE 4-7M5 AFTER « RERTAURANT FOR »»0« DOWN knd email balance. Call FE I-1M3. _3440 Dial* Hwr_______ moSTey maker and a (ood trader ber* mlRht an eaceptlonaj deal. Oood rmt to responalbl* people STATEWIDE 1717 S. Telegraph FE 4-0S31 RESTAURANT. TOBACCO COUN-_1*X. noveltlet and patent medicine^ now operating In Pontiac. _____ real good bualneaa. Very little cato required Chance of a MT'S TALK HU.SIXESS” .7 tncltidtnc U. il« 1* a me* oi i7boo win ■ iroj-eirpdrtuBtty HAGSTRQM EXCELIENT-OLOBR.( FE 4-4526 GAYLORD Val-U-Way Car \\ asli stabllahed near sbop-;enter. Ideal Inyeat-large enough for IIO.OM w^ handle ig property. Bualeit Just ahead. Eape-rlence^not neceatsry. future ‘ MICIIICAX HUSIXESS I.IM WITH jim'downI SALES CORPORATION All .0.1 With approyed perk Ust. | joHjf g. LANDM188HL Broker LADDS, IXC. IlSW Teletraph Rond « 4-lUS Corner of Lapeer Road tt Bllverbell i — PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR ■ ■* north of Pontine -|------ SUBURBAN FE 5-»Jgl _ L SUPER MARKET CLARKSTON ESTATES ROLLINO X'7 A'!? --- ---lots 75x150 •• mile fixtures, high gross buslnets. Chrysler 'Highway i *"*' liquor Will sell lure^ mtiSS, and : Property and all or will tell bust- wlthln 7 bloekt. Use »'*•' '«•••■ down. *■ "■ "■ WILLIS M. PR EWER ------------s_8 ___------------- _ 4-47.30 MV 172tl I Schneider MA'i Had'......... “S*’*®' >FV * ?®ERN MY 7-7701 Bcnnelder^ MA_«-1707. restaurant completely furnished OXFORD—TAN T.K RRmLEGBS • Private dining room In rear - seat.s 40. Phone RE 4-04» or call In per.son .Ask for owner. MODERN 3 BAY 8ERVIOT STA- ------ doing gond unity. OH i LEASE 8ERVB:fc~8TATlOK 6 OR 3-0450. (iROW' MOXEN' I building and a sr POUR bedrooms IIOVT REAI.TY Eio^** telegraph MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE FOR OOOD BUYS AND TRADES >ie "party”Call loday-'i ! NO DOWN PAYMENT ™ ROO-mV tto alsed kitchen Situated on larje | l« “only saet knare ! *®*.' r!®*' *<• lakes school. Ows iiours i-ii L^tUchM"”**^^ --------------TMol ^rlcr^l^OOO garat*. lai t3,500„dowc LOW DOWN 0 DOWN PAYMENT Before i^” sr 5tii[dreT.»te^ H. R, ll.\(.STK()M realtor. tktxi HIOHLANU ROAD iM-.Sk' PONTIAC OR 4 C3M ^eHRAFr 3 bfdropm bung»low on Norm Md»^ ltt'(iclT6oTf OKr'TTnfor'f:^ ' 1 AWRENCE W ■ Gm.oR'n,T!(-;m.-;v - ■ U**ej Jnd Inruranr”**"* l-'l" 51 800 DOWN Large Vroom home v itii 7* (eel 118 E Pike St Pontiac Mich Oak floors plastered'wall**'brtr'k WA.SHINOTON PARK fireplace, full basemenl 2-iar sa-lage Pull price onlv 513 800 is*' ire'ly*^'cl*rS ^ li^UDicki V \i t (•• r rm.**and 3 olece bath**Oarage le bohghl on FHA Incomr, $7.5() Down 7 lamlly Income located on tile West side In the city. Basement with automatic oil heat, large lot and ' car ga- J .falLU^ J^EALTY to. MULTIPLE LI8T1NO SERViCE EAST SUBURBAN - THIS 3 BED-room home with 7S ft. living room. lygc,.- modern kitcheiu JoJs^ of rlosel space full basement, gas CLOSE TO BUS - plhg center on North side L _ M foot living room. 1 large bedroom. large kitchen with lota of cupboards. Basement with coal ' heat. Oak floors, paved street. - m car gaiaga. Shady lot. Only 5(.750 with 5500 down. Partridge STEELE KI'.AI.TY (Main Office) 174S North Milford Road Between HtgMmnd and MIHord EM 3 7877 or MU 4 7S45 — COLORED — No Money Down ...MODEL ~ 7*8 CRYSTAL LAKE DRIVE Carl \V, Bird. Realtor 503 Community Natl Bank Bldg PE 4-4711_____ Eve* FE 5-1387 Waterford Hills E.state le‘e"?Rl.‘ GIROUX £*?“£**• 1ST ATE 385 Dixie Hwy. or 3-8701 __Opanjllfl. Sun;toyj«lj_ Sale Land Contracts 60 _ offer, MY 5’ ACRES. 144 FT. PRONTINO ON i Crooka Road. 810.000 caah UL 74013 aftei^iOO __ j ACRES. 1350' FRONTAOE' ' 83.000 «a*h. 8EVIRAL OOOD SIA BONED UND contracts for sale. Big Bear Con-atructlon^Co,. » 3-78M-^ „ STATE ST., PONTIAC, SOLD DE- CK E.S( ENT LAKE I tor*or."buT'iook""OTily'"8i4.7to Prlylleg*. ,o with this snug 5 <•<>•» P«yni'"« room tome on 50- x 150- lot ' K. L. I empicton. Realtor paj muO 1“:^..!**!*...““ ”'** t-k. Rd. FB 4-4503 KndlUl'oV' ren*'^* * ' be^paytm for %oor*'o«’'^inJ'! i SUBURBAN BUNGALOW HA08TROM. Realtoi Highland Road OR 4-035S APPROXIMATErLY PMridge AND ASSOCIATES » W Huron PB 4.3sgi GAYLORD bedroom bungalow Utll->oom. automatic HA heat. Carport. Newly decorated Large - t-.H.^5;.v,le^;., Ne.r NOHTH WDE PL 3-3SU 'vou”!?!*® farm, modern house /«n ggt. barn, alio and oth^tp hniuiikov 202 S. MAIN -A-eWs ; 214 E. ST. CLAIR ....i-rROCHESTER—RQMECi- - LOANS ^^O 5500 LiVEs-ranc HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 1-0791 PL 3-3510 asrment Automatic Heat decorated. Vacant 1 IVAN W. senRAM ^ EEALTQJC „ _EE 5-‘M71Y • 043 J08LYN. COB MANSFIELD | OPEN EVENINGS k SUNDAY MULTIPLE UOTINO SERVICE Ct-ARK J050 DOWN MODERN 4 BEDROOM BUNGALOW Fun base-mem. oil furnace, on 3 lot* with nice beach and Ishe prirllege* on Bald Eagto Lake Ba)^Mt EXTRA FEATURES ^^olhf^^^bulldtng*' I ter^'uL 77m47 after 4 p.m**^”.' Sale Business Property .47 » IjEABED PARKING *d viihriivtslfin Along ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATE rick fireplace *nd~aL’—S-"hedToom -home on large lot, garaer It oilers you prlv- Pla.'tered walls oak Iloor*. Ba.ye-ir -Caai Lalie.._glA.75«, *'t*’ automatic ga* lurnace CEDiUt ISLAND LAKE rondiuon Only ■^'w'lth*'w" ol"‘ iakJ' • too^luded” a thia exclu&tve tome . ®?V?P William Miller i foting Pric Realtor FE 2-()2b3 j * ’’ 070 Weal Huron Street 0"HT. ** home Built In 1051 New bath a kitchen Excel-kltehen with garbage It lor you Everything us 517.400. I'ea.sonahl* ten er’I3'o^500.**terin»'to*h*'*rrang^^ 5“0 ** ALL IT TAKES TED McCULLOUOH. REALTOR I® ’"o** In a 3 bedroom ri 51U Caaa-Ellxabeto Road teveral location* Call now EE 5-1284 FE 4-.I844 Open 0 am. to i:M pm. _ LAUINOER REALTY 0000 DOWN nKAT 8 BEDROOM HOME, BttUt to 1888. wall to wall carpeting In Uetog room, plebiant In pine, tiled floor. PA heal. Oarage. Include* ' WMydS”” C'lirnerLut HAYDEN IMMEDIATE POBBEBSION. Lon ■ i 8^* Kkr*Pr1**d f »‘U> |”E!1L.* -"^.PROOM JIOME. 87M 1531 WlUiamt Lake Rond OB 4-0481 , ELIZ LAEE FRONT cgeellent'’1uinusir'*wlth*^t ******* Horth rBuyrprop:577\j **'■ P»»toll j 8PA(» FOR RENT, 5St00. OOODl at FE 7-7333. for aalea room or warehou** | Shopping Center. FI 3-0030 JtlENDLYSERVlCE’ Need $2.5 to $.500? See Seaboard Phone iq? .1-7017 llSj-N^’erry St. ir min*. Your ___ „ __ DON ^icDONALP UCEHSED BUIUWR ' OR 3-3837 jneome Property 50 VALUABLE CORNER 3 Iota fronting on Auburn Avenue oonr town. Wlgh 3 good Ineome houae*. On* 1* room. {•Jr. Ona be'at^Mntal miue K SMITIf-WIDEM.\N REALTY “SlATc** to)T WITH OFFICE. J80 ft. on Baldwin. Located at 8B5 Baldwin. Phone FE 5-lBOI._ BiHine^Oppoii^ 59 Partridge 11.500 SQ. FTr FOR SALE OR LEASE Commerclnl buUd'tag on 8. Bagl- vfmiKPV ri va wr>»e w..ae» «. II. .Sinith. Re«Itoi « r*** S 54,,*. F, 7,^*' 54- LawKence w r;.\YLORD. Realtor , FE 8-'W.5 ■ 1303 W. Huron kt. Elizabeth Lake E.states «-room modem brick. 3 complete hath*, carpeted llvinlt mom. auto- t'^*E*«»w nfNiu M.ow mitle h«al br«#s*wttv flrsmlAfv# FF 9. D4Ffi'"'*1 '“■“u';"" BRttv1.'R 4\to * p m. FE 8-0*33 ^ . F^ 4-4730 I Sun J\to'0 opeW eves. I ‘touto 0 examlnauon rooma. 3 Uborato-rle*. 3 offlcet and reception room. Rd* n*nr"*henrt*Tf toIn**An PARKING NO PRbBLEM Seaboard Finance €0. WHEN YOU'NEED -----$25 TO $500 will be glad to help yon STA1K EiN.\NCE CO. 500 Pontiac SUt* Bank Bldg. FE4-1574 BUCKNER FINANCE, COMPANY WHKRB TOD CAN BORROW UP TO $500 0"IC1B in Borrow with Confidence GET $25 TO j Household Finance LOANS $2rr^$5oo ' ?mrM:ssfisrt.**'r;gfre»in( msehme. poruble rt %PH. FE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Company SSI suujsml^bio Credit AdviMrs SIFGI.ER (ias and Oil Heaters ! TwtMttwiMst torbsttUMaMt. • ^ TnS* no« Ha maasr Sava. (on i;iiw or kr >-stu { SMALL O E ^ REntlOBRATOa St p«r cant oa CbrlttaiM c---- Eorm r«t«r« mtuM* typewHUn | IlN M Bmlth-Coraas alaclrtc wM-, tni a «uMrMUiit.B»chlnt> tlM i SmMb-Oor«ii* blmtots bortsbU. lyiMvntcrt tits St r«rb« rrtnt a. OliM r'-‘- ^aotomatic nnuonx mlAnm 1 A Fl«€tric drrtr Oo6d eoSdttlP*. ' . —mw _ _ ' IlM tor botb. UA t-SSM SraCIAL I Lit RDOS. SS4M Me- ay ’■*■! _u“/S'&ys;r‘A' swr ,2ssf'."S' I Diod rttrttorotan, opt. piMt sod Co. lose w Huros ... Montcol UR ' THOR ELECTRIC IRONER APT --------- I ' KiKTRir" w or wn^nili« i"snioER 1 j^KE OVER BAI ANCF «*»« **»i^*'^ ****** «S«» «»t M (^t. •«« - or t«ke up pormbnli of »»j5r rmancial Advisers. Inc. I. i?ontb_ oni»«sai co pe tosia | 8. SAOntAM _______PI 3-70U BRAND NEW WROUGHT IRON _____________ ________________ _____ - ---- bunk bed< complole with sprlni* SO 8 Com. Pontiac Pf l-USS. ‘bSJk“.i‘d‘^?;;i„.^ono/irb?X-1 “T-sVd Trade-IirDeit “ ^ “pE veS? • “‘^A*»*"'!!!“” **: f wU. brc.kf..t ;*» • . : t'i: 8 gj«p--„cb.lr . g g $600 TO $2,000 CASH FOR any HOUSEHOLD SSilSiT?.-.*'**' ...................... &H On CMklnnd, County honiH. Mod-1 “*»» appllanc«» and lurn Oulek •ra or notp , »«rvica BortaiD HouM. PE I-«« ■“ THOMAS ECONOMY ! r» ------carpets - TWEED WITH PAD ” *-•>»' Swans 5"'^ “"<* TYi* »>» “ and up col- ^ - irARPKT - RQr\Ar^ty^i-bas ••’ .."•la*' or«d TV. RCA. 1375. SPtft'i Ra* Qlo^^d Appl., 413 W. Huron. FB Sand, (jravel and Dirt 76 SHEEP MANURE ' Fe tf** NO, iT.jr PC t-Mtl YARD OltADINa TOP SOIL 6IA Mortcage Loans 62 fROM US WILL 8AVL__ . Caay paym'U. PE AASO*. IS’ HOUBBTIUILER. 'il CHEV ' ' kuso' "ran'’ «* *000 OB tawyiMon ,-.V" TiV f Otdctpd mmoUI for fiutowor, 1 ** »*' moTod out of city. Icbrlnt d»- *'“* 1. __ ® * potit Sort OM Poy IIW por i PR 18 STANDINO TOILETS lll.fl r IRON WMk OoodyMr Sorylot Store. Double bowl alnk ............. I IN I pick-ui 1 pe Wood DlnetU* 111 It i>dhan|« f< CASH POR UBib turc a mlic. PI CASH FOR UalD TV'S, RADIOS. PURNACB SLOWER. Mil 'or twop. PE 4-LAKEPRONT LOT. EtJUl’TY FOR turr in Broomfield Htllt MA ^ •-3J4I _ __ _ DlN^ttE set' closed 1 PT . Ootolp bench Ru|i PE t-mj ' Rebuilt woaher. |uor '*UV* Rm .line .........”7-. '* , ___jSe^door. H crisper. 14 per STOH- ____ ______ -------- ■ Illy MO, ------ tie _b«che« M '391 ~Wetr IroquoTlT......* OR DELUXE WESTINOHOUSE'ELEC-trlc stove. OR 3.3711 PURNI- DARK OREEN HIDE-A-BED ... WRINGER WASHER Noryr 10 pound eopocUy. utod 3 weeks, like new. Bert 109 on this WIIL crates rteluzr mochine Pov only II 3i« ' Tl in Tur »—ir Ooodyeor Serrlce Store. ■ "“‘IOC FI 9-1133 __ deluxe. ------- --- "sfPbNTlAC FOR'DUMPTrUCK-. oid"re(rliVri UTT Mnddy Lone, Keoy HAfbbf. Hove lot., to- fVo^Motbrdjor, S lb“"fr..". I >» CE^^ AJY TERMS VAlinf 5 Acrth and cash to tradft tr. >lwln ertsper, |4 per week. _ -18 wEaT FIKE .... for lood land contract Call Neil FIRESiONE STORE WILL SELL; STORKLINE BABY Hortwig, Realtor. OL 11144 ;>«• « SMinow____ __^FE t-3130 biyiiy |M, picnic table 19. 3 dl- CHOICSTOP ‘JSe.P^cSuoS”'^’-’ ?*Ve'l0.Mr*7!rce^t, r7 PE sImi* than 19 cu It. OR DELUXE WESTINOHOUSE "ELEC- AHTMWBS. L I B R Ah Y. HOMI^ luntiihlng.. at Auction, fhi day Oct 37 at II am The MU el Aano Ueyd Courtro 4MI Sailaow Troll. KOliTYFIVE ; Mj Boats a A^casaoriM^ ^ i»TT rr aismihW ioA^^ - botb lorto and , lOod boobe from ’ each 110 mtac i iltcea of braes. . ■ lU, Boaton rock- ' 1, bade rufo fur » folora. You 11 - Wood, CosI and F-ii«l 77 I'HOICE AlA. SUMMER^ ***'1^4 luroece. DrIWered Ac 4M900 il ” SI.AR WOOD II ' riHEPI.ACE wood s W Henlllop PE 4M4M PIKEPI.ACE PURNACE WtloD Delivered M e cord PE 3-0070 PIREPlJtCB CAHHH, TOAL-PUR-.... lore klodlliM wood ....,u»l oil Oehlond Puel n Paint l‘lim Burns OOO N Jlorhjster Rd Phone Roman. FI. ...1 WOOD 18 iTOPti SEASOIIED 17 . BLECTRICtTY BOTTI.EP GAS hordwoml It Delivered PE I fl74 li.hU n heal, new palnl. PE SLAB WOOD OR PIREPLACE 25%"Di.SCbUNT'^ Itos Jabr " - - marble top ere labUe. mate odd find thia o< to home until mormni ei aaie Bud Hlrkmott, Auetlonoer. OA i I 3190 Aseleled by J A Arnold. ' OA i-mt ORION AUCTION OPBN POR CON algnounl dolly. MT I-1931. Sale Housa Trailtrs 89 nCHANOE Ml a. Wood, alum . Ilberilne bonu, o 3 l-tlSl SEASONED WbC of buetnees, 66ob~8Ei EcinoN" OP used tv 4 1 International 100 00(1 --- forced air furnace and control! ref price, 0330 Bell pricr *313 30 year guarantee 1 BryanI .........— ROYAL able practically new. On j-mso ra TYPEWRITER *39 , M I M E a i USED ORGANS, CONN. AR' graph. 139.PE A4400 Mahogaiiry. 3 full 61 Mute m " TAl.llOTT I.rMIU’.R | “ mu'oS;''*"”*'’'' " I Now Is. the Ume to get ready Eoehler and Campbell Single lor winter. Baaemeni waterproof- , ual Elerlronlc organ 1490 14 , ing. glace metalled also wood sash pedalbnard hardware electrical, plumbing I Mornr Music 14 S Telegraph A paint and lumber supply Open | from Tel-Hurm PE 3-0567 : 9 am till 9 10 Bun | ' 1039 Oakland Ave FE t SIEOEL OIL HEATER 440 I Priced (< f Every For Sale Clothing 3 MEN S SUITS, li I TOPCOAT. •Irei 43. OR 3-M4* NO MONEY DOWN BEAUTIFUL FUR COAT. fcXCEL-, LITTLE’S FURNITURE A APPL lent condition Cloth coot, dresses. 9317 DIXIE HIGHWAY. DRAITTON •'** •*“* reoeonable IfbigidaIRE REPRIor POR BALE, PE «W._ _ _ _ t like new 4 m PE 3-1304 ____ CHAPEL LENGTH WEDDING DOWN freezers - NOROE PREEZERS and voll 490 PE 9-1347. _ , choet and Upnghti OIRL’B CLOTHINIl. ,3®®, W,*NDi GRINNKLLS 37 S_ Saginaw PE 1-7160 RCA 17'INCH RiMOTE CONTROL TV J8* OH 1-0399 BALE USED TV’S PORTABLES ta^e models consojes. blond and 473t Dixie Hlft Mich. MA S-9311 ALWAYS . Clorketon. Rd. at M90 OR 3-4994 H4NDLEY BROWN, OAS CON-verslon unit. SIM.OOa BtU. Input, complete with controls, excellenl carnation OR 3 .1409 HEAVY OAUOE STEEL CLOTHES Kur'pB'2^79'* IN’TERNA’noNAL gradfi Wagner ft and snow plow, r ‘48 Cafilllac hearM comnreaaor and ho Two 1 WALNUT CABLE C\VN80t ano (ui Rdir Ml 4 6531 WURLIZAON 2 IN 1 ' OROAN TRANSISTOR RADIOS, POCKET relulor SpInVl al-» ml oliL-VrUd sire, 91199 value. 99 99. while new condition Ml) 1 730rt they loal Michigan Fluorescent 3.1 orcb.^ L9^ Rd s.|e Office Fquipmenl 72 , L.scd Trade-In Dein tu«e Bullet 914 99 ll'iXdO DESK GLASS KiP. MO logM EEg: Carpet samplei 18 a 2? in# . fE 5-8J83 aivkUAm v N^IIV to nelfCt from Each 71c Ar*r\t%m' %J ar'lSTai«*is an m n u a la 3*H44 5t)R gALF BEAUTIFUL iteetie Nuritery grown t rigation. 36 feet tall 85 (irnvr.and Farm* Half iacru Pwnllac and Fll fitaiiKe Hall Hoad Holly For Sale l*els 1 PUPPIES PART BOSTON BULL 99 . 330 E Iroquois Rd FE 3 I960 9 AKC DACHSMUND6 gT STUD Pups. 9’39 up Jamiir s PP. S3919 j AKC RBCIISTEHED DArNSHUND' rvsiT* ’'“i AKC TOY PEKINGEPB BBAU’I’l- ' DI’.fROITKW TOXTr.^r"nTtTvF- It In 91 9 4) 19’ WIDE lurnliure Iloli IlllU’llill Moliilc llomr 4301 DIale Hwy Ora 1199 N WINTFK ,STORA( iF SOA'TB AND MOTORE PICKUP and DBI-IVIRY l’Ai;i. A. YOUNI. HI36 DIXIE HWY OR 4-0411 "T LOOK IdlKB_______1 "NOW" 79 Jacolisnii's Trailer .'’ialrs and Rpiitah Trotwood, Mir-KIng Pfenk and Tour.A Home Travel trolleri oui Manirrk Marinr Sales EHANCHISE OWENS DEALER SAOINAW AT SOUTH SLVD For Sale Airplanes 99 ! iMi piFBR 4-PAaaaNaait will at old Nov 24ih male lt(X hr seen n1 Ilf Iillhon (Urtf PEKINOKHE PUPPIEi CTbR Jacket. All '"two years 1 COAT. blue* UtDY’S BLUE winter Ci zip out lining^ ilze^lt^^Bov’i^ coal, gray wool. .sMe^ 7j9 LadyU WAYNE OABERT BAOINAW ____ PE 9-6198 GAS STOVE IN GOOD CONDITICN ____________________LAROE selection of lata modeL guaranteed used televlelone OUKL TV 3930 Elizabeth Lake Rd PB 4-4949 Water Softeners 66A , WATBRMASTBR BO PT E 7 SEE 8Ef^ARD*i^IllANCB CO 1199 N Perry St. PE 1-7017 LNSUI.AT10N - AU lyptl. Call— M. A. BHNSDN 3 Piece bedroom srl Reclining chair Refrigerator . - 21’ RCA Mahoi TV 4*9 99 TIIOMA.*^ ELONOMY 361 S Saginaw PE 3-*L’iI THE SALVATION ARMY ^ ^RED SHIELD^STORE^^^^ - cioihing funiUurc. (UBllanirs III WEST LAWRENCE V1’:KV .SIM’X IAI. ADDING MACHINES PROM *J9 CASH REOISTKHH PROM 149 PONTIAC CASH REGISTER ' ’ 317 S SAOINAW FK IPOMl ' new" NATIONAL CASH REOIB- POODLEl Road. Drayton I 1397 NEW MOON 19 l" 3 lake liirludrs 7 k awning Pull 130 gal tool abed and TV ante right In 13100 Term I reelu FK 3.0916. Keogo 7 e Park Lot No. 43 ‘ LET US SELL YOUR TRAVEL • ... ..........US lud 'eerv. sAl.ES 19116 Holly Rd . HoUy ' ME 4dPm H E COL MOVE TO PI.ORIOA WITH THIS j Id’ Zimmer On# I I'iokiir* 50 up. ^comp K HOUND UR 3.|7|0 ! ir STUD _ I. All reaeonable. PE 6-6793._ , fnoor m'odcii. demmalrators. LADY’S 9. LENGTH. BEAVER! 3 yoars to pay. 31.39 weekly colored Mouton coal. Straight small collar. Size 14. In verj — good condlUon 990. PE 3-4963 IF YOU NEED 9900 La'dY’S BEAU’nPUL PALL AND; ‘o' »»T emergency, TM^mlfL■ Co" 919o'^R™ :”"ol| BYE S^BOAHd'IPiNANCB CO l.jlfg <1185 N Ptrry 8t. FI S*70!7 MEN S ANb~YOUNO MEN'S WIN- IRONRITl IRONER. PROVE TO ter «uiU. topcoau. §p irci coats. ^ yourwlf that 1/onine time can and Jacket*, alie* 38*42. panU. m cut in half wl.h ease and “vC“« fi^'elliSSl ?ond^p' nie";'“L‘ ’day"' n' LlOTl' ' CrSmp PE 4-623L - - - . Blectrle. ____:___________ MAN'S OVERCOAT. SUITS SHIRTS IKONRITE. UPBIOHT 160BEL. tsfmwewe '**''*.hin£ for children Eat cond Used -« limes. Reason* eorth Paddock PE »W« 37 Edward VTMnAr. PTANA AND RAMK FUR.. r; For Sale Miscellaneous 67 to nav. 81.25 wee WAYNE OABERT i-COU material' 'sales..........CO Mr^-6438 Highland Rd •M58) OR 3-7W2 • i KM fl4Y PWAVAMW TAMW T ■ .0^ bbw «>b> r'tn m«eY"t ”*••* ntr^n 1A ANTED RELIARLE PARTY TO ill 500 OAL PROPANE TANE_ 3 LET US BUY IT OR SELL IT FOR assume naymmls of 85 10 per vrk, old After 5 pm Ul 2*5223. you OA 8*2681 month on con^ model Finwn I PULL IN. THICK MAN’S OLD WATCH AND SUITS, ! »ewing machine, or will at cepl Aluminum combination door new revere tape recorder, fouo* 838 20 full balance due FE 5-8401. Nov only $23 05 waterfaM and planter. 14 Inch _ CapUol Sewing Center T„.f.‘nrn as 7'' ’ WBINQEH WASHER 910, 379 GAL. InsUUed Price 931.16 , lumi. EM 3-730* __: oU ^rum 319 OR 3-30*9 Federal Modernization motorized lawn sweeper i wallpaper " mural weepino 2139 Dixie Hwy _ PE 3-7033 i Orig coet 9306 zell for *e» .......... - - '•end M mc'h'-bo^^'fkrf'u'z 1? ' - ^Ike OR l-tg*?” _lnhoard propeUor. PE 3-3003 _ : M.UlQtLVN'Y 3 DOUBLE -------- ------------- mdltton.130 each. PE 1-3397. i; jn^i,' «• , g- piVm . . g,i! wooden OARAOE' door's Inch Y Grooved Prrflnlzhed^93 j Cooiry priced MY V-0113 4 .NCH SOIL PIPE Lake RMd LIKE NEW APARTMENT SIZE, 3o'^“f“gn’. DelOerfd’ FE VgJir 173 s'*\7glntS.*“'''" I- Jacket I ...... up General" Pril Supply, n We«i PoolUt,. JCE-3JJU Sale Store F.iniipnienf 7.t COMPLETE RESTAURANT EQUIP incl erlllz counter. UmI., rr- 0r*pit'"l"9737 Vr ra^4-'30-*i' Safe Sportin* floods 74 I SINGLE BARHEI-. 410 ONE 13 .iirj.vs:;!!;' i.‘.ij*'U'‘«k.« 9-7979 12 GA. STF’-.VKN'S SI.IDF; Boll ai’lion. condition, uiilv $2.S,()0 l.l 9-1274. AKC REO NOREION puppies 3 mp old AKC TOY poom.r. rE 2 667'i AKC' rj:MAl K MlNlAtURE POOl). AKC SCOrriFf 875 OR 3 53S6 BOSTON rCRRlKR PUPS PI RE ' breii Good house dots OL 1-834 1 BAssrrr hound reoistirid Parkhurst Trailfr Sales FINCST IN MOBILB LXVINO •• 1 moon . OWA8* ! ""fen' I m&wnt 4-16I9 BCTSTON STUD CH B nKTi! CURT * — --- »*y betwten Orlsn I Oxford on M14 MY ^4611 Oxford Trailer Sales 49 units to pick from. 11' - 96'. ;ent'e'’;.,Xh.vii;Tv;;», General. Zimmer, Oardntr. Tour-A Hume WAd iMffSjrL . NEEDS BOY CHIHUAHUA 150 ”,'’,lSAI.K! SALE! SAGE! Fol LIE PUPS AKC REGISTERED • im6 Marietta 4tk6 gnWin beaulie. OB .1-9139. 4909 | jggg.Anierlaan. 3ls6 . Hlilrre.l igg] Royal. Ms6 . KITTENS PREE TO 0(K)D ROME I 1963 Silver Ooma, Mx9 FE 6-9710 1993 Pnntloe Chief. 39x1 KITTENS FREE TO (KX)D HOME ^ jJJJ OA 3-1477 1*6" RlchSraiMl, 16x1 1691 Pontiac SUf 40x6 HOLLY UAMNk AND C SALES 17110 Ho I I TRUCK OOINO NORTH PART load tltlier way PB 1-6666 4 ENOINE AIRl-IHEHr Uii 'TH-gelet San Prandteo. Son Ditto. 960 Hawaii IM 10 tetra. New Yorl^ 930 Pbrry Service Ine. OB cars'TO NEW lrdllK BQNNIE’I DRIVEAWAY PE 3-T639 LEAVING POR PHoENIX " ArtlE ArouiML^&t.^^U. io^ peeM^ Wanted Uscii Cars 101 ARE YOU OBTTINa THE MOST FOR YOUR CART -WE BUY — - TRADE DOWN -- TRADE UP — I DON’T TAKE ANY DEAL UNTIL YOU’VE BEEN TO LLOYD MOTOR SALES |SMa,toflMW_ __ PBM131 996 rbk JUNE AH . PE 1-8666 days i I JEEP wrht BLAhfc; eEmIr I Oreenwold 646 Bsghsbsw. - Orton-I villa HA_7-^_______ gi^AVroiLL'S 61660 1 >***<) abarp lalo models (or calif. 91366 markoi. y TOP DOLLAR Ip I PE i-orx”” T Srt^ dr S—MotOf^^les . ____ .. _ . UUr mod.. ■blvra Ikoatiir ilKii^^ i mS? n,.i. h.. n» v.ioai SALES AND SERVICE P'*'* •**'-------2*.^^ SPECIAL TOP BUCE JUNE CAH. THTOi; • Otm. 9669 17 fl Oenj, PONTIAC WASTE . PE 3-6366 " ........ H10H~ r'POR^^^ tldp jCL„ Sale Household 651‘YJfn' n«'HisB-Pei niture. 43 Orchard Lake n.e. fJw'k" *->VlNO ROOM FURNITURE, b ,n»m .Ultrt, 91 76 1^, Admiral refrigerator OR 3-6386 1 N. Cast. PE --------------— SELLINO Bargain House. 103 42 YARDS OP GREY TONE ON bargain.; Ml i- ‘aZr?Tp“!n‘ .'!S?4 LET" US BUY IT OR SILL Td Coet 613 69 lor vou OA 6-3611. _ --- r—JUY QU «... , >pectoi prioes. FtroL 4 °YERI^I3 GARAQE^WHL---_ — j”.,- 990 Deming doub e artTonTrrnw^ _ _ __ lion pump 850. MAyfalr 6-2IT5 West’ 10 i STORM WINDOWS. 82'p. PorUble stall shower, cheap. ' 810 85. O 1 OREEN RUO 6 X 13. i3t THBOW ru9>. hldabed. upholstered ciialr.. .... drewer. illverware, metal window. AUCTION OA 9-367 mloeellaneoui rummaxe. PE 5-’337 mAPLE ’TRUNDLE BEL.. . ________ Y"nkENM6HE* AUTO. WASHER tre., 910 PE 3-7097 _____ will, suds saver. 99(|. It CEiUNQ TILE 16X19 SQ PT 'Jxl2 l-inoleum Ru^s $.V4‘) •BUYLO’ UNCLAIMED 'HLE OUTLET _ etove 95. PE 3-731K _____103 SAOINAW_ _ PE 9-1469 16 WOOD FRAME S'fORM WIN- REFRIGERATOR 910 PLAT BED dowr jpfeens liiciaffea. PE 4.3356-‘ Trotter 9W 30 N Ooee -37 Pt. HOUSE’fRAILER, 169. 38 RANGE HOOD A PAN COPPER- . I 14 WCX3D STORM WINDOWS. 34x In. .. 9U 'l •ectlonals. 917 cTOr, rocker buffet, pillows, phone_»et PE 5-9443.______ 7 9dAPLE FINISH BEDROOM 1 drawer double dre.aer with at-ached 39 x 33 In mirror Double ' 1 condltl -------- _____ 3-4 L MA 4-1167 34643. 1. h6dioQai4. HoMK'-lQlu heaters used a floor ----------AtUoitti.i .ampTea.’’ -------.i-w 'i price. I my 34711_______________ .. . OIL SPACE HEATER. PE 3-0986. at i-aiayotte, PE, oajjloor furnace _66 "tale ,-rSnwww'TABit OVER 56 USED TV SETS, FFK3M N Paddock. __ W VfTDV 'IA 3 PIECE ROBB UVINO ROOM W.VI-l''-' tulle Kelvlnator refrigerator. maple table and 8 chairs, RCA • ~ •--wv** TV 17 In Platform rocker. WtG- ORLEY DEEP FREEZER. 19 CU !nghou»r electric stove EM 3-6679 n g yr,„ old. 6139 EM 3 2316. 3 PIECIL IVORY BEDROOM SET ;;v.,”0,tSv,.SSTD SO”A W‘.S 9341 70 •57 PACKARD NEW TIRE3 0®OD condition Large Mie Propone tank. £R 3-5,79^ ___ 93-OAL. ELEC. HEATER, loubie I 30-gal. auto, gat heatei ______________- - 4-3667 I Cab sinks and (Ittlnte. 684 — MIBC" PURNitURE, RESTAURANT j trave and i equip., oil tank for apace burner. lauceM 61K6^ Cw* and oorry. ^ IM rubber wheel E3l_ll«S»» I________________“AY* mFR Healer''‘!:Tbrr Thomp,on, 7009 M56 W ROMEX 3', CENTS I 30 eallon i a« .-lln 173 S. Saginaw 60 PiacEa"'op Iren kottles ttroate. Save T-, on the c 9-a99^________________ njLoijM sraEb queen washer oi --Beixy-...... Door Sales .F71 S i'.\l)l)()t'K Machinery i f BACHOE ON actor, with Wa.M<. — I hydraulic pipe pusher. 3544 ELIZABETH LK PE 9-4771 OPEN DAILY TIL 9, SUN 1-3 COMPLETE SET OP WfXIDS AND sguinitEL MONKEYS 119 19 c‘ad'd'1''«'* one' 1*001 H .V.S, $10 I )0\\ -\' year FE 9-6334 PE 1-1113 HUNTS EASY TERMS CI08E-0UT PALE PHAKEUPEAPK TROPICAL PISH FOR SALE BUT I .mln.lY-rt Wond.r.Bowi. S'l'. nfl •> fl.h 1 tre. Hunl’- .- — POOMaf FE 1-610 3173 W Huron V.AC.A'I'ION TR.MLFKS PGR BOW HUNTING AND RIPI.E SEASONS. AMK3 FLORIDA VACATIONS, 15 PT TrtllBlBxtr- ■‘"*E* HOWLAND*"R RIFLE, EXC Nil 33 OB 3-7647. .~~t«"IoUenir'64b:'OR 1) .. "clo-thing- iSd ty'{iwru'.r'‘‘"^ , ’ S-^'wpOL^' MUx! 6-4338. _____________! Ins^Phone Mr Moore. PI 1-3100. I Lathe Etc Phone “ "" I IN GIRL’S ENGLISH HIKE. ‘ SAW AND ARBOR MOUNTED ON clarkSRHi MA 8-2167 alter 6 30 ^(M couch and tasy chair. PE .of Me^curj or ln^r^nln| p „ 7 “----Sale Musical Uoiods 71 lion. 650 Phune OL 1-6649 rftrr ENPIl' O 30 - 06 COMPLETELY .siKTlerlied PE 4-9374 aflci 5 GUNS BUY, SELL, TRADE Manlry Leach. 10 Bagley gun" repair a'scope mount Ing, shot guns and rifles, 914 up. Ount Duy or trade Burr-Shell 37^8. Telegraph. FE 3-4709 h'unti'no ac'cidIcnt insurance Low rates. Hansen Agency. PE ..1.7063_______ ............... [ILL. "HUNTINO BIse II. 139 PE PE I TOY ICC. 1 TOY MANCHESTER MALE 2', VI.I , 91b OR 3-9999 UoKA Trained, Boarded 80 BRITTANY POPS, McNARY 8 Tailwtfger Kennels, boarding truinlng. trimming Brittany and Puodle stud kervlcr OL 1 0994 Hunting Dogs 8] A t POlNTI^ 9 YEARS, OLD, Pixie _____ ______ ..._ ...... 1049 North Lapeer Rd.. Oxford. OA 9-3793 f*' WE PINO OUnaELTfES OVER-stocked and Xl'e gatUng lata In the year for travel trailers. It detinitelv will pay you to drive out (nr one of the ewcatost pack-age deala you aver heard of. For rzaropit (990 Apache (or only 1-7764 ve we pay r^oral IILL SMITH'S USED CARS 8 Saginaw_______n 1-499 vvf: wTi.u PAY FOR EXTRA CLEAN SHARP CARS gUAl.lTY MOTOR 6 ORCHARD LK PE 3-7( WE NEED CLEAN ’57 AND ’58 CARS I POSSIBLE E Walton 0 OAL- OR 3 3473 3 PIECE MATCHING BDRM SUITE. 930 OH 4-4473 _ 3 PIECE PLASTIC LEATHER SEC - “ ■ TV. e 993 9(1 Odd chests 914 69 pT*npa and iBter-eprInf.« n OutTltU?g*^o.. 4793 Di _ Drayton Pimns 360 GALLON OIL ...— .. - Ion oil h^t water her.tar. FK 3 4100 .VXniOR FENCES NO moirer down- PHA approved, PREE ESTIMATiS « ft 9-7471 AMERICAN FLYER ELECTRIC train Exc. coil. OR 3-0437 a " LARGE selection. USED iTvAfwuna and rtdfi Ban's Loan t. 4 Pattarson. PB 4-5141. W'‘Ye "rhoi* B^OL EB AND COON DOGS SBU DRAIN TTLE RA\'UE------- J M 7 Cnriugi 1 THRU 24’ ACCORDICN SALE WEEKS CHAV^P SPORTSM.\.V.^ ......... “ HEA7)Or,\RTEK: SIZES GUNS A ARc'rtERY EQUIPMENT GERMAN SHORTHAIR ,.n r m beam- BUY - SELL - TRADE " nerz with lcsKm».^Pf ,5!5419.. ......i _ _ . ' * " rALI, WIND INSTHUMEN’fs 7*14"AT ‘vv— NEW AND USED , _>;7KE GIG /. AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MY CHOOSE PROM LAROE STOCK A’lNCHESTEU CARBINE 32 LIBERAL TRADE ALLOWANCE ilsl, with case A shells .nu STUDENTS RENTAL PLAN OR 3-9939____ ALL TYPE Rent Trailer Space w ”brioht spot" : CASS AT ORCHARD LK. IX IdMOO AUBURN HTB MOBILE VILLAGE , WE'bUY" AHO~TRApjG^ BRAND NEW SPACES PONTIAC i WE" NEED CARS ci^rr^okfL^'^dXrS-R-rR i That You Too Would ihose who want the bast OO-xSO’ Be PrOUd tO DriVC lots 19 X40- cemont paUos, ale CUSTOMERS WAITINO One tnllr east of Oxford on Lake- jeoR YOUR CLEAN CARE rPK“H*uR*«‘?*LAg.