The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1963 —28 PAGES House Rioters 'DwesWReds FROM OUR NEWS WIRES WASHINGTON — Chairman Edwin E. Willis of the House Committee on Un-American Activities today labeled as Communist dupes the bands of beatnik-style youths who battled police in a wild, two-day protest against the committee hearings on student travel to Cuba. . _ ' / !//• /: - '' - -“Thr coittmittee’s pubiic hearings came to an end yesterday as more than 100 police cleared at least 35 shout-, ing youths from the House Office Building. Seventeen of the demonstrators were*.....„'......-.---v—■ ■■ ushered from the commit- County Budget lice brutality.” Fifteen youths had been ousted Ia Da AnAntn/J from the hearing Thursday in a |(| AUUUIt/U similar wild melee. Terming the demonstration an “ugly episode,” Willis said it was Communist - inspired, but he added that the demonstrators themselves were not Communists. The Oakland County Board of “The big boys who don’t shdw Supervisors will meet Monday up are the Communists,” he said, morning in the new courthouse ; ‘NEW LEFT CLUE* auditorium to adopt a county ; - One -yitnesr, Larry Phelps"l5f Budget for next year. Burlington, N.C„ acknowledged he *,. * * * m Members have had a week to the University of North Carolina . . M .... ... _ for “people Who are to the left of study * ^million budget recom-Kennedy.” mended by the board’3 ways and , 'The most serious outbreak bielris ., • * ** V. came yesterday; The recommended budget li i Kathy Prensky was asked If than the one ! she ww a member of a Progres- ad°Pted for th,s i sive Labor Student Club, which It includes pay raises for all the committee called a Commu- county employes, ranging from nist splinter group. , $ioo annually in the lower birack- R eve a I Poll Paved Way for Governor'* Fiscal Proposals From Our News Wires MACKINAC ISLAND— The Republican State Central Committee endorsed today the goals of Gov. George Romney’s fiscal reform program.. The endorsement provided a sharp contrast from a flareup last night at which a dissident ' • AF Photofax Two students walk past a line JOIN DEMONSTRATION of policemen as they leave Phillips High School yesterday to join pupils from other Birmingham, Ala., schools in an integration protest. Supervisors Will Meet Monday in Auditorium HAPPY DAY — Andrew Fischer of'Aber- , this morning. Fischer, 38, Works as a shipping deen, S.D., joins nurses of St. Luke’s Hospital clerk. The couple has five other children, in beaming over the birth of quintuplets early Boycotfers in Republican claimed sweeping tax reorganization was based on Marxian philosophy. < Wife only one, vote east against the resolution. It appeared Romney was having Success in selling the Republicans at. the party's biennial fall conference oh the principles of his prograin. “Republican S t a t e Central Committee does hereby endorse the goals of the spending and tax reform programs outlined by Gov. Romney and the State Legislature if hereby urged to approve a fiscal reform program that accomplishes the goals outlined by Gov. Romney and ends the deficiencies gf our present tax structure,” the resolution said, MAJOR STEP The resolution Was a major FROM OUR NEWS WIRES , BIRMINGHAM, Ala. —^Boisterous white students* boycotting-desegregated public schools, werg tofchfty/ Mayor Albert Boutwell yesterday to return to classes; land let him fight “distasteful”, integration by legal Quints Born in South Dakota ABERDEEN; S; D; Wl A1 shipping clerkfavi birth The Ihg and cried all night,” said the fers Of assistance for the family deen 38-year-old father, poured into its daily newspaper As for himself, Fischer said, awl radio staUms. One c<^trec|or ‘You are not accomplishing any purpose by staying y;rp-rr*-—;-----------“ which could HnB give him a maximum pen-f ‘ alty of 12 years.and a I $40,000 fine. > Sgfctu Federal Judge Fred W. Kaess ! "■Wm * has yet to rule on a defense mo* *■ don for a directed acquittal $n For /New Hospital For the first time since 1959, Studebaker claimed, a complete turnabout in styling has been made. But the cars still retain a hint of styling continuity. The cars are almost six laches longer for 1964 than they were in 1963. FRONT LENGTHENED Combined Staff OK'd j we don’t, we are dishonest and it’s a farce.” ■ ,ryf The combined staff at Critten-ton Hospital, Which is to be built on Walton just west of Rochester, would make it the Uth hospital in the state with a joint staff. Dr. Gelst said Crittenton would be the first major hospital with a combined staff to -continue resident training. In 'addition, It would be the third major facility In the state with a Combined staff and accredited A combined staff of doctors of medicine and osteopathy for the proposed Avon Township branch of Crittenton General Hospital has been approved, by the Oakland County Medical Society. A resolution for a combined with regulations of the Hill-Burton Fund, which could contribute as much as one-third of the hospital’s costs under a federal act, Indian Summer to Blanket Area ; The Pontiac area will have a taste of Indian summer this weekend, says the weatherman. Fair skies and not so'cool temperatures are forecast tonight. The predicted low is 62. 1 Dr. Edgar J. Geist Jr., society (Spokesman, Work on the Suburban Unit of Crittenton General Hospital is slated to begin next spring after nearly six years of ’planning. About $1.1 million has been pledged for the lSO-bed facility. would head up staff committees, such as the credentials ’committee, and serve as department heads. He emphasized that osteopaths would have representation on all eommittees and in all areas. - ■ ’ . ' Tomorrow will be fair and warmer. , A high of 74 is expected. The lqwest mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 41, By 2 p.m. the area had warmed up to 88. * , Studebaker cars for 1964 will come With seven engines, including two' ultra-high performance competition-type powerplants, the Company said. partly on, a defense jclalm that no evldtincO fas presented to (Continued on Page 2, Col, ft were mentioned by. Dr. Geist; (Continued on Page 2/Co). 4) Dr. Geist said the admission of osteopathick physicians complies 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS.-SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER' M, 1968 ' lip si §1 . y I ^ ^ indents Riot Against Diem y'W< pils in !PW*.' ' dent Ngo iDinh Diem’s regime, re* liable sources said. ■ Word that the schoolboy rebellion,, had spread from Saigon to j, ★/ ★ ★ \ ' , C/fS. Presses 1 for Release of Fjier in Laos : 'WASHINGTON O-Tlw State Department says it is pressing for release of an American flier held by Communist forces in Laos, sod any other survivors of a chattered plane shot down nine days ago. Wbrd from the , Communist Pathet Lao that they were holding one of the three American cMlirih crewmen of the plane was reported Friday by the State Department. , The report, relayed by the U.S. Embassy in Vietelne, quoted Communist officials as saying pne American crewman died. BODY MENTIONED Original reports from Laos mentioned a body found rit the time the Air American plane was shot down in Communist-held territory Sept. 5, which might account for the third American. Tito coalition Laps government, chartered the plan to carry supplies to refugees. ( dr \ it: There was no indication which of tie three Americans was reported alive. The three