- Glenn’ Motor SMes^^/ TIIAILER COURT W Huron St rlran niuntry IUIn| oij^ Ik WANTED JUNE CARS. OR 3-3616 _ DEPENDABLE USED CARI TrrmsTmED^ 6 ENOWSH -POtN r-ITI uin PE ,2-0’J7.l May, (train and Feed 82 LAYAWAY OR PAYMENT 1 trMor,'l¥ a'-e . _ ____ I ROOUB OP PURNI’TURB TOR; retbIOTBRATOR 6*6. DRYER 646 tale. Includlni. practically new j .ecUonal 688. Electric i ___-BUhtr and dryer. 319 Oolng Bt .gg g)] water heater 936. i Wr-mf.------------------:rz~ 7r«h«r 9*8 0*e I * PC. SILVER OREY BEDBCK»I stove 936 V^Harrls, PE 8-*799 , ouUlt. Double dresser. BookCMe RgRRjogRATOR" WITH PRFEZBR i bed. Large chest. * vanHy lamps. , All for 119.90. Only 9* weekly. f system. --------*- ’Wliwiagfo AfL. ^WwKmrrt__ * I.em.! .niri IT -V- - Kc\; II S.\I.F.S 4I'X' Dixie Highway Fall Clearance (OvcrstGckcd) Must Sell ^SBWOW R4d RADUTlOa -JUXsiNOEH CABINET JtODEL SEW rnwApVve X botiom -prloee-94.96 -W-4Xf.-0---^ -4no a»achlne, -ilg-za«^ for..-X. A 'nompaon 7(,4 -d^Wesl. deelgmi. etc Enee control, bal-! buWD WMBALL awx"i'i7i!9»» r\ft 'EMrt Ulc* V^fy iow Kt 854 40 Or MV' . SAOll^AW wfn d - Hunting Accoin’tions 74 A x-orn^fed bpjep p , IJX14 WALL TENT CALL APtER HAY AND STRAW, 1 BALE OR ....... ROOM OUTFIT. »....d new davenport and choir 3 modern step tablet. Matching coffee teWe. 3 decorator lamps All (or 99*. Only 93 - Peargon's Furniture. 43 ...... MBIORTB SUPPLY -0334 3818 Lapeer Rd_________PE 4-8431 BEEP AND "pore “ HALF AND quartcri. Opdykt Mkl. FB 9-7841. BALANCE 'op OIPT SHOP STOCK, V 1 excellent assortment, also count- - •- --- cosh rtglstors. re. PL 3-137*. OR 3-^ -SPECIAL_____ Ir 2x4-9 -Ji6.-..rt-t-3362, , ___ enetlon BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR, BY pjod condl- CO M'oDEitJ - -- SAOINAW I HOME FOR RENT. NEAR I Cyti .......... Rd pfc 4-4339 or OK 3-0169. For Sale Livestock 83 3 YEAR OLD NANNY GOAT, 9 HAMPSHIRE boar. 19 Mils ( Ridge Panelyte counter f-PIECE JUNIOR SIZE DINING 10 used ref. 34.65 UB -—rsstA "'idtU. tO#« eoBdltlen. TO- -- go-need TV-IddadElx^EiOja J-tm. __________________ _ n used electric end gas slovei I’ff t’s ' Newdlnett.'*.eu,'BV 38 9n«, TWMd ruts, 836.66 Jug p^s., j Vav'wble Tam!wi”i4%yp^^^ ‘"’s.iTabJ*" open .u« .0 - s —^rwwTw 7 rteonditioned adtoMillc wiilirr , . ‘*kuS?mttS"'-a.’ffif\3^*^^^^ New htSlI &\*.l?r“a1,ee a‘ U OLVERINE LL'MB^ PeoTionq. PI 4-Wl._______.f builders nrlc* ‘330 8. Paddock PI >-67S4 10 IN. KENMORE'OAS RANOE MIsc Items Make olf- foafT^:^- JmT* I AMAX^ NECem AUTOMAnc'—_---------------------— — xtf lag sewln* maehlna. “-v*- irdwiral'^^Vu^ e_Wk*Ai i siMMIOM STUDIO COUCH. TWIN 'o 'zW COND! _ __________CABIN truck. 34*4 Josiyn Ro»£ ______ COTTAGE POR RENT . .. PE9-8333 ' near Roscommbn. PE 3-3671 : CHLCKERINQ CIBANdT COMPLETE- I ee.-. Cash Iv reconditioned Priced to sell ' 4 Close to Atlanta, PE 3-8426 We «lrry all kinds of LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. MI ROOMS POR HUNTERS WRITE ounoing material al i rrasc“ ” ....... ” “* able price Waterford Lumber C 3678_ Airport Road. OR 3:.7703 Tractors and Mowers ."Ar.V ,« «... ,vns ar 30 per cent off on roUry and reel FOR BA'E W b>«b MINNOWS, ALL SIZES 35c power mowers Mew i'mI used cordlon, *106. Call MElrose 4-»lw u sq doi. All kinds o( live hi tractors wLh snow bla^s Some HAMMOND SPINET WITH SPEAK- «eson. Trout Creek Ranch F or Sale Tires I USED TIRES 63 99 UP WE ■ ' buy sell Also whitewells. • STATE TIRE SALES A 903 8 Siglnaw Bt. FE 4-4967 750XT4 RLACE TlRra ■■ nam‘e"brani7i“On new ciTI T_____ plus tax and exchange State Tire 2? PE 4-49*6 * ______ NEW TREAD TIRE8."l70 X 1*. 6* HARDENBURO” MOTOR 'sALES Cao. 11 Pike PE M36* : TOP DOLLAR^— lectrlc itove. electric guitar SILVERTONE. s Wilson. Sni STANDARD BRAND TTgW' TIRES’ Trad! In on General Raleiv Tire-0 per cent off Biscl SRit,“. male german s WANTED HORSES TO BOARD I'.I) WII.UAMS ir>l 8 Saginaw at Reel Auto Service War hoops -- TRY Warhoops USED .\iitii and Truck Parts 2.fmCAR YARD . Sand, (jravel and Dirt 76 1 47*5 A l PEAT HUMUS STATE TEST COMPTON'S' BNCTTCLOPEDIA 1*43 buttonholes etc. without ue& atuchemenU. cabinet etyle. Tike over pay-menu of H-J* per mo. or *7l.M balance of deOnunent eeeou"« (Ortllnany sold lor «*6T E6467 Cgpttol Searing ANTli^ PURNITURE AND (nents! Kctuilt Appliances I CKIOD HOUBBKBEPtNO SHOP of Pontiac . -161 WEST HURON ______PE 4-1596 -.. _____ ____ . . ___ ____ Adralrsl lie. (rtei- Bofltle got Ruud waUr hontjr, „ g,„ 9306. Biloact " — •6 ;jal.. mono meUl Untd. MoyUS woohet. U 6-6171. ___ ______ ____I *46 SchtckT. MY 3-*ttl. A WILL SAVE YC"------------- -....■mjm'.................. S CARPETINO' nSvER "USED. 6X13. .......... _* *4*^OR >3*37. CmLD’S " tfOCKINO vcxMlta. Minted red. elter 2:3d p.m._____ CA.SH WAY BTAHLET ALUMINUU WIHDOW8 gUk'e Pexboard .. ..... «r 4x*x'4 Ptfboard ....... *4.1 . IT'S A SAD FACT- .\nd Oh So True! \\ ieiiand Music ( enter BAZAAR AREA MIRACLE MILE PHONE federal *4*34 HORNER ACCORDION AND CASE used ver^ tooi cond . EM PlANOt^ New and uhed. S| ’ricid 'rj load, 1190 per yard fur 1.5 ' load, km View Peat Farm Baldwin Rood. MY 3-3471 or 3-114* 1-A _1_AA STONE^ 13 MY APPLES AND PRE8R B7VBET C rr Finest as always Oakli Orchards 1 ml. B of Milford East commerce Rd. APPLES AT QLACKMORE 2190 E I Hold I. 79c yd. PHI d Open POR SALE COOKING AliD EATING eoplrs. 439 B Buell Rd N of Rochester, out_, Rochester Rd. Cliifks'tcm, MA *-2l«!---- ------- SCABBY PIEl.DRUN POTATOES. A-l BHRBDDEn _PEAT HUMUS lJ,''‘Barr'el’'^Antrim* me''*A^^ RAT STEAM CLEANING AUTOS, motors, rquiproent. 796 Oakland, portable service, ra 4-S30*._ SAFETY special FRONT END allinmert Front wboels balanced Brakes rellned As low as Chevy Wagon i Road. Inc : 0 Harbor. 19 Orchard Lake Rd . Kee-' FARTS. ----------1 91 PODtlSC _ OR M487 _ _____ Sale UsctI Trucks KM 960 FORD ^ STAKE HEAVY duty. Inns, and akie Runs good. Good tires 913*. FE 4-67M. 49 OOOOf 9 TD 'DUMP ~’» W--einc Good Con. 9*79. PI 9-6664. S'-T' “(T-Ju iSJTa ini'?? btS i plUn* up and you are wooder- ... LEW lie CO . MI LYON AND HEALY GRAND Plano. 3 practice pianos, recondl---------^rfrot for Manning ^lono . a’^J^e? (Hi *'« ” . 666.4-ochhvtn. PE gaie Farm -Eiiulpiunt 87 -x6m zw^-^ twim Fall Clearance "^sale Scott Lake Rd. On new power mowers Sale Motor Scooters 94 I ZUND -,7*r ABOUT ANYTHINO _YOU_ WART ' ^We«l with non ekW POR THI BOMB BB poadWa ELgln 7-6U1I douthtteld WS ouT o'} the"w“ b“ a lot »» leta to nuy Pumitore and apoH-______ antes of all kinda NEW k SBBD siwn'r; P Visit our trade d*l>«- lof (**■ equipped *36.6*. Curts Appl PE bargains. ■ • '. »-4^^ ___ _________________ We buy. sell or tnoR SAiSTOLCBB. 67H IN . and look wound^ a^« Of tree „ never u»ed Alter * p m m* % * ™ iBEARS*! "ROTO LAWN MOWER 64MWWTOPAY fc.y vmMwr Wore)* •••« 4 WHIM B. Of Pontiac or 1 mite , 1 I, of Auburn Metgbta ou Auburn.| drn»r. 'ReaaMablw offer. 79* Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY I* Cooley Lake Rd. EM >41 Open 6 a.m. to I p.m. dolly _ Sunday 1* ti.m. to I p.m. _ aU Mxea Spteab block, door chimney eopd. Poo^ Pfc-Stejg^Ce.. 14 W. -Stnuid. (v TOO dccoratti and mi Berrv E palni. ___ , OAELAND PDEL * PAINT 43* Orchard Lake Ae«. PI 6-618* i CAR PARTf FOB ’M TO"‘M MOO-ela. Royal Aula ^U. U60 Mt. I KS^'wba'ra CO t thoi Txn thine CASH r OR 3 „tX DUl. — . -livery. OR 3-6644. fractor.s and tillers For ^*** Jm4 get totether I SELMER 'E-PLAT AL’TO SAXa bLACK*^DIRT PUi AND ORAVEL I DO longer use phone with eaee, 8*6, PE 3-5363 Ft - *— ITHINO. PURNI-! ORPHEim ELECTRIC dUITAR. 8 blaCK" DIRT MOTORS, any- monthi oM. Will eaerUlce 978 ®*‘*''*‘ - vpo eon turn them Into | Caeh, 137 E Oloai. Ortonvllte i.-r——BSt with ^ llW 604L want micp BLAtX .H*RT. The Pontiac Preee. p^Mo"TDKiNO -OSCAr' PE J-MI7 FB 4-0734 PE 4-1112 KINU Bros: ” "re*l?3m . PONTIAC RD AT OPDITKE TRIUMPH SALES k SERVICE " 6 M DELIVERED PARM EQUIPMENT SALE ENDS . *30 E. PIKE__________IPE *-*306 -•MS "roy^motorcycle saLes BROKEN-CON- ¥h*SSl”%S“.3S5: ..rvlce ra *4943 Your John Deera. New Idea. 0*hl ' owners ^ \Js~ FOR YOUR Truck Needs Sales & Service k Home Lite Maler^ Tor Sale Bicycles 96 IlN Easy /Just Dial FE 2-8181 Ask fur Want .\tls hire or 44t CftmtTMi _ TUNIKO AND RiCPAlRlko" 24 hour earvtce. ill work guarin- II9 N I MUSIC CO HOnX PARM TOP SOIL OP ALL klnds.i 9S yards. 410 delivered PE 44899 also loading .. PE 5-93*3 CRUSHED STONE. SAND ORAV- WUh^^cae? fl09"'?w AVEl7"7tANb~ifr6HE"~PILL RESTAURANT BUSINESS LIQUI-Apnllance EM 34118 dirt: Black dirt top tolL P«at. datteiL. Tuet, Nov. |-l4a w. 1,*9*9 g®. -S' gS-S 84304 Swarti Creek. GMC Factors Branch CASS SrpS5'^K*')2 Uvtrtd. 34*73. • *• * :64 P0R0:"'wr0N"8TAiE. oodo P< 3-Wl _______ fondllon. ,PE V4SJ*_afUr *|*.* Boatl & Accessories 97 sg roRD^Eu v^ _ dltl^._t^ 3-1*13^____ _ 25% OFF * ”»E4SiI**'* , ■:Ff?T5T?to“MiE SCOTT MOTORS It «RV1C1 '** DODOE 9*^ ilS CBUISE^OT EOA’JSA^ ^ Cie.^ wim m Ool. Un«. 9* B Walton. Open 9-7. PI9-44M *SI Balboa FORTYSIX THK l^OXTIAC PRESS, WKliXKSDAV. *OC TQHER 20. 19(M) Sale UMd Tiwdc^ lUj M rMUNOBB. UrmtNATlON- For Sole Cart 1061 ____ ___ _ _ CaETROLET 1-DOOR TsrfilRAMTRXCKS^ * AND EQl lPMF.NT w rdab KCirfr «b mosey: tetuuam. m raonr> ,PK LMyd M»rt^ m S«( EE prU f I2W r ^l« ( MARMADUi^ By Ai^erson 4k Lceminff I - I’.viNTiM «•' ne n« uniT MW ' ---- CHEVROLET CO IlM WORE OUARANTEED i’^wodowARn AVE^ »«Misa os ali-jjakea^oe car* HAM MI 4-}TM 1M4 CHEVROLET RTWtibs WAG columipn. prU f I2M ----- r---- il«M Oor month CALL WHITE credit MASAOER EE ASO TRWCES ONE DAY HERVICE JOHN I >MITIt IN* bMc~T»rCE-iJE « s^eed; trasMitMioa. ERt EE »-SIN V _H»rrt«,....................i' Truck if*arti * TOH FRONT AXLE CI^HPLIrtE daiL»uUtMtn Eo»fr«lirtr r»c(m, tin *J*» Rit «ork»too pnatFr wfriln Ww n«^ ' Auto ln.ur.oce >04! "w‘^ WARD AVE BIRMINGHAM MI C..EAN RECORD * '*An.'’5o.Y«‘^ -59 C lII-:\ ROI.I T 13* EOR « MONTILO BnlAIr « dnor t ctliiwlfr Auto- EE 4-3iM Evei FK : 4iM moui: tran«mii»ion Radio A h>at Foreign and Spl. Cart 105 *' “"■* ' "n'Sf'TTf-TT^" *’• CHRfcli;‘n!vioUTrt ... n, noth, -- ‘’ jplllovd Mtr, 2»8at rt J-.UI ■ |»M CHEVROLET BEL AIR HARD ' \ < M down, noi '* unul^ iwat^ ' DODbC .... of 3II ti SAOINAW ‘ ,EE TINJ CHIVIE. * PAaSRSOCR. TAEB . U tb CLAB8IC NEW TOP'*^ draltwt PE W8 cHsyy 60OD’ eom N2 HEVY RAH STICK EORD COOTE" chopped Id chananlad: Old* powarw Don l^watt OL 1 I IN 1058 CORVETTE WhiU wuh Wicli mm ♦‘Quii With Fo«er|liI^ * _ -tz_ ^ «»r cfiirl. tudliMt ’ cdadKIoa M PACSARO. GOOD TRAHSPOM- I Jf*_»-«nL _____ _________ lailon. DL 2-»U _ I lt» PdsflAC. BEAtmrOtTlt ItM PACEARD CLIPPERTraDIO I Tan* Oraad ftnUb. no atonay and Hratar Eicrllanl anaditloo ! dowA fall ftiev IM Atauma No monay uovn. Pull prka i paymaBla of lll.M jyar laontb MN Annum* paymaais of |261 CALL MR WHITE CREDIT p*i moaUt CALL MR. WHITE MANAOER EE MM2 CREDIT MANAOER^PE A*«C I Eta« Auto talat 111 t. tUfliMW Km« Au'o Salas III t. Bagteaw ) M'KMT OOSV. EXTRA HIC# M PLYMOUTH STATION WACOM. , Lloyd Mtn . 232 Sda PE 2-tlll A-l coDdlUoa. MA l-**l«. _ - — ---------------------- ~ StATl()\ \\ ACION i U Plymdum. V>«. 4 door. Charry red Automatic transmlsalon. ' —JT radio and banKr. 1 uvner, j ^ 4 lark«*toii Motor Sales i "T' CHRTBLER-PLTMOUTM DXAtlR 'V - — - ' ....... SHEP'S Month-Kiid Sale ON THBSa NO MO«n DOWN PLY f dr .------- MA I-114I ;« PORD Man list rt-YMOUTH BTATION WA*- .S 2|RL L sun radio and haater. automauc [ .JJ poNTIAC *4 d PLYMOUTH. 2 U44 cond. tlMI. 106 Gay Saver ~SF1- TllK NKW 1%1 Morriv, Sp^e^Lir 850 _:tjp TO yb mpp 1-Till 12 Muiiths Part'i Warraiilv We need your tradc-iiu Houghten & Son 1960 Falcons 1960 Fords a DQOKja AND 4 DOORS l'>5'> nymuiiili 2-Uu(.r tlHrimi Mt MI «-:iflO0 BIHMINO-HAM-RAMBLKR m 8 WOODWARD !«»• CHFVR'OtET IMPAl A 4- C*’’r'“rt*i? , inu amt tirakrs- Radio and haater i Wliitawall lira* ll.NO Nil illlv«r-hill, Pontitr OH 3-76M iJ CHEVROI ET. POWER GLHJE ' OR 4-noot liM cHEVRotrr nil rntR 4 00 Pe 2-0*9 1*S» CHEVROLET STATION WAO-nh f rvUndar-i iiowfraltdr. trout I Only T Itl CHt VHGI K~ ’ .. ...xrowsRir AVR MINGHAM 1954 CHRYSLER 81DAH I9« PULI, prlia Oood iian»p«i tatloii ftrr ---Mr Allan, Cradlt Advlj-or, FE S-BMI Eddia Rlaala Ford SI DE 80T0 HARDTOP 2 DR. , Whil* waiL, 1100 Call ava» Ft For Sale Cars 106 For Sale Cart THUNOEIWRD^^^HARDTOP, 'M PORD. CUSTOM^ UKE NEW. ily tllll. Mr Ball Rira d t Auburn “ PORD PAIRLANB • 2-OOOR - liar, tJ down. |4 02 M full prica Call r . Mr Murphy. FI ------ --------------- .1-1 '54 Nan condition. UL 2-4644. M Ply II FORD CUSTOM JOO: 2 DOOR ,*» After 5 or' 2-TMT _ 1V.57 t'r.YMOL'Ttf j •«* ciiiv 'cioJm ... rii OockMu"* Ilealrt'^ I owner'ISS Sllf))‘s Mutur Sales '7c^L Vl^A^MA i^t ol^ ■ ‘“b*u.~?lm“purear*"!”»u« Just Make Piymehts **P •jw* .1___________ II PLY 2 DB''^ MM I PONTIAC CHIEFTAIM 4-DR . Pa? onlv S3i nu> Dtic Ifov l&tb ndlo. heater. hydrsmtUe. whit* R?U Auto. mT* Bell^ Fe’-MMI ‘•J'-. »^uUtut tu-tona irMn and 1m Blvd At AMburn WtUU pblnt. Will tASt tfbdc. X ^ OlrouM Motor 8bl€S, ‘v i —?*i? “V ■ Drayton Plain* Y:!; — i 1M4 PONTIAC aTABatWP. REl^, .•’T!?'-----I ipHid transportation. AVaoTuleTv I nu rust *121 fuU price. Call I Cradlt Mtr.. Mr Murphy, PB 2-262V, Eddie ateala, Pord._ 1 IMi PONTIAC'CLUB COUPE RA-! DIO a HEATER. HYDRAMATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY ima ptymanta ol I Call Credit M|r. MI 4-7100 Harold I, MW OR (.iood TraiLspurtatioii •M Pontiac HT Nice 'M Plymouth Club Coupi " Rtmbl«r Wgn rardtop VI rniilna. Pordo-radlo hratrr, whitewall , heater 1175. I NICE lOlI FORD till. FE 2-J27I I FORD, VI RAH, FORD-O-lllc. nil FE AMWr-Sttty Auto Suiierior .\ut*»» PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR. BA- I ----- DIO 4, HEATER AB80I.IJTEI.V ! NO MONEY DOWN Ai ment ot 519.76 pe Mr. Park! Very clei JIYj-3751 ______ ' NO CASH NEEDED 1154 Buick 2 doer haedidp. FuU ■ price $159 Pay only III month Ring Mr Bing. FE 81006 UCKY S 153 8 Saginaw______ 0 CASH NEEDED Ick, 2 door, hardtop Full Tay only $23 month Blag. FE 81006 Ring Mr l.UC*B,_I- ^ 1-ISCHER nxr.Y ?:1075 Critjsman ROCMFSTKP .OPEN EVES TIL I OL 2-1731 IP YOU NEED 5.500 ,___, lor any eiiiergeno, SEE SEABOARD'^lftNANCB CO FOB U« N Perry 81 PE 3-7017 Bl'ICK >**• CHEVROLET RADIO 106 6 WOODWARD AVE "*■' BIRMINOHAM _ _ _JO_4-8424‘ ■".CADILLAC 2-bR HT A-I; md._8elJ_c^eap_rE 81121_ '-i5 Cadillac Convert. mmsavifais whita finimh 0^*8 A. elACK COLE INC, . _ h?if M»p!e M FeiHMic Trail .Mt# RldriVlU^ MODEL OR MAKES T-aT?i ^ IWO - IB60h •mau down payment. WITH NO MONEY DOWN • WE i HANDLE ALL FINANCINO _ ! imo'chevrolet 'station WACT. I ' cylinder 3 door aUndard DodgeXart $1930 8. eusme. Auto* , a»0^ )R1) V-a SHARP l5ol) l‘rost. Iiic. LINCOLN-MERCURY.DBALBR *• nur Blvd.___Ml d*aa00 'f^AlFRCURY HEATER ABSOLUTELY ’’c'liu Credit , - _____ - Ml 4*7M0 Harold Turner__Pord.______ for 1 1B54 PLYMOUTH STATION WAO-nw o.etiev —d heater. e*ceiiem money, down, full ^i»5. r --- --------- M 2B ON. Radio •rondltlon. i irlce B1B5. Aaaumc paymeo^a . _______f month. CALL MR. WHITE CREDIT MANAGER. King*Autif^ics ____115 B. Saginaw WOODWARD. •,S8 PLYMOUTH Fuiy 3 door hardtop. Radio hea A Of sai 75 p MISSION. -ABSOLUTET Y MONEY- DOWN ward . _____ 1955 FORD Y-9. 2 DOOR. RADIO 8 H K A T E R. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume par-gieiils of 532 06 per mo Ciill Ctedil Mgr Mr. Park* si Ml 4-4,100 Harold Turner F^d ' •-'7 FOKI) '50 MFKCl'KI MONTCLAIR Good looking h: l.ip Automatl- — whiles. YoO one. Hurry. I -Sclnitz Mulor>. tiic. OeSoto - Plymoufli 913 8 WoodwsrU. Birmingham MI 7J61I_ ! ' proud I NEW "PONTln'CS AT TREMEN- ‘ jgE>—< Bargains 960 Cstallna convertible. Hydra. Radio 8 heater. Power steering Power brakes An oHIcItl car. Low down payment 36 mos. on 1556 Pontiac. 3-dr. sedan. Hydramatic. ^adio^and Whlt^ gem. Your '53. '54 will make down payment. HAUPT PONTIAC Plymouth - Valiant - DeSoto '60 Plym6uth SAVOY 8DOOR finish Back-up lights, nad-ded dash, whtUwaJls. Brand .-.“'’'."V. $2295 '60 Plymouth FURY 8DOOR V-t. Torquefllt* trans. Red and arhlte Sportime oamt -Power steering, radio and ahitewtils. 4.M0 mtlee. .....$2695 '59 Plymouth fury 4:door ..awawme.^. “1 I .........$1795 '57 Plymouth SAVOY 8DOOR 8cyl with radio This esr Is resl nice. Car for ths $595 '57 Mercury COMMUTER 8PA8SENOER STATION WAOON. 8DOOR. Has Merc-O-Matlc. power steering, power brakes and -.iadlp--.Qnly_.12IS down, .and 143.73 per month. ....... $AVE '56 Chevrolet with Powerelfde Irshs-mlsslon. Clean In and out! .......... $595 '56 Plymouth (AN with $795 S-RASSCNOER '60 Plymouth '^V4^^"T.r,..n.M trap... power steering, radio. Mw-er window., powar hrWdt. remote control mirror. Oold- e....... $2895 '59 Plymouth SPORT SUBURBAN. Red and whit* finish. Torquemt* trsnsmtsslnn.. .po««l, stMf; Ing. swivel seats, radio and whitewalls N k W CAR OU^ANj^J^^jMI Down— SAVE 580Ids. ••M ' HARDTOP 8000R with blue finish. Hydrsmal Mwer bral , .A SAVE '58 Plymouth BELVEDERE V4 CONVERTIBLE. Whit* with black top. Torquenite transmission, power eleeiing $1195 '58 Plymouth SUBURBAN 4-DOOR MW . . . . . . . $AVE '58 Plymouth 'or^uefllt* $1095 '55 Chrysler NEW YORKER 4-DOOR With trftnsmteftloB. In*, radio. On# Very clean Id i $695 .BRAID Plymouth - Valiant - DeSoto CLARKSTON ! Credit Mgr Mr ! DODflE COUPE TOM BOHR, 1) S Msin. Mlllor«* ,.$1205 1958 CHEVY BIscavne 2-Door Be-- engine Powergllde. heaUr and whitewalls. Pink and Ivory fln- .a960-BUlCK-, r.$3695 1959 CHEVY . .$l6f>5 Bel Air 4«Door Hardtop. Pow-ergllde. V-8 enilne. radio. heJ-er. whitewalls. ¥>Hd blue flnlA. Plastio covers. 1955 FORD..............$695 C o u n t r y Sedan 8Pasarager Wagon. Pord4)-Uatlc. V4 engine. Sandalwood and Ivory ftn- Eleetra 225 Convertible with oower steering, power brakes, power windows and seats, radio, heater and whitewalls. Bucket seats solid whit* with red trim. Every^g buyhf kitchen sink. Bonnevlll*. , . _ . . brskes. windows and seat. Tly-dramatic, radio, heater. H?* got everything. 1954 FORD............$ 395 4-door sedan that Is eitra clean «Mi‘’car* tor to* family!*** ***' I960 POXTIAC $3295 Bonneville Convertlhl*. All p< whitewalls. Othe-A whlta beauty. I960 PONTIAC $3095 CoBverilble. Power sUerlnt and beater. Whitewalls. Decor arid lamp group. LUt I3M4. Demo. 1953 MERCURY .................... A*reM buy**” *“** "^*** •“** 1956 MERCURY $ 995 i'S SSteV: *jKfrt ... $150 ' .PONTIAC-BUICK ^ / ROCHESTER ' OL 1-8133 .\cross )Fom Nevv Car Sales OPF,N TIL 9 P M. QR_LATER '_UoNC^ W edne^^ and Saturday at 6 P.M, THE POXTIAC PRESS, WEDNKSDMt (K TOBKR j FORTY-SEVEi^ -Todays Television Programs-- I rilni ua wbjaet to dtoi«* wUkMrt Mtloa TONIORTS TV HIOlIUGriTS •;N (4) Tntckdown. (2) Movie (COM.) ,(T) Newi and Weather. (9) r Chaaaal IMXLW-TV > General Chemlitry. (7) SporU. |:ll (7) News. •:tf (2) News Analysis. (4) Weather. f.M (2) News. (4) News. . (7) Circus Boy. (9) Woody Woodpecker. <;4# (2) S^wrts. (4) Sports. «UI tt) Nm». (4) News. (56) Mathematics. 7:09 (2) Aquanauts. (4) Dangerous Robin. (7) Award Theater. (9) t>ioneers. 7:30 (4) Wagon Train. (2) Aquanauts (coM.) (7) Hong Kong. (9) Movie. "Smart Girls Don't Talk.*' (1948) A beau-uful socialite becomes r_ volved with the underworid. Virginia Mayo, Bruce Bennett. (56) Portraits in Print. 8:00 (2) Best of the Post. (4) Wagon Train (cont.) (7) Hcsig Kong (COM.) (9) Movie (cont.) (56) Showcase. 8:30 (2) Wanted-Dead or AUve. (4) Price Is Right. (7) Ozziet and Harriet. (9) Movie (cont.) (56) Conversations. 0:00 (2) Kennedy. (4) (color) Perry Como. (7) Hawaiian Eye. (9) Rocket Richard. 9:30 (2) I’ve Got a Secret. (4) Como (cont.) (7) Hawaiian Eye (cont.) 10:00 (2) Tomorrow. (4) Pete; Loves Mary. (7) Naked Qty. (9) News. 10:15 (9) Weather. 10:30 (9) Telescope-UAW. 10:30 (4) U.S. Border Patrol. (2) Tomorrow (cont.) (7) Naked Oty (cont.) (9) News. 10:45 (9) Movie. “Ifg Love I’m Alter.” (1M7) The theater's top actor and actress love each other but quarrel constantly over scene-stealing. Leslie Howard. Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland. 11:00 (2) News. (4) News. (7) Decoy. 11:15 (2) Weather. (4) Weather. 11:30 (2) ^K>rts. (4) Sports. 11:25 (2) Movie. "It’s a Wonderful World.” (English: 1956) Orchestra leader Ted Heath gets involved with a couple " ~M"gany-publiclty men. Ter-j--ence Morgan. ikSO (4) Jack Paar. (7) Mr. and Mrs. North. TBVBgDAT MORNOfO 0:00 (4) (color) Continental Classroom. 0:10 (7) Funews 0:U (2) Meditations. 0:40 (2) On the Farm Front. 0:45 (2) TV College 7:00 (4) Today. (7) Breakfast Time 7:10 (2) FeUx the Cat 18:00 (7) Johiuiy Ginger 0*15 (2) Capt. Kangaroo-■<80 (7) Stage 3 :00 (2) Movie. (4) I Married Joan, i:* (4) Exerrise. (7) Exercise. fOl FayeEHzahetb 10:00 (4) Dough Re Ml. (7) News. 10:10 (2) Movie. 10:36 (9) bUlboard. 10:30 (9) Ding Dong .School. (7) Divorce Hearing. (4) Bishop’s Consecration. 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy. (4) (color! Price Is Right. (7) Morning Court. (9) Romper Room 11:30 (2) aear Horizon. (4) Concentration. (7) Love That Bob. THURSDAY AFTERNOON 17:00 (2) Love of Ufe. (71 Texan. — (4) Truth. Consequences. (9) Chez Helene. Auwtr to Prnlou Pnil* 18:15 (9) Nursery ^hooL 18:80 (2) Search (fOr Tomomw. (4) (color) It Could Be Yoa (7) ()uoen for a Day. (9) TOwer Kltebea Tlrae 18:45 (2) Guiding Light. 18:50 (9) News. (4) News. 1:00 (2) My Little Maigie. (4) News. (7» Abtut Faces. (9) Movie. (4) Bold Journey. (2) As 'Wurlo Turns. H) Ule of Riley. trOO (7) Day la Court. (4) (color) Jan Murray. (2) MeMe. !:30 (2) House Party. (4) Loretta Young. (7) Road to ReaUty. 3:00 (9) Movie. (2) Our Miss Brooks. (4) Young Dr. Malone.’ (7) Beat the Oock. 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These Roots. (7) Who Do You Trust? 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. ““ (4T Make Room for Daddy. (7) American Bandstand. 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. (2) Edge of N«ht. (9) Robin Hoo two feataree required of all i Annett loM pommisoloners that he thought planners' objectiona He claimed they were thwarting what is already a trend towards commercial activities on Orchard Lake. ’E«»ryo»ie seems 'to admit the. street should be commercial. Much of It Is now.” * * * He said the problem'ot parking and the alley waa something the prospective purchasers would have .. . . to satisfy the englneer|ng deport-ljuM- ment about aditu upfsuvil Is mBud of building plans. WINS SYMPA'IVr Initial comments from the eon-ilailon Indicated Annett had won sympathy from Commlasloner Milton R. Henry, who sold (danHcn should be "overruled." “Orchard Uka to gatag earn meretoi and 1 can’t nee why eu earth there sheuld he attonipto to reatricl M to reeMcaltol.'' he eaM. Commlasloner Wesley J. Wood. ^ ■ Tepresenmivu on the planning board, tndlcatad ito would sldt with planners. It * * Wood and Commissioner William H. Taylor Jr. said they had been contacted by persona worrtod the ■ ‘ It was Commissioner John A. Dugan who asked lor the week’s delay. “I don't like to vote against Om planning commission, but I woulc If I thought they were u Gubernatorial Talk/Taxes in Candidates Detroit The recommendation whs changed when It . was reported last night. ★ * it Planners Instoted the move would be "spot zoning," a phrase plan ners use to describe rezonIng of individual lots without regard to the neighborhood or master plans lor neighborhood developmen OTHER LOT8 AVAILABLE Planners also noted that there was other commercially zoned proper^^vailable In the neighborhood that should be used up first, TODAY-B BEST LAUGH: Bob Hope says things are tough I all over: “Tension In the Congo, trouble In Cuba, fighting In the U.N.—and last week the doorknob came off In Loretta j young’s hand.” . . . That’s earl, brother. (Copyright. 1960) comedians ] dy Hackett, Joey Bishop and Bob (Elliott) and Ray (Goulding.) (color) dren who are worth ! than Russians to Help Iraq Set Up 4 State Farms property. An unidentified Negro woihan said neither the whites nor the Negroes were happy with the sit-uatiffli. School officials declined Detroit schools are integrated. MrtccYwi; /Am A r ^ iThe Guest. Monnler and Noble schools are in predominantly Ja. Iraq,^hite neighborhoods was signed Friday, the Soviet! __________________ news agency Tass reported. The , , r\ , ■ . ii jSoviet Union is to supply tractors, [Q£0| |n5tg||5 Tbay aaM It waa too amall and I Irregularly abaped for a proper ' oommerelal alley and parking Cubans Invasion Charge Headed for l/.N, Debate UNITED NA'nONS. N. Y. (AP) —Fidel Castro’s charge that the United States is preparing an in- is bogged down with a heavy work schedule, and the Cuban charges appeared fated to wind up near WTQW^ppeSred aosnwRf Wr bofTOTn bT Rs^pHdi7“^ today for debate after long delay in the U. N. Political Committee instead of immediate discussion in the General Assembly. Demanding indent consideration for the invasion charge, Cuban Foreign Minister Raul Roa also accused the United States Tuesday of planning a "manufactured provocation" at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo, Cuba, to Influence the U.S. presidential election. SrORTS TALK rr IS u f!“ II \y IT 11 T XT JT N r JL AMVET Commander Newly elected commander of AMVETS Bcmis-Olsen Post 113 Tn Pontiac, Charles E. Ctocker was installed at a recent ^reme^. Other officers installed were William P. Babcock, senior vice commander; Harold P, Willis, junior vice commander: and Robert E. Pote, adjutant. The ceremony was conducted at! the post home by Michigan State Department Commander Chester! R, Burton. “tR! BlfllOf as c*i«tou>» 41 Window tlM4 nr.r.un 1. Despite Soviet backing for Roa, the assembly steering committee voted 12-3 with 5 abstentions to send the complaint to the nation political committee, where the United States said it rightfully belonged. The political coiji)mittee already Waterford School RoHo^linfc Site A polio clinic has been scheduled for 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Donelson Elementary School on West Huron Street in Waterford Townihip. ._Any three regular, ov booster shots will be given for a fee of $1 per shot. Dr. Joseph Schirle will be in attendance, kixi alt children must be accompanied by their parents or an adult. SwainsontoBid for County Vote Due Friday for 13-Hour Swing in Traditionally LITTLE CHANCE Cuba had served notice that if the steering committee rejected her demand for immediate assembly debate on the complaint, it would try to get the assembly to overturn the committee recommendation. Diplomats gave the Cubans little chance of success. The United States branded the Cuban charges a "monstrous fabrication" and warned the steering group against being stampeded in-hasty action. It made clear, however, that it welcomed a full U. N. airing of .Cuba’s charges. ★ ★ A The Cuban foreign minister accused Sen. John F. Kennedy and ' “ ■ M. Nixon trying to make Cuba the scapegoat of the election campaign. In an emotional outburst, he declared the Cuban government had abundant proof a large-.scale at- (2aribbean neighbor. __’’This may be a second Guatemala andTnilS"noFT5eT¥palCT Zorin said, referring to the overthrow of the Communist-dominated regime in that I.atin-American country six years ago. James W. Barco of the United States said the invasion charge was so fantastic that it was hardly worth the committee's time to discuss it. The U. S. delegate said his government had instructed him to reiterate the ns.iurances given last July and Augast that the United States hag no plans or intentions to attack Cuba. "That was tnie three months ago," he declared, "ai equally true today." Gives Flowers in Tfionks Republican gubernatorial candidate Paul Bagwell and Lt. Gov. Jidm B, Swalnaon. Ihe Democratic candidatCL-debated taxes Tuesday before Ihe Detroit Life Underwrit-•a Association. Bagwell challenged Swainson to spell out hto specific tax program, saying: I submit that Swainson is playing the well-known television game, ■■’ve Got A Seerel," with tlw voters. He knows and I know, that favors an Income tax. But don’t think he has the courage on this day, or any other day, to stand up and say what he recommends” Uwalnaou anewered that JtoAIA not Intend to make any specllle statement on his tnx program nnttl after he heard from an advisory tax committee. He did say that Bagwell' dorsement of a one-cent Increase in the state sales tax was "nc solution to our fiscal problems. "In the first place, It ia Inequitable and inadequate, and secondly, it Is not a permanent solution,” he eaid. Bentley and his Democratic op-j . munt S«a. Patrick V. McNamara both campaigned in the state Tuesday. —Benttcy told -e-ltoy C3ty-aa--i „ dience that he had “a new plan to provide health rare for m^y retirees through direct payments i by the government for private Insurance coverage.” i Bentley, who said the plan was| an "entirely now concept in thej approach to a sound program ofj health care (or the nation's aging! citizens,” said the government should form a federal health Insurance corporation which would make cash payments monthly to, p«'rsons earning Ires than $1,800 annually. He said the money would be used by retirees to pay their, own private health insurance pre-' miums. Bentley said the sanw coverage would apply to couples earning less than $21500 annually. McNamara told a l7th District Democratic rally at Detroit that '(he Republican administration has been more concerned with a fle-tlllous fight against Red Ink than In building American defensea to stem Red advances." eurlty I of a ttdy batonr« sheet. “Far from diluting their boast of achieving a Soviet world, the Rusaians In the past eiifot yean have been working even more dllt-gently to achieve this foM. Yet, In those eight years, thto admln-istratlon has reduced our Air Force personnel by l9 per cem; Army personnel by 32 per cent and Navy personnel by 22 per cent. ★ A ★ In that same period, we have wltnesaed the frightening development of Soviet superiority in missiles and space techmdogy.” NYC Will Consolidate State FreigTif Storvlce LANSING im Th« Now Yorki Central Railway has been granted State Public Service Ommisskm --Today's Radio Programs-- WrON (IMO) WiBK (1IM) VWJ, R«Vf VJSX, MM ’cKLV^^jit'TSSof f wxrz'. r* uoriaa wnA. WCAR, P. Conrwl 1:SO-WJB, Oowt Boom WX^. trOO-WJU, aboweu* ■;S0-WK)W. Jtrrr OltM •;0O-WJII, ,Mtwt WWjj^ 11. Xottler a LW. Koowtos tiSO-WJK, Mtw* wm, rnmmtSr IIM—.WJB. Xrwi WWJ. Newi rHtastiAV MURNiNn ■;W-WJK AurlcUltUff Hpt WWJ NfWi RoO«rU WKVZ Woll CKLW. ay* Opener WJBK, Hew*, M«rn. Xzp. WPOT. Bto^Urk' *" 1:W-WJK. New*. Uuito WWJ New* Robert* WXVZ New* Wolf caiw N*w* iobr p*»:i wees New* WPOM. Mev* Bob LW ]:W_WWJ, K«v(. J-aird* WXTZ, N«we Wolf CKLW. New*, D»tld WZJ^K. ^r»nie-Coot«r^^ ■:iO-WJR Hew* B, Ouett WWJ. New*. Boberto ?aMo a*w* cto^ Muile Bell CKLW New* 0**1ses with q j«ck-o'lantern in his dad's taumirv in Madison, Wis Jiim* WalsoOi an employe, did the carving for the fare and the eyes evidentl.v please Dennis. GOP Researchers Find: LBJ, Kennedy Differ on 264 Senate Votes WASHINGTON' lAPi — The Ke- Johnson was paireil against a : Jo,J;xj;lude the. islands-to ■solution on defending Kor- Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson. di.sasreod. on the average, on one out of every four or five votes di|hng their years together in Congeesa. , Altogether, said the .Republican Natioital Committee's research division, the two Democratic can-’ didates clashed on 264 roll calls in the 10 years they served together in the House and Senate Ri a breakdown of the voting! records, the committee said they disagreed mostly on farm policy. | taxes and civil rights. j "Voreign aM. foreign potVey.' h.ivp also come in, lor Pairing is a device (lermitting an absent senator to say how he would vote on an issue if he were IHX'sent. Know Where to Sew for the Big Payoff IIOr.STON. Tev (t'PI| - Proof a paiiiotic film pieked lor the pre- a large share of disagreement, have labor issues, public works, housing and tidelands oil,” the release said. ‘ But there is hardly a subject (Tom A to Z lairports to zinc, ac-tuall.vi where the two have noti disagreed. Tltey run the gamut' from antitrust, atomic enei-gy. banking and controls — through! gas. highways, mail rates and; loyalty oaths—to shipping sub-| tidies, trade and w aterways, to name a few.' The Republicans said Kenned.v and Johnson also have disagreed, on a top campaign issue: I'nder! what circumstances the islands off Red China's shore, Quemoy and Matsu, .should be delended. Actuaily, the release said, both men were hospitalized at the time of the vote on the island issue, but Kennedy was paired for and I 'Hie hitlf liour nio\IeT^'’'Lrs<^^^ This .'seed, ' was shown to nlwut ion newly naturalized citizens A second audience of memb<‘rs of die national society of the Daughters of the American Revolution w-omnicndW^ film be showiv-at'T'Ai^fy’ motion picture |theater in Houston, including drive-ins. Coproducers of the show are Jack Gardrici and Shail Graham, who described their pitiject as "an anticommunist ic documentary" They plan national distribution. NOW OPEJI: Store Hours Today 9:30 a.m. to5:30 I I I .........' 1,1^ UoUlt, pretty pink, all-Hteel kitchen for tots 26" Cbarre if Sturd.v tteavy (jauge Steel Any little mi.sa will lovDct A Johnson W W J Mindrruiu-h. Foufaa litCuAk*r. iaT .aL_CQlu».tei% MWrt A. Rhode*. 2M Pro pect S BAd«r, 1471 Weldon Bryant. 46A Frr—*- jparry L. Hammett. KH Meet VlMtor L Smothers. ]»5 W i f^a&k Johnson, a§4 Bondale Rtch»riJ J 1J3« D j*' Conlrr T I>»y. t»t t«li»«lil( thomMJ. L«mb»rt. mi 8cou IMi K. 'orS^u » - VTICA t r. WTuie. sow isorne: r O. Ddfratne. <675 Jobi ______ly L. 0*rtch»r. 33tt Lly< tsvreom rratacirviec. 13U ■ OlnmX Wrrth. IM4 Cf - ■ ArlUs O H»a. MT Bt« |ua«l R. Saktr. nM i^tt K. TaUr. tm X Wdia. 43IS A. Weksttr. M4 ■ylvtnwood jeiiiati O. Mitchell. SOTj Cbuicery AMhur i. L»Vol« Jr. Ms H»rr» & —................. b. ucncncr. j — • ^titwicwte*. » Werth. IM4 Cadi__ H»a. MT Bt« Bnycr ------------------- Y«Ur. __________ O. Baytr, (is RoMnwood . <■ Jr.. MM WUssMln mocmwrtu C Clovttor. Wll Rouevlei crick D. Bctbam. MTS Coiinthic J; pwMiTTt. BT Ynsni $5 Down u O. KcUlc. IMM Klrhy 2-pc. nylon SEROFOAM cushioned suite Rugged durwollity blended With a x;niclous / Striking black or bronae has brass finished aluminum trim. Chairs have pillow becks and cushion seats. 36x48-in. table extends to 7J inches with, leafs. ^ . "Satisfaction gjuayante^d or your money back Modern you like it! Light off-the floor lines ... the bouncy comfort of revers-ible Serofoam cushions ... and a cover that wears ‘n’ wearg|. Textured nvlon frieze is wonderful around children, most spots sponge off easily In aoua sniop brown or cherry red. Walnut finished legs. Sofa measures 76ijim ^ ^ 154 N. Saginaw Ph. FE 54J71 Th« Weath«r (.'.a. wmmm ■ Thwwiajr. Fatr. THE PONTIAC PRHSJBOVEIIPAfiB 118th YEAR ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ FOXTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBEK m 1900-18 PAGES Kennedy, Nixon Battle for Michigan Windsor Blast Kills 10, Injures 99 Reich Army Will Train in France PARIS (AP»—The apearhead ol fxnPther German army will arrive in France next week, this time as mi ally. ^Gas Triggers Explosion at Crowded Store A spt'.jesman lor the French j Defense Ministry said that units ^ ot the West German amiy wil'. l take up training position^ in East- Walls Fall, Windows Shatter, Bodies Fly Into Street WINDSOR. Ont. -- A era France on Nov. 3 for an in-1 gas-triggered explosion in itial period of three weeks. A total of about 2,400 men will be units. The meats .Idenauer and President Charles de Gaulle signed Tuesday night. The French arc to make train-i; and storage facilities avail The -bases wilt crowded downtown department store here Tuesday caved 4n walls, shattered windows and hurled ^ies into the street. At least 10 person died. Seven bodies were ipro\eiief'. Another pei-son diefi in n hospital. Rc.gcii*^ ir-freczing. temper;'- der French controi. ;niglu turss to f’-e^ r.t ra-.i , ....... BKAT OPPO.SITIOX bodies which could be seen pinned The an-ival of the Germans so: beneath the ruh'olc. Othe;- i-c-Hn't'; oon after signing of the agiee-Isaid (here were three or mor.-’ uent means the two governments j buried, re hurrying to put the agreenjent . " uto effect before opposition can| In.InrieK llenry Bird. iiystallize. j director for the a;en. The newspaper “Figaro” re- j su'd five Dick in State Thursday; Jack Stumping Today ? By The Associated Preaa The two major candidate.^ for the presidency, OemO-icralic Sen. John F. Kennedy and Republican Vice PtmI-dent Richard M. Nixon, are returning to Michigan to I continue their battle for the"state’s 20 electoral votes. it it it Kennedy arrives today and Nixon la to arrive Tburaday. Each was to cover ground the otlier covered in a prevloua trip. Kennedy lands at Selfridge Air Force Base In mid-after• Inoon. lie is to give a 30-minute speech at Mount Clemens plugging himself, the Democratic ticket and Rep. James O’Hara cf I the 7th Congressional District. He also Is .scheduled to attend party rallies at shopping c^ulera ln Warren and Roseville before going to Detroit. Kennedy ulil make a brief slop at Ciampus Martioe In downtown Detroit, then go to llamtramck to give a spceeh in A.tMMI-seat Keyworth Stadium. At 9 p.m" the Democratic aspirant delivers a speech at tlte Mlcliigan Slate Fairgrounds’ 8,000-seat Coliseum. It will be curried by WJBK-TV in the Detroit area. Kennedy will leave Detroit Metropolltah Airport at 10:30 ;p.m. for New York'City. : * I Nixon will vlBlt Mven cities during his U-honr stay. " He Creek, Kalamaioo, Grand Rapids and Muskegon. Party ofllclals sgid he would speak at each stop. They said he would be accompanied by Rep, Alvin M. Bentley, R-Mlch„ Republican candidate for U.S. Senate, and Pa^l D. Bagwell. OOP gubernatorial candidate GRIM SE.\RCTI CONTIM’iQS that as I'rench sensitivity, the Initial German contiageirts will wear khaki iintforma similar to those w-ora by Freoch, British and .Iniericaa soldiers and not the field gray Frenchmen associate with their Nati occupiers. , The Defense Ministi-y said the Germans will tiwin at Sissonne, near Laim, in the Aisne Depart-nent; and. at Mourmelon, near rbaions-aut-ilhriie, in the Marne Department. Both areas saw bitter fighting In World War I. onne. also figured In th: c riign of 1340. ni-ited for. ment Store in downtown Windsor. An afternoon explosion, during disastrous blast was blamed on a natural gss jeak KENNEDY NIXON “Evci cv- rone was screoniin; saying bo quiet." siiid A. Anderson p," Windsor, one of about 130 customers and Falling Car Crushes Area Father of Two A 38-vear-old father of two was '**'^ille converted to gas. 1 tbwitles Hr^«Pago-rtpptwe wmre working under h« car ______ »___________ „mnn«.a list nf initial aemiisiti; Sum of the People More Stories, Photos on Explosion, Page 22 City Receives Renewal Funds Waon Gains on Religion' clerks w’ho were in the Metro-i $567,822 U.S. Check pontan Stores Ud. bunding. "t ^ ^ * r\ l Mrs. Anderson -aid the mld-| Opens DOOT ‘ tO Deals afternoon explosion “.iust shook! Prooertv the place, and all the llsl' s went I ^ f off all of a sudden." She said. . "Tnere was a big r.wish as tlie Tiic city has received a air came back into the store, or check frwu tiw Uni ted ;>.at something." Treasury to begin inilial proper^ -vniunma ni sifSdTz; >« '"<• i»“ »•« By JOHN KR.%FT | Better doniei^ ptatforin . (Sperki tofhe Pontiac Press) ‘ : Beat at Igleown relations Richard M. Nixon is gaining; Kennedy tim young .................... strength Iwro the ao-called /’re- Religious Isoue .................. liglous issue." Xixim likable About one out of 10 people who *4% 'ffittt one out of 10 Nixon supporiergj (fVtt no reluctance fit discussing ,17^] their opfiosltlon to the Democratic I - It% icandidSte on ietR|kNiS griNiDds. | But this one-ln-lO pro-Nlxon vote KN ROUTE WITH KENNEDY IF;—Sen. John F. Kennedy charged today the FJisenhowTr administration is "afraid to tell the people the truth” and has rep«'utedly slapped the secrecy snap on records tor political purposes. The Dfsuoeastle presIdenUal candidate, heading for a day’s* eampatgsing In MlckigwJU-brnodened the Imsoe be kept imundlng on I'uetMlay In a inaralhun assault on largely KepnblleBa OMeago suburiMi. Ills (ximplaini then was tliat, in e decided to vole for t Religion ranks sixth ia thi.s-list is offset by the people who were (o hi'lp Vice Fresident ^'ain toliw pr^m- ~ Of leasana lor supportlDg a Repttb- cqurilJj outspoken on this religious! Ri,.|„,,i m. NiAOO make good his_ Page 2, Col. : ment with Charles Ingram, a plumber, and Howard Sdiram, aO| electrician, when the blast curred. The store's JieaUng plant/hough, until urban renewal i ern Illinois, a grade-school teacher who has decided to vote for Nixon Negotiations won tget underway, gave this reply; 'B’e decided to open the main (gas) line from the street.” Halford said, "and all we got was air. AR oT a saddrii (he gas came through. I turned to leave the basement when it exploded.” Halford sufferc-.. Bums , |IIUVai Ul. U|x- S face and hands and was Deducted. fair condition at hospital. Windsor proposed list of initial acquisitions. Robert A. Btlerer, assistant city manager and nrban renewal cnordinalor, said he exported acqulsltloa approval shortly. I’m terribly eoneernrd about I srtiat is gstag to inppni to tMs planet It our ex plod tag population isn’t somehow hailed, Although I admire Mr. Kennedy pimaimtiy, t tqmaid^lnliig^Wst’lf to believe that he would support 1 h ronlrol Information lor Castro's Cuba to Endure, MSUO Professor Says campaign contention that U. X. ; prestige is at an all-time high, the administration had hidden i away a government ■ financed survey. This report, he said, showed The check represents federal ap-1 those poverty-stricken countries proval of the city'^request forj M-h«re ift desperately needed.” 1 the yard of his home in Pontiac Vownship. Theodore Washam amm I^d was underneath' his ir ‘ making repairs when the -heels slipped off blocks, pinning m to the ground. Hia. bo^ was discovered three lurs later by his wife. She -me out to call him to go to work the General Motors Fisher Body - . „ ^____________________________ r ‘''VrcSk*inV\vWitol!s^'X^ toW members of the MSUO faculty and ad- IDetroit-Wmdsor tunnel, a few.590112 advanced by th? federal 1 /ihundred yaids across from tlie; govermnent two yeais ago foi-have to take ordere from ministration that ' jstore. when the e;;plosion oc-pjaiming; interest J Icurred. 'and J38,067, the esumaiert icow “People were running out sort, cost for auditing and inspect! I countries believe the Jioviet Union is ahead of fhi.s country, , militarily and will maintnin or “/Increase its teari:" WITH NIXON IN OHIO tJB-Vlc# President Richard M. Nixon pounded away at the theme today that he ia e4bipped to deal with Soviet Premier Khrushchev and hia opponent is too "Incbn-siitent’’ to do so. The Republican presidential nominee campaigned aefon Ohio In search ol electoral votes that “inUlhi help lilm make up for the possible loss of New York in the Noy. 8 balloting. Btrtking at his Ueinoerattc rival. Hen. John F. Kennedy. Mxou told a Irainside eremd hi the rain at the steel town of Middletown, Ohio, that his opponent Jumps from position to position on Internatioaal Police estimated the crowd at 10.000, which seemed far in excess of the actual turnout. But I expected, were several items. And down south, in North Caro- Kennedy said today, In a By MAX B., SIMON speech prepared for dc;llvery A Michigan State University Oakland professor in-| lh,.'I^,",^^'“Mate‘'i;plrt' dieted the nation’s press Tuesday night for feeding a| menis, the international (o- DetroR htgn sclioei seniorFOB PLANXLNG line, a tobacco larmer couldn't "false image’’ Of South America to their readers. have been mote explicit. Pulling Dr. Samuel Shapiro. 33-year-old assistant professor! Her screams summoned a cons- ' "11, Carl Buxton, from hi* home I™ u rtM the street. He Jacked the r up and extricated Washam’s ' ' |of crazy-likc, covered with blood,"|of the project over it.s anticipated Dr. John Harrold, deputy coro-|said Sheldon Snfi'an. 19. "There! flvo-j-ear span. „ - all re- , ‘0 the contrary-Cy- , Catholic, loo!" Iro’s Cuba is here to stay. W it . estimated he had been deadjwas this tenific blast. I drove my )out three hours. car through customs without stop-' The $700,000 is covered in the "riie victim leaves two children, ping and left it in the mldd’e of,|3,165.041 revolving fund the fixl-iitb, l3, and Lewis Potts, 17. ajthe street. The street was a rain-jeral government has set up tc^^ Mxon experienced -pson. 'storm of glas.s.” ' cover land acquisition costs. Admire his lesni .. GOP Foursome Takes a Wave Break "The Cuban jiapcrs may be mu/-* When all the reasons for deciding lied under Fidci.'’ .Shapiro said, to vote for Nixon are grouped.'-)Mit they tell the troth about their licfe's what emerges: eounlr:/ more than American pa- KKASONS FOR NIXO.N pc« do." ♦7% i He said coverage of that ares 7*% ' by The Pontiac Pres, Is superior to that of the other metropolitan dailies in the area. .Shapiro taught in Argentina last year under a Fulbright grant, and visited ill Cuba during the summer. A specialist in Latin-Amcriean his lory, described himself ns . “not complete admirer" ,nf tlic be:adcd l''atlcr. ■ a 11 oj wlileh adnilalster* foreign mid “and many oOier executive agencle, hare repeatedly refund the iHiblie free aerress to than the crowd which previously assembled to hear Kennedy. In contrast to his rival. Nixon I pictured' Mmseir as ah'M I enced negotiator who knows lx>w to deal with Khrushchev. “You have seen the television I pictures of Mr. Khrushchev shak-I ing his fist at me." Nixon de-I dared. "The way to deal 1 4 . . . -------- — Even "tire rtvii ni.-d Commission, he said. ,was j givTn (he autlwrlty to cln.s.sify I as secret some of its reionls •( ONnilTTEE BIAM KKD’ I A congressional committee was blocked from finding out wlio high bids were accepted and low bids rejected on some government contracts, Kennedy charged, and information sought about the administration of economic and technical aid in Imlia, Evos, Pakistan and Bolivia was refased. “TMs administration does not ; Titm Is Julir (0 M as firm folTthe right AS he is, for the wrong." ‘ As Ni.xon spoke, some members of the crowd—which included many school children—waved signs which lead: “One Mr. K is =wriT with Nixon/’ " ‘E-XEMIFX .\DMIT G.|INS-"Ccr..T inK F.del somitimes aeUs silly and makes ridiculous statc-nienis,” Tie "But the living standards of tlw Ctiban people have been raised to an enormous degree — and evei-yonc who visits j Cuba, including bitter enemies of i regime, admit it.' DK SAMI Kl. HHAPIBO He-said Castroism is spreading | Thursday to Be 57, "-.•'I Jl^y QIggf gnd Pgjf Said. "It has kept the unpleasant truth from them in order to convnlce them that, as .Mr. Nison *ays, they never had It so good. "In ret;ent years the administration has classified (declared secret) three times as many documents as were classified in the entire previous history of American government." ' Nixon told an n ni h r e 11 n-benring erOwd which fliled the square In front of the Dayton, Ohio, conrthouse, he beUeveo his record ns n member of tte Eisenhower administration qualifies him for Iho oatfon’s highest office. Tlie Dayton crowd was estimated at 20,000. about the same as Kennedy drew at last preek’s appearance there from the same platform.. With the aid of President Eisenhower. Nixon will shoot the political works in New York next ! Tuesday. , Then he will be joined by ; Eisenhower, vice presidential 4 nominee Henry Cabot Lodge and I GOP .Sens. Jacob M. JavRa and I Kenneth R. Keating in what the I Republicans hope will be New I York City’s biggest ticker-tape reception. Nixon will star thiu I night in a television appearance. f»ra tonay McBride. 63, former publisher oil pnblle n report whieh the Toledo Legal News, died Tuet-i contend shows U. 8. presi day in his home at nearby Tem-| abroad has decHnsd. perance, Mich. (See earlier story, page 1) I eeoter, but Saaday he warmer Morning southerly winds at 10-1* miles per hour wlH ^hift to north-westeriy tonight. Precipitation will be less than one half inch in showers Friday Forty-one was the lowest re-corHlng to diwntown Pontiac ip«>-ceding S «,m. ’The reading xt 1 p.m, was 46. In Today's Press Cameras on Candidate..............Page 18 U.S'. Highway Shenanigans ..... . .Page 19 ir # Radio Ptogranm r—'' .i.fl . tt-n. ■J 4 TW( I V THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26. 1960 Hie Faces Prestige Poll Decision Kennedy Again Cries Coverup U.S. Information Chief to Ask White House for Directions WASHINGTON (API - The White Hou*e apparwitiy will have to. decide whether to make public any government polls' on the; status of U.S. prestige owrseas 1 Sen. John F. Kennedy renewed! charges that pells have been! made showing a drop in American | prestige and that the administration has concealed the findings to protect Vice President Ricbard M. Nixon. Rep. John E. Moss. IK!allf., chairman of the Hoj^se Govem- said Tuesday night a claim of executive privilege had blocked his staff's effort to learn whether such a poll is being suppressed by the^1?:Sr Information Agency; Moss quoted Thomas Roderick. i;SlA general coun.se!. as saying USIA Director George V. AUen •'is checking with the White House'' for a decision dn whether such reports should be withheld. Troy Boy Dies lAv/af/on Mishap Kills of Qash Injuries Sov/ef Rocket Chief Victim Ran Into Side . ^ I L B B J ! MOSCOW (API - Much-dM- Ot Car on John K Koad; orated Marshal Mitrofan 1. Ned-elin. 57. commander of Soviet rodket forces, has been killed in an aviation accident. Driver's Statement Due A 10-ypar-old boy died early today in St. Joseph .Mercy Hospital as the result of injurie* re School, was Robert McDowell, top ot Mr. and Mrs. N’o^rjfian the Spanish civil war and was an artillery commander on' the. Ukrainian front in World War li. He was made a candidate member of the Communist party Central Committee in 1952. Marshal Moskalenko is i full AR.NOLD M. DORCA.S New Urban League Head Is Named Oakland Highway Toll in *60 Dowell, 87 .enng uij^ ’details except that h:* died meml^er of the Qommunist party |Monday in the coarse of his Central Cemmiitee, lie was an I infantry commaiider n t:ie Uk-' His successor as commander ofiralpe and Czechoslovakia in World the strategic rocket force and as|war II. a deputy defense minister is Marshal Kirill S. Moskalenko, 60. commander of the Moscow MlUtary District. Hart Visits' Political 'Home' Senator Plugs Kellis. Jack (Not McNamara) at Bloomfield Hills Commission to Review Parking Lot Assessments Sen. P h i 1 i p A. Hart, D-Mich„ visited Bloomfield Hills^the Republican city where he got his political start 12 years ago as precinct delegate-^o plug for the election oj Democratic congressional candidate James G. Kellis. John R Road, Troy. Police said wfr j nesses reportixi that Robert, parently thinking the rt»d was free into.'the side of a James C Hagerty. White House press secretary, brushed aside all queries on the existence of such reports. He referred newsmen to a statement last week that the President's Committee on Information Activities Abroad had made no report and "no conclusions as to the status of U.S. prestige abroad." Moss said Allen himself had refused to discuss the matter with Rodericic, had advised Allen to claim executive privilege. Kennedy and Sen. J. William Fulbrighf, D-Ark.. chairman-of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, had asked earlier for the reports without success. Former V'ocAtional Services director of the Pontiac Urban League! Arnold M. Dorcas has been ap-! pointed acting executive director of the social improvement group. His appointment was announc^ today by Dr. Robert R. Turpin, president of the Urban League Board of Directors. of traffic, northbound car on John R Road at South Boulevard. Robert's father is employed by the General Motors Truck and Coach Division. The McDowells ______ have seven_other children, five Dorcas succeeds Everett C. Spur- boys and two girls. / lot-k whtvresigned Oct. 1 to assume! Robert's body is at the Pixley similar post in Flint Funeral Home, l^hester. graduate of West Virginia The driver of the ear, Jarnb H. Helmberger, SS, of 4747S Betty SI., ITHca, was to make a atale-ment today at the proaeeotor*s Hedelin’s appointmenL as head f the rocket .forces was announced last May 7 by Premier Khrushchev. That was the day Khrushchw said U2 pilot Francis Gary Powers had confessed being on an American spying mission when his plane was shot down a week previous by a rocket ^rew near Sverdlovsik. RETAUAITON OK’d Subsequently Khrushchev said e had given Nedelln direct authority to retaliate for any future spy flights by firing nuclear-armed rockets at the base from which the intruder came. , ★ > ■ A Nedelln held several Orders of Lenin and other decorations. He fought on the republican side in AURSHAL MOSKALENKO State University. Dorcas has been with the Pontiac Urban l,eague since last year. ty N.AACP ^board, Mie Pontiar Area Chamber of Commerce and a rouiwll member of the Boy Scouts and the Big Brothers of ISakhHHp 4'oiinty; lie also belongs to PTAs at Mark Twain. Jefferson Junior High, and Bagley schools, the Rehin Club and St. John Methodist Church. Committee, challcnfjed Nixon to| A Unitixl Fund organization, the use his influence to obtain release Urban League is mainly of the reports. ' concerned With housing and em- "This appears to be a case of j Pl®>’hicnt of minority groups in secrecy in government at its most|*^“^ '‘rea. objectionabl^for campaign time purposes.” Gore said in a state-] ment. ----- Doctors in Poll Accept Smoking as Cancer Cause Students to Get Holiday Friday people of tills district could see them ou ft common ptatform. The contrast is very great, "If I were running against him I’d have to vote for him,” Hart Mid af the ^541-ptete ^‘Dinner With Kellis’’ at the Kingsley Inn. REPUES TO CRITiaSM In reply to criticism that he had been stressing too much foreign affairs in his campaign talks, Kellis briefly outlined where he stood on fiscal policies and the centralization of power. He said the record speaks for Itself that during the Eisenhower administration expenditures were greater and the qattpnal debt increased more than during past Democratic admlnistratioas. Kellis, a retired Air Force colonel, said Kennedy’s platform 'will mean more expenditures." (Continued From Page One) before intend (b stay put on the Republican line. Not as many for-Stevenson voters do—and it NEW YORK (API - A .survey among 587 American doctors dis-' closes that one-third of them bc-j lieve cigarette smoking is a definite cause of hing cancer. sa>i the American Cancer Society. Another third regard it aj probable cause. the survey showed. However, Teachers Will Keep Busy at a State] Institute in Detroit issue in supporting Sen. Kennedy. A young rabbi in Connecticut said: "It’s ridiculous to suggest that Kennedy's religion will bias his presidential' policies. He’ll fight for what the Democratic party believes in. and he'll worship in private! We’ve had a Jewish governor here In our state for several years, aitd he hasn't turned Connecticut over to'lsrael yet:'’ In Southern California, the wile of a retired policeman said: "I'm a Catholic and proud of it. I I’m proud of the great men we have in the fields of medicine and education. I think it's high time that this country shows the rett of the world that we all stand to-gether-r-a Catholic president would do that!