were listed as Joseph rhpnoy n-nfWaynftyMiCtr; Charles Grant Herrick, whose wife lives in San Antonio, Tex., and Eugene H. Debruin, whose parents live in Kaukauna, Wls. le came as Diem an-it martial law through-let Nam Will end qr. The announcement said aU administrative functions will revert to civilian agencies. The sources said 6,000 die mountain capital of‘Dalat, 140 miles northeast of Saigon, barricaded themselves hi four or five high schools in a shouting, brickthrowing demonstration that was quelled by Vietnamese soldiers. OTHER PROTESTS Smaller demonstrations were reported in high schools in Bien Hoa, SO miles north of Saigon, and Vinh Long in the Mekong Delta, 6$ miles south of Saigon. Hundreds of students were carted to detention camps in all three cities, informants said. ■ * 1 *■ * w ■ Saigon, which had been the scene of dozens of similar demonstrations in the past week, was reported qidet as etudbnts attended, clasmimdm’armed guard. Nearly 3,000 school pupils and university students have been arrested in Saigon. More than J were reported still in detention camps, DOCTOR STRIKE ENDS Reliable sources said a strike by doctors and interns in four hospitals run by Saigon University ended this morning when a professor and his wife and daughter who had been arrested earlier in the week were seleased. Martial law went into effect just before government security forces raided Buddhist pagodas last ical State Trooper Heads Hew Group Headed by Trooper Howard, J. Kelly, of the Pontiac Post, an In-defKdenUgtate Police Trooper’s Association has been formed to pmupote the mutual interests of officers of the trooper rank. KeUy was elected temporary president. Other officers areTheo-dore Gailbraith, Houghton Lake, Vice president; Stanley Snyder, Detroit, secretary; and Francis Davis, Brighton, treasurer. State Police Commissioner Joseph Childs said he had no objections to the new organization and believed it could serve a useful purpose provided it was organized with the correct objec-tiviaS in mind. He said it was not department-sponsored. National assembly elections, scheduled for Aug. 31 but postponed because of the edict, presumably will be held soon. Today’sdecree noted foatwhile martial law will end, the state of national emergency that went into effect Oct. 15, 1961, will remain in effect. , ★ ★ * Under the state of emergency, the president is empowered by the national constitution to rule by decree. Worker Hurt in Bridge Fall A 43 - year-old construction worker was in fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today after falling 25 feet from a bridge at Adams and Square Lake roads in Troy. John H. Dodson, of Detroit, suffered chest injuries in the accident yesterday morning that saw him topple from a newly constructed bridge and land sandy embankment. Dodson was employed by the Canonic Construction Co., of South Haven, and was doing cement work at the time of the ooeidentr™^^rr^r^ Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny and turning warmer today, high 68. Fair not as cool tonight, low 52. Tomorrow fair and warmer, high 74. Southeasterly winds five to 15 miles per hour, becoming southerly tonight and Increasing to 12 to 20 miles tomorrow. , To0»r to PonUoo Lowest tomporaturo procodlnc • A I wind ▼•toottjr 1 n.p.b. IMrtoUotfi BMt •to Mto Wuijtor to jigl p m. Sun rises Bund*y M 8:n ».a>. Mom oeto Saturday at 5:28 p.m. Friday to FmUae . [ . (aa raoordod downtown) Hldhoat tomporaturo Lowoit temperatura .. ..... "fatSMS! cm................ On# Ttw All In Pontiao Waaltaer: Sunny gjpgto Houghton” Marquette Muskegon PsUaton Traverae C. s&s: n 27 . New Qrlaant ft ■ to 58 20 Mow York 68 48 if 60, Omaha ‘ it 40 88 to Phoenix . (T 70 ! S SF& c. h» 6S tl S. Francisco 71 ~ S 3 LSF8, H 80 -u Tampa 83 80 41 WMuniton 78 NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers and thundershowers will occur tonight over the northern Plains, central fHateau and Plains and parts of the southern Plateau and Plains and the south Atlantic Coast. It will be fair to partly cloudy elsewhere, With pooler weather along the eastern wa-Loard and foe Gulf Coast as well as the northern Plateau. It M|| be warmer over title upper and middle Mississippi Valley, IqUo Vattay and tha southern Plains. CLASSIC DIGNITY - Stylized chevron side trim on the quarter panel of the roof sets off Studebakeris Cruiser model for 1964. The Cruiser is built only in this four-door sedan modek Standard equipment is 289 V-8 engine. Lines Change o New sculptured lines are foe Key to the styling of foe Studebaker line for 1964. .. Hr it Local dealers showing the new line Sept. 26 will be Davis Motors, 606 N. Main, Rochester; and Masters Motor Sides, 7675 Highland ROad, Waterford Township. sheet metal apparent are hi i expanses of sculptured metal on the hoods, deck lids and roofs. The 13 different bod^ models bring offered in six series are almost 6 inches longer than they were in 1963. Most are 1 Inch lower than last year. ★ ★ ' The basic Studebaker line begins with foe Challenger, followed in order by foe Commander, Daytona, Crtiiser, Gran Turisiho Hawk and Avanti. r SEVEN ENGINES j Studebaker has seven different engines available this year, six different transmissions, phis Democrats Ready Reply to'SOP Idx-GulCrtiies choices of axle ratios, braking systems, suspension and specialized equipment for such demands as trailer towing. ...* • * * Engine options start with foe Skybolt Six of 169.6 cubic inches and 112 horsepower. Next in line is a 180-horse-power, 259-cubic-inch V8 and then a 289-cubic-inch Thunderbolt of 210 horsepower. Four high-performance super powerplants with displacement ranging up to 304.5 cubic inches also are offered. v All, two-door models and foe Avanti are mounted on 109-inch wheelbases, the four-door sedans and station wagons sore on 113-inch wheelbases. The longest of the JneJs-ihe Hawk, wifo~a420-|i inch wheelbase. United Press international WASHINGTON (UPI) - Assailed by Republicans as ally and fiscally wrong” in proposing, a tax cut while foe government runs in foe red, Democratic tax writers readied a counterclaim today that cutting taxes now is the best way to get back in foe blade. ■a “ #. # Republican members of the House Wfjfeendylieati* Committee made public T surprise plea last night for House rejection of an Bll-bilUori tax cut approved by foe committee on a 17 to 8 vote last Tuesday. Earlier, foe GOP members had indicated they would fight for an amendment tieing foe second stage of foe two-phase tax cut to specified curbs on government spending. The Democrats were taken offguard by foe minority report, signed by 9 of foe committee’s 19 Republican members. TAKE STAND Yhe hflridrlty group took in unequivocal stand against cutting taxes in the face of continued heavy red-ink spending by foe Kennedy administration. ★ Sr Sr The GOP report called foe proposed tax cut “a time bomb!’ of inflation, and said it would add at least $50 billion to the nation-; al debt In foe next five years. The Democratic majority was to make public today its part of foe committee’s customary report, to foe House, which will take up foe hill Sept. 24. It was anticipated that the re- port would claim tax cuts are a "must” if business is to get the extra push required to keep the economy climbing. 1 Sr In foe end, foe majority was expected to say, this is the best route toward higher tax revenues which, coupled with efforts to hold down government spending, can bring foe budget back into balance. CIGARETTE MONEY* The minority said foe tax cut would give foe average wage-earner only about 21.50 to 82 a week in tax relief — foe equivalent of "cigarette fooney.” ★ _ Sr ’ ' Some Democratic tax writers privately expressed surprise at foe unequivocal nature of the GOP opposition. But they sqid it did pot change the outlook for passage. ★ it it It had been expected that the minority report would concentrate chiefly on arguments f or adoption of a GOP amendment that would make part of foe tax cut contingent on foe administration holding deficit spending down to specified levels. Pontiac Mother, 31, Raped and Beaten A 31-year-old mother of two as dragged from her home and criminally assaulted earlyv this morning and then left beaten in field. ,★ * Sr The woman told police that she had fallen asleep waiting for her husband to come home from work and when she awoke short* bfefore 2 a. m., she saw a man looking through an open window. She tali there was a struggle and she was knocked unconscious. She said she vaguely' remembers talking to foe man in a field near her home in the Beaudette Park area. The - woman 'returned shortly after her husband arrived home after being contacted by neighbors who heard screams and the crying of foe children.' : Sr ★ ★ Police said the \woman had a tooth knocked out and foe left Side of her face was bruised and her mouth swollen. which pioneered disc brakes and factory-installation of seat belts in cars last year, will continue both safety teatures. A padded dashboard is provided at no extra charge on aU models of Studebpker. Combined Staff Okayed for New Hospital Brandr (Continued From Page One) First, local osteopaths have proposed building a $1.4-million osteopathic hospital just north of Rochester. ★ it ★ ‘i The Avon Center Osteopathic Hospital is planned as a 100-bed general hospital on a 24-acre site on Rochester Road north of Tien-ken. . Dr. Grist indicated that If the second hospital were built, the two hospitals would be to competition. This would make it difficult for both to operate at capacity. Secondly, Dr. GeUt said that some osteopaths are "fighting to retain their Identity as osteopaths” and might oppose a joint staff at the Crlttonton Hospital. Dr. Geist said that M.D.’S and osteopaths were combining on other hospitals across,foe nation. He said this move in Rochester was a "first step” for Oakland County. * ★ ★ • "Ir-He pointed out that in California the two groups merged. HO also stressed that1 just two years ago the American Medical Association, a national organization of M.D.’i, approved foe professional association of their members with osteopaths who practice healing n a scientific basis. Thai Michigan Association of foe AMA has gone along with such A clash between two segments Of' Waterford, Township’s employes may o^cur Monday at a public hearing on foe proposed 1964 township budget at Waterford Township High School. . ‘ it it Two weeks ago, Township Board members altered foe budget as proposed earlier, eliminat- Ortonville Man Ghorg$d,WMhvM Taxicab Holdup An Ortonville man was arrested for armed robbery by a sheriff’s deputy early this morning 25 minutes after a Detroit cab driver was held up in Southfield, ★ * it Larry G, Sloan, 25, of 760 Bald Eagle Lake, admitted to police that he robbed Edward Whitson of Dearborn at 11 Mile Road and Northwestern at 2:45 a.m. At St 16 a.m. at 12 Mile Road and Telegraph, two miles from foe robbery scene, Deputy Henry Hansen apprehended Sloan few minutes after hearing the police car radio. Police found $21 in, Sloan’s shirt pocket, foe amount taken in the robbery, and an open knife in his jacket. Whitaon identified Sloan as foe man who robbed Sloan also admitted to a burglary near Imlay City yesterday. two Arraigned for Break-In Two men charged with breaking and entering a Waterford school were rrieqtod on 2500 bond yesterday following their ar- Clash Possible in Waterford Board to Hoar Views of 2 Employe Groups raignment in justice court. Hulan F; Ward, 24, of 360 Ru»- j eddefendttrttir to the sult after tic Circle, Union Lake, and Billy Patterson, 21, of 196 State are accused of stealing a radio from the William Beaumont Elementary School. Waterford Township Justice John McGrath scheduled an ex* for Sept. 24 uniform personnel to allow for three additional firemen and two more patrojmen. A group of employes last week proposed q swap of a 2260 pay raise and hospitalization insurance, benefits provided jn the new budget for foe pension plan. " ■ ; i . . V • * If this proposal were adopted by foe board* police and firemen, who already come under a separate pension plan, would lose the proposed pay hike. CONFLICTING AIMS Indications are that a large delegation of nop-uniform township employes will appear at the 7:30 p. m. hearing to seek reinstatement of the pension proposal, while a similar group of police and firemen will be present to try to retain foe pay hike provision. The board is dealing with a 1794,660 budget, 2147,000 more than foe current one. ★ it ■ .★ In other business at the weekly Township Board meeting slated in conjunction with the hearing, board members will, consider three appointments to foe Waterford Township Youth Protec- Committed Th, v.oteck* were created by resignations. Also slated for board attention a police department request that detectives receive a, week’s pay in lieu of *a week’s'vacation because of their present heavy schedule. iiimlnghW'Aaie- Nyfo*'-Court Denies Injunction; School Building Goes On BLOOMFIELD, HJLLS-A petition for an injunction to halt work on a* three-room addition to Hickory Grove School has been denied. OaUand Connty Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. * Zlem yesterday aNardbeki tamed down the request «f Schwanz Construction Co., 2991 Franklin, Bloomfield Township. The firm sought a temporary injunction to stop work there while its law suit against foe Bloomiflrid Hills School District 1s pending in Circuit court, b |( SchwanzT low bidder for foe Hickory Grove work, charges that awarding of foe contract to a higher bidder constituted "An extravagant misappropriation and misuse of public tsix moneys.” The 241.650 contract was lot to Bersche Construction Co. Of 201 W. Walton J«Iy 29. Schwanz* bid was 2851 loss. Architects Tarapata-MacMahon Associates, Inc., were named as recommending that foe contract go to Bersche. Besides asking foe court to nullify the contract, Schwanz is seeking 210,000 in damages against Tarapatai-McMahon for 'fraudulent and statements. after they pleaded Innocent at The pair was arrested 1:30 . for Thursday by a sheriff’s deputy who caught them trying to gain entrance to the Clifford H. Smart Junior High School in Commerce Township. They were turned river to Waterford after police found the radio to their car. Birmingham, Chapter No. 020, Order o! the Eastern Star, will hold its advanced officers’ night at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday at the Birmingham Masonic Temple. Sideliners and new members will be honored. JmyConvicts City Teamster (Continued From Page One) show Harrelson responsible for entries of “catering services” in union records for two checks to-taling $500. y>ir ★' The defense also asked for acquittal on the basis of a statement by Mrs. Berdinq Verwey, the. local’s