■’ REASONS l'’OR KENNEDY Better on domestic Issues .. .M% . Kennedy likable.............21% i Admire his team ............19% schoolsj |>on'l like Nixon ..........19% appears that Nixon has picked up Ing conducted durinyihe weeki of among the Protestants that had been Democrats. Contrast this with the Catholic vote: IN 19S6 CATHOUCS WHO VOTED FOR: Elsenhower Stevenson Now for Kennedy 43% 87% Now for Nixon . . 37% 3% Now uncertain .. .20% 10% enough to balance gains the Re-Cambridgeshire Handicap hors * I Ci'ui ?y Ai I pen „ Ite._fiAures_._KkasM Hihly will get a diiY oTTTnday All schools will closed to permit eTlAC PRESS. 'WEPyESDAY, PC TQBER 20, 1900 Seaway Sets Winter Closing U.S. Section Will Shut Down Nov. 30; Later Dates for Canada MASSENA. tlY. (H-The American acctlon Of tjje St. Lawrence Senway will clo*e on Nov. 30 for fhe uHnf<»r, the St. Lawrence Seaway Devel^ment Carp, ataioanced' The section wag scheduled to close Nov. 30 last year, but remained In operation until Dec. 3. Willis Crosswhite, trafnc ser\'-lee officer for the corporation, i said, the American section would close on lime this yeni*. The Welland Canal is scheduled to close De<', I.') and the Saull Sle, Mari# Canal on Dec. 12 TREATED IN flJMC - The best of m.dUal treatment for needy patients in Oakland County is pro\ided at the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Ginic, supported with dollars from the Pontiac Area United Fund. Here a blood t'raas(u.sion l.s rasllSf rmt PksU Kiven a patient by Dr.^Pitiil G^wdi'eau. assisted by Betty Jean Jones, a pracUcal nurse. The clinic operates on a fiw and part-pay ba-sls, with .tliarijcs lor cimicarsicrviccs made accurdin); to finan 'lal statu.s. I Seaway officials anticipate an increase of possibly 15 per cent ini [tonnage carried through the in-' iland waterway this year,------- ! “ f the end of September, traffic he seaway was up 11 per cent! ' 1959 figures. | Train Incident Recalls Dewey Campaign of '48 loud« By MERKIMAN .S.MITII * th s |,'m!cr ABOARD THE M.XDN TRAIN standim,' nc.'libv (UP1» — Backstairs at the cam-bl.i."! of i! tiv nint: out the paigns: chairman’.s ni'M rcnteiuV, At the start of Vice Pn-.siden; in th^- crowd ’vcncnih Richard 'm Nixon s c u r r c n I ' Nmux-^Bcpub- - whistlestop tour in Washington tin' * '^i'Uddr Other night GOI'* Naiinn.il Chairman Thruston B Morton was addro! ing a crowd at the rear end o( the candidate's ci»r. It was in l»IS that Tin In Hamilton, Onl„ however, the president of the Great I.akes Wa- | lerways Development AwHoriation | predielril that tonnage passing I Ihruiigh the Welland Canal would ! In- alHMit .30 per cenl In-luw es- eluding days of a bitlecly fought ■••imnaign viil flsiodg" lirany of Oen. Howard D. C.raham said thc.se threatem-d non vafcr.« tonnage iiassing through the canal last >ear was atxtut 30 per cent ibelow esiima.es an:' " ; will be New diesel locomotives driven about the same .again this year." hydraulically through torque Arn-I (Iraham'.s organization is serkiir; verters in.stcad of by eb-ctric drive the removal of tolls from the WH-train are now being pnf into service. 'land Canal. "Th-' r;iilPO)''l e iTwBci- iJewcy, • ’ biitor chtrklc. .s.iid-wi(h ; t Avrn- Dewe.w the "We an- going b.ick to j derfully romantic form of portation.” Morton .said, "the old '^Traih andTJic”whistlt^,si6|)sT” 'k'o ddcll Canada's Auto Industry Hurting The train suddenly I begin *0 mine barkwnM Into ' the crowd and hundreds seat-lered in t T,-enll"g ninrni. Dewey reaeted b- roaring that his l urinei-r "iirj.t bi- a lunatle." And everywhere Dewey traveled th,'^ n'"hh h-- .sa '.’written in the dust on hundix'ds of box-, "i-’n.r'.ics 'o - Truman." One of the SJiocking things a Low-Volume Market, ritirwign .tr-v-lrr encounters this High Taxes and Ixipork ?. All Blamed for Trouble «fisp'».v a hnreh, cynical alti- : Vde tc-vnnl both candid,n'er. j '•’h''' '■> f’’ ■ p.‘.'‘rcrtive fact but, OT^Vt A t*t—High taxes and a ,^5,^ overv reporter tmv- ^-^e market were among fte ills of Canadian autoundus- j j, try specified Monday by the biR . , . „ „ , . j. three-General Motors, Ford tmd A clerk in New York, a cab Chrysler—before a royal conimis- rA wonderful new lightnes^ comes to bourbon...with - DANT PERFECTED Guaranteed two years against oven breakage Serve directly from oven to table in this beautiful white ovenware! You save three ways! First, you save time—your food nt^s., no transfer! Next, you save energy—no extra pans to wash! And you save money —up to 39^ a vmit—xmr^sale! All casseroles have clear crystal Fire-King covers. G«f mor« than on* — and save even moral Shop Cdsh-ir AT mSCE'S — pay only once a month WILLOW BASKETS Add Charm and Beauty Wherever They Are Used New York, i"' ill Ch-cr-go. n bellhc') in I>’ vcT^ an entertainer in I.os Ange-Prof. Vincent Bladen ol Toronto, !;"^' Hi rreentiy said c^eniialiy the a. one-man commission studying the automotive industry now liit “I dm" k-v-v wfin to bHteve. hard by low-priced foreign imports. Both sides si-eni In Is- promising inaugurated week-long hearings by so nnu-': > n rin--V that I kn-wv' questioning representatives ol the they vion'I Ik- able to deliver." ' three firms. E. H. And tile «-ven saddt-r as-^ect of Walker, president ot this ‘dis ihisionmenl is fhe nexti Motors of Canada l.td., seu’enei- one h'-.nrs too frequently: At only 88c each, you can afford to be lavirfi! Yhu’ll want more than one from this open or solid weav^assortment. Wastebasket, flower pot basket, French brea4/or roll basket, and flower basket . . . choose the styles for your home needs. you think’' to turning out In, this . rouniry the Vauxhall ear produced by (ieneral Molors ' in Brialin. It leads sales of foreign earn hfre. An anticipated government step Would shift the basis for duty valuation upward as of Dec, 4. But Walker indicated this isn't expr-cted - to end dmy IhequliBOes now enjoyed by imports to the disadvantage of Canadian products. Rhys M. Qale, president of Ford. Motor Co. of Canada Ltd , agreed with Walker that the effective ii crease in price for United Kingdom or European cars after Dec. 1 couldn't be evaluated .vet. Ron W. Todgman, president of Chrysler Corp. c( Canada I.ld., said in a statement that the Canadian industry is at the most critical point in its 50-year history and, a remedial action must be taken by the federal government'at the [xiinl where foreign autos enter Canada. HALLOWEEN CANDY Wrapped Peanut Butter Kisses.........29« k. Butter Cream Candy Cam...............29< fc. S« Chacalote Cqndy Bars............10 for 39< Cello-Wrapped loiripops....Bo| of 105 for 79< Penny Give-Away Candy...........39<—B9< bog 2« Curtis Candy Bars .............40 for 79* Penny Mints and Tootsie Rolls ......1< eo. Candy Cigarettes, 50 for S9< Money Roll.. BO for B9< WW/y/f THIS LIFELIKE WAXED FRUIT ADDS TO A COLORFUL DECOR 19‘-49 SALE! TRICK OR TREAT CANDY BARS 10-BT Bars Reg each »t**’ ()y itiMixH Wd Sm-’-* ZIS. '-*•**' mck-or-trest They look so real, you’ll wane to taste them! The colors so vibrant, they cheer instantly! And their -pace is so irresistably low,you’ll want a basketful! Choose apples,, pears, grapes, bananas, plums, peaches, tangerines, orangesr-each a work of art. Giant gcat! Ten for only 39c .. . regular 5c-size candy bars! Choose from Hershey and Nestles pure milk chocolate ot with almonds or crunchy nuts. pic-a-mix wrapped candy 39: Pick and mix from these candies. Toffies, hard-and-filled canmcls, licorice, nougats, many others! .O^TO>i HAlNsi _ _____ S CINTir Y : "CHARGE IT at KRESGE’S" ,#i DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - TEL-HURON - DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER - A4IRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER DOWNTOWN pdNTiAC—*TEL-HURQN CENTER- , ROCHESTER—MIRACLE MILE SHOPPIlfo t "CHARGE IT of KRESGE’S” THK POXTIAC PRKSS. WEDXF.SDAV. OCTOBER 2<5. 1900 MAKE OVHMAiaS AFto Take Over in Oxford Band Concert Set Tomorrow Mayor Proclaims Day in Honor of This Widely Known Group OXFX)RD —A precision-drilled military unit will take over this village tomorrow. Bui till* 6T) wiTicrnipn who march in here will l»p armed witii ,tnimucts ' and trombones rather ilhan rlflci and fixed ba>oneU. ., , All ol ihein are menibera of the internattoiuilljr aeelalmed U.S. Air Force Band whicii will pre-aenl two concerts at the Oxford Area ('oniiiiuiilt.v lllgli School. RAISES RARE DEER - Springfield Township resident Dale Wilder feeds one of the four Japanese Sika deer he raises as a hobby and for an attraction at his "new, used and abused mer- Higli scltooi students fiom Oakland, Macomb and Lapeer counties will turn out 2,000 strong for the band’s matinee performance Dale Wilder Just a ^Junkman Dale Wilder is a collector, ■ quite discriminatory in some respects, very haphazard in others. He’ll search for years trying to find a particular rare animal he not always sut:e from one minute to the next just what strange Items have accumulated at his place of business. Wilder, SO, Is a Jnnkmaa with a kna clrrfw-animals. The junkman tag doesn’t upset Wilder at all. However, the reference to the 50,000 odds and end.s on sale at his establishment is another story. "It’s new, used and abused merchandise, but never junk, said Wilder with a genuine sense of imagination. While WUder raises animals fs a hobby the creature* also serve as an altractlon lor his business on the Dixie Highway, The Whoopee Bowl. Currently, the;stars of Wilder’s Psntisc r»u PksU chandisc’’ business on the Dixie Highway. W’ildcr, owner of the Whoopee Bowl, also raises white jot 1 p.m. squirrels. ★ ★ * ! An adult audience of corapai abic ' size will be ori hand when the men ;in blue present their second per-'tormance at 8 p.m. 'i The village's main street will i be decorated with red, while and | blue flags for the arrival of the | bandsmen and Mayor Allen E. I Valentine has proclaimed lomOr- | row as I nlted SUlM-AIr Force j Band Day. I The afternoon program Is de-| “A* far a* I know- thev wer« ! W'ilder lives above his store with ***"‘^‘* “‘’ff j bred ta Otov LiT bit sTiT !»>« Marguerite. Modem music will be: ** , J* some- I ..____________ ,presented in addition to classical! where along the llhe someone j gemidassical compositions of, ha. got their stories mixed be- !QqJ^]qncf QrQUfh—^ Collects Pets and Knicknacks ARRA.NGE CXINCERT — A final check on arrangements for two concerts to be presented by the U. S. Air Kocce Band in Oxford tomorrow la given by three members of the O.xford Lions aub, which is spongoring the double event. They are (from loft) Rohert Dick, dub president; A1 Post, band committee chairman; and John Miimerfelt, matinee committee chairman. Proceeds from Utr concerts will be usi'd for the Lions Oub's charitable activttles. By ain and Germany. Her com-some 450 families of new juniorjpHnlon. Mis* Alice .Serrell, wjjj__________ and senior high srhool students in {show pictures'she took on the trip, the Roeheater Coramunlly Srhool | • I Vice president is Harold Doe- Wilder, who estimates Jie has,bier, independence Township clerk, raised more than 50 kinds of ani-iand B. J. Arcand, superintendent mals, birds and fish in his lifetime,!of Mount Hope Cemetery was elect-said he would lay odds that under .ed secretary-treasurer, his care the squirrels could sur-l The group will meet Wednesday night.s, once every two months for In the Junk busIncN* it years, dinner at designated places. Fol- whose background includes experience as a soloist, composer aiid educator. He has a doctorate in music from the Chicago Conservatory of Music. The Air Force Band and It* SSivoice rhorus known as .(h-^ Singing Horgeautk appear on a national radio show. Start Series at Brooklands mena^ne are four JaP«n^ ^u^er got sklelraeked from his | losing dinner there will be drer that romp over a la^ areai ^rtginal intent when he mov«l to ! table discussion on the best ways adjacent 10^ township from Ue- to the public, how to keep the Whoopee Bowl. ^ projee s standardized and how ,/ * * . * -. shop. ’ solve individual problems ol vari-school. The performances are be- .pike .deer of this country, toe | , , , . ous areas. ing sjxinsored by the Oxford Lion» mals^ instead of taking longj Actually. 1 had planned on ___________________ es when running, actually!building a recreation center on the i. /- n J IfTip^d dbwn. uncoiling for-'site since I own lakefi-ont prop- Mocomb CoUfity Boarcl ward with each motion. |erty.”-Wilder explained, pointing ^ RgisG 8 Salaries The nve former 'school board members resigned «then It was learned that the school district could be disbanded In ibis man- The knotty situation developed thia fall when ninth graders from the Carver district were not eeptod In Detroit high schools Wilder puichased a pair pf the to the two lakes behind his prop-7 animals from a Massachusetts breeder six years ago. WHITE SQVIRRELB------- - Another of his pet pets are five erty. Bridge and Spring lake.s. The .Macomb County Board of • • * Supei-vi^is has voted unaninious- makhig a start and decided to deal!elected officials by $1,000 a year. ■ ■■ ■ - ,1. BROOKTjkNDS — Guest speakers nnd sperlal music will highlight a four-week aeriea of ooounu- -------- ■ "» nity open- house services, startlnri The Carver Seioob ftistriet aas .Sunday at Geth.semano Lutheran no W«h school ol Its own and neigh-The concerts will be .staged in a,uifh. t boring school districts would not the multipurpose room of the hlghj * ♦ * accept the students. The Itev. Gordon Bohnke of The tkrver ninth graders now Holy (^ross ( hureh, Oxford, wilt, s|M*ak al the first serrice in the ,,, ^ . ... . , . - series al 8:30 p.m. al the churrh All proeveds will go towni-1 me Lions Club charitable projects. ' Dequlndre. In following weeks the speakers w ill be the Rev. Roland Going of are attending elasaes which havr beep net up In the township the nltuatlon is resolved. School offlcinl,s from Detroit, Oak Park and Femdale say that economic factors rather than racial CXJMMERCE TOWNSHIP ton; the Rev. Kenneth Fischer of,*'^'“‘'« admittance to the (.'arver . L.' Peace Church, Disco; and the Rev., square dance, sponsored by Jobs \vilHam Grafe of St. Mark Chureh.j """ indications pointing loji students. Area Coed Has Horse at School in used merchandise since I al-, v-....- ready had some recreation equip- The board also has set-Jan. 20, Daughters. Commerce Bethel 2T, Qrj.j,ai-d Lake, ment for sale.” as the date for a special election will be held Friday at 8 p.m. at, w * * * ♦ * on the incorpomtioii of the Village! the Commerce Masonic Temple. The emphasis will be on evange- lic .said that for the first five of Richmond into a homo i-ulc 4835 Broadway St. Tickets can l)C |i.sni in tlio open house scries. ae-| vears'all his goods were purchased city............. purchased at the door. .. . _ .. . 1 Rally Day Date Set by Club Rochester Community School Book Based on Extensive Survey I districts will hold their annual I Rally Day Nov. 4 at Howarth District. The guide was drafted by the )de committee of the Rochester Area Youth Guldapce Committer. It was based on results of a survey conducted last year of some 1,000 teen-agers and local school district. The purpoae of the guide I* to outline areas of parent nnd Iren Mr*. Carolyn gebrock and Mr*. Mary Hardy, Oakland CmiNly make for healthier family living. Further, it is designed to stimulate discussion on Issues where there are conflicting opinion* rather than provide a substitute lor family-made rules. sent Illustrated talks on me(lra>l>t whirb can be used toward etab progre** and on rtub leodonWp. Registration will start at 10 a.m. with the travelogue to- begin at 10:30 sharp. F,ach club may enter a centerpiece fi»r . the potiuck meal that follows. A prize will be offened ^(or the most attractive entry. tre to adjourn the session at 1:30 p.m. Osteopaths' Proxy Will Be Installed ARMADA - John C. Zemke. 46, of Armada was to be installed today as president of the Ameri- According to the code committee, it should serve as a springboard from which family agreev ment may be reached on such Is-sueg as dating, drinking, smoking. Entertaining and other actlvlttes. The guide has the endorsement of area gov'crnmentsl agencies, the dissolution, the question now Ts to;^hM»er B^ of Educntiim, ^ „«,p„a,. «.mKe nas I what neighboring community or. Ministerial Association and the . j. .. , , for sonic t”* communities the Carver School Dls- local Parent-Teacher As«H.iatlon a trustee of the jtrict wUi be annexed. | Council. tion during the a.s.wiation’s an: nual convention in Dallas, Te.x. Sunp«*Dntendent of Mount Clem-General Hospital, Zemke has Stables Stallion Close to CMtJ Campus so She Won't Be Lonesome WHITE LAKE TOVW.SHIP-.\ Central Michigan Univeraity cood from here may have found the answer to the campus paikiiig problem. She took her horse to college. Geraldine Berry, tt. daughter cf Mr. and Mrs. Enos E. Berry. !1665 Oprice Road, admits she has .vet to ride it to class, but claims she feels a lot less lonesome with her prize-winning quarter horse Lucky close by. And close he is, for Jerrv keeps Lucky In a barn located about a quarter niUe from the CMU campus. She -wakes tw» trip* to the barn ilaU^ to feed and exereise Mm. Jerry, a sophomore whose fam-lly moved from'Louisville, Ky., to the Union Lake area three years ago, said she took her horse ti school because she didn't want in burden her father with feed bills. "I felt that I shouldn’t let my father take care of my horse wiiile I was away, and decided to tak|^ Lucky to school and look af’e, him myself.” she The blonde coed works In tbq enmpus cafeteyln niter nchooi to earn feed money for the hone. The 9-year-old horse has won various prizes at Western shows around Michigan and Kentucky since she bought him five yearn agoj Jerry said. A 1959 gradqate of Walled Lake High School, Jerry is on a twt)- . year general curriculum at the Mount Pleasant university. Lucky coqld come in handy if Jeriy foUows throogh with hei' present educational plan s—to change sehoMs and major in a^-culture at a Kentucky colleger ‘coi"dtng to the Rev. Norman Kuck.r pastor of Gethsemane Lutheran!,, , .. • ■ • ** n Church. A fellowship hour will fol- Couplc Married in Holly low each service. years. He jAOHA before becoming president-! elect in 1939. ' Zemke is married and has five daughters. He and his family live at 73790 Church St. 2nd Bums in Night V on a honeymoon I *nd l,eonard BeaUey. both tour of Michigan and Wisconsin Holly. ScKoorfalr to Be Thursday Night The annual fall festival at Avon— ;30 31-Mile Road. Washington! it it * Township. ^er wedding the bride A condemned I'l-story (srm- | chose a ttered rhantlllv lace | house was razed alioul 11 p.m. , gown,with a chanel train and ^ ' iMlnted, wrist-length sleeves. Rich ♦ A crown of seed' pearls ami ciys-The Commerce FlreDepartment her fi^ertip veil ol silk let the building burn since it had illusion. The bridal bouquet was a been scheduled to be used for a lillcs-of-the-valley, ste- fire practice drill at a later date. Cause of the fires has not been * * .* defemiincd. Arson is npt suspect- The bridegroom’s sister Charlene and John Taylor sei-vcd t reception was held i altar,tomorrow by the school’s Parent-jTeacher-.St«dent A.ssodation. Bootiui, shops and a greenhouse .h- 0, ,h. ents. immediately followng the |phant Items and gifu. ceremony. The newlyweds^will re-j The fair will be held in tlie hide in the Holly area. | junior high gymnasium. Couple Heads for Florida Says Vows at SI. Patrick ed in either case. Taylor was maid of honor, maids were Mary Ann Lynch pf Holly. LaVonne Rhodes of Fenton and Mary Bergman of Pontiac. to Show 25 Exhibits of Coins at Holly • HOLLY — Twenty-five coiu ___ hibits will be displayed here Sun-_' day at the fourth biannual coin, ST ST™* Suprem. Court Atpironl iho« iiu be MM in (he (o Spaok iti Lolco Orioit Harold Young of Holly was be*t man. UsberN were Thomas Bergman of Pontloc, Erm^ Daft WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -St. Patrick Catholic Church was the setting for the recent wedding of Don^ Rae Shearer and Walter Nabozny. The Rev. Lewis .M. Ellis performed the morning rites. The bride is the daughter of Mr. nd( Mrs. Harry .Shearer of 800 En-nest. Road. T^e bridegroom’s parents are the Walter V. Naboznys of Detroit. Detroit. Then the nPvvlyweds left on a Honeympon trip to Mianii, to 6 p.m. Ancient coins (befwe 1500 A.D.) up to the current ypor will be on k’iew to the puUic., University) Gerali wHth her horse Lucky, that she took to doUege this year so she could be near him. She keeps Rummcfge, Bak« Sale Sef GROVELAND TOWNSHIP. - A ruinmMe and bake sale will lie h^ Sunday at the Mt. Methodist Church, Jossman and Bold llagle Roads. The sale wiU begin at 9 a.ro. at tonight's dinner meeting of the Orion Republican Chib will be Judge James R. Bgcakey Jr* of Ann Ailior. He is a nonpartisan c^^jfor Sup^ ^ Jus-] tice in the Nov. 8 election. ■ Speaker For her wedding the bride chose a tailored w’hite satin gown featuring a bouffant skirt, long sleeves and a chapel train. Her sett! pearl crown held a fingertip veil of illusion. and she carried a cascade arrangement of white Fugi chrysanthemums. The meeting will be held 7 ptm. in the Lake Orion Methpdlst ChuiEh House on East Flint Street. A question and inewer period ..MaM *f honor was Bosemary Beamer of Detroit. 51ary l.oa BbUr of Pontiac ami Mn. WII- John Nabozny of Deteoit assisted his brother as best man. Usher was William Billock of Detroit, and Dennis Shf^r,^ brother of the bride, was a junior usher. Foltowing the nuptials a recep-tlop was held M CtOrpenter HaQ, MBS. WALTEB N^WMCNfr w TVVEN' m JKEfcGO •mu cwMu' tamfiua: • lau Iff/* ,PERLB£RGSEATONi THE PONTIAC PRESS. \VEDyESDA¥, OCTOBER 26. 