office manager, that one of foe checks was authorized by Local 614 Secretary-Treasurer Floyd B. Hannon, rather than Harrelson. The money was given Ppntiac caterer Maurice Croteau Allegedly for a 1060 campaign advertisement by beckers of former Pontiac Priice Chief Herbert Straley. The defense argues Mrs. Ver-wey’s testimony that she made foe entries cm her own proved Harrelson was not responsible. The government replied that Croteau’s testimony showed the Teamster official caused Mrs. Verwey to make the entries by getting Croteau to issue false re* sipts. ."A ; Croteau testified Wednesday that he falsified foe receipts because he was asked to do so. But he could not say whether it was Harrelson who asked it or an unidentified man who accompanied the union leader to Croteau’s office April 15,1960. Croteau said Hairrrison gave him a 2300 check at a bar the light before and a, 2200 check April 15. Mrs. Leonard T. Bailey Service for Mrs. Leonard (Elizabeth L.) Bailey, 73, of 1132 Webster, will be 3 p.m. Monday at the Manly-Bailev Funeral Home.; Burial will follow in Rowland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mrs* Bailey tiled suddenly Thursday. She is survived by her husband, Leonard T. r>m Phot# WAIT FOR WATER — Students qt Stone . water to the building became clogged. Outside Elementary; School, in Avon Township, got an the empty classroom, foe well-cleaning crew unexpected holiday this week. AU 350 were can be seen finishing Its work. The school is dismissed Wedensday when foe weU supplying scheduled to reopen Mohday. i 4/ , ■ i 1 .. ■■ ill Mrs. Albert W. White Service for Mrs. Albert (Ann) White, 69, 6870 Colby Lane, will . be 1 p.m. Monday at the Manley Baily Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Rowland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mrs. White died Friday after a brief illness. She was a member of the Kirk-of-tiie-HUls Church, Bloomfield Hills. Surviving besides her husband^ Albert W., are two daughters, Miss Murrlel Archer, of Detroit, and Mrs. Walter Philbim, of Allen Park; a son, C. James Stay, of Denver, Colo.; three sisters and a brother. Romney Gets G0R Backing (Continued From Page One) aide to Romney, said yesterday aU elements of the tax program were agreed upon before results of foe poU were known. De Vries* said no revisions were made as a result of the poll though the prill indicated extensive opposition to any major shakeup of Michigan’s taxing pro-/ gram, 'HIGHLY POPULAR’ / In addition, a Romney aide said it became apparent that other main ingredients of fori Romney tax plan werri "highly popular.” ■ ★ " rir . '“!(■ - The aide, said 60 per cent of those answering the poll approved of the job Romney was doing and only 9 per cent disapproved. Thirty-one per cent has no opinion./ Those prilled also agreed that voters were "better conditioned” to a personal Income tax than when Williams first proposed one in 1959. ★ .* Sr - Romney says he wants to mwt with Jerome Cavan agh td discuss the Detroit mayor’s objections to his tax reform program. In Detroit yesterday to witness a swearing-in ceremony for three new Wayne Counfy judges, Romney attempted to see Cavanafte, but toas told foe mayor was at Irincli, "Tell him I’d like to see him, when he gets fori opportunity,” Romhey said. Pope to Admit laymen VATICAN- CITY (UPI) - Pope Paul VI today drastically reshuffled the Ecumenical Council leadership fo admit a selected group of Roman Catholic laymen to .the secret meeting which resumes here Sept. 29. THE POKTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1003 mm THREK ; ]NEW YORK (VPI) - Ameri* cans.can sample the historic, cultural and culinary legacies of Khan a dozen European, r SINATRA BREAKUP — Lawrence Reilly, president of radio station WTXL in West Spring-IWdr Mass., breaks a Franks Sinatra recording to back up his order to ban all the singers discs because, “We don’t want to be Identified Fabled West Indies Blend Cultures of Many Nations ___and Asian countries practically .on their front doorstep- in the' fabled West Indies'. M lays IMartin J. Winsch, general ruifyjger of the Caribbean TOdr^t '-AiSoclatkm which r e p-resents 25 local , goyemmento, airlines, ship lines add other toprist interests on the Old “And if you’re not looking for fancy accommodations, you can enjoy, a two-or-three week vacation at almost any Caribbean island for well under 120 daily, including room and bath *at good beadifront hotel, meals and round - trip air transportation from major U.S. East and Gulf Coast centers,’’he said. . Spanish IV “There’s an ideal vacation destination in the West Indies for every type of traveler — and if . bargain transportation and' hote 1 rates through December 1$ at most islands,” Winsch Said. ’Rates 'run as low as $6 dally pgr person during the so-called off season at modest guest houses forfroom, bath and meals, according to Winsch. Until recently, few Americans regarded the Caribbean as summer resort area but this attitude Is changing, Winsch said. It Is true, he admitted, that Islands do get hot and muggy at times but summer temperatures ayerage 80 degrees, only n point or two higher than in winter, qnd rarely exceed N, And mere are always the cooling trade winds, he said. 1963 1964 TRAVEL ADVENTURE SERIES presented by the downtown Kiwanis Club of Pontine SEASON TICKETS Includes Series of. 7 Programs Pontiac Central High School Auditorium CALL TODAY FE 4-4516 This Ad Sponsored bf ■ Austin Notrtll Agancy For sun - and - fun, the Caribbean offers scenic beadies, deep fishing, scuba, sailing and other water sports, golf, tennis, 'State GOP Chairmen Goldwater Bid by 7J Pet.' From Our News Wires (Without Romney we’d to a desti-MACKINAC ISLAND-A found- tute party in Michigan,” he said. er at the GoIdwater Tor President takes DIM VOICE movement in Michigan claimed [today a private poll showed 71 per cent of the state’s county Republican chairmen want Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., to be the GOP presidential nominee in 1964. Tyrone Gillespie, an executive nf tha Dnw f!hannlt»al Ca............... COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE PONTIAC MALL optical CENTER land, also, dismissed as untrue reports the state party’s fall conference which opened last night is a battleground for presidential; delegate votes between Goldwater and Gov. George Romney. “Romney has made a statement ... A commitment that he is not a candidate and we are taking him at his word,” Gillespie said. Gillespie, wearing one of the large “Rolling With Romney;' badges that most delegates at tne slant vigil was nwintained today ta the tax program was ieve|ed at the bedside of crUically Harold Schrier, a manufac-SbjV Clair Engle, U-Calif > and turer’s representative from Kala-hte brother was reported on his He said the proposals ad-f**y Washington. Locate taking money from people conference sport, said conflict for Republic* porting both Romney/ahd Gold-water. 'We want Goldwater for president and Romney for governor. STOP, SHOP and SAVE at... OPEE SUNDAY m-a P.M. • 3373 Orchard Lain Rd., Sylvan taka (At Mlddlabalt) • 68S tail Blvd., (At Psny) Pontiac • 341S Elisabeth taka Rd., Watarford Twp. (At Hwan, M-59) a 8040 Caalsy Lain, Union Laka (At Union Laka Road) • 1340 Baldwin Avo.. PontlaelAt YptllanHl Romney yesterday, indicated onto again that he does not have his eye on the White House. The governor expressed a dim view of politics in general during a discussion of his fiscal reform program for Watch Maintained at Engle's Bedside ' WASHINGTON (UPI) - A con- before a GOP conference at Mackinac Island billed as the kickoff for the 19(4 political The governor’s comments came lifter one man took the flow to denounce the tax program which includes a recommendation for a stat^ income tax — as ‘Marxism.” with no regard for what happens politically,”„ Romney declared. ‘‘I’ve been in politics long enough to knofr one thing — it ain’t any fun .. and I have no political ambitions.” HEATED EXCHANGE The accusation of “Marxism’ Engle, who will be 52 on Sept. 21, -was suffering from a ma-I'gnant brain tujinor and was reported to be slowly laspirtty-ing, but his chances of a full recovery remained uncertoin. Physicians said it was impossible to determine definitely the course of his-illness. Their statement, issued through his office, broke a recently imposed official silehceon his condition. who have It and giving it to those who don't. Persons close to the senator had described him as in “very bad shape,” bdt the doctors said' his condition was-not critical. Schrier told Romney he should “Cut out the social legislation you have proposed — that’s , Marxism.” Romney, his eyes flashing and fhee reddening, shot back: “I resent that from the bottom of my soul. Is tbi Marxism? Is tithing Marxism?” In his message to the special session of the legislature Thursday, the governor declared that his program Is based “admittedly horseback riding. For after-dark entertainment, there are plush clubs and casinos. HISTORIC LANDMARKS Historic landmarks trace to the discovery of America, Wfiisch, said. In the islands, Ik said, are the cultures and architectures of many European countries as well as their languages, traditions, food and music, spiced by African, Edit _ Indian end American Indian influences. f&gi Discovered and claimed for Spain-by Columbus in 1492, the West Indlet was the first area in the New World settled commendation ~by Europeans. M os t i did not recognize Spain’s claim aqd islands Were considered fair game for colonization by Ony country strong enough to hold them'. Hour came the Eng 11 s h, French, Dutch, Danes, Portu-Swedes. Even the knights of Malta managed to take possession of St. Croix for a short time. Now a U.S. possession, the island has flown the flags of seven countries. Vatican Will Beatify Bishop of Philadelphia and unashamedly upon the Biblical principle of tithing, where everyone contributes his percentage according tohls means.” VATICAN CITY (P - The Vatican confirmed yesterday that John N. Neumann, fourth bishop of Philadelphia, Pa., will be beatified in a ceremony at St. Peter’s Basilica Oct. IS. The beatification had been scheduled for late last June but was postponed when'Pope John XXIII died June 3. Romney holds the rank of high priest in the Mormon Church. BIBLE REBINPING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE* , SALES 39 Oakland Av», PC 4-9591 Romney Makes Oct. 24 'U.N. Day' in Michigan LANSING (P — Gov. George Romney yesterday proclaimed Oct. 24 as United Nations Day in Michigan. The date marks the 18th anniversary of the signing of tlte U.N. charter. Romney also named Noble Trayis, public affairs director of the Michigan Consolidated Gas Cq., as state Chairman for the commemorative day. EVERYBODY* LOOKING! Connolly’s Likes People Who Look! •; • and people who look like Connolly’s If you’re interested in- a Wedding or engage- ment ring now or just looking around to find your favorites long in advance, you’ll find no better selection, and prices range from *100 W& Remember, You Haven’t Seen Diamonds* UNTIL YOU’VE VISITED Regi.trr*il Jetcmhn Ammrioun C*m Society ■ dtloomflrld Miracle Mile Shopping Center Americans, too, have played l important role — tracing to the colonial days when Yankee traders prospered from the rum and slave "triangular trade” between New England, the Caribbean and Africa, In the Caribbean today, you can see Hindu temples, Mos- gogues, Chinese pagodas, Spanish castles, Dvfch windmills, British greatoouses and American mdvie Foods are as varied as the architecture. Chinese restaurants are found throughout the Islands; French culinary delicacies in Haiti, Grenada, St. Marten and Guadelupe. Surinam and Trinidad lean heavily toward Oriental type dishes, while Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic feature native dishes with a Spanish accent. * ★ ............. in the Caribbean also, the tourist can figuratively travel the world by visiting one of the many “Free Port” shops. Without walking more than a couple of yards in any of these shops, the traveler can And German cameras, Swiss binoculars, worsteds, Danish ceramics, Irish linens, Italian laces, African Ivory pieces, Oriental ade, Swedish glassware and French perfumes — all at dutyfree prices., rOPENToi(ili ’WRJml! MONDAY STORE HOURS: 9 AM. to 10 P.M. ■ •On Sale Toriite and Mon at SIMMS ! sal# priest good Tonka and Monday only. Simmt quantitios. No mail or phono ordori please. Simmt* Count Dopartmdnt Store. tho right to limit aU I Pontiac's Total Dio- I SHOP THE WHOLE STORE-SAVE ON EVERYTHING PERMANENTS $1.59 Value PACKAGE OF 25 TABLETS ■ Alka-Seltzer ■ Lilt homo permanent for any typo hair Makes hair styling easier. Family Size—Gleam Toothpaste Contains GL-70 for people who can’t brush after every meal. ______ 59a Value 34 - Hie dispute about the nuclear test-ban treaty, even though the Senate seems certain to approve it, givos a priceless insight into how far off world disarmament is. , 7 President Kennedy and his advisers — Xiig snum.u*«. w jftodiplomatic, military ana~SCl8ttlfflu—all think— plan la relatively simple. In return J ^ for the $306-million revenue it is expected to produce, various unsound and inequitable levies affecting botji individuals and industry are eliminated. , It represents, as its architect terms It, not a tax boost but a tax reapportionment. The plan was condived by a chief executive with outstanding qualifications in the fields of busi-. ness, finance and administration; whose personal integrity and sincere concern for the well-being of his State and people1 are beyond question. The Press approves Gov. Romney’s tax bill. We urge that political expediency and partisanship be transcended to the end of speedy enactment, with promise of a bright new day in Michigan’s fiscal future. interest to agree to limited test ban with Russia. Hut others, in ■and out of Congressr have doubts and forebodings. The doubters persist in their misgivings about the treaty — which prohibits test^ ing in the atmosphere, outer space amLunder-water but permits it underground — despite assurances given the Senate by: . —'♦ Secretary of State Dean Rusk—that the United States could detect at once any Russian try at cheating, • Secretary of' Defense Robert S, McNamara — that the United States is, and tldl remain, superior to Russia in unclear weapons, even under a test ban. # Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission — that any risk to this country under foe treaty would be “minor." All this is not assurance enough for the troubled ones. JEREMIAH (Sicbhd fin o. **ri« raiiJ» gtbatn prophilt) Jeremiah was the lonely man of God, forbidden to marry or to participate in foe ordinary social relations of his fellow men. A great poet and prophet, his drop conviction in the* role he played caused him to be hated and Wen persecuted, He knew little success during his lie, yet his deep faith sustained him through bitter and trying moments Of doubt. Imprisoned, placed in stocks and thrown Into a dry cistern to dip, he was saved 4 slave. On one occasion, foe priests and people of Jerusalem seized him for prophesying foe dowtflbU Of foe city. He , was, saved by the Prints of Judah. -The great contribution made by Jeremiah was foe prophecy of foe nfew covenant. .The laws of Moses would remain foe same, but foe Lord said, “I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts; and will be the# God and; they shall be my people ... they shall all know me from foe least of them to foe greatest of them..." This was a fresh approach to man's understanding of God. Hq not only would be for foe priests and prophets, but he would be in foe hearts of all. ?' vertitye and enjoy driving it sanely. 