19^ n-Officers Royal Oak Tries Out Youth Court WytAL OAK » ~ A pratatioii jprognun that it at effectiw at tnexpentive it beta* evolved !here. It may point the way lor other comm unitie* worried about how to make law-abidtaK dtiiena out of youthful nrtt offender*. Used at the level of municipal court, which trie* minor crime. It hopes to keep the offender from ever Retttafi; into the kind of trouble that wlQ take him to circuit court. wh#re probation is a standard effort towanb refaabiUtation. * * t Mipiicipal Judge Keith J. Leen-houts is the first in Michigan to :^pe^S“lAmit€^ ^Istirts FRIDAY Dr I Perftriuees Oiiy ■ t Parformancat Daily—2 p.m. AI p.m. I OAKLAND TICKfTS NOW ON SALl IT 1 THEATER MAIL aad at ROX OEPICE probation “department" at a regular tool ol hit court. * * ★ He started it last April after consultation with the Michigan State Ooirectiom Cammisaion whoae Director Gut Harriton hailed it as unique aiftong Michigan communities. Judge Leehhduis' plan it tim^. He asks local citixena with special interests or special training to act as "probation officers." They give sympathetic understanding. counsel and help, if needed, to the offender. All are and are /xpected SlNIIRjpit CNEgUtl A "chief probatkm officer” to whom each oHender must report once a month is paid IM a month tor Ms time. That coot la privately andertvrittea. Those sentenced by the court usually are on probation from 18 months to two years. Jurisdiction of municipal courts extends nor-Imally only to misdemeanors for 'which the maximum penalty is % ' eoU Al® ■ urn . ^ ktSAKf**^ HiiiiiiiicflnrfuiiRimKi •'.: frjuucT Hiojia ' UnnMIKIlfUHUR MAKE CHECK OR MONEY ORDER PAYABLE TO OAKLAND THEATER Penti h. My chock or monoy erd*f for S_ CLOSED IIL FRIDAY BLUE SKY DRIVE IN THEATER MOW I FOR 3 DAYS So^ Hurry ~ Don't Miss This! Open 6:30 TWO GREAT-GREAT FEATURES ON ONE PROGRAM! —FOR THIS WAS THE TIME OF TEMPTATION—AND THIS WAS THE DAY OF SIN! AND - ^ All the people...all the passion . ..all the overpowering greatness of tine up to $100 «■ a iail ten to 90 days. Most sentenced to probation in the Royal Oak court pay a line; some may alio serve a brief Jail Sales of Flint Pleads Guilty $5,000 Bond Continued in Abortion Charge at Muskegon MUaiEGON (UPIl - Earl W. Sales, 61. a Flint real estate dealer, pleaded guilty Tuesday in circuit court to a charge ol perfomi-iiig an abortion in a case in which' the prosecution’s main witness said Leenhouts. "The negative punlahment only — Just doesn't teem enough; we ought to help the offender if we can.” How does it work? We are tryiag It with, fotne pretty rough boys. We expect There are now 56 men between the ages of 17 and 26 on probation. ★ ♦ ♦ Is probation preventive? This is one case, and admittedly an extreme one, cited by the judge. ♦ ♦ A A youthful car thief headed for possible imprisonment was charged only with a misdemeanor, instead of a felony, to taing him within Judge Leenhauts' jurisdiction. He was placed on probation and referred to a "probation officer” who also happens to be a psychia-^ itrist. Hewas Anown to have a month »ner! serious ^personality problem, and ales arrest. i jj arranged for him to under- * * ♦ jgo treatment at the Lafayette Judge Henry L. Beers ordered i Clinic in Detroit for six weeks, a j>re-sentence investigation for Sales and continued his bond of $5,000. Sales had been scheduled to go on trial on the charge this morning, but instead entered the guilty plea. Sale* WSB arrested at a motel In Whitehall In April and accused of periarmliig an abortion on Mr*, (ilorls Knglaad, E7, s Muskegon divorcee. In May Mrs. ttagisnd’s body was found In the Muskegon River. Her wrists and ankles-were bound by wire and she had been dead severat days. Prosecutor Harry Knudsen said Mrs. England had been the chief witness. Sales’ hearing on the charge had been postponed twice This young man later, told George A. Martin Jr., the chief probation officer; “I uwe you everything. Now I cun look forward to having' a wife and family and amounting to something.” The RoVal Oak court’s Paul Adams to Stump in Northern Michigan LANSING (UPI) — Atty. Gen. Paul L. Adams will begin a canv paign tour through Northern Mid>-igan Monday. Adams scheduled st<^ in Kalkaska, Antrim. Chaiievolx, Emmet, Cheboygan, Mackinac, Luce, Schoolcraft. Delta. Alger, Presque Find Tab Hunter Is Innocent of Beating His Dog GLENDALE, Calif. (AP)-Actor Tab Hunter has been found innocent ol charges that he beat his flog. A A * A jury of 11 women and one' man deliberated three hours on i cruelty-to-animals charges against! the blond leading man. He shook: hands, with the jurors as they left: Municipal Court here Tuesday. AAA "I’m delisted beyond words," Isle, Alpena, Marquette, and Chii*-pewa counties between Monday and Nov. 7, the day befon toe dec- The attorney genenl said Sen. Philip Hart and Aratiss Brown Jr., toe Democratic candidate for Oongress from the Uth District, would join in his "Meet the Peo-tour Tuesday in Alpena. ROW! 2 AU-TIME ! 6REAT MOVIBI fjPin Ingrid Curl Robortl pBERCMAN-JuRGENS-DONAT) The love story of the white f rneiNM 1 Feotora miseionory ^ and the Eurasian [oFmesixTf! 1 3:00 - -Midler . . under the China sky!* L mPPiN£S5 i ood 7:25 Shown at 1:15 — 5:35 — lOKM He had been accused ol beating .jIs two • year - old Welmsraner, tion department” now includes ITlFTitz. He said he had merely been men. They include a psychiatrist.! disciplining the dog as directed two psychologists, two ministers by trainers. Veterinarians testi-and a priest, school counselors and I tied the animal showed no in-princii^s, a personnel director, an; juries;' assistant city manager, a former ■ ----------------- Navy pilot with long experience in I youth work. The amount of water which flows Although the cost of the program out of the Mediterranean Sca is is negligible, the 35-vcar-old judge less than the amount which flows TnteFds tb'irefrm largely because of a higher to institutionalize it info a regular j rate ol evaporation on the water city function. | surfaces. Authorities still are investigating' her death. | ! Knudsen had said records seized when Sales was arrested indicated he was with a large-scale abortion ring that had been operating in [West Michigan. Reno Principal Keeps Eye on Rising Skirts REINO, Nev. (AP)-*A ruling discouraging girls at Reno High School from wearing above the knee skirts brought two comments Tuesday i •■AAA I David Rush, bachelor principal | ol the high school and author of! the rule, said: “there was no: edict to the students, only a statement to faculty members to watebj for girls wearing short, skirts. We felt that short skirts' coiild lead| to serious difficulties.’’ The other comment came from! Robert Clogher of San Jose, Calif.,! a spokesman for the National! Nudist Council. . j AAA . I "What is surprising to me Is that a state which permits bare bosoms in Las Vegas should become perturbed about bare knees in Reno," he said. Show Storts 7:00 M. Furnace Repair Bill May Exceed $1 Million PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (Jt - A pre- ^ limtaaly inspection showed it may cost $750,000 to $1,500,000 to repair a ruptured blast furnace at t^e Detroit Steel Corp.’s Portsmouth Division. Thatls the estimate made yesterday by A. E. Roinhard, general manager of the suburban New Boston plant. He. said the lesser repair figure is estimated if damage is confined to the break-out area. nSMU PIER ‘ ‘-AKfiHl JACK wnoSociNc flUll ; flMANCE-NEWMAN! , WMwa Bros, happily present Ttooble Along SHERRY iACKSON ■nvut^MugsMSB WCHAtlCUffnZ.^.-. FOR VOUA COMFORT Wl HAVE THE HOTTEST IN-CAR HEATERS lUST UKI TNI SUNI N 0 i m 0 W w 1 KIRK KIM 1 OooGiAS Novak ERNIE BARBARA Kovacs Rush U 8^2 I % OwaScon-EASTIMN COlM ^ERNEST BORGNINE , at 7:10 and 10:45 S. Telograph at Square Lake Rd. THE WORLD'S NEWEST AND FINEST ELECTRIC In-Car HEATERS AND AT NO EXTRA CHARGE! ELMER GANTRY IS COMING TO-MORROW SINNER! ELMER GANTRY WANTS YOU! **%uYe all sinn«SM. IN’Uall bum in hell!” KERENS GOOD NEWS THE OPENS TOMORROW HOW IS IT POSSIBLE TO BRING SUBJECT MATTER LIKE GIRL OF THE NIGHT' TO THE MOTION PICTURE SCREEN? ... BY STICKING TO THE FACTS OF A DELICATE THEME--BY FOLLOWINGMLBURPOSE AND EXECUTION THE PREMISE OF THE WIDELY-DISCUSSED BEST-SELLER-BY MAKING AUTHENTIC, EXCITING AND UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT -BY RECOGNIZING THAT THE STORY OF BOBBIE WILLIAMS HAS A MEANING FOR YOUNG WOMEN EVERYWHERE^ ANNE FRANCIS LLOYD NOLAN KAY MEDFORD -JOHN KERR I——.wTto KRKiuN - Raphael eutti' j RosENaERG Ml. JOSEPH CATES' AVANGUARO PKOOgdTKM - PRESENTED BY WJ^E A BAO& THE POXTrAC PHESS. WKnN ESDAV, OCTORKU 20. mo He's Happy With Arena That Bears I^is Name MITSKEGON (UPD—"I am wi-ll seen his dream come true in a content." ^ {recent t9ur o( the arena made tai Louis CarJisle Walker made thisig wheelchair warm-hearted Remark after tour-|-^j ^ow dear to' ing a new brick and.steel struc- tute which brightens the landscape >*: ^ treasured; of downtown Muskegon. jthis opportunity to see the arena,” j The building is the L. C. Walker said Walker after loddhg over thej Sports Arena, which cost S1.5 mil-jfacility which will be used for pub-i lion. The building i« a gift •tojiie immunity functions as well • Muskegon from Walker. as sports. Thurkay night, in the wind- | HaUter is a native of Farming up of eight days of ceremonies. | xon, a graduate of Alp. na High th«* haiHlHom<» arena will be of- |ioho«il and the rnlver»l!y of ficlaJly dedicated and preaented | MIchlKan. to the Hty. For Walker it K the ^ . ••fruition of a deemies o I d ; Walker .s faiher w^s tn the lum-dream." busine.ss in Alpi'na. but he de-, ' , k'ided to turn to something else Walker, now 83 yeais old and ^vp^t to work for a mail order; i-onfined by illness to hLs home, hou.se in Grand Rjipids in 1898. will be unable to be on hand whenj * ♦ * Vice President Richard Nixon^ a short while Jaler^^^^lkcL- and' makes the d<>dicatory speech And^ther man. A. W. Shaw txwledi Mayor Donald St>yforth accepts the-their savings of $430 and stalled arena fivm John C. Beukema,u business of their bvvn in Muske-| chairman of the Arena Dedication!gon Sinc-e then the Shaw-Walker{ Committee. jCo has prospefcKl and become a| ^ ★ * * helper in the field of producingi But the retired businessman has|business aids and equipment. i Wants to Escape Dangerous Humans state gnme protector in Niagara | The oiiginai ]azz style of mfc ' County said. “It ought to be sic was created in the tat* lft| j , iieacehi) in th«» wnotta," jeentury m New Orteans. } LOCKTORT. NY. (UPD-Pa-trolman Louis C. Raymond ia (odj up with working with humans | and is looking forwnni to a new; assignment wdhdng with "wild; animal llle" in Niagara Counij. i He was scratched scVerely 6n^ the face and nei-k by a m«h re-| cently when he sloppe*! a fight j outsale a tavern. | A wi-ek later. whs sent to slop I domestic qynrrel ami was! •ralchcHl again on the face by an , irate woman who al.so threw! a lAmp at him j Raymond, wlio w a s rccom ' memitsi (or appoinimcnl as aT HELP FOR YOU 0-JII.WA LAXATIVI HIM TIA IS •■Hteedlst fee sMtHpeHou. «i««fi- sppetHe. bleetlsf, femperery lUNet** Bfit, md etber •IlMata, wbeu due ta SMiNpeties. Thl* sll^terb tea I t tbereuyli. yel pieei* ■•w tlrastcr U k ' Tri • kalll* i bA IIITTKNS AT ALL DRUG STORES IN MICHIGAN HFLPI.NG (illl.DKK.N - For the third eon-sccutive year the Pontiac North Kiwanis Ciul) is c-0-spon.soring a therapeutic swimming pnv gram for handicapped children in the area with the Pontiac YMCA. Here- club President James Marm-Tvatches thTCOTTiid TtMTyTTiTtr1(re"T'Tijoy session .with volunteer instructor Mrs. Tlionias roniuc rr»M rh*t* Lusk. ' The pixigrum is working out woniierfully well in helping these children adjust to a more normal' life," said James Templeton, physical education director at the "Y." TIk' club presented "hrm" w ith a check "Mislay coming year. I. W. HARPER DISTILLING CO.. LOUISVILLE. KY. BOTTLED IN BOND MELLOW 86 PROOP Hidden Pay Cuts Itlamed $661 $415 $570 $557 GET OUT OF DEBT! DEBT PROTECTION INSURANCE BUDGET AID ASSOCIATION 1011 W. Huron St. (IVl biki. W. of Telegraph! FEderol 4-0951 Strikes, Fight^ Reported Among Eas^ Germans Auto Accidents Cost as Much as Roads NPTW YORK -,Pp(, Motor vt»hicle accident.s last year cost Americans as much-a.s they spent for <-on.struction and right of way; for new highways and streets, ac- BERLIN (AP) — West BerlihjWest Berlin's more conservative Isources today rc|x)t1od strikeslpapers, reported that there had _________________. ■ w., ««« and fist fights in Communist Eastibeen fi.st fights fit Stalinstadt,i^° ' ^ a riT Corn Germany Lcause of hidden wageisoutheast of ^rlin between w5rk- "O'nics department of C.I.T. Corp. cuts. [men and CommuAist party offi- The strikes were said to have]cials. Stalihstadt is on iron foun-occurred at government railroad town, built entirely by the nomics department of C.I.T. Corp. The figure for both was $5.6 bil- •pair sho()s in Cottbus and Elbers-walde, east of Berlin, in the first hfllf of October. After several hours.; a private Jntelligenoe agen- Traffic accident figures included wage losses of thoSe killed or: disabled; reduced earnings cause of disabilities; loss of fu-„ rure earhingsr and insurance well as medical and hospital i expenses and property damage. Communist countries, ey said, .the strikers went hai.-k to worker’s take-home pay. is largely; work with premises that the old determined by the “norm'' for hisj ___________ pay. scales would prevail. ijob. This is the amount authori-j * * * [ties consider a "jiarmal worker” No PloCB Like Home The reports came from the Free should produce. Tho.se who "over-| Jurists Committee. It said a sim- fulfill the norm" gct»b«jlter pay.j LONDON I'UPI) — A plaque ilar report . had been received;bonuses and other advantages. A!adjoining .Soho's Windmill Thea-from the slate’airplane foctory at^favorite way to cut wages is for ter, a well-knowTi burlesque Ihea-Dresden, but that it could not be the—' Comfiiliinist authorities tat(T^ays.. "Tiiiswas-tbc Iw.'mearnd; confirmed. liaise the norms, reportedly wtial^rniiscurT of Dr. William Hunter, an- ' The Beilincr Morgenpost. one bf nappened in these cases. atomist, 1718-178.3. I WE’RE PLEDGED TO SAVE YOU MONEY C-O-U-P-O-N 1 Lb. SWIFT BROOKFIELD LINK SAUSAGE .. FrI. and Sat. Tender Cuts POT ROAST 2r FREE Pre-Cooked . | Home Smoked Picnics 29* BroBded Steer Beef -SIRLOIN • CLUB or SWISS LSTEAK eq Guofonteed Tender Well Trimmed ^ OVER-READY YOUNG HEN fURKEYS 12 Lb. Average WITH »3iio OR MORE MEAT ORDER! LOOK WHAT A DOLLAR WILL BUY AT HOFFMAN’S! ^ SLICED BOLOGNA SKINLESS FRANKS STEER BEEF LIVER 1 OSCAR MAYER SLICED WACON ROLL or COUNTRY BREAKFAST SAUSAGE ^ ib$. ^ >|00 OSCAR MAYER SMOKED A Ac LIVER u. y||c SAUSAGE UV PAN READY FRYERSu,.2Jc FRESH PORK SPARE llOCo RIBS LD SNOW WHITE ’CHinERUIGS GRAIN-FED STEER BEEF HMD QMRTEIIS 49 lb. CUT, wiurrEO and sharp frozen free SatitiMtidB 6iiaMate«4— Ym Most Be Hapn! BEEF LOWS 59M FULL SIDES I 45* IX FOREQUARTERS 43* U-- HOFFMAN'S OAKLAP PACKING MABKET 716 fiLENWOOD \ ,Hess points out. "Vie n®w seek will om-e again bring out the ;genei-ously. sprinkled with pecan! Remember, its simple and ea.sy V and original dessert to add ruUnary creativeneM In what 'piei-es. lopped with whippfd cream, to enter All you need is imagina-e a IraditloMi highlight The Patio's tasty, smooth cheese!tion originality and allegiancq to! • most. Th«' reader submitting the win-a recipe, ning recipe will rec-eive an all-to our menu, which ^will please ice creaiBjS.tTushfidI and tempting dessert by a non-pro-in competitive bidding. The ..u—..—uo O’-ning bid was 101,0599 for a 4»i per cent coupon. The debentures are to be offered publicly at 101.656 to yield 4!65 per cent. ftoften gelatin in cold water; ado ' boiling water and stir to di.ssolve. Add .sugar, vinegar, pineapple and lemon juices; stir to dissolve sugar. Stir in a few drops of green food coloring, pineapple, cucumber and celery. Turn into individual molds; chill. Serve trnmolded on salad greens. .Makes 6 to S' servings. SAYIHO National's 100% Pure Fresh Lean Ground Beef Uan Small Dssiroble S»« Spare Ribs 39* CHECK-COWARE Our Ground Beef Is Better PPfJPpTw Wantar's Spteiaf NATIONAL ipacifll SAVE $1.00 With This Coupan I, Hysrsds's or Morhoofer't CAMNER HAMS 90 Lb. Yeunq Ttndtr SIlead Beef Liver ...... 39* BEEF TENDERLOINS 10 *6 50 FREE STAMPS With $5.00 purchase or more ond Coupon below VALUABLE COUPON FREE ,With Tkii Coupon 50 EXTRA ”;?r STAMPS With $5.00 Purchase or hfore at Notional Koi Stt Sat., Octokor 2*tk. Froili FrootoS Whola "‘.i.’" u. 7^ All Purpose Enriched Flour Gold Medal Notco All Vegetable Shortening..................3 c» 59* Dixie's Pride — Sweet or Buttermilk ■ i Biscuits..................... IU 6-^49* Chefs Delioht Cheese Spread . . ^orden's , Cream Cheese . . CeToniol Froxen Chopped Broccoli........ Libby's Finest ■ . i Pumpkin ........ 4"^r49‘ Northex Permanent Type . . Anti-Freese ... . .. m "5c OFF " LABEL—KRA-FT'S REAL Spaghetti Dinner . 2 39‘ Whipped Cream OLD^ASHIONED FLAVOR VAN CAMP'S ^Derd's'Root Beer~. Kidney Beans ... 4"?.“'’59‘ 6.1. C.. 69 39' Lake Orchard Frozen PUMPKIN PIE 29' SAVE 20-Ox. ‘10c‘ Pkg. Top Taste leet, Ckicken. Turkey, Horn, Salisbury Steak or Meat Loaf FROZEN DINNERS 49* SAVE 6c 11-Oz. Pkg. MICHIGAN Potatoes f0«29 25 U S. No. 1 All Purpose Cleaned & Washed U.S. Nj, 1 Lor«« JVk" and Up Mich. "Hond Piekod" Wottom Grown, ToJ^lMolity SNOW ^ iB Ax ■’'ANJOU APPLES O 49 PEABS . . K5TCHUP mw Hems Strotned Baby Foods • Heinz Chopped Junior Foods Heinz Concentrated Toinato Juice .UlO'5.^98* 5C WtlHo - ■ M.PFli.1 Uit 6'A^g.i Can Heinz Cream of So-Fresh Saltine TOMATO SOUP CRACKERS 5; '-10‘ save ,.Lb. 40* 6c Box H HEINZ Sweet Pickles . . 69' Heinz HEINZ SPAGHETTI OR Pork & Beans . . 7'c™‘95‘ Soups . HAMBURGER. HOT DOG OR SWEET Heinz Relish ... 2 0 Croom of Chkkon O Minifrone O Chicken kieo O Turkey Noodle 0 Chicken Noodle O Chicken Vegefehle O Vegetable Beef • Cbili Soup • Grton Split Poo . # Croom of Miiihroom HEINZ White Vinegar . . 27' HEINZ 67"*!®® Cider Vinegar . . . 29' lEAN, VEGETARIAN ' A Cons If Ac OR VEGETABLE D For #0 ) SERVING YOU BETTER "national SAVING YOU MORE rHATIONAl SERVING YOU BETTER "maI'?naO SAVING YOU MORE national 'Smr-Ri^t' BBT BlADl CUTS "SUPER-RIGHT" IS FULLY MATURED GRAIN-FED BEEF Nof Young, Immofur* Boby Btef Not'Grass-Fed Range Beef • Not Budget Beef "Supar-Righr B««f It Stl«c1«,d for Suporb Tottt cind Tondornott . , . ONE HIGH QUALITr—NO CONFUSION—ONI FIIICl AS AOVIRTISID Halibut Steak * 39c Fresh White Bass Fillets. . 49c Fresh Dressed White Bass » 39c Medium Shrimp - Sea Scallops ....... » 55c OVEN-READY—4 TO 5 POUND SIZES GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Ducklings LB. “SUPER-RIGHT ' All MEAT "SUPER-RIGHT " BONELESS BRISKET Skinless Franks £ 39c Corned Beel 59c “SUPER-RIOHT" QUALITY "SUPER-RIGHT • BONEIISS "Ground « 49c Stewing Beef « 69c Arm Cut 49c ^ English Cut « 59c A&P Bacoa Sale ALLGOOD SLICED "SUPER-RIGHT" FANCY SLICED "SUPER RIGHT*' THICK-SLICED 1 LB. PKG. 39* 49*’“^^9 ^LBERTiLJREESTONE Meddo-Land Peaches 4 ”ans 99 SPECIAL THIS WEEK! SUPER-RIGHT luacheon Meat 3 «Ns 1.00 MOTT'S TASTY Apple Sauce... 3 1-9Q EVERY MEAL BRAND Apple Butter.. 2 %°.i 39 Cut Green Beans Corned Beef Hash "SUPIR-RIGHT" 3’ Sultona Mediym^^hrimp 99c 89c Sparkle Gelatin *Vfi 29c Brill's Spanish Rice . 49c Sultana Rice SHORT CRAIN • « « 2 /kV 25c Xrtseo Shortenthg^^^^^^ S^^ 3 5r73c Ann Page Tomato Soup “fX?' 10c BANANAS LB. \Qt FINE FOR TRICK OR TREAT Mclatosh Apples 6... 59^' Pascal Celery 1'^%....29c i. 19c JANE PARKER PLAIN, SUGARED OR CINNAMON DONUTS 19* Your Chaic* DOZEN EAU CLAIRE OR SENECA BRAND CIDER GALLON JUG M# NO DEPOSIT ^ ON JUG JANE PARKER FRESH, CRISP FROZEN FOOD BUYS Strawberries TWO 8-OZ. CELLO BAGS IN BOX 59* LB. BOk 599c A&P Peas.2 35c JANE PARKER—8-INCH SIZE Pumpkin Pie . ... Raisin Bread ICED 23c . Orange Chiffon Cake White Bread nrdr" . REG. 35e ONLY 49c 19c Peas & Carrots. Grape Juice ABP ^ 35e 35c AAP'S PREMIUM QUALITY Instant Coffee... 1-29 • • RJNG 41c MARVEL—VANIILJ^ OR CHOCOLATE lOcOFPLAIEl MOTHER'S Snowdrift... 3 can 67c Quick Oats ^ . TIDY HOME REOULAR ALL AaVORS Lunch Bogs. . 2 23c Royal Puddings 3 ^^cs MOTHER'S DOLE PINEAPPLE CITRUS BLENDED Quick Outs . . . 'nra‘ 20c FroiM Juicts 4 Ice Cream Slices ?m. 29* Sharp Cheddar Biscuits OBBMIARD • Whipped Cream • • • • 4 Pontiac Area Stores Open Monday Thru Saturdoy 9 to 9 1185 N. Perry St., at Madison 4724 Dixie Hwy,, Drayton Plains 949 W. Huron St., Near Telegraph Rd. 25 W. Pike St., Downtown Open Monday and Friday 'til .9 A8tP Supermarkets Also ot . . . 637 Main St., Rochester 85 W. Flint, Lake Orion 1160 E. Maple, Wolled Lake 210 S. Woodward, Birminghom Adams at Bowers, Birmingham CLOSED SUNDAY AS USUAL THt OMAt ATUNTIC B RACIFIC WA COMPANY Whitu EmboMMt <' Pqper Napkins 2 S’So 25c tvoty Soap 4 •-'* 27c 55c ■ Grand lor Oishai, Tool Dreft, Sovu ot A&P Spic & Span 29c VSt 88c A Ivory Snow 1.33 77c «Aegulor Si Camay Soap 4 coku. 41c Bath Siiu Xainay Soap 2 Cukoi 29c •A f# THIRTY I ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. \VKDXE|^DAV. OCTOBEK 1900 Only the Bees Can Make Honey-A Universal Sw^fi BrMIfCT OOEIX cune. Which kind yx(o and your jfam^ ppeien ia Joat penonal In theta day* fabriei, ajmdwtic drugs and chem-j kally praaerved fooda It it good tar* It kMga baked goada «r**h to IpMw that one tMng-honey- far a laager tkne. « la eatbar cannot be made artiflcially. The implicated to aelftitato iaaey beet atlA have a monopoly on tta! tor aagar a* yea had bettor aa# manutheture. \ redpra qweifically caWag far Last tuffliner, down in the Greatl haary. ■ ‘ ‘ atl- stand in atiff peaks. Remove from hot. sterilized glasses and seal. iboUing watnr. Add K teaspoon! Makes 64 glasses. IvaniUa and beat 1 minute or untilS * * * .thick enough to spread. ! Nut and fruit quick breads teste To toast coconut ppread out better when they have a mild ithlnly pi shallow piui. Toast In fillin*-. Th* foUowing one ihoukl __ Jmoderate oven (350 degrees) 5 to T|hc good wlte nut bread; u .. . I . . ■ M^kM“ab^t'oJie (ton large cupii'”^™**"* «• *°*‘‘*" ! H«aey<»r*ag* Smidwtch tTlliag has a delicate flavor on other kinds after each addition to keep mixture|^yy, ....... of cake Beeblve Cupcakes 1 c«M cskt n«ar Iipyi^yds. <4 cup cborMnliis —----------------—-----------j I'i wpi hoiwy Smoides, we bad some of the best! You may. howei'er. use honey In' cImcouu. cakes turned upside down,three times. Cream sbertening.j Remove cakes from cups. Invert'^ and froated with a cooked honeyiadd honey very gradually by table-j">d *^ih Hwy FVostlng.{° fmsting. Tiy the frosting which,spoons at first, beating very hard g^* * honey we’ve ever eaten. It was j,„y railing for molasses, served with the little hot biscuits ‘ . . . hoh»t---------- WSS.WUW. .• Mwwum* wwumeslto el«ak«e» * netQ SOQa. US^ 01)6 | cUD COCOnUt. Utittd ' IhM appear at moat meala doan . * bakina oemder in olace' T«t«ubto shortentni, . , llitre. ! teaspoon oi DaKing po^^oer jn piace tutwr or mtrgarmc. \ vHut* . tMcpoae TknllU Hoh«t PrMUng thick. Add one fourth of the flour ,Cbmbjnr in top of a smaU double! * *=•*" » wi5SS“si5us wpss. aj^at until smooth and weU boUer: ^ i»»«« » e^«>t with biscuits, cbm^ine cream cheese, honey blended. .waffles or toast. ' Honey Frosting .......... 1 ttobMun «ts »iuu I Hooey Jelly *. cup tufir j 3 cup* llaitld bomi ..Ur ‘i'sStiTTfcut pwtis i I>ench dressing has an Infinite ught eorn lyrup | _______,__________, j_,„ .Inumber Of variations. One of the Combine dry ingredients, then add remaining ingredienu. Beat ahake well 16 Uend. Makes 1!4 ciffis dressing. * A A An easy honey cookie is our last recipe. It is the chewy type of Add eggs, one St a lime, beal-big well after each. Add chocolate and Mend. Add remaining flour In Iblrds, alternately with water, beating very well after jand ora^e rind. Yield; Va cup, or filling for 2 aandwiches. Measure honey and water into al, ^ a**®"’ 1 minute, or untilJarge kettle and mix. Bring to eack addition. Add vanlUa; Mend, thoroughly mixed. Cook over rap- boiling point over highest heat «xl “^‘* ** **“* I Spoon batter into greased custard'idly boiling water, beating con-jat once add the pectin, stirring You know, of course, that the of each U teaspoon of soda called ••wr. 'cups, filling each«#bout one-half stantly with sturdy egg beater or constantly. Bring to a full rolling! flavor of hmy depends on theilor 1" Ih* nxilasses recipe. | Sift flour once, measure, add fun., Bake in moderate oven (330|at. hl^ speed of electric beater.jboil and imnnediately remove'fttomi flowers from which the nectar' Beehive cupcakes are little soda and salt, and sift tbgether degrees i about 25 minutes. 4 minutes or until frosting Wll!the slpve. Skim, pour quickly into Nutmeg Frenek Dressing ground DUtmes Combine honey, salt and egg; stir in coconut. Drop mixture by heaping teaspomifula on a greaaed baking sheet. Bake in slow oven (325 degrees) 12 minutes, or until slightly browned. Makes about 1 dozen confections. Food Club for those who shop hr QUALITY . . . and don't mind paying a little LESS ... Sweetly nourishing, deliciously refreshing . and ripened the golden sunshine of our 50th state, Hawaii . . . FOOD CLUl Hawaiian Pineapple is of the same high caliber as the best-known brands of Hawaiian pineapple. But compare the prices! fresh ; Ground 6®®* “49‘ plain or GARLIC ^y^Bolpgn® ‘45 food club, 'or . snowdrift : Shortening Leg-O-Veal Wrigleys Tender, Sno White, Specially Selected Milk .........^^IciLYeaL............ Knuckle Bone Out 49 lb. Veal Shoulder Roast With Pocket for Oressing Breast-o-Veal V»ot Rump or Sirloin Roast Food Club Food Club Hawaiian Pineapple Juice 29i 59f. Veal Chops Rib or Loin Veal Chops 79v BELTSVILLE Oven Ready^ Govt. Inspected TURKEYS 46-Ox. Cat! F(X)d Club Hawaiian Crushed. Chunk or Sliced Pineapple with jSancty from {Vrigletjs Everybody’s Favorite 5c Candy Bars H«rsb«T M a M Milky Wsy 2 Chenky , _ GmJ ead Rtonty . - t*H Candy Corn Jelly &eans Kiddie Pops Dum Dums Butterfinger torge Selectiw ef Fr«h FOM Ivlorthem Orchord* Sw^ Pim , ApirfB Cider OR 8ABY RLITH Cole Slaw Dressing With Butter Seosooing Pops-Rife PopCorno, y.how Pkg Free Kitetien T«we( Breeze Detergent I,c Sole lifebuoy oTc'^oi Pure Mild Ivory Soap Pure.Both Soep Ivory Soap Ivory Flakes Feel Reollv Cleon Zest Soap Graham Crackers Nobisco Oreo- , Cream Sandwiches Strongheort Dog Food Brooks Chili Hot Beans 4 59“ Wilderness 49' AtterfiM rlevert m ^ Royal Gelaiin' ^ Ceuton Hat N« Cesli Value. •!¥! to g Ceiliier tetore She Checks Yeor OrUer. Apple Pie Filling Swonee White or Colored Toilet Tissue ;AAork3s Thrown ' i Stuffed Queen Olives 39' VIotic Sweet , Cucumber Slic;es^ ^ 5Jr 39* EA^TER WnTH GOLD BELL OIFX THK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXKSDAW PC TOBKR 20. 11K«) THIRW-ONE Raisin Bread Makes Simply Elegant Toast Zips Up Liver yere * a tasty way to prepaw tiver: Dip sliced liver il pound>: m French dressing then dredge in Food tastes turn with the seh-two-thirds cup enriched flour in|>ons and as (all comes biusterii* w-bich teajqnon garlic sat, winter, we teaspoon salt and ^ teaspoon peb.i**P" “«"“*• As an k.