65 Blaine Mrs. Robert Kessel •■’I have worked in Birmingham for four years, driving feck to Pontiac nightly at 11:30.1 have not observed everything Hie Press mentioned in foe “Woodwaking” stories, but I have been run off foe road, heckled, threatened and rotten-egged-all from moving vehicles. , , ~ I hav$ never tried for revenge either by conversation or maneuvering of my car, except to avoid collision. Hie worst night is Friday. Try it sometime, It will make your hair ’curl—-if you’ve got any left by foe time you get home. Just n Little Scared •Since when it Is a crime for teen-agers to drive up and down Woodward all night? We have as much right on that street as any adult—maybe more because it’s a good part of our money that keeps foe drive-ins in business. ______-Jr___★ .__jA.....% |.. -l-i — . ' Is the drag racing too dangerous? Yes, it is, so bow about giving ns a free admission strip of land to race on? What really hurt in foe Press story, was foe insinuation that teen-agers sending “. . . laughter (echoing) from every corner and . . . hopping from car to car seeing their friends" is something to be frowned upon. - ’ . & ©• (Editor's Note: If foe writer of foe letter signed “Woodward-ers" will submit his name and address for our files, we will print ; his letter.) , \ , ' ’s >' Days of . All Faitha: Rosh Hashanah Start of New Year By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER Sept. 19 in foe Jewish calendar, is New Year’s Day, 5724. And that does not mean merely that lem by means of a relay of hilltop bonfires. So, to be on foe. safe were either exiled or killed, and side, they extended foe holy day utter desolation settled over foe into two day^. One of foe reforriis abandoned countryside. (Copyright, 1953) | || Alcoholism Is Cured < by Industry Program A growing Headache for American, industry is alcoholism. . / • Hardest afflicted is the youhg-mlddle age bracket, including the expensively trained, vitally Important middle-management executive. The dollar toll is estimated at over $2 billion. ... - The National Council on Alcoholism says that about 3 percent of the nation’s 70 million workers are alcoholics; the, ratio is five men to one woman. Nearly 90 per cent are between 35 and 55 years old. ★ ★ ★ . Studies of the NCA show that the Victims are proportionately distributed throughout a plant force from top management to the unskilled labor segnient. St Sick leave payment and other llringe benefits run three times as high for alcoholics as for those free Jflfjlillft disease. One company survey pegs the average benefit cost at $500 {tor year for each alcoholic. , Absenteeism averages three times Its high among alcoholics. A full 25 per cent of all absenteeism ill some corporations Is charged against alcoholism. . , An abiding evil of the sickness Is the related high-accident rate, considered doable the nonalcoholic rate. But industry, slow to face up to |Se {froblem, is now combating it on ‘ | broad front with noteworthy suc-cess. ufar ★ , m Whereas four years ago only 35 blgy j Time Won’t Wait As the fella said, “Time waits for no fan." * And you gridiron fans would feel sort of left out If you didn’t get your entries to The Press Football Contest in pn time. •______........cl ★ ★ ★ ... The worst of it is, you would not only feel left out—you’d, be left out. Years ago, the slogan of a national advertiser was “Obey that, impulse.” k So-o-o, if you haven’t yet sent in your entry, obey that impulse and get it en route now. ★ ★ ★ It can be mailed, or dropped in The Press’ Huron Street drop box. A third mode of dispatch was about to be added— by carrier pigeon—but the inadvertence was nipped Just in time. Pigeons is a dirty word around here. If yofl missed the contest game schedule and rules that appeared in past Issues, don’t worry* Tuesday's Press will carry a repeat, and you still have three days to deadline. ★ ★ ★ 7 Meanwhile, you might give some weekend thought to the1 outcome of the firsl game on the schedule — Alabama vs. 'Georgia, i , it la 5 724 vears since the Jews in formed Judaism was foe it la 5,724 years since the Jews abandonment of m old custom. began keeping a calendar; it reformers felt that present means that on this day 5,724 years calculations are accurate and a ago was foe day of Creation, foe second day is superfluous, first day of foe world. Of course, DAY OF JUDGMENT most Jews in these times have Most Jewish holidays have ei-adjusted theiiUdeas about this to foer a historical or an agricultur-modern scientific discoveries, but #1 background. Rosh Hashanah is there are a few who cling to foe not,r®lateiS £ . * „ . . i .. ™ . anything that ever happened to old belief, Just as there are Chris- IgrJael ft ls ^ Day of judgment, tians who prefer to accept Arch- concerned only with fo ' || bishop Usher’s reckoning that foe Individual. On Rosh . ... .... - . God examines each man’s life over foe past year, and enters Opinions Differ on School Bps Service I have found foe Waterford Township Board polite but not help* fill, wo want our chlidrarrmutoctedt-not-luaL educated. There arp about 25 children, kindergarten through 4fo grade, who must wait— on foe corner of M59 and Whittier, which ip a 50 mile per hour speed zone. The mothers have asked that foe hue come down our afreet so foe children won’t have to stand on such a hazardous highway. , The only excuse given is that they cannot afford It. We Just passed a 5-mill tax raise and they want an extension on foe 10-mill, school. I will vote no. •f- - Mrs. Charles McPherson 1218 Whittier When Waterford schools can/bffer normal Class loads,- adequate supplies and a salary schedule7 comparable in' foe Detroit area to obtain competent teachers, they can concentrate on school buses The result was that foe others and guards. No school bus t>x guard has fought a child to read or count. It is foe parent’s duty to get foe child to school. Hie ’compulsory attendance law will suffice for those who fail. However, any teacher with a triple shift will be glad for foe chance to work with fewer students. Waterford Taxpayer Washington Notebook: Buy Ticket Now for ’68 Trip By WASHINGTON STAFF ^ ... —..............-- -.7.