™ b*» S21S' riowly In tord or drippings untUi Let s begin with one ^ the slm-well browned. I ply best—raisin bread toast. Take ---------------jit as a crisp golden slice of good- Need a quick and deUciousi"*“ ver its many match- party punch recipe? Combine 1 (4/5 qt.) bottle of any California dessert wine with 1 quart pf the sherbet of your choice. Stir just until the lumps are out — it will be of milk-shake consistency. Serve it in punch cups as an afternoon or evening treat. mates. Some of the best are fruit mixtures which give the sweet touch to toast. Fnilt-toppfid toasts go along delightfully with hot chocolate or coffee for the late eveniag re-freohmenl, and they may also lunch. Prarh-annainon TonSi i Toast or Cseoant Toast, a two-aomo rertaii to please teen-age gueots. With a little more preparation, you may serve a French toast version — Pineapple Upside-DowB French Toast or Ap^e Butter French Joast. These, too, are right (Or the day's little me^. Pineapple I’pside-Down French Toast ptasoppis tTrsp Melt butter in a i8- or 9-inch) square baking dish. Blend in brown sugar and pineapple and qtread evenly over bottom of the disl^ Sprinkle sirup over pineapple ture'. (Combine beaten egg and in a shallow pie plate. Dip bread slices, one at a time, into egg mbc-tore, turning them to coat both sides. Place bread slices on top of pineapple mixture. jfnoving from oven, then invert diahj over a ser\'ifig platter so bread! slips out, sugared side up. Serve! immediately. Yield; 2„ servings —| 2 slices toast per serving. Peach.Onnamoa Toast m ... clnotmoo rolUa brtad .japoont SulUr . •Hen canotd pastlMw, Ortlntd uMwposaa Srooo aunr. alltad Spread butter on bread. Arrange four slices canned peaches on each slice of butterrd btead. Sift brown sugar over peaches and bread. Place on a shallow pan and bake Bake in a hot oven (400 degrees) I*" ®ven (450 degrees) (or about>„ egg, untU lightly browned on top, about »«> minutes. Yield; 4 servings, twenty-five minutes. Let stand in Orangc RalsIn Toast baking dish one minute after re- 3 ubiaaposaa sratas orsnta nod l%w'’irsnXi#d‘aus*r tgrca4fd waffle baker until nicely »tuw,«uiirkS.dtd)at I browned Serve immediately, ^ -Combine orange rind, oiangc|‘®PP*'«l “'“h ‘tuifecttoners' sugar, ljulct, sugar and cinnamon. Spread I *^'*‘.*^* ''^ben i», ,.N»p«« one sidb of each slice of toast. jPlace toast, spread side up, on an I ungreased cookie sheet. Toast der low broiler iieat for five minutes, Serve Immediately. Yield; 7 servings — 2 slices toast per serving. Apple Butter French Toast 1 «tta. bMUo I t>nlHpn«0> sppit btUUr t illcM rsUin brtsd I Ubinpoen eoatMtlpotri' sutsr Cmtiblne apple butter with beat- bread into egg mixture, one thee time, turning them to coat sides. Bake In a hot, well- H cup ttun tonrccueobrs' lutsr IcMf I cup *hr«dd«4 MMOtti I •llcbi rsKla bread taset Spread 1 tablespoon king o each slice of loait. Sprinkle 2 tablespoons coconut over each slice. Place on a cookie sheet and broil under low broiler heat for five minutes. Yield; 4 seiv|ng8 — 2 slices toast per servlSg. Butteneotoh-Peeaa Toast S|»ead eadi slice of taUc^odir sugar sprinkle with 1 taMespoon pecam. Place toast, spread side dp, oi» op ungreased cookie Toast under low hroUor heat tor flve minutes. Serve immediately. Yield; 4 ■ervlngl — 2 slicct toast per serving. Dip I ton butter bT msrtbrUM 1 illcM rbiila bread taait H eup chopped peeaae Combine butler and sugar. This Is q Surprise Are you surprised? A recent study made by the U.8. Department of Agriculture shows that homemakers who most often use convenience foods (such as prepared flour mixes, frozen foods, frozen complete meals, soups, etc.) are not thoM who work sway from home, but those who stay home all day Wrigiqy Blue Ribbon Farms Specially Selecfed Chuck Roasts Center Blade Cuts Round Bone or English Cuts 59V Pot Roast Cuts 37. The King of All Beef Roasts Real Beef Flavor Standing Rih Roosts 69*- Fiesh Cioimd Chuck Lb. Table Trimmed Lean Tender Cubes Swiss Steak Center Blade Chuck Cots Boneless Beef Stew m THIRTV^TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. W KDNESDAV. OC TOBKR 26. 1960 Polk Put Dans r Ahead in Slate SetJJime Bomb' for Nancy Anne News Survey Gives AAcNomara, Swainson and Kennedy lead DETROIT (UPIi '- With just two weeks remaining belore the election, the Detroit News polls Tuesday showed all three top-Democratic candidates leading their Republican riviils iii Michi-‘ gan. A poll published Tuesday had-Democratic U, S. Sen. THitruk V McNamara leading Republican Alvin M. Bentley 52.6 per cent to 44.3 per cent Polls publishV'd Stunday And Monday had Sen John 'K. Kenm>dy leading .yicc President Richai-d-i M. Nt.xon 53.3 per cent to 43.9 per (cnt, and gutx'rnatorml candidate John B. Swainson in front of Paul Bagwell 54.4 per cent 'to 43.3 per cent. MONTAGUE Mh-Likc 11 m bombs loaded with affection. That the stale .of this tiny community, neighboring Whitehall and nearby] greater Muskegon ticking off the] days toward a giant homei'oming' for Amefica's sweetheart, They’re'triggered to explode Fri-| day. That marks the staH of a two-day program honoring Naney Anne Kleniing in her first hometown apiiearam-e since she was named Allss Amerfct In Meplem her. The lovely iR-year-old brunette will spi-rsl Thunsday in seclusioli witti .her *|«m nl.s, Mr. and Mrs . Rolw'i t M . Hemiog of Montague, and her three .sounger sisters and two hrolhers, Their visit wais arranged by the sponsoring .luni^ Chandler of^ Commerce for an undisclosed loea-, Hon to block intrusions "They’re going to move Ihej house, " says Fleming. ”I don't even know where wc*re going." But bark Into the spotlight goes Naney Friday morning In a mo-lorea^ starihig from Muskegon i Helghls. Greater Muskegon Jay-' ree President Kalph .MrKibhIn has asked that area sc-hools let their pupils out for a look. , The caravan nlpyes to Muskegon j where Nancy Ani^ won the title iof Miss Michigan last July. Itj ipasses thitnigh North Muskegon, 'and speeds up (or the l5-piile run] I to the chemical indust ry implex ' iof Whitehall and Montague whpsej combined population is 4,696. \ * ★ a Here the lid |Kips off in rivic pride Schisils'are being disrnissc-d'after morning classes to let students join the eelebralioiT......... i Eighteen high sc hool, bands plus the ScoItviHe Clown. Band "Rhe up for a parade starting (at 1 p.m.i in Whitehall At least -34 other units] including civic and industrial floats from Western Michigan join the parade. An Indian group from DeWltt is included. NIXON CAN’T MAKE IT I The line of march leads to Montague's memorial athletic field luid reception. Rep. Robert P Griffin, R-Mich , Whitehall Mayor Carlos Mikkelson and Montague Mayor Ralph Dillabaugh are among principals. Prior commitments have blocked attendance by Vice President Nixon and Michigan's Gov. Williams. Mins America Is being Joined nt the field by Donna Jean Shep-ard of Dowagiac who wa« first runner-up in I Eton Grads in Demand '•* Orndunles said •*OW Efonlaas I A new kit boat ia made by dmw-" ling a fabric "sock’’ over a corru- cated paper form. After the fabric has been hardened with resin the . *lorm is removed. LONDON (ITI) - An artkh 1 on employment in America In i the ttW edition of OpportaniUcr ' aireu and busbawfs." Nancy Anne also officiates in Cloning Beverly Barteau. 18, as Mis^'hite Lake, It's a title that starle<^^Jhe winsome former life-l gui. J-sbd^ clerk on her way to the .Miss America crown earlier this year. \ . —^ .. n severe straight-bagk„hair- About :M per^s ace expei ted, later at a civic t^timoniai din-1 for Naru'y Anne^t the high| sr PfeaMiti sso.eoo LAWSl'lT — Actress Audrejj Hepburn, boyish' looking defendant damage suit for J30.000. hool where sh^‘“gra^at^ ik^st'! Another actress. Joan Lora, asks I the damages for injuries she sa^s she sustained two years ago when her car and Miss Hepburn's collided in Hollywood. RAZLEV CASH MARKET JL 78 NORTH SAGINAyf LEAN SLICED BACON ROUND SIRLOIN SWISS SIBIKS TENDER BEEF 1 1 SIRLOIN TIPS TENDER RIB STEAKS 49c ll| 1 CUBE 1 STEAKS 89*“ T-BONE STEAKS 69*“ CHOICE BEEF CHUCK ROASTS ts "49- BONELESS RUMP ROASTS 69*“ MEATY BOILING BEEF 19‘‘ MEATY BEEF POT ROASTS 33*“ FRESH PAN READY FRYERS M LEG OR RUMP ROASTS 39* BREASTS 25 :c Lb. I VEAL lAc ] CHOPS Til GROUND BEEFi REMUS BUTTER sr BULK Sausage 29’ SPARE RIBS 29*“ Ml«-| that Fast (ierman refugees make gram. ' ......... A Miss America ball Saturday' night for adults at a Muskegon' Hole] and one for teen-agers at ]the MusRegon Aimory the] I whirlwind .schedule. I Decorative signs already have blossomed in the area. ; The feverish pace nj>ght leave Muskegon County celebrants limp hut for Nancy it’s a springboard toward commitments elsewhero on her good-will rounds as Miss Amer- Refugees 6.5 Per Cent of W, Reich Population Up O.S |ier cent of West Germany's population. Mlnisir.v Secretary Peter Nuhm said that 333 refugees dally crossed the Iron Curtain during the first nine months of t060''and that nearly half of them wero under ZH .years old. PURE I LARD 13onful. Take home Big Chief or Pioneer sugar next time you shop. w ) YOU’RE RIGHT TO USB MORE ^ MICHIGAN MADE PURfc SUGAR grnwn ind pr Michigan peopk. • - , 4,.-- - I Roneer • _ Ftlui sugar 'A m ( lytasu ^jl .y— Michigan makes so many ears—and ranks so high as an industrial state—that the importance of agriculture to Michigan is often overlooked, Factis™ that Michigan—with*$740 million in cash receipts, the largest share (27%>irom dairying—ranks among the top of all states in farm marketing. And that’s saying a lot because farming, by any yardstick, is the nation’s biggest industry. Farmers produce more, sell more, buy more, create more jobs than any other single industry. ♦ ^0% of all jubf injjrixmteemploumenrare^fmted— by agriculture—either on the farm, processing farm products or supplying farmers with their needs. In Michigan, V3 of alt jobs are created by agriculture. • Sales of farm products totaled $32 billion last year. That’s twice the total of auto and truck sales. ^ f^arniers spent over $2S billion lasl^year—inctud- ’• ing $7 billion for food and clothing; $5J billion for feed and fertilizer; $4 billion for automobiles, trucks, machinery and equipment. Farmers are Michigan’s biggest customer. . «) ' Agriculture and industry—cars and cows—go hand ' in hand in Michigan and throughout the nation. Each has a vast production capacity. Each is a vast market for the other. They thrive together in a ^ sound and stable econofpy. Michigan Milk Producers Association OWNED AND OAENATEO EV 13,000. Mt^itIOAN OAINV WANMCNS j \ low TRICES pfus green STAMPS it's no1^j|'||l^^ to save with these With Coupon Below 5 POPULAR FLAVORS THE KIDS WILL LOVE! Canada Dry Pop * Oranq* • » Grape • > Itoelt Cherry 12-Oz. I Cons SAVE IOc—FRESH BRAND POTATO CHIPS . SAVE lOc—TOPS BRAND FRESH FIG BARS VALUABLE COUPON .AAA4I ^ GLENDALE'S i Skinless Franks VALUABLE COUPON jo SOLD LABEL II Ice Cream ' Yernor's GINGER ALE 5 Large 00 Bottles I PLUS DEPOSIT ~ PIECES S STEMS . 4.0Z. $ I ( Cavern Mushrooms ............ . ^ Cam I SAVE I Ic ON 3 ROLLS Food Fair Wax Paper , Roll 19 SAVE lOe—FLAVOR-KIST Chocolate Chip Cookies PersohaT Ivory Soap . . . I Z Ban 7 7 SAVE 27c — California Yellow Cling Halvas Hunt's Peaches 4 SAVE 6e—ITALIAN STYLE Hunt's Tomato Paste.................3 cfn*. 29* SAVE It—FLAVOR RICH Hunt’s Tomato Sauce . . ..,... 3 cfnt 29* save 17c Hint's CoHfoppjo VALUABLE COUPON 29' ht «ny Pooij Fair thru Sat., Oct. & Limit; One Coupon. Adulti„0i«t7s.lf TnfmvrmryWTa «'a 5' _______________ I o Maxwell House, Hills Bros, : “ Cheso S Sanborn, or Booch-Nut Coffee 'One 1-U>. Can coupon at' any Food Pair thru Sat.. Oct. »th Limit; One Coupon. Adults Only. P [po Extra S&H|i |f Green Stamps i\ ^ wirii Purchasa of_ ^ ! 7 or Mort. Ftqi. of 4 ' SAVE I3e ON 3 CANS—UNPEELED Hunt's Whole Apricots .. SAVE Be—HALVES HUNT'S HALLOWE'EN CANDY h this Coupon St any Food Fair through Saturday. Oal. 29th:';; T Limit: One Coupon Catsup.. HUNT'S TOMATO Juice.... 4^89' »«rjJ 3 i. $100 s ^ I " am J - MJ1A0 Jm THE PONTIAC PRfiSS, WEPyESDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1960 Stuff Golden Onions With Macaroni Autumn'i golden r«y« often turn a cWUy bhte at lundown—a tliiie| when hurrying home to the warmth of a good hot supper makes pleasant antidpatkin. Rewardii« indeed is the sight of a great steaming bowl ot hot soup, ready to be ladled into mjiRs or cups to toe sipped before, or along with the meal. Soup's friendly. Sharing a cup of it is a cozy, warming affair. It srtmulaics good feeling, and warms the way for good things to follow. It’s "friendly" toward other foings are. The Insider’s News-'foods wrapped in airtight plastic tually not difficult to provide, reported recently. I packages lor study, the FDA also menu, and baked custard top it off Hot Buttered freaiu of tlilrkrn • B«-el Broth lean ilO'i ouncoi condi-nicd 1 caa‘ao'i ‘^ein coudnuad, bed.top with buttered crumbs. Arrange can* aat«r baking dish. Bake in moderate !cnen (350 degrees) about 30 min-Blend' soups in s nicepan: add utes or until'onions are tender, water. Ifi"It. stirring CKcasionally. Makes 6 servings. ■ The study follows the report of reports an i imber of Cheese-Onion Gems ^ shell about *4 inch thick. Mean- two deaths in Minnesota last week returns of these products to super-, while cocA bacon unlil c r i s p. I which were attributed to botulism,! markets. Consumers have com-Drain: crumble. Add to macaronlja usually fatal type of food poLson-1 plained of a high percentage of and cheese. Toss well. Fill onionling. In both cases a ready-to-eat spoiled fruits and vegetables which cavities with macaroni mixture; brand of unsterilized smoked-fish (contaminate their neigti,bors more packed in airtight plastic wraps!rapidly in the absence of was blamed. ------;----------- The FDA confirmed the presence A magnetic “weather stripping I t eup( ilftbd cnriciMd flour 1 tableipoon biklug povdar Uuapoon talt % cup fm»ly graUd cbeddgr cheese H cup finely chopped onion 1 tablespoon lard in the fish of Clostridium botulinum, I for stonn doors holds the door a bacillus which grows only in the shut. cording to a recipe recommended by Rebn Staggs, home economist,. are antrittous fare for they contain one-third cap of lard, an {gg, a half cup of milk and te^th^rds enp of grated eheddar cheese,' A11 Igariu' these ingredtenls have excellent Grease 12 medium-size muffin food vaJue. jpans. Sift together flour, baking A sprinkling of sesame Seed powder and salt. Cut in V3 cup! lard .until mixture has a fine -even crumb. Stir in ^ cup dteese. Add to fldnr and cheese ndxture and mix -ligtitly with fork. -Comblae milk and beaten egg. Add to floor mixture and stil nntll jnst moistened. (Batter will be stiff.) Fill muffin pans %-^uU, SJw-inkle. tops of muffins with remaining cheese and sesame seed and spoon ^4 teaspoon melted butter " or margarine over each. Bake in a hot oven (4(» degrees F.) for 18 to 20 mlnut|s. Yield: 12 muffins. An automatic letter sorting machine, which is believed to be the world's largest, handles 36,000 let--ters per hour. PAUL'S IGA FOODLINER TabfeRite (Blade "Cut) CHUCK Ronsi Pound . . . 1980 Auburn (Corner of Crooks and Auburn Rd.) (Following Items and Prices good only ot Foul's IGA) Delicious TobleRite, Standing Rib Roasf "Freezer Beef Sole'' SIDES lb. 52c FROWTS lb. 44c HINDS, lb. 62c CHUCKS. Ib. 46c ROUNDS, lb. 62c CUT AND WRAPPED FREE OF CHARGE TableRife J3 round. Beef______ 49’ 3 i T 39 Sweet 6rai4 Prize (PHILGO PORTABLE TV) Grand Prize APPLE CIDER Gal. 69 Q I Delicious With Cider FRESH DONUTS 19' * Bicycle • Space Rocket • Cathie Doll Set < • Fire Chiel Set • 6 Elsie Dolls * Balloons and Comic Books for the Kiddies * Coffee. Chocolate Drinks (Fri.. Sat. Only) * Pnmpkins to First (100) Customers (Thursday) * Cottage Cheese to First (100) Customers (Friday) * Loaf ol Dread ti) First (ICO) Ccstomers (Saturday) IGA Instant Goffaa 6-oz. Jar Strowberry Preserves.. 20-oz. Jar ^1^^^ Delicious Armour Tree! BASKET of GROCERIES —— Every Hour Pri. and Sot. Fresh Angel Food IHKE McIntosh APPLES 4 ^ 39‘ Fjresh CARROTS ^9 Cello Packed 3-Lb Bag looKinG onions Only THE rOXTlAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OC TOBEH 10«o Buy Costly U.S. Residences African Nations Open Pjurses ADAM AMES ■ Ar CHOKED UP — K. T. Keller, former chairman of the board ■ of Chrysler Corp., mumbled something about a cold and wat-pty eyes as he tried to respond to • Wilber^ M. ^ Brucker. secretary of the Army, as he was awarded a medal for , distinguished civilian service iSiesday night at Ft. Knox. Ky. The award w;as made at a meeting of the Army Scientific Advisory PKANEL. By RITH MONT(iO.MIJl¥ WASHINGTON - Teen - a^rs and the new African nations have much in common. They re-parental control, but perpetually have their hands out for allowances." They want what the other kids in the new neighborhood have — in' a hurry. They insist on sharing the family car and pocket-book, but are reluctant to work their way up in tK»e world sjowly. like Dad did. Not a single one of the new African republics expect lo gel along without foreign aid. All of thetn have asked us for financial help, and most are perfectly willing to accept it from Red Moscow — like the dope peddler oh the back sti'eet — is so anxious to make juvenile delinquents out of the young nations that Uncle Sam is ia an unaccustomed rush to shower them with dollar aid. It therfore comes as a bit of a shock to Washingtonians to how lavishly they intend to live among us, while counting on largesse. A week or so ago. the newly recognized government of the Cameroon tonce a French protectorate! paid $210,000 for a field-j stone mansion located in our moBt| exclusive aiea overlooking Rock| Creek Park, The house, with i(s gracious | drawing room, eight bedrooms and servants’ quarters, changed hands six years ago for lesa than $75,-000, The new owner added a swimming pool, and picked up a neat profit in re-telling to the naive young natlon-ln-a-burry. This nearly quarter -million -dollar transaction provides only a residence for the Cameroon ambassador. The nation is still shopping for a chancery to hou*^ oflicetf for him and his staff'. A few da’ys earlier. Guinea proudly announced that for $225,-000 it had,acquired the residence of Frances Knight, chief of our State Department's passport division, and her husband, This also produced a whopping profit for the owners, and .seemed to indicate that the new African nations may have an inflated idea of what it takes to keep up with the Joneses. . Ghana, a slightly earlier newcomer to the family of nations,' bought an equally lavish mansion . last year in the same exclusive > area adjoining the park. These cstaMIsbmenls are far i ■uperlor to many of the Waoh-Ington embassies of larger, more i prosperous and better estab. I llshed foreign nations. Certainly | the prices paid are setting new : highs for extravagance. Two years ago. the Kingdom of Jordan paid only $lj0.000 for a. house and all. of its fui-nishings. which serves the ambaxsador both as a residence and a chancery office for the staff. TreeT '-naner interested, person may: hates to take his vacation thi.s time of year Says Mill Production] enroll. No previous college back-1 his firm's busiest season. But I MAKE him. What': Low for Year necessary, Ekiund said.! being his own boss?" Near NEW YORK (UPII-A dear-cut textile recession is now in the| making, according to Prentice-j Hall. IiK-. ‘ I After a false upturn in May, i mill production has resumed its for the yror. the publishing hou.se says. ' Industry groflts are atxo he-ginning lo-^ falter as second | quarter rrtiiros dropped below | a .vear ago for the first time in two years. P-H reports that selected textile sccuritie.s will soon offer good opportunities for cyclicah capital gains. * ★ ♦ Oark,'Dodge & Co. believe most unlikely that the market lows will hold more than just temporarily and it is entirely possible that the 520-550 area will be reached before the cledion rather “than after it. Moody’s stock survey jays that no one could be surprised by po.stelection spurt in the event of a Kennedy victory but it is too early for a w ell-grounded bull' ' market to begin. ♦ ★ S. B. Laurie of Josephthal A-(’o says that next year’s eamings - rtf Deere A- Co. may double II-/! $2 .50 a share that seems likely in, 1960. There's a potentially big re-1 ■ placement market in farm equip- j ment, he says. A * * United Business Serivee lists 10 stocl^ the mutual funds are buy ing: AT&T. Gillette, IT&T. N.Y. -Sfaie Electric & Gas, Pepsi-Cola, Philips Lamp, Reynolds 'Tobacco, Swift, Upjohn and West Penn Electric. ItWill Be Chili Instead oi Talk at.PTA Meeting A chili supper from 5; 30 to 7:^ p.rn. Thursday will be served in Waterford Township in place of MeVittie School's regular Parent-Teacher Association meeting. The school Is located on Midland Road ■ just behind the Drayton Shopping Center. There wfll be an open house at 7; 30 tomorrow night at the Cooley PTA meeting. Following a. short busiiien meeting and coffee period, Mrs. PhyllUi Greenberg, coordinating number-aid (xmsultant in the Waterford Township school systeih, wOI talk on new instruction in mathemati-also discuss I a mathematical sub- - Or, David Wells of the Oakland, County Board of Education wrU| aslo di.scuxs a mathematica] subject, "New Trends, in Mathemar tics." siffvS m TIIK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1960 ^ lusiness and Finance Market Rallies From2-Yeariow jSoviets Confirm Congo Boycott Navy Junks Plan to Sink Old Cars hr Ariiiicial Reef MARKETS |6fain Wees Stay NEW YORK (?i - The siwk market raltM above its lw>o-year The following are top prices Steady to Easier : UNITED NATIONS ('UPIt - Thej covering sales of locally grown i Soviet Union formally announced >roduce brought to the Fanner's | CHICAGO (*'—Piices for Krainil Tuesday it will refuse to pay Ms darket by growers and told by' were mostly steady to slightly eat-share of a $66.6?5.fXX) appfopria-I them in wholesale package lots. 'ier in the futures market today , jtion which Secretary General Dag Quotations are furnished by the - Pta. tAPt - The US. D„w 11 kl !N“vy has vetoed a Dade County KOTUStt TO ray U-N*|pian to sink 1.000 wrrap automo-$66.6-Million Share of biles off Miami Beach to create - SI* • .inn artificial reef. Peace Mission ; Navy isn’t opposed to 4jood fishing, such as a reef would provide. but ia worried about submarines. Submarines — and the Navy doesn’t mean ours—could hide alongside the reef. All that the Hammamkjold refjuesled to cover moderately active trading early Bureau of Markets, as of There was commercial demand the first six months of the U.N. today. The list was irregulariy higher at| best, including a wide assortment Detroit Produce rivin Ol losers. ^ Applf$. OeUclou*. bu ... Some technical recovery was in'J^U;' “bu. the cards after seven straight daily bu declines, brokers said. Appi.t, «oU airtr. »u'....... e * * ‘Ors^«,^*CoBcord.*'j^, . Gold Issues gave ground as thc^J" bu price of gold bullion in London Ml , «“•"«: <>'' from Tuesday’s close. Ilomestake' VKoaraaLBs was down about 2 point* and Dome a*«i* do* b. R.d!^\lot' bchi. RtdUlMt. WhIU. do*, bch* . Horicrtd.1^, pk. ■ irtbl. do* bch [I. doi. bch*. undersvater detection devices would report is that something ,for nearby wheat i-ontracts, pre-j peace mission in the Congo. "f* sumably reflecting exporter sales.! a * * Whether the something is just iSelling of new crop 1961 deliv-; Hanimarskjold foi-warded ih.-a pile of bamacle-encnisted autos, cries apparently was based on re- rtxxjrd appropriations request to'"'' » Pl“* « lurking enemy •I w ports that seeding progress was the General Aswmbly’s Admmi.s-1 sub. is p question the Navy dotsfi’t 3 « good the past week / trative and Budgetary Committee wan to be forced to answer. , D«‘mand lor corn was 8low.|X„estor sf Mr*. Bda* Skidmore; droa sad two ire*t-sr*ndchtl-drta. Oravooido •ervlee will bt bold Wodno*d». Oct. M. at 11 aim. St the OsAvlow Cemsun. Royal Osk. witb Rcr. Tbomat w KIrkmsa offlelatlnk. Ptinersl ar-ranctment* wort made by tho Lowii B WInt Funeral Rome. Clarkiton,__ ___ _ _ _ bRUSMICK. OCT J6. ISSO. DORO-thy M.. MTl Brimfleld. Auburn Helfhu', asa M; beloved wife of Wllfism Orutmlck: dear mother of Robert Oruimlek: dear (ittcr of Mr*. Beatrice Dudley. Mrs* Helen Rlopolle. MUdred. LtllUn. Bdwarfl and Barry Vine. Funeral arrancementa art pendIBf at th* Moor* Chapel el Spark*-Orllfln --------. «------ Auburn Relshu. In Memoriuir. ^ 2 LOVINO MEMORT op OUR 'eor moth* ---- sued 'swa; 3w^ I aao I ! frdm H Tou are oot ioriotteo Dauchter dear. Nor fver ihall you be: A* kmt a* life, and •aemorloe la«t. We iball rkmember thee —Palber and Mother. IN LOTIHO MEMORY. OP OUR mother Mildred Snell who oaued away 4 ye*" Help Wanted Male 6 Insnrance Salesman OAKLAND COUNTY AGES 27-45 Mutual at Omaha-* OoMra An-'' nirtnary cts aeaa morp e(kah ■ to you Uirouih their speelel boottt ympisif I ^UII UMioni • ayiSiId Tho on earth you are no mor< But to i»mory you are with u f Dialed by ( Rae^ Dick. IN LOVINO MEMORY OP MARIE WUhclm who paued awa> 2 year* ago today. CKt 24. im. Ip my heart yaur memoip Unger*. -•--- tender, fond wd true; Alway* TV — I d a day. ■ear Mather. >y her dauthter. ■fly DETROIT STOCKS I, Surly, doa. I Naw York Stocks *is rtlUf** •b*'- llectmal point* a to Allen Electric Equipment Co.. 100 Baldwin Rubber Co............ - t 00 areal Lake* Cherolr*! Co. 1 Michigan Besmieu Tub* Co. . > M Prophet Co. ............ . 2 >0 Rudy Manufarturing Co. . . ‘ f2'Bh*tlerproof Oita* CoTp.. - . 5 >• Toledo Edlton Co. * m Vernor* Ginger Ale tac. I 10 *t»>n>lntl quotallohr e eighth* j^uavl News in Brief The Silver luike (ioM Club. 3M3 W'alton Blvd., Waterford Township, was broken, into last night and S222 worth of golf clubs and equipment wa.q stolen, the club manager told township police this morning. Melvin Staebler ot 38*7 Koeb-crofU Road, Independence Town-j I ship, reported to sheriff’s deputies . f Tuesday that his home had been id'Iaked * * . , (broken into and ransacked. Nothing - - -iJ: The curt Soviet statement set tbe|apparently was taken, he said. ■ stage for a severe U.N. financial crisis which some Western sourc’.s' Fall sale. Large selectiefi of .. p».ibiy clSM XSS,' U I ----------?------- , iof pumpkins,. Indian corn, gourds - . r I p* bittersweet; squash $159 'i Defense to End Case 's Id Str* I Chal > Ltd . 40 g iqutkh, Bultirnut. ^hu 72 2|squkth. Hubbard, 'j t AlcM Am AlrUn :re»ge, f TT 4lToir 1* 0 Ton •tPdy _Jt Cf . Am Mator* . 10 2 *-»' • Cabbage. Kro'ger .. 