--^^ WASHINGTON (NEA)^-Report- tians who prefer to accept Arch- concerned only with foe life of foe . a’ Danied Vice Presi-bishop Usher’s reckoning that foe individual. On Rosh Hashanah j„,, ™ n iAkMnn out hin world Was created in 4004 B.C. Hie name for Thursday is Rosh Hashanah, “head of foe year." Among Orthodox tand Conservative Jews it will be a two-day observance; foe Reformed Jews limit it to one day. The reason for this differ-"*ence is interesting. In ancient times, astronomers were not able to be as precise as they are today, and since Jewish months are lunar,* or moon months, there was sometimes a foe record in His Book. There is no Joy in Rosh Hashanah as there lain other festivals. What man, knowing foe secrets of his own heart, can feel anything but shame before God? No one works on Rosh Has-hanah. Everyone goes to foe synagogue. Services are almost continuous, and foe pious Jew attends them ell. dent Lyndon B. Johnson and his wife Lady Bird , on their latest overseas junket, to Europe were charged 88 3 8 apiece. The price included rounfl-tr ip transporta-, tion, hotels aii ‘ meals and was real bargain ini vacations. j -But when one reporter said his Responding to increasing pre- A query on whether wander-dictions that Congress will be In ing camels are “natural hazards” session until Christmas, Sen. or “casual obstacles" on 8n Af* frr*" »■ “With all foe New Frontier into State Department for a spending bills still pending, this ruling on foe State-UlS. Inform^* could provide Santa Claus with tion Agency Recreation Assoda-foe toughest competition he’s ever had.” . * There is no mention of Rosh paper didn’t feel foe trip, was little doubt about exactly when Hashanah in foe Old Testament, worth the price, he was told: foe moon entered Its various at least not by that name. Some “Better come along, or you phases! Especially was there scholars say it was at first sim- might miss the boat in 1968." doubt in foe outlying districts, ply foe harvest festival of a prim- f * * where foe people had to get the itive agricultural people, with Arizona’s Sen.' Barry Goldwa-word from foe Temple in Jerusa- none of its present solemn judg- ter, a leading candidate for foe —__—-----------------------------mental significance, and that it 1964 Republican presidential nom- was not until foe seventy-y ear ination, runs ,a major Phoenix exile in Babylonia that a penitent department store on foe side, snd homesick nation divided, it. Democrats are now frying to into Nosh Hashanah, Yom Kip-' make hay out of .it. pur, and. When Philip M. Kaiser, U.S. ambassador to foe Republics of Senegal and Mauritania, came home to announce to his family ■ I several years ago that he had ‘l°"8mJenth An"ual World-Wide been appointed assistant secre- Golf Tournament, tary of labor, he admits he felt It gets under way in the mid-rather proud of himself. *!e of Sepfcmfoer on moro foan The Almanac By United Press International to follow. Hie moon is approaching new phase. Th^lpiorning star is Jupiter. The evehing stars are Saturn, Mars and Jupiter. ★ ★ On this day in history: Now begins foe ten-day period known as foe High Holidays, which runs, from Rosh Hashanah to Yom Kippur. Life > is quiet, solemn, and serious In these ten days. It Is a,tone of self-examination and prayer. FAST OF GEDAUAH , On foe third day of foe High 9A(*TOTHC STORE IN'64 Bumper stickers seen streets Of Phoenix Back to foe s At dinner that night, Kaiser’s six-year-old son announced that he was planning to be a doctor. A few minutes later, he changed his mind and said he had decided to become a lion tamer. Then, looking at his father Critically, he asked his mother, “Why is it that some men, like daddy, don’t become anything?” ★ : ★ , it Sen. Ken jCeatlng, R-N. Y., overheard a conversation between young ladies on an elevator which he savs “might very well be foe final feminine word on foe matter of automation in this mod- 70 courses in. foe United States •and 50 foreign countries. The Callaway System of handicapping—subtracting a number of foe golfer’s worst holes, according to his score—is used. The rules committee further revises foe scores by applying “extemporaneous rides of thumb" in an attempt to equalize foe differences In yardage, par and terrain of foe various courses.? Several years ago, a foursome from Kenya attached foe following note to their attested store card: “We hope foe fact that we had to play foe front nine twice will not invalidate our scores. Bat a In 1778, Benjamin Franklin Was M^ay, comes the Fast of G«- (tor. Rockefeller’s first cousin, sent to France to negotiate “ daUah,, in memory of foe death was considerably helped by that 1 treaty to end foe American Revo- 0[ a Jewish national hero. When family tie In his successful bid lutionary War. in 588 B.C.''foe Jaws as a nation for election as a New York City In 1847, foe U.S. Army occu- were carried off into slavery in councilman-at-large, pied Mexico City. • Babylonia^ a few were left behind In 1901, President William Me- to look after foe land and keep Klnley died from wounds suffered it from, falling into complete rule, eight days earlier at foe hands Gedaliah was appointed governor of dn assassin. ’ over this small remnant. in-1923, Louis Flrpo knocked To foe zealots still lurking in ’ Jack Dempsey out of foe ring foe hills, these people, of course, In foe first round, but was de- seemed to be “collaborationists,” feated by foe heavyweight chain- and Ghdallah seemed foe worst pion of foe world in foe second one of all. So they assassinated Laraula was 842 “cousins” short routtf, him.—. •-.« ..,w. .. ^ victory, i ' - ern age.” ' “(hie of them said,” Keating relates, ‘“I know that some <5 . • ...» „ M v . these machines can take foe group o Mau Mau sripers un-New York- piace 0f three-men. But person- aware of foe more subtle niceties "" sm" niiy, i»d rather have foe three p)? gam®, infilfrated foe woods Recognizing the problem, Aldrich’s opponent, John La-mula, flooded foe voters of New York with last-minute ads and post cards urging them to “Be MY Cousins" ,d»y.: When foe votes were counted, Sen. Gale McGee, D-Wyo., a former professor at foe University of Wyoming, got a left-handed compliment In foe7 following letter bn his chances for re-election next faU: “I’m still convinced that you are foe best history prof I’ve -ever had and Pm looking forr ward to seeing you back on foe7 faculty at Laramie after next iiusL i Beautifully Soft and Warm WOMEN'S GOWNS Perfect godogothers... HIS 'N' HER CLASSMATES [ you belong together . . . theie •mart ehtrti an "In" at kHooI this yastr Red, olive or blyeifllt size, , S-M-l-XL, hers 30 to 36. Street Floor Girls' Sizes 7 to 14 PLAID SLACKS JoeKennedy ' FacesSurgery . BOSTON (UPS Fortner ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy, the President’s father, will enter New England Baptist Hospital 'today . for what doctors described as a minor operation to. remove a “skin lesion.” the operation was expected to last about two hours. the elder Kennedy, <75, has been in poor health since a stroke la December 1961. He underwent similar surgery in July at Cape Cod hospital in Hyannis when a growth was removed from his THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 19G3 _ F1VB Victim Questioned Earlier About Brawl '• Gfs Death Investigated in France f, France (ft -ji Army officials said yesterday they were investigating circumstances surrounding the death of a U.S. soldier attached to the Evreus Air Base. The soldier, Identified as Pfc. Michael Boatman was found dead Thursday along railway tracks near Evrenx. Some reports said he had been decapitated, bat Army authorities in Vefthin, who are handling die case, declined ts go Into details. In Union City, Mich., it waste-ported the soldier’s parents, Mr. and Mrs; Arthur Boatman, received a' telegram from the adjutant general’s office notifying ..................aitty hA them he apparently had been struck by a train. French sources said that Boatman had been one of a number of-soldiers questioned in connection HEADLINES NOBODY NEEDS ... ■. ‘V ' 1 : , • ■ “Lumberyard Bums—Damage Set at $100,000” “Six Students Injured in Fire” “City Fire Loss $2 Million for the Year” If this is the kind of news that appears in your daily newspaper — who needs it? The best way to get rid of such news is to keep the fires from happening. Your local Chamber of Commerce is working hard to do just that They are involved in many activities in this direction through the work of their Industrial Fire Safety Committee. All of these activities require the cooperation of concerned citizens ... business and community leaders. Maybe it's not as exciting as sliding down the firehouse — pole, or riding on the fire truck, but it sure beats the dubious thrill of watching your town go up in smoke. with a, barrack# fight last Friday between whites And Negroes. Army authorities would not con-firm this, but Boatman, a white man, had not been held following the fight. NOT INVOLVED The Defense Department in Washington said he was not involved in the fracas. Five Negro and one white soldiers were charged yesterday with homicide and aggravated assault in connection with the barracks brawl in which a white man—- Robert E. Padgett, 23, .of Woodlawn, Va. — was ' fatally to- Remember the Dates for FirelPre^fl^ eck - October 7 Through 12 You Will Be Hearing More on This. PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE tL mmsemm The charges were preferred by the compander of the 5S7th Army Quartermaster Company. The incident occurred at Ev-reux air base in western France, where the company is assigned. An investigation officer will now be appointed to decide whether there is sufficient evidence to bring the men to trial; This investigative procedure is expected to take several weeks, ARRESTED SATURDAY The five Negro soldiers were arrested last Saturday and transferred to Verdun for pretrial confinement. Pfc. Allen L. Gernard, white, of the same company, was implicated yesterday and is being brought to Verdun, A . Official reports immediately after the incident said the soldiers invaded a barracks occupied by Air Force enlisted men and that broomsticks and. iron bars were used in a scuffle. Military police were called and restored calm. Officials said at the tithe there was no indication racial tensions had touched the incident. Window Detroiter Gets Life in Death of Policeman DETROIT (AP), — Recorder’s Court Judge Frank G. Scheman-ske yesterday sentenced Charlie Wshington,-34,uf to life in Southern MichigarTPrSorrat Jackson, following his conviction of second-degree niurder in the shooting death of police Sgt. Stanley Sech. , The policeman was shot last Feb. 24 as he answered a family trouble run at the Washington home. OAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST MORTGAGE LENDING INSTITUTION NED MORE LIVING ROOM? N ENLARGE PAIrI.. MODERNIZE We hove a special PACKAGE HOME LOAN SERVIC to meet your needs NO DOWN PAYMENT • NO LEOAL FEES MMMVNlV SKtttlS! SHOP MONDAY 9t45 A M. TILL 9 P.M. Sorry, No Mail or Phono Orders on These Monday Only Specials. Charge Thom at Walte'Sl ’ All Season RAINCOATS Solution Dyed Rayon and Acetate JUPITER DRAPES Reg. 6.99 Rag. 8.99 Rag. 16.99 Rag. 18.99 Rag. 28.99 SWx63" SWx90" DWx63" DWx90" TWx90" $500 $700 sfjso *15” *25M These Courfolds solution dyed coloray rayon and acetate draperies won't fade, streak or Fun . . . and1 the color Is guaranteed for the life pf the drape) Draperies ... Fourth Floor wf&jjgjj Extraloft makes it fluffier! BELLEAIR BLEND BLANKETS Reg. 5.99 ♦4 85% reryoh; 15% acryhc blankets with extraloft ter a thickar, fluffier blanket , and nap-loc to stop the pilling. 72 by 90" ike, . Blankets ,.. Fourth Floor Your Choicel Our Complete Stock of 9xl2~Ft RAYON RUGS Rei 49. &*3988 ALL FOAM RUBBER BACKED! 9 by 12-ft. room site rayon rugs In solid colon and tweeds... all, at ovet $10 savings Monday onlyl Rugs .. . Fifth Floor 3 Movable Vinyl-Clad Shelvesl TRIPLE-CHROMED BATHROOM SPACE SAVERS Reg, 9.95 ♦8.77 e Poles adjust to 9-ft. 2-In. • Chromed towel ring , • vinyl-dad shelves with raised gallery T?-' • “ ■ - e Fits over all standerd bath fixtures Reg. 9.90 Reversibtes and glen plaid oil season raincoats in sizes 8 to 16 and petites 7 to 15. Half size glen plaids on sole too, reg. 11.99............. 10.90. Coats ... Third Floor Proportioned Sizes in Smart LINED WOOL SLACKS Kontfleld Polished Cotton’ AREN'S SLACKS Reg. 4.99 Wash’ and wear combed polished cotton slacks In the traditional style. Beige, el-mond or palmento green* waist sizes 29-40, Inseams 29-34. Men’s Wear... Street Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1968 SUNDAY ONLY BONELESS LEAN « TENDER SWISS STEAKS 41 EAST WALTON Just Cast of Baldwin Complete Selection of All Colors Super Keht-Teiie Oscar Mayer’s RED BAND SLICED i BREAKFAST Now Dupont Lucite WALL PAINT Young-Tender STEER SLICED BEEF LIVER LVCXTE 41 EAST WALTON JUST EAST OF BALDWIN AVE. Opatt Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M* AN Otter Waakdaya IAJN. to 8 P.M. tMoilUblllNb FE 4-0242 Pick-up & Delivery PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 16 N. Parry FE 2-1100 • 24,000 Miltt ■ B. F. GOODRICH 111 North Perry FE2-0121 SAVE FREE-House Inspection mCATEXHOUSE PAINT ^^^^^SH£RWIN-WlUUM! GLENWOOD PLAZA Paddock and N. Pony at Glonwood 5-Pound Poly Bag Campus Green GRASS SEED FAMOUS YOUNGSTOWN BRAND First Time Offered at Thia Price Complete With Faucets and Strainer 42" Wide ... While They Last Ws alio havs M" and M» eabinal slsks at tanHIo valuat. Michigan Fluoresoeul Light Co. 393 Orchard Lake Ava., Pontiao Plumbing Dept, THE GREATEST ADVANCE IN 50 YEARS A quick-growing grass, guaranteed to grow in sun or shade, i Treated with disease-controlling DuPont Arasan. ROLLFAST BICYCLES . WITH TRAINER WHEELS $29** HOOVER SWEEPER , Authorized Hoover Service Station FALL CLEANING a /, MADE EASY. .. _ With Hoover Serviced >4B|i/fff 711 Vacuum Cleanere a up/W fit e Same day service. • All makes <91^®® /#,; e Work guaranteed P ///a. *•! Free Pick Up and Delivery , gongs if Oakland County>^K COMPLETE STOCK Jftfe/ REBUILT CLEANERS M Red V Blue 11 4-Cubic Feet LAWN CART 1 5.96 mi Durable phenolic I finish, large etrong ' handle, heavy sheet 1 steel frame, aelf-lub-ricating, non-corro-eive bearings, steel wheels. o Air Tires , * ‘ • Spring Seat e Chroma Handlebars Regular Rollf as! 24” and 28" NO MONEY DOWN Jtl III I ilia 18 »t B B i t tilt SSSSOO ceceee* — FOODLAND MARKETS — ATLAS Martet FELICE Market 1461 Baldwin 1116 W. Huron TENUTA Marliet La S. Market 6616 Saihabaw taka Orion PARTS AND SERVIOE QN m BRAND SWEEFERt : o Bags - • Hoses • lU ll i i jw o Cords oBjiishaa* Switches I Attachment! ..........................I Included, SCARLETT’S w mi in irn^Ti i imimtrftTn fry \C0MPLETE BRAKE REUNE\ lTURDAY^SEPTEMBER 14, 1963 paoaczzKx: OPEN SUNDAY NOW! wPIiIm SUPER Tuesday Morning -9:30 of the Pontiac Mall Community Room ... "Woman's World" Program Dr. Lowell Ecklund Will Present "Whafs New In Adult Education1' 9:30-10:00 A.M.-Coffee Time ].0r00>11:00 A.M.-Formal Proaram 11:00