20 T Turol^! lopped, 1 LOP Olaa* 4T2i Lone 8 Cem I Lon* 8 0*» .’a j collard. bu A Lorlllard 90» Endive bu Am Til A T*1 00.4 V?" ^ Am Tob 02 2 Mshblng '> Eaqarole. bleached, bu. JT-eL*?. ...... Si *‘•'■‘1" C6 10 4 Kale bu A?mm till M f W»> ° «1 3 Lettuce, Bibb. pk. Armour A Co lO.T i.m.,. k- JS Barrymore, Pals '/^gainst CaipentefS 11 Ordered to Court in Ringing Feud 49c. so lb. bag $1.95. Groceries. I meats, beer, wine, and liquor to take out. Hours 8 a.m. to 12 pjn. |7 da.v.s a week. RITTERS FARM MARKET. 3225 W. Huron 8t. FE j 8-3911. adv. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. lUPIl - sale. Thurs., Oct. 27. (Tlic delcnse was expected to con- 9-9. C.A.1. Bldg.. 5640 WilllBm.* Lk. ielude its case today in the bribery :Rd. Waterford Branch W:N.F.p^A. top Carpenters 209 fcrck .. ! . 2 00 home (API—John Bairymore 1» Jr ; the girl he plans to marry, a. her tWO“l8i'wUinjq have r> -j wmci VI Vv'iiri. .. ordered to trial Dec. 12 on charges' The tiu;ee, Lnion PiTsidentiReservations call Mrs. Murra^ 1 "Ithey have been pf’stei-ing the|Maurice Hutcheson, Vice President [Schluchter FE 4-1483, Service at .... } jj y‘’U'3K actor’s former fiancee I "^*****"3 Blaier, and Trea^rerj®-®- -P-"*-^**'*’* ®Hertng. Adv. " ■ | 2S -an engagement ring. ^^‘»*rtiarged! win th, udv KBiMTH, OCT 20. 1000, JULIA. 120 AUanhurat. Royal Oak: ate OW: dear mother ot Mr*. Paula Oplta: dear slater of Mri. Olsella g^raa; alao aurvlved by two arandchildren and grandniece Mrs. Claud* Parcells. Funeral service wUI be held Thuridsy.. Oct. 27. at 10 a.m. from Sparks-Orltfln Chapel with Rev. Robert Wlnne officiating. Interment in Evergreen Cemetery. Detroit. Mrs. Krcisch win lie In aute at the Bparka-Orlftin Funeral Bom^ _ i4g. OCT. 30. 1060. EMILT I.. 70 Palrgrove; age 03: dear mother of Mrs.-Maude Lamoreux: dear slater of Mrs. Jerome iCarrle) Peteraon: also aurvlved by two frabdihUdren. Puneftl service will be held Saturday. Oct. 20. at 10 a m. from the Huntoon Punerwl — llVsb a m! Mrs. Lee will lie ... state at Huntoon J^neral Home. LUTTRELLr OCT. 24. 1000. NORMA lltaabeth. 2030 LIndenwood Are . Brldievllle, Pa., formerly of Pontiac: age 01; dear mother of Mrs William C. (June) Onnlston and Mrs. Richard D. (Carolyni Young . .1--------Tvlved by three g)— interment In Perry Mount Mrs. Luttrell will lie In si the Pursley Funeral Homi 3 p ni._Wednesday _ 8 H E B R A R D. OCT. 29 ■Adv. Srandinavlan SmorgAibard,' I'Thurs,. Oct. 27. 8t. Johns Lutheran ^CfTOr^ TOrnef onCfi^'afRTHnr t Ward . SSS Turnipi, ; };1! four already have liorn In jCourt with bribing highway officials for|le j^ hcro liccause of a hrawl overj*"fortnafion about proposed high-'^ Poultry and Eggs i» Funeral Home, Onsted, ----- .ln.Jhk.JlntLlf!l.. ments complet- 1 by Coats n Plains, f !f ‘ small 33-34; ?<5r:: Cant Can Cont ^p A I Coot Mot .. Cant on . Copper Rni Corn Pd . CurUt Pub lit dress from Robert __________ tiac. Oct. 3. -Call FE 4-5357 after 6. „ ... Will pay your price. —Adv. Bairyniore s beard. sites. AAA AAA Soroptlmist Rummage Sale, Fii., The new charge* were brought I The prosecution accused the ?n.'^’ginaw^t! ^**'*^^ by Mrs. Medea ’ 5|a»er. mother ol' three of purchasing the land onj DETROIT BOOS ' !Italian nrtres.s Georgia Moll, tolpropu-sod highway routes and then Rummage Sale. Fri., Oet M. 19 DETROIT. Oct. 39 (APi—Price* paid;.. j;-. . u ,u , . ,a.m. to 1 p.m. 8sint Andrews rr do»en by firai receivers delivered Bairymoie gave jt din-'selling it back to the State. (Church 5301 Hatchery Rd Dray- im‘?rs”iV*i?“rinHumng“*s **engagement ring earlier: ------------------- . (ton Plaihs. . —Adv. **maii*^M***^«rarte'*B' n ' .lo . Mlchioon MoR Elected Rummage Sale. St. Paul Lather-1 I* A medium 40-437' _Jarrymore, 28. wants the rmgi"'H-"'g«rt fVtan CieCTea church. Josl.vn and Third SU: t» »-3i (back and plans to marry Italian fo Tool Die Unit Post ^ Pm, to 8 pm. Sat.,' DETROIT POULTRY |fUlh Starlet Gabrlclla (Gabyj Pal-1 ' ^ Oct. 29. 8 a.m. to 2 piti. —Adv.: DETROIT. Oct. 39 (APi-Priccs pcriaz/oU in a Roman church Friday.l MINNP:Ap6liS — Harold S.( Rummage. Also Ahite formal' Mrs. Maser charged that Barry-|Murd(K-k, Los Angeles, CaHf., has' samplw- ^1. and Sat. Youth Cen-I more. Gaby and her two brothers 1 been elected president of the Na-p®*^' Orion. Adv.( have .been making trouble aboutjtional Tool, Die and Precision; the ring and trying to force their*Machining A.ssodation, holding its(. w^ into her apartment; lannual meeting here, ‘ ! SMcial communication of Cedar The ring ha.s been impounded Other ■ officers included E. W.l Lodge No. 80. F&AM, Clarkston by court order until its disposi-Baniwelf, Roseville. Mich., s(ecoMdj ’ P?); tion is decided. 'vice president. SCHMRICHBL. OCT. 39. 1SS«, PAU-llDc. 1390 Holiday Drive. Lake Orion, formerly of 479 Wlthlng-•-■i, perndale; age S*' oi™*; irtssJr f i Mrs. Fred (Bertha I f 1 IS great-gradde fchl^dreij ......_* Mila Road, Perntl_... . ..h Rav. O. E. Behnk* officiating. InUrment In Roscland Tark ' Cemetery. ' Mrs. Scbmelchel will lie In state at the Spauldine A Son Funeral Home. 9(j0 W. Nine ”■•_* Road. Perndale. The ^family I the {yW liena 10-11; heavy type ---------------- over 9 Iba. 23-34: broilers end fryer* 3-4 lbs White.* ls-11: Barred Rocks 31-23; turkey* 30. hens 39'a. Livestock Lodge Calendar Revron ^ STS DETROIT LIVRHTOCK Rci Drue ' DETROIT, Oct. 2fl ceitie no. suughter steers he‘f- County Gerk Daniel T. sMui-phyj.S t r o n g, representative of the, 4--Tp select nnnpnrfisan r«n. iLgher; cow* opening s\e«dVT t*wo blaek and white;Doubleday Brothers printing com- didatos, turn pointers down ^ ■ ‘« 25:26’M'”g(Jli”ioTw“‘’^ Of Kafolhazoo. explain the 5-Move handle to the left. 33 00-29 26;^'feSr load* good Nov. 8 in asing voting machinfs. j steps that must be followed on This completes your job as a cuuerr yesterday's annual school of election day; . good citizen. • t'|sfniction for tow nship iind city j xiw five stickers c-ontain the fol-i AAA Z,"' ‘"^ructions; ! Murphy and election clerk Mrs. spwtors Murphy distributed black ]_Move handle to right. j Mabel M. Child also remind voters white suckers which he rec-{ j-To vote amendments tum'that -the black pointem must be -.- Asked ; pointer down over YES or NO. left down to register’the vote in B.rd*m*Ribbef'*co'’”*"‘ 111 ,>’ P®s‘^,°n ‘he ^ automatic vx)tlng|,T.here will be three state ques-'all instances. |lionsontheballoti. ; "Tha of y .yesterday niorning to hear Donald ‘’bab'e- j For persons wishing to study ' the ballot in advanee sample the machines). j copies may be obtained etf To vote a mixed lleket do not ( the eourthouse. party lever. 'Pum down tot4-nshlp or city clerks. I et^r St otmxM Of Toorheea-BIple Chapel with Dr. H. n. Savage oftlciaifhk. Interment In Oak Hill. Mrs. Vogel will he In state at the Voorbeei-3lplt Funeral Home. _____ BfIX RCPUEP Al 10 a.m. Today there were replies at The Press office in the following cu&iomers on in route 1115 xuarantet Also part-time • for inei/ -AETER 6-nn PM.- 'm*n°wh **n tlmeT'job. "aU ^r, "RouniU. **OR 3-09M^3 p.m.Jo I p.m,______ BAKER. PULL CHARGE BREAD ceptable. Apply tc Emjploymen Servlet. ________ . _ _Ved.. Thurs. and Frl. bakers' — RETIRED OR PART-tlme men thoroughly experienced In hfeid and roTli. 3 days pr" week. LI 3-3110. After 0:00 p.n.. CAB drivers full OR PART time. 431 Orchard Lk. 30 yrs. or ■ Some ciliesT 'Mufjpby said, : re making machines available for trial runs. Pontiac i.s one of them, having put one in the city hall. Out of Oakland County's 311 vot-, ing precincts ,only three—one in I Groveland Township and two in 'Brandon Township—still use paper I ballots. GENERAL ELECTION To th* Qualified Eleclon:- , Nolle* It hereby given, that i_________ Election win be held In the City of I County of Oakland. State l^l—^'^blgan. on Tue*day. November I. 11900, at the place or placet ot holding thd election In laid city at Indicated - __lmr’offrcer?“'^{l5^ klectlng Ah* foUow. 1 Natlonal-^PresIdent and Vice-President I of the United SUtes ! SUte—OovernoF. Lleutenent Ooremor. Secretary of Bute, Attorney Oencrtl. Statw-Treasurer. Auditor General Congresslonkl—United States Senator, . Reoresen.t»ttve In Congress ^^Le»isl»tl*e—state Senator. Reprisenta- County—Prosecuting Atterney, Sheriff., , Cpurtv Treasurer. Clerk - Register I of Deeds. Auditor In CountMi electing same. Drain Commissioner, Coroners' surveyor, and such other officer* a* ar* elected at that time. Non-Partl*an Election for th* pttrpoa* of elecltng th* (ollowtng oflleers. vt»: On* Justic* ot th* Supreme Court Ito EASY A» — county Oerk Daniel T, Murphy Jr. points out to City Qerk Ads R. Evs^ one trf thic;.ltve iitalruction stickers Ms 9ffice dMributed yester^y to all township and (litjf clerks. Paathic eSRlH^st# They are to assure that voters on Nov. 8 romplete all five ste^in voting. Murphy recommends that’oil clejis post them On voting machines. e following conatltuJ -------- .—FDdment No 1- amendment to Article X c. Michigan Conatttutten addl^ a Section 28 relative to (chool bondi and state loans to school district*. Constitutional Amendment No. 2—Proposed amendment to Section 22, Aitlela X of the Michigan Constitution Inereas-i Ins the sales tax limitation. t Constitutional Amendment No. 3—Pro- ' ptited amendment to BecUon 4, Article i XVII of the Mlehlgaa Constitution relative to eonstltutlonal Conventions. a<"> any additional amendmenti or iltlons that may be qubmltted. ce relative to opening and'^ doqtiw' I pern*: tleettaD UW. Act Hg,TA!l BKtton 720. On the day of any ................ bt opened at 7 0 coca in Ml* lornronVl, and StialJ bOf contlnuoualy open until I o'clock In’ the: afternoon and no longer. Every qualified' elector present and In line at the polls i at ths hour prescribed for the closing thereof shall be allows te> vote. The polls of said- election wlU be open at' 7 o'clock a.m. and. will remain dben 1 until S o'clock pmTiH said day of elCc- “'“’■'"Wafnl pij^KWltli electloln t Thousands ijec Your PONTIAC PRESS WANT -ADS (And they're interested , folks, too!) to place!YOUR Q(d DIAL FE 2-8181 CAB DRIVERS 35 OR OLDER experjencepIj experienced'TV XECHNICTAN. fulror p»rl-tlme. Phone FE 5-8703. FOOD DISTRIBUTOR ORF.XrXG bondable. Age 29, Prefei—.., _ ried Paid training school Many qualified leads. Average earnings kimi. CommiMlon. For Interyiew ^U^PE «W0, 1-8, ask for Mrs. PAMIL'r'MA»~Td~WORK PART time for large electronics company. Opening new office* In PontUc. Presently employed with .. . -ayiP*iPn5hU. *Oeri^ er*l housekeeping, help with children References. MA I-19N EXPERIENCED SILK FINISHER Apply In person 131 Oakland E X P E RIENCED SALESWOMAN Able to work evenings. High tiarting salary plus other bene-'lts.^*for right person. Apply oi NAOON0 MIRACLE MILE . THURSDAY 10 A M EXPERIENCED SALES LADIES Edward's Department Store. 33DS Auburn Road,_ Auburn Heights. EMPLOYMENT FOR COOKS. CAR hops, and waitress. Apply In person Pandy's Drive In. 509 8 _ Saginaw and Drayton Plains FULL OR iL\Kf 1IMI - Keep yout tmpdriant ]bb as wife ' mother. Weekly pay c " exp^iem DO HOUSEWORK, white preferred.. Live In, own r^m bath, TV, other help em-R*ferficfi. ELgln 6-5354 FULL OR PART TIME REAITe^ -------------------------------- FREE TOYS—FON *i?d*rp*ce7v°’^fr?““*^ TOY narty mas. Cjll'(ira^W72?“ """”*“''RK;^Afly--srrfrNo-! !. Part or fuu time Uve - V'-^'JiiArtera. MI 8^913 HO^EWIVES sell PLASTALOID lA frfcnrt. . Outwear* wax 90 to »ll« week. MArket W CARE OP couple to *x-,'or wife's services. Call P*“a*.si?." » "> •venlng*. good^ ***' Perry. *1 30 PULL DR PART TIME~REAL Efr i between 1-9 •Sch^nol Representative WE HAVE AN OPENINO FOR AN EXPERIENCED HOME 8TUQY COURSE SALESMAN IN THIS AREA. LEADS FURNISHED. LIMITEO TRAVEL. PREFER A PART TIME SALESMAN -SEEKINO SUBSTANTIAL EXTRA INCOME TOP COMM. AND BONUS WHITE TO ROBERT E. EWINO. DIRECTOR 927 SO. DEARBORN. CHICAOO. 1U-. OPENING FOR '3 MEN A new factory branch has opened which needs 2 men who ar* mechanically Inclined to Install new reyglutlonary .electrical units. For appointment call FE 4-4SM batwaen 1 and 4^ 7 aad 0. jfECHANIC WANTED. EXPERT’ on Y.W Writ# PooUae Pr*sa Box M. ■ . . __________ Orion Area — Part-Time work CtU Mr. Oas«, P.\RT TL'ftE $60 PER WEEK -.3 men. 21-99 to help ut cover our lead* In this a^. Car necessary. No canvassing. Ws make tiie tp-polfitinent, you fonow It up. Must be able to work 2 evenlMS ptt week. 4':20-9:l0, Sat. 9-2 Kr In-tervtew write Pontiac Pros* Box 92. QIn age. present oeoupation Slid Dlidh* number. Replies coK-fldentlal— -.-insportatlon and oe able to wmk Apply Thur»d»r morn-m n to 12 p m. at center desk REAL BOTATE SALESLADY. PULL time, Lauder, OR 4-0491. .SALESUtDY TWENTY-PlVl~OR c*P*cl«nce for full-time. Excellent working conditions and associates who are pleasant. CaU Mr. Boosa at Btap^i Family shoe Store, 031 W. Huron St.. PI 2-4331, or - come In' person for Interview. WOMAH for OENERAL OFFICE woaiAK TOR GENERAL OFFICE work, must like detailed clerical ■or*, lyplhg required, write Pon- Mr Tip» WAnrin - WOMEN not liow e^irplo:^ who can work part or more per hour A’on customers. Start sng BSJO eoMiB, _ houae. PE 4-11047 _ i^M^ FOR RESTA^NT Vt„„, and motel cleaning. To live hi »«*t 7 p.m , WOMAN to CARE FOR Olfii dren 0 days a week, for workln couple. General Housework Indue ed. Must be InteUlgent. and hav godd reterynces. Ml 4.2927,-WAJn'lO J[ntPEHIlNCID~7rHLH TIIKfir^TlAC' rUKSS. WKDXKSDAV. (H TOHKR Money to Loan 611 Sale Houiehoid Goods 65, Sale Household Goods,651 IAU. ALUmNUM, Get $25 to $500 on TOUR j , AUANA bc-HuurotriEa TipisD i wrta^r •-”* ' SignatureJ^i»wln| gorfablf ft CPU PH. FE.2-m •OAKLAND Loan Conn»nv ronttpe StoW^^ 'Ki^_ Ci^it Advisors 61A ADTOMA-nb ncNMORE'WAiran A ele, MA S;^______ Burrrr and drop i. UtALL OE tor ul* PE t-joso mCIAL t I 11 ROTN. $14 M Mc-l«o or uke up payment! of $1 per Financial Advisers. Inc. ' month unieertai co pe tom I'l 8. SAOINAW PS 1-TOU >RAND NEW WROUOKT IRON •* -............... — bunk beds complete wuh spring^i .Mortgage Loam 62 CkTJd"“nd1?b“d»*irb”X. A BID PROM U8 WILL SAVE YOU^ uV^A'ce ** R^%^menrii££?Sce OP*’ "iWy^l" iW^Pl* 2^ $600 TO $2,000 CASH "“POR^ ant" HOUSEHOLD On Oaktand County homea Mod- TRAOS OAR RANOa POR Huron. THOR ELECTRIC IRONER, APT electric itoyc. aluld < foldlni play-, pen and^ mitc PE 4-NIO TAKE OVER BALANCE Brand new INO OR Ulerlilea ordrred ' ipeetal for cuno--- moved ^oal o^f^ett^. peek Goodyear Seryke S------- ^ 8 Call. Pontiac PI 5-1123 Usetl Trade-In Dept. Buffet ...........I14.W 9 Piece breakfait let ___ lU M Davenport and Chair . .MM 1 Piece bedroom tet ..... MU’ Reallnlnl chair .........HI M Rafrljerator .. ... HIM 11’ RCA Mahog TV m *9 Voss & Buckner. Inc, 109 National Bldj,-" cIrPE« "^EED^ Swaps 63 . - C^PBT - BRpADLOOM 9' X 19 19 HOU8ETRAILER. ’91 CHEV Pm,! COMPLEX HOME OP FUR^tl ......... ,nnp lor lair lure In Bloomfield Hills. MA lei pick-up or .aelT leparat*.♦IM, ' . . 1-9IM _ ' blNETTE IIT GLOBED t PT ■91 PONTIAC. 1 DOOR HA*bTOP. Ooulp Dench Rugs PE MTtl deluae. PI 1-SOH _ bON T WABTl MONET ON TOUR 93 PONTIAC POR DU9IP TRUCK 1 old relrlgernWr. Oot a now one ----- . .*,«». pricca 11 cu. It. crisper. and chiller 19TT Maddy Lane. Keego Harbor. | - with free drawer. U 1< Mr wk.' 11 BUILDERS Have *lk free and clear loU. to-| ""i‘iJ'“J lallng 9 acret and cash to trade ‘eev-iiiw for good land contract Call NeU‘ ® pe s-mm Hartwl*. Realtor. OL 1-9144. ;1« _______” CHOICE "biP 3 PR10IDAIRE8 In!D*VENTORT IN OOOT CONDI-eichange lor a good deco freere _ *“ *"* ’’’onuoi. no. larger tf - “ ““ ~ 3 37#g R DfltDTV PCRNI- DARK GREEN HIDE-A-BED nlsc. PI 9-1003. ' ——- — — CASH 'pOR USED TVS. RADIOB. phonos, and tape recorders FI 4-4049. WILL _ blowir:. r swap. PI 4-90 LAKEPRONT LOT. EOUl’TY POR 1. giO PE 5-5349 DRYERS RCA WHIRLPOOL New In Crates $119 I. Wareho*' UTTLI 8 PDRNITURB * API*L _______ 5317 DIM HWT.. DRATTON « BVrp lor ‘'chain "Viiw PRII7.IRB — UPRIORT PAMOUB r sell OR 3-7301 after 4:30 pm.' name brands scratched- Terrific OR B«-L it POR orers liklTse. iSTchlMn set" OA g-3«l_________ SWAP AT i Are. JOiWH PUKNITURE ! ELECTRIC STOVE. REFRIOERA OP WELDING GAUGES^ AND lor. 31 In TV EM 3-0379 - I ”JUler- iASY ELECTRIC DRYER paints' Valued‘gw — - — pickup of ‘ "■ ■ ■ '‘">E‘‘T773g mYleaee' PORHITURE AND APPLIANCES ,«t"Qn" Portable ty^:' .. ............. II swap for ; 1 value or . PE 5-5036. 971 Sterling, WILL- TRADE '9T DODOI POR 97 Volkswagen wl*'- ’— ---- Also Remlngto.. _____ _ writer_ for saJe^OA 9-3907. For Sflie Clothing i SUITS. A sale Oood condition. 1 TOPCOAT. "Tern condition "cioth "coat, dresses.'9217 DIXIE HIGHWAY. DRAYTON site 12 Hats Very reesonebk IprioidaIRI BEPRIO POR PE 4-8908.___________^_______i like new.jll39. PE 1-1304. CHAPEL LENGTH WEDDING OOWN PREIZlRS - NOROE PREIZERS end veil. 090 PE 8-3357 _ Chest and Uprlehts GIRL'S CLOTHING. SIZE. 10 AND; New models slightly scratched_^or 13 Also subteen 9. Blouses skirts, erate marred. Models at blj_ dls-d^esscs,^jumpers, I*”® ,o pay t Anv^“BT^^p**■wINTiIl coat ' ”wAvVl*OABERt"** LADY 8 blue. WINTER COAT., ,j, „ gAOlNAW _ PE 9-6180 tS STOVE IN OOOD CONDITION ; site 14. Boy's . _ l¥noth. beaver ; colored Mouton coat Straight cut small collar Site 14 In very i good Condition. 150. PE 2-4063 LADY’S BEAOTIPUL PALL AND’ winter ___r models, demonstrators. tlM. 1 yea'rs to psy. 11.25 weekly. ~ WAYNE OABERT 131 N BAQINAW PI 9-6116 IF YOU NEED $900 small. Cogt I CL' 6EF SEABOARD FINANCE CO - MEN'S and YOUNO MEN S WIN- IRONRITE i mONER ter suits.' topcoats, spur.s coats. ‘ yoursell that Iron! and Jackets, sites 36-43. panU, »<■ «»* '« h»Jf * &izfi 38 waist gtrl s lovely winter » 'r’ljri _ ’ i.' coat «Ue 12 eaceilent (ooditlon. i nj*R a day. FI 4 PE 4d333 MAN S OVERCOAT, SUITS Warm clothing lor imiuim.^ --- -and mlsc 96 Norlli Paddock. PEi able 27 Edwi KIMBAL PIANO ■8 YBONRITE, UPRIOH 9-6744 household Items open dally and Sunday 9 a m to I pm 4708; Eliiabeth Lake Road at Cooley ,,ricru m Lake Road „ LIKE NEW APARTMENT SIZE, SEVERAL LADY’S DRESSES AND gas stove 955 • Apt’' size retrig y FE-tl Sale H^sehold Goods j m DeHTerrt PE 5-1307. E LARGE " CRIB AND MATTYIBSS REJECTS. BEAU- Bargaln House. 103 N Cass. 43 YARDS OF OREY TONE ON " , 1074 Argyle. S6.09 LET lurniture bargain ^ost_013_0J K RUO 0 X I. hidabed. upfiolsti II THROW L Sn YOU _______ ___________ ______ ______ OXFORD _r. etlverware, metal wlmn*. _AUCT][ON OA 9-3681 elianeous rummage. FE 9-1037 maPLE TRUNDLE BEDS r 'RENMO'RI AUTO. WASHER tress. 910. FE 2-7087 ______ wrlh suds saver. 190. Real good MAPLE BUNK BEDSik DRESSER cond. n 3-8680 J*!! alter 4 , Oood condition MI 4-0075 i OKOUP DAMAOED MERCHAN-'moHAIr’CHAIR" AND TAPIeSTRY 933 e relj|s ,^^|l9^a r. rocker buffe' Oths _ FE 9-6493 _ : MAPUe FINISH BEDROOM^^SET. Double M'Bedrooms. M. ot nl« MlSC PURNITDRE. RESTAURANT iie-su mgs.. BHXCS siiu w.s(.r,,. , eQUlp . ... a I at barga'D orIcOs. Also new Ige. rubber wheel. EM 3-4930. ' J‘j'*‘‘jj-i6iL hea'ters used b laetory second s? Koiil EZ Urma, TBa-^r 103 ' l?4W“p?dd\,rt?“™ 2“ PIECE “rose UVINd“Rb6"M \V.\LTON' 1\ suite. ,Kelvlnator refrigerator.) 519 S. Walton. maple table and I "ca —....... TV 17 In Platform OtL space HEATSU N. Casa at Lafayette. PE lurnace, 80 f EM' 3-6679 OR LEY 3 PIECE IVORY npOBOOM SET -, OR 3-3473 3 PIECE MATCRINO BDRM SUITE. M' PE 2-2397 yCP FREEZER ; ” -9125- Bag 9X12 c bell V Odd chests 114 09 prings and hiter-sprlng IS both 9»90 n 0»f»»liy Co 4763 Dixie, ‘ ^iREPRIOKRATbR 939 DRYER 640: i *“«°*''.troS :,„rA.’a'"7SA.i;',”a' E£Hk€£.ks'i. I K SILVER OREY BEDROOM stov^ 9»'^ V^aSu^FE *M766.“ ^ PaTil *8upe'r‘*Kemt0M *Iim"'Ru^^^ o^t. Double^ dresser, Bookcase RxraiogRAfoR WITH PHFEZER, oleum. ';55P* top. 979, New red .’Jlratolomiser. HIIOBTS BUPPLT S » _4_P A_8y.t.m^g3_9„0« 4:0234, 3M_L,_pror Easy ter mi 90 PIECES OP ANTIQUE DWHE8 e.a«y kettles and churn all kinds i-4338. __ 36 IN biRL’S ENOUSH Studio couch and easy r^-3-2140. __ _ _ MO GALLON OIL TANK. 30 OAU Ion oil hot water heeter PE 3-71J5 AXaiOR FF.XCE.S AMERICAN FLYER ELECTRIC T SI TRaNSTTI I.AROB SELECTION. USED ilKttguns -and rines Ben;s ^an Since. 4 Patterson FE 4 5141, -.tSEBOARD RADIATION AT bartain prices. 11.99 Mr ft. O. - V.m>mp«i« ' CdSd k Bulling- Buppl^^C^^^^ SINGER CABINET MODEL 8EW- INSTRUMENTS AND USFD ....._-j;ndous *•” CHOOSE FROM LAROI LIBERAL TRADE ALLOWANCE designs, etc Knee control, bal-"Tnce^ery low aTT544o or payments cl $7 per month Universal Co PE 4-0009 SIMMONS OTUDlb COUCH TWIN or double Rug. typewriter, vse- students rental PLA LAYAWAY OR PAYMENT PLAN EDWARD'S 11 S SAOINAW BLOND KIMBALL CONSOLE PI Hunting Accom'tions 74A , All for 7 PC. LIVINO ROOM OUTFIT.! . K & H s.m1’:.s 4190 Dixie Mighwa Fall Clearance BEEP AND "pork - HALF AND _i)uarters. Opdyke Mg,t, PE 5-7941. BALANCE OP GIFT SHOP STOCK, ___Lake Ave;. ___ _ 9-PIECE JUNlbR SIZE DININO rdbm suite, good condition. PE 3-7178. ' ______________ gkl2 RE"^RSIBLE RDOS, 9f(T»9 i Fosm rubber backed rugs. 919 95 ; ^34,95 up^ 11?PC3 B.ARGAINS 4X1-V4 In V-grooved mah. 1»13 sheeting IV, per ui Panetyte counter toppin Hon. rrosonable OR 3-7354 SPECIAL ' Doug."fir 3k4-9. 41c each. Cash and carry. We carry all kinds of building material at a reasen- 3579 Alroort Road. OR ' Tractor.s and Movvers rot«ry rcfl BLOND V M Hl-ri OOOD CX)ND S85 FE 1-2362 BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR. BY '“i‘’%At,B*i'^Mu8ie cb 9 N, SAGINAW. PE9-9332 CKICKERINO ORa'ND, COMPLETE-!y reconrilUoned Priced lo eell LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Ml ' 8-21^9. .WALL TENT CALL AFTER HAY AND STRAW 1 BALE OR 5. ‘ ‘ —......... , OR W355 Olf^HF-w WANTED GOOD CLEAN wW OR NEAR ROSE HUNTINO CABIN THAT FI« Used Auto Parts MODERN COTTAOg POH KE near RoMommon PE 2-2671 ! RENT HQUSETRAILER. SLEEPS ' ' Atlanta, KUHs AUTO SERVICE eJiOOMS POR HUNTERS WRITE PIOS POR SALE Up tt V bladea volt I . $47.M. * EVANS EQUIPMENT PE 6^0900 POR- SAll BASS tYRA-Ae-' cordlon. $100 Call MBIroae 4-5160 HAMMOND SPINET ^WITH^SPEAJtJ BrTTERLY ^ Bait, Minnows, Etc. 75 MINNOWS: ALL SIZES 35c TO 6 8002 MUSIC . LEW WANTED. HORSJfS TO BOARD pH 3-4809 Sale Farm I’rodute 86 H 3-7924 'haMMOND CHopD organ i CU. PT. FREEZER. 9-TBAR uarantee Sacrifice. 93 weekly, earsons; PE-4-79gI. _ • I IN. KENMORX OA8 RANGE I good cond. 979. Chrnme break- AMAZINO NKCCHI AUTOMATIC L sig sag sewing machine. Makes, buttonholes designs. ---- GO HOME HAPPY! WOI.VI’.KLNE LC.MH1’:U 330 8. Paddock FE 3 9791 COMPTON'S ENCYCLOPEDIA 1943 edition. Like new 145. Dinner bell ........ • "'1 professlonsl r HUMUS. STATE TEST- Kcl uilt .Xppliancch 9 949. OR 3-2937. CHILD'S ROCKING — "->n. OAlnf-'* — 5:30 p.g IOR6E, i IT'S A SAD FACT- W icjjiaml Mii.sic t ciUci' BAZAAR AREA.MIRACtE MILE , PHONE FEDERAL’ 2-4924 ' ' HORNER ACCORDION AND CASE. teiid. Hill View Peal Faun. 392,. APPLE8 A.ND FHB9H BWEEr CID- [■ {) W I [.1.1.\MS. 451 8 Saginaw at Raeburi Auto Service CRANKSHAFT ORINDIHO IN THE 7575 “l9' cap CyUrpdcra rebored. .. ' Shop, 23 ■ Kood . Warhoops IRY Warhoops -t;siLD .Xiito and Truck Parts 2.€00-C.\K X \RD . 2-3563 li T STEAM CLEANING. AUTOS ______3-J4U WBECKINO FOR PARTS '91 ■ Pontiac wm Road MY 3-3471 or MY , 756 ( CASH WAY I STANLEY ALUMOIOM WINDOWS ■ ■ ', Pesboard .. .. \ikI Oh So True! ALMOST NEW OAS PULL SIZE ™l OOOD HODBEI 1 WEST HURON] “ cubic ft rbIIP I A"*® <•*'«»» Admiral Ige. fraai- i £T mail Hni ^1 *t. S»Y* l»* Balando 92 perl ti ’ rill. " »«6h. Maytag waMier, lata model' t-' __________I 949. SchlckT MY ^3hl. i 7940- ___ to 'get the *m«ie'. lor them Just get together ------‘ ' 9*9. In original ] CEMbht STEPB," READY Midi] 5 rubber ( »>1 »f ' ‘ '' “ " WANT The Pontiac Press. ABOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT , ..._________________ _ A little out of the way but a tot BEFHIOraATOR gtt , g.jjog. ; ?n“ee.“or.Uk’S?s',‘”N'Jw*‘S 5^ ii»n-? W W zXb j J°S.;Yrt5Mm^ 552??eds°b1 birialna*^ trade dept, lor real, roalgped. g»90. Curf|s Appl PE j co~M S* 5io«Ie from. Jnterlnf / -1* f?aJ >OHA FOR isALrotCBE 9>'V iw^ ' and^’mal^hlh?* HWe *sele?Uon • Lrktn“" P*hX“W 9‘-'g2ri 1 ^JlnJ. OPEH 9^^ MT^I TO 9 I^ARS 21'’ ROTO IAWn'MOWER I ??*?.* 24 MONTH! TO PAT Easy washer. Bicycle. Bear* Jvt ^ 4 mllet B. oT Pontiac ar 1 mile pump Large tricycle and vanltv H Aqbyn Hel23ttl on Anbtmi t^revser Rek«ml»lj. jurrr 731 f j-0904 afler^^ffl ^'PIANOS New and used. Spinets and con-,v.e.v Priced from 9175 LEW BETTMLY MUSIC CO. Ml 6 9002’Prl, 'Ml 9. _-LYON AND HEALT GRAND FT-. tloned perfect for begUmlDg piano students. Morris Music. 34 8 Teiegrsi^ Across from Tel-Hur-on. PE 2-0807 sei’mer' le-PLAT "alto ' ba'xo- phone with ease. 969. PE 2-1363 OBPHEUM ELECTRIC OUITAR, 9 months' old. Will sstrlfice 979 cam 137 E CHats. OrtoBvHie Mich. _ _ ' nANO TUNINO-OKAR SCHMID* _ PE 2-9217 _ - SUPRO" OUITAR" and CASE OlbtoB ampliner. I SPECIAL 10-A STONE I Srach sand. 75c yd PHI dir 10-40 tl 90 yd. American POR SALE COOKING A ■OR p^ALI Rncheslrr ou, Rochegter Rd SCAKRY PTELIIRL'N FOTATOER. 9129. PE 44790. 6 TO DUMP '981 I Con m*_n »-• 9-1419 AL'B BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL, nil and ^ manure^ Also eom^leU ' t*mmlng"^79“^8coM "LaU* Rd^ — 4-M39 e- •*‘-* srn at Andersonvllle and MotOF ScoOtCTS 94 nil ’ 9 30 1" 4 Jd Sale Farfu Fquipment 87 1954 zundapp. good conditicn. See Us imp4 delivery. OR 3-9944 black DIRT PILL AND OHAVEL , P! 8-0977 BLACK DIRT 99 96 DELIVERED _ ..........f| 4-9815 BLACK 6IRT, BROKilt CON-crete. bulMotlng. PE 9-9042 A-1 TOP SOIL CRUSHED STOHE Sand, gravel fill. Lyle Conklin. PE 9-lIU o# PE 2-9972, Jus} Dial FE'2-8181 I Cameron ; TUNINO ‘ AND REPAIR^INO. 24 ■ ’I work guaran- -----i itaett. Ask for Waul .\ds Royal Auto Plrts 1130 MI. t ' trad by laetdry ------ CA,LBI MUSIC CO HI N’. Sagmaw PEJ9-9222 SPRA88ER F:B0-T0NE CLARINET ' 1 romplele with ca.se. 1100. Peer , , ApplIancF., EM 3-4119. TRADITIOHAI; LOWERY SPINET 1 organ roet 11,390 Best cash OBer t 6lfj Pontiac Uke Road sftfr 4 CHOICE r Alf M TOP "SOTL OP ALL kinds 5S yards. 910 delivered PE 44598 also loading. CRUSHED STONE. SAND ORAV- F'all (j’iearancp Sale (•J*r new power mowers tr.-ictor.s ami tillers PE 4 0734 ,FE 4-II13 KIXC, BROS PONTIAC RD AT OPDYKE FARM EQUIPMENT SALE ENDS Sat Ool 23. New A used mt-eWnery. Davtg Machinery Co Or-tonvUle Mich Pbon* Na 7-3392. Your John Deere. New Idea. Oehl A -Home Lite Dealer^ XO\7lMBKR salf — — - wM.iri^s^*tth fflow, L, tillers and moweft, ' \ ' EVANS EQUIPMENT 6907 Dixie Highway For Sale Motorcycles 9Sv 97 INDIAN 700 CC i PE 2-3122 triumph sales a 8«iVlCE. 230 E PIKE PE 3-9320 S MOTORCYCLE BALES FOR YOUR Truck Needs Sales & Service 303 W MONTCALM GMC ,rley D4vld*on_Sal«s A_ Service , > . For saie^kyciei^ 96[ Factoiy Branch oravci. sand, stone dirt Black dirt top 'nol EM 3-3394 EM 3-3419 ^ Auction' Sale* '-88 restaurant business ,'uqui- ■ datloh. Tuct Nov MO a m 14996 | Dixie Hwy cosner Granger Hall j; Rd.. HoDj Wrile ^ ghonr ' 5-8304 awani Creek. ^ •» “rJ”’ .O.AKL.\-'^D ATICASS ..... .-.mc^hS^'V^SIki^an^' FE 5-'^ _ ” */»4wrenc6. .M>oRr, r* 3-7a41, . / •eondllon. PE 94933 altar 9 p.m. . Boat* & Accessories 97 ford, panel, v-e 0090 cos-a -4iti«. UL 3-nii. > ■•I “.■87 Pb8DT^ ■» 44141 2$% QVl' BOATS. MOTORS. Trailers is'ton maCK 12 VARO 'iMiMf! \\ IXTFK STOR.U'.F ‘ bS’'Eir3.Srt.” __ sdonf MOTOM At SKHVigi [ -43 OODOK' pickup, cab I -..SB OUTBOAT SALES ' -------- ------------- sssls with 273 Oil lank. w V{ s: ■ THK POXTIAC PRESS, iVKDXESDAV. PC TOHKK 2(i. 1960 . dSk'nii-:\fiK<>i.n «... ofler \0\\ ^I.V»5 ................. CORVETTE W'.S'"''"' “■*““ \,,.,(a,„,,‘(“.,,.l,, I,, r»rS.I.C.r. 106 ForS.I«C.,. 106 '.'~l~rui...„ Worih ChfiV. ‘'fi North '“••“■'Sr^ir.S\S.s2iJ;v-‘ pSSHi 1960 Falcons' Sn..rioF An,.. Sal.> ;:ii: i “"ssr^r SAVE '58 Plymouth •57 |■I,VM0L•TI1 ,4 door V-l .lU. rodlo .h«trr, .u.,^ 1 • )f,0 lU)N N |- \ 11 -1.1 '. ‘Kss:;Kr:i.rsi r *8»I(- ’ Schutz Motors, liio. GasSaver: -^.j. . S,I"s>“';S 1»» Fords Ki1!| 12 Miin'ili. I'WI l.lv,,, „ih ’ll ".m's"??”.™ **' *'" £*■'....■----'•• km. -rr-o --- ■ w6^osd.wra..,„, -o.......... »s»...«. U6I r.i,.... r, ..S'."j.'sr;.s:;„“.'i-57 imukki.m, ...... ............. Ff'i!C"7v„:; K.r.”s?.V*”'WS '57 Mercury Houghten '“• (SSon ■" PI.VMOITII ' j l»H>6NTIACril25"FE'r-S426”32^ ^You Want Bargains ■M-u£:r='oSr: .. $1195 '58 Plymouth SAVE '58 Plymouth S1095 '55 Chrysler S695 BRAID Plymouth - Valiant - DeSoto' CASS at WEST PIKE FE 2-0186 ).\1.V $107.- tyFia Crissman PI.VMOUTH ■'"'iyi.i.l"' ':;v„".rsss.,£*U'S'.'. HAUPT : PONTIAC WicAA'iis'' F»v'toIt »23 month OPEN EVES TIL • Ol, 2 *721 l»SJ FORD V-«. 3 DOOR. RADIO »i '.-() .M l‘tK(. I’l\ N SclUltZ .MollH's. lllC. n apkotov W«ienf»ss^:'ara^^ ■mmm -^"s^SCaS. Scliiitz .Motors. Inc. '’.t iioiiiii: .I! As r STATION WAO .''clllltZ .Motors. Inc 2 door “■■' Over"lOO Cars : S SSiacd .^Sr jl«e a ='sciijiS; lipyil.l2s.i fe™? -sSikij .gsr W 4- iH-ln 1*60 C at all lY'Yt \\uV‘“n'''V6Tk- »/'n n.7a Foiiu cusTo.ki aoo tudqr. H58 ford 2 door., radio a ' ., i.n'fiuy'5l%,n'^'‘i‘,oisjb b WILSON ..... POXTIAC-CADiU.At 1350 N. Woodward - Z “' HASKINS ; anyone • WINTERIZED ^ ■■',.r;;;,±‘.o Orion • CARS CARS po‘r:-ToNcb6?‘ hAskins CHEVROLET FINAL COUNT 1V58 MF.KCUKV FSS. DOWN '“wCS2l*uJ'«>«V *‘*Vm6 1957 ClIF.VROLET 1958 FORI) liOl FORI) in.57 'UiRa-RY^ BEATTIE •tlrJSJ' -S£S?;S . . otiVER MMor:Sales\ Drive over to Shelton's and get the DEAL ol DEALS Our low tiverhead nieaiix you pay less in Koclu 'ter. We'll make it , worth your while to drive a few extra mile>. N’o reasonable offer will he refused. Come our ami see 1-WJBII-TV OuomI 4-WWJ-TV CkuuMi T-WX?Z-TV Ckauel »-4XLW T TONKUirS TV mOHUORTS THlTRaDAT MORNING U;1S (9) Nursery School. <:M (4) Trackdown. (2) Movie (cont.) (7) News and Weather. (9) Popeye. (56) General Chemistry. (7) Sports. •:M (7) News. •:U (2) News Analysis. (4) Weather. •:S (2) I (4) I (7) CSrcus Boy. (9) Woody Woodpecker. 6:M (2) Sports. (4) Sports. •:4B (2) News. (4) News. (56) Mathematics. 7:Q# (2) Aquanauts. (4) Duigerous Robin. (7) Award Theater. (9) Pioneers. 7;aa (4) Wagon Train. (2) Aquanauts (cont.) (7) Hong Kong. . (9) Movie. "Smart Girls Eion’t Talk.” (1948) A beau-UAil socialite becomes volved with the underworld. Virginia Mayo, Bruce Bennett. (56) Portraits In Print. 8:00 (2) BdSt of the Post. (4) Wagon Train (cont.) (7) Hong Kong (cont.) (9) Movie (cont.) (56) Showcase. 8:M (2) Wanted-Dead or AUve. (4) Price Is Right. (7) Ozzlet and Harriet. (9) Movie (cont.) (56) (Jonversations. 0:00 (2) Kennedy. (4) (color) Perry Como. (7) Hawaiian Eye. (9) Rocket Richard. 9:30 (2) I’ve Got a Secret. (4) Como (cont.) (7) Hawaiian Eye (cont.) 10:00 (2) Tomorrow. (4) Peter Loves Mary. (7) Naked Qty. (9) News. 10:18 (9) Weather. ' 10:20 (9) Telescdipe-UAW. 10:30 (4) U.S. Border Patrol. (2) Tomorrow (cont.) (7) Naked Qty (cont.) (9) News. 10:48 (9) Movie. "It’s Love I’m After.” (1937) The theater’ ’ top actor and actress love each other but quarrel constantly over scene-stealing. Leslie Howardi Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland. 11:00 (2) News. (4) News. (7) Decoy. 11:18 (2) Weather. (4) Weather. 11:20 (2) Sports. (4) Sports. 11:28 (2) Movie. "It’s a Wonderful World.” (English: 1956) Orchestra leader Ted Heath gets Involved with a couple of zany publicity men. Terence Morgan. 11:30 (4) Jack Paar. (7) Mr. and Mrs. North. (4) (color) Continental Classroom. 3:31 (7) Funews 0:M (2) Meditations. (2) On the Farm Front. 0:46 (2) TV CoUege. 7tl0 (4) Today. (7) Breakfast Time (27 Felix the Cat. 8:00 (7) Johnny Ginger 1:18 (2) Capt, Kangaroo. 3:19 (7) Stage 3 i:li (2) Movie. (4) I Married Joan. 1:30 (4) Exercise. (7) Ibcerciie. 9:18 (4) Faye Elizaheth. 10:00 (4) Dough Re Ml. (7) News. 10:10 (2) Movie. 10:28 (9) biUboard. 10:30 (9) Ding Dung Schoed. (7) Divorce Hearing. (4) Bishop’s Consecration. 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy. (4) (color) Prira Is Right. (7) Morning Court. (9) Rompier Room 11:30 (2) CUear Horizon. (4) Concentration. (7) Love That Bob. THUKSDAV AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life. (7) Texan. (4) Truth, C!dnsequences. ’ (9) Chez Helene. 13:99 (2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) (color) It Could Be You. (7) Queen for a Day. (9), Tower Ki^n Time 12:48 (2) Guiding Light. 12:50 (9) News. 12:18 (4) News.. (2) My UtUe Margie. (4) Ntvw. (7) About Faces. (9) Movie. (4) Bold Journey.' (2) As Worlo Tims. (7) Life of Riley. (7) Day in Court. (4) (color) Jan Murray. (2) Medic. (2) House Party. (4) Loretta Young. (7) Road to Reality. 3:00 (9) Movie. (2) Our Miss Brooks. (4) Young Dr. Malone. (7) Beat thq Clock. 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These Roots. (7) Who Do You ’Trust? 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. (4) Make Room for Daddy. (7) American Bandstand. 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. (2) Edge of Night. (9) Robin Hoou. (4) Here’s Hollywood. 5:00 (2) Movie. (4) (color) George Pierrot Presents. 5:30 (7) Rocky and His Friends. TV Features Did West Reich Buzz Royalty? By HAL BOVLE i There were three primary NE'W’ YORK (AP)-The Iren i«*•<*«’». which everybody knev. ocn.p,« .h, light of air time, is somellme-!| i^^rothy Parker ns a wit with-homesick for arrival to where helout apol^ or explanation. ’ THE DRPRE.VIION The amount of fun that life and! depression, when men grew, time measm-e out to each genem-jg ^^.^d because they larked both tion probably romes pn lty c1o.-m- „ ^ blade-bcatnlks to being equal. People will not necessity for a time. AT Pbaisfat NA’TTU.Y ATTIRED-GUstening in a glassy goal and wrapped in ermine, former film star Hope Hampton pauses to display her trappitigs as she arrives for the opening of the Metropolitan Opera season Monday in New York City. By United Press International WAGON TRAIN, 7:30 p.lh. (4). Lee Marvin and Lon Chaney Jr. star as mortal enemica Who forget their differences when the Indians attack. HONQ KONG, 7:30 p.m. Newsman Glenn Evans is involved a plot to gain possession of a priceless Chinese object d’art. PERRY COMO, 9 p.m. (4). Singers Andy Williams and Jane Powell and ’Thelma Ritter are Perry’s guests, (color) I’VE GOT A SECRET, 9:30 p.m. (2). Special guest Is Spike Jones. PETER LOVES MARY, 10 p.m. (4). The strange behavior of Wilma, (Bea Benaderet) the housekeeper, puzzles the Lindseys (Peter Lind Hayes and Mary Healy.) TOMORROW. 10 p.m. documentary on new frontiers of research into the “thinking” of animals and electronic machines. NAKED a’TY. 10 p.m. (7) A playboy’s ex-girlfriend confesses to his murder, but the police believe she’s shielding the real killer. JACK PAAR 11:30 R.m. Jack’s guests are comedians Buddy Hackett, Joey Bishop and Bob (Elliott) and Ray (Gouldlng. (color) Germans Check to See Whether Their Planes Periled Elizabeth, Philip BONN, Germany (AP) —The West German Defense. Ministry pressed urgent Inquiries today to find out if two of its Sabre Jets buzzed an airliner bringing Queen Elizabeth II- home to Britain. ’The two jets, reportedly marked •ith the crosses of West Germany’s new Luftwaffe, missed the queen’s Comet airliner by only feet as It flew over the German-Dutch frontier Tuesday. The fighters and the royal plane ere traveling at a combined speed of well over 1,000 miles hour. Air experts said a collision Russians to Help Iraq Set Up 4 State Farms Happy Young Couple Thrill Non-Marrieds Vallee, Mah»Jongg, Long Underwear Memories... Oh, So Wonderful spearean actor, dying as the leai: Ing cowboy performer ot Ms dajf. NO irrATION BREAK Two-hour political speeches hy candidates on natkmU Issues surii as the tariff—a 120 minute commercial uninterrupted by a program or a station bmk. be denied. mkidh'-nged ie denl*ri either — the road to his usual renown Is his mem- ory. The sbiltly to rent by chekee because they were more cirpty arwirtments than people wanting (hem. Here are some of the things that those over-young folk beyond t h 'teen—those gay, thoughtful exuberant p e o p 1 e between 20 and sur-remler — might miss, if they are young or old enough to do so; Oraiq^es that came one at a time. Popcorn without aluminum. Helen Hayes without politics, but never wllhait Uilent. Tbe sound of Rudy Vallee. alutiys sang as If there was a sinus in his nose, The sound of Bing C'rosby « echoed the dreams of « gene tion-he didn’t inherit.. BOVL Musical comedies in which Sigmund Freud was not a sil«rt lyricist. Novels In which he was. Fatty Arbuckle, before he fwind time is the most st-rious of calories. and the one most likely to make a follow owrweight. Charles Coburn down to hts first momxie, and with no objection to the income tax. Mah-jongg. played with a of sedulous newness. William S. H«H, (ho TV News and Reviews By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — FLASH: I just saw a glamorous married couple that Isn’t divorcing and Is very happy together. Steve Lawrence and his wife, Eydie Oorme, opened at the Copacabana with such warmth, charm and talent that Hollywood'Producer Joe Pasternak said to me, ‘"They are Mr. and Mrs. Delight.” •T have to go change my gown,” Eydie announced—“NOW?" asked Steve . . . “Yes, I’ve been wearing it ever since 1 came out 10 minutes ago” . .^“And It’s already out of style?” That was a gimmick for Steve to work alone. Later Steve changed his gown so Eydie could work alone. Singing “Bill Bailey, ’ WILSON changed the lyrics especially for a broad-shouldered rlngsider, making them, "Bill Bendlx, Won’t You Please Come Home?” ★ ★ ★ Steve and Eydle’ll do the Perry Como and Carry Moore TV shows — separately. (When those shows were booked months ago, Steve and Eydie didn’t knpw they’d have an act). But Joe Pasternak, who’s made a movie star ("another Judy Oar-almost certainly would have been land”) out of Connie Francis In “Where the Boys Are,” was enthralled, Hollywood may get them as a team before TV does. Looking around the Copacabatia when Stove and Eydie had everybody drooling Into their acotebea about thetr pretty love story, 1 noticed something rather peculiar. They Just love love stories about marrldldr people. They may not belleve-ln them, they may not practice the Idea—but they dp love them! • : , -4r ★ , ★ ■ . * James Mason a Smooth, Controlled John Brown fatal for all aboard. QUEEN DIDN’T KNOW A Buckingham Palace spokes- said the queen, Prince Philip and the other passengers in the Comet did not know of the incident until they were told later. A spokesmM for the West CJer-man Defense Ministry suid if Luftwaffe pilots., did the buzzing, the Defense Ministry would regret iiinklirUT CADI this highly, and those responsible C fVlIUINlvrni C/kKL . . . would be punished.” Several Euro- ^ed Williams has kept the name of his recent beautiful pean NATO members “fe Sabre companion t secret—but she’s Lee Howard, the Chicago Jets, wtuch^are of U.S. design, Harriet Nelson aren’t happy about ron The queen and Prince Philip; David’s newest plans-buylng a plane! Werq en route home after a visit | John Wayne, asked If ‘“The Alamo” really cost $12,000,000, ior*«t TT?i> Denmark. W (:omet’s copilot, |gald, “Sure—wars are always expensive” . . . Actress Wandra . Maestro Charlie By FRED DANZHi NEW YORK (UPIt-The most dramatic of John Brown’s ill-fateil attempts to "meUonlst. Mason’s role called for disciplined'evangelical eloquence. In less capable hands, this vital requirement could have been overdone with disastrous results. Caricature and comedy could have resulted, ACB088 : Tennti ttrok* ' 4 In addition B CryptotsmOUi i: ^onsUIlatloo 13 Narrow board SPORTS TALK IS 33 Ban A 37 Musical ----hargjdioof- S Meat MCUll BlMCunne 37 BaiebtU- MOSCOW (AP)-A contract to' organize four state farms lit Iraq was signed Friday, the Soviet news agency Tass reported. The «____i. ‘ Soviet Union is to supply tractora, f agricultural machinery, motor ve-;”™*' X hides, tools and fertiliiers. if ^ ^ ___ ilinor, then turned in as a pAir and passed only about 50 feet • ^al «r-1 French 51 French coin 53 Blackbird! .4 Ki; 55 Advltt M Etteatua 1 Indo-CUnn r r r r r , r IT IT ir IS u IS IS if ir U" El IT !T Hr w w IS IT IT w h\ BT u W ST above us. " It wa.s a very nasty moment, Stevens said. London newspapers erupted with ahgry headlines and editorials. Local Post Installs AMVET Comniander 3 Rernldle Inad 7 Xleotrletl u I Feminine ■bpellntloa t Perilan poe il n^eman’i 17 Kukten 1. SlVbtr » Celeb 36 Earn 37 Adrnnee UVSh 31 Made • 1 33 Notlona 36 Fluids 43 Window llMi 46 Military meal 47 Unbleached 46 Prosecuted 50 SkaUnx area Hendrix escapeclj^ath In an auto smash . Barnet and hjo wife have a total of 18 marriages between ’em .. Jean Simmons’ mother makes her film debut In "The Grass am eternally tired of hearing that Jack benny was charged Tuesday word Caution. It is nothing but with copyright infringement in the wo^ of cowiirdici- ” lihe use of tbnrlip Chan material ^ i, " {without permission on a television Tlie emphasis was .m Brown-1 ________ the-leuder and we were given a meaty portrait. The hour might Is Greener” In a one-wofd'role . . . Jimmy Donohue Introduced' But Mason controlled his intensity, his bold exhortations, blind confidence in his destiny and keyed his performance to a des cending scale. When, at the end. Mason was flnally subdued and he came to see that hts raid, for which he had ipent “two years making plans, training men, and a tile-lime praying" whs a btaidy failure, Mison combined a measure of despair with his still-un-qiienehed spirit In Impn-sslve fashion. As he lay on a stretcher, blood soaked bandages around his head, his beard caked with dirt, M; da.v’s standards, have route on t strong, soklier. Women wondering If they ’ cigarette In pubilo someone might think them tm bold. Long underwear—the poor mans heater In winter. That great gap In Americnn cultural history between the ci»ls and dimples of Mary Pickford and the dimples and curls of Shirley Temple. (Turk Gnhle was youjig, ^eon Harlow was a living flame, Wayne King crowned the waltz, ^phto Tucker sighed for real, Joan Crawford was queen of the CSiarlfston, Scott Fitzgerald hod pocket money while he wondered about wraith, and Ernest Hemingway was sweating in Paris and hadn't shot a lioq in Afrka or seen a revolution or a bullfight in Spain. Those are some of the odd memories that spring without diselpllne to one middle-aged mind. There are so many, many more. But what will -the teen-ager of t(xlny remember of hts preatrt world a quarter century Irom now? What of what we really are as of this moment will endure lor lomorriiw's folklore? Jack Benny Caught in Own Dragon-Net NK’W YORK (UPM - have had gix’iitcr Impact if it had pointed Up the unbalanced nature of the nhm and his influence over less fbrceful. more pathetic souls. > THE CHANNEL SWIM: Bob Hope's third comedy special of the season, which pre-empts "Perry Como’s Mus)c Hall ’ on NBC-'TV Wetinesday, Nov. 16. will be filmed at the Air Force Aencemy in .Col orado Springs. Cowboy star Steve Metjueen, Mrs. McCJui'en and sing-i er Kay Starr will be on the pro-j gram. ' , Vi Harvard University’s "nolikl | ProO, Grarge McOrorge Bundy j will s«‘rve as narrator on "He Shall Have Power,” the “Oniiii-bus” study of the Amorlcan pr«*s-Idenc.v scheduled for NBC-TV on Sunday^ Nov. 19. An hour-long six-ciiil ileallng with 'the life of Rudolph Valentino, tlre^ legendary star of silent film.s, is bi’ing profliiccd for syndication by David WoltH T Associated with Wolpcr in the special hi. Saul Turrell, roproducer of ABC-TV’s "Silrnts Plca.se.’’ ' ’The option was brought by Eleanor Blggers Cole, widow of Earl Derr Blggers, creator of the flc-lionnl detective character, (!harU« Chan. ’ ■ ■ The suit alleges that the copyright infringement took place over t.he CBS-'l’V network in a sketch entitled "Dragon-net, or Charlie Chan Strikes Back" with Jack Benny, Jack Webb and Don WH-.son in the lending roles, Join in Observance Newly elected commander of AMVETS Bemis-Olsen Post 113 in Pontiac, Charles E. Checker was installed at a recent ceremony. Other officers Installed were William P. Babcock, senior vice commander; Harold P. Willis, junior vice commander;Vind Rt^rt E. Pote, adjutant. Tbe ceremony was conducted at the post home by Michigan State Department Commander Chester R. Burton. Jill St. John (Mrs. Lance Beventlow) as "my niece by marriage.” " ' ★ ★ ★ EARL’S PEARLS: A woman never knows what kind of husband she didn’t want till she marries him; [ - TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Bob Hope says things are tough all over: "Tension In the Congo, trouble In Cuba, fighting In the U.N.—and last week the doorknob came off In Loretta young’s hand." . . . That’s earl, brother. - (Copyright, 1960) , , heard hi-s captor.s say ho would Publication Tags State's Liberals An average residence has about 150 locks of various size varieties. - - To(doy's Ra(dio Programs ■ nxvz (Itlfl WCAR ( WrON <14661 W.;iia (ISM) >1M-WJR. raann n WXTB ’Inhn IHtv CKLV . JM L----- WXVZ. P Uorgu WW K OpIaloD WJBK. tollboy WCAR. D. ConrM- w wx, r, mammawta W3CTZ, FrM Wrist SiW-WPOM, Jriny Oteta tito-WJE, I6t«f WWJ, M. KotUtr CI LW, Kapulu Nt«i l#:aa—WJR. Ceoetrt WWJ. MriMz Barad! wxvk, Dm ztt THUaSDAT NUaNINO N-WJR Axriculturr WJBK. N«wi. Morn WPOB. Bob’ Wrli' 6;ia-WJR. Murio RaU WJBK, Morn. ■■■"' CKLW kw M 1:ta-WJK I WWJ Ntwt RoborU ways M4*l Wolf CELW Nout lobT Dartd WCAR Rsnt wrom, Mtvi, Bob Lark WXVZ, RtWi Wolf CKLW. BtWi. Dorid ’ WJBK. TriMlc-Copebr WCAR «»■» WXYk. H*«i Wolf CBLW Mont. David Slnl. CanT SM-WJR. Music Hsil CKLW N«vt Dsvld WJBK. Rows. Larimer tt;id—WJR. Karl Hast WPON. Bob Lark 1;«a-WJR HesUh —WJ, Hows. Lynkor McMeclty WWJ, He wjtrz, 1 caLw J WPON, Bob Lark II:M-WJR. Maria. TIlURSUAt arTEKNOON l»:da-WJK Beat Parm - WWJ, Hows, Maria WXVZ. McNcelcv CKLiA lot ViP tan WCAR, Newt. Purst l-M-WJR Sl.owcas* CKLW Jot van WJBK, Hews. Retd WCAR, Ntwt. Purse weuN Cbuek LewU rm—WJR. Conftotlto WWJ, Newt. Mi,awoU WWJ, newt, ti'mv CKLW. Jo* Van WJRK. Newt. Lee WCAR, Newt, Porte WPON, Chuek LewU Three Counselors From Area at GM Conference ADA Magazine Rates 3 Dems at Top; Picks Broomfield, 2nd GOPer WASHING'TON (UPI) - Three Counselora from three Pontiac area high schools are among 19 counselors attending the G^eheral Motors Educational Relations Section’s 8th Annual Conferehc? for Counselora at the GM Technical Onter in Warren. ’The conference, which bega of Michigan’s seven Democraticends today. congressmen have won 100 per cent marks from the Americans for Democratic Action organization ’liberal” votes on nine key ’The publication "ADA World’ gave Rep. James G. O'Hara of the 7th Congressl minimum wage and a measure which would have* stimulated housing construction. 6:ia-WJR. Uurie RaU wwi^Ntwtjj,yBk#r ^mj. Newt. Ljnket CKLW Sports Diviet WJBK. Ntwt. Trafnc WCAR. H6«t. Stwrtdaa -4ja Uurie Ban ra Ntwt. r- - NYC Will Consolidate State Freight Service Rep. Charles E. OiamberlalH of the Oth District omI Hep. Wtt-Uam 8. BroomfMd of the loth liberal” of the il Mlcblgao Re-puMIcaas. The ADA publication said the other four Democrats were p^ v«»ted from making the MO-per-cent category because they were nt at one or more of die of Nurses' Week be hanged (or tre; He rou.sed 'himself .-ind forecast j . that he would recover nll hc had] LANSING MS — Praetlcal and lost at Harpers Ferry merely by j registered nurses have joined hanging for a few minutes from!fork’s I"'' Ihe first time In a stale-; a scaffold. And he added, "The wide observance of Nurses Week, end of this question is not yet.” ’’ ending Saturday, a state nurse ★ * * association spokesman sqys. He; was not referring to the cause j * * * J Of ubolltton but to the broader| Miss Hazel Gabrielson, RN. "Negro question.” In TV, that's executive dirtMt-tor, said members probably eonsidered a iKild state- of the State NUrses Ass TWO ORIKNTAI. SMIl.KS - IVnnLs Lrons. 1J, p*>srs with a '.■jRCk-o'-Inntriri in his dad's laundry in Madison, Wis .luw' Uaison. nn *>mploye. did Ihr cai vinn (or thr (m plfase Dennis. ' and tlu‘ I ■vidmtly GOP Researchers Find: [£J, Kennedy Differ on 264 Senate Votes s paired against a luck' tlu.'..i^ands (uiin. csolutinn On defending Kor- ^♦‘sjan ab.seni senator to s in would V Know Where fo Sew W A.4|1NGT0N I AH' - The Re- .lohnson pulk'nnK said toctay that .Icihn Kcratedy and Lyndon B' Johnson/ disagreed, on the average, on onej oiil of every four or five ' during their years together i Congress. Altogctlier, said the Republiea National Committee’.s researc h di-►vision, the two DemcxTatic (Hdates cla.shed on J64 roll .u,..., i in ft the Big Payoff ,In a breakdown of the voting records, the c-ommittee said they IIOL'STON, Tex. tfPI* - Pro- (disagreed mostly on (arm |joliey, of a. iiatnotie film piekc'd m.xes and c-ivil rights. ideal audu'u.e, for the pre- -Foreign aid. foreign |a>hc'y, , and defense have also c-ome in (or niiere a large share of disagreement. So The hall-houi have labor issues, public works, nds Seed. ' wiw. shown to alid housing and tidelands oil," the re- „auiinli/.etl ‘"“^uMtiT is hardly a subject from A tci Z (aij^s to zinc;. - D,„^htcrs Of the American Rev tually w re e . p ■ , olulion rc-commemled that the film disagreed TTiey run the gamut frpnri ant.tmst, atomic enc'w , banking and controls — through ps htghw^ mail t^cs ,,, loyalty, oaths-to shipping sub- (-...ixi,.,., and Shad C.iaham -sidies, It^e amt waterw ay s, '« "Te Reilieans satd Kenm-cty amicommumsfa- ckwitTiam^- «nd Johnson iilso have disagrrtxl. Oil a top campaign is.suc Lndc what circumstances the islands off Red China's shore, Quemoy and Matsu, should be defended. '’Actually, the release said, both wen were hospitalized at the time Of the vote on the island issue, ^ Kennedy was paired (or and hulion. ’ Tliey-ptafr Tiaiinnat dtstrr- Reg. 29.95 pretty pink, all-steel kitchen for tots 44 26 TOY SALE 67 lt€‘ms ... . ea. Cb«rre It .Sturdy Heavy Gauge Steel Any little miss will love her own Coldspot, Refrigerator, K e n-more Range and Happi-Time Sink! “Plfiy-jng house” will be twfice as much fun! It makes a wonderful gift! I)ike savings! bright red Happi-Time ■ 10- inch velocipede i Regular ■ U 9.49 BiitV, 12 in. * 4t 10j98 Bike, 16-in. 9.88 TTic ea.sy rolling ball-bearing front wheel and black teardrop pedals combine for fa.st sm-^pth riding fun. White ad-justaoie .scat. 99 Charge It Doll Clothes 88c 'mT life-siz«‘ doll in 3 styles Little girl.s will love her soft rooted hair and lovely lashed eyes. Choose from . three different cute outfit.s and hair styles. Reg. 12.98 Truck with Extra Trailer for Hours of Thrilling Fi iiiul While Station Wagon Bright Refl Fullv IJpholsIerefI Rocker For Tots :B8 Keg. 9.98 Charge H 8.98 Happi-Time 5,IV. Faiimlry Docs .VII Dolly’s W ashings . 2.10 Savings ’Satisl'action guaranteed or your money back” SEARS lity constructed for all small folks. Hardwootl frame with blond finish. Wijye-clean plastic cover. No-sag spring seat. Stands 22 inches high. 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 Holster Set 88c Helicopter 88c Births "•following K ft IhU 4>fwent Skills in the f*onli;ic area as rc-f^jcdcd at the c;iunly clerk's office g^lcd by name of faihPi i: iM J. M»ndfrn»ch. 1155 r»irl I E. llcCu..ltfr. W Columl trt A. Rliodfn, m ProMwet D E BMfr. U11 W»ldor "‘'i J. 0«rcl» Jr . M E Wilw L. 104 M«ch»iiu L. Smothfr*. 1»S W ” WO SuncicM 2|».. V TB0¥ ^•S A WebsUr. 804 Stivanwood }««Bb O. Mitchftl. M75 Ch»ncfrv AMtuir J. L»Vol» Jr . tii Harris terald B. Loiws. 3M Chrrrv Babert OUlon. t*60 Rocb-.trr D. Archibald. Miner Cnraner I Campbell. 4III3 Dcquiiv Alfred ^ ^h!’t r 'ABtnir o’. DutrWnc. A575 John R nStrt L. Wroech. S630 Coolldse gSbart W. Olaea. 91« Starllnv tmnur L. Oartther. 3IS8 Uvernon SiirHne* AoUakwlca. 1315 Alpine fflrr- A. VertR. 13(4 Ctdrau. JUtSi O. Bova. M7 Bla Bearer -----cl B. Ba»fr. 2MI WIriln* S B. Tatar. 31N Helena > iriek O. Bayer. (I5 Robinaood - Baker Jr.. 1(1« WUumUn D. f6ol>*l, *1# w. Lon* Lake . L. Hama. UlO Tuoker S..Ool)iBa. 4HI w. waule« ROCBEStEB . CUmtler.. 7Hi Rpeene L. Bccben. ^ Mlahi [DOLLAR DAYS VP 1 Sears. Thnr.. Fri.. Sal. j iiioilrrn .sAvivt‘1 rockt*r Avilli 111-hack comfort Reg. 59.95 41.93 SAVINGS! S4 Down Centle relaxing mo-tioh with n6iseliR.s pall - bearuu! swivel. , Acetate frieze with pln.'itic 111 green with recji. brown with $5 Down Reg. $119.95 $6 Dotrn 2-pc. nylon SEROFOAM cushioned suite Modern aa like it! Light off-the floor lines . . the bouncy cohifort of reversible Serofogm cushions . . . and a cover that w^ears ‘n’ wears. Textured nylon _ frieze is w’onderful around children, most spoth sponge off easily. In aqua, spice brow^ or cherry red. Walnut finished legSe^fa measures TeVrih- > ^Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Pli. FE 5-4171 7-pc. dinette set *88 Rugged durability blended with a gracious look. Striking black or. bronze has brass ' finished aluminum trim, (^alrs have pillow backs add cushkm seats. 3lRi48-ln. table extends to 72 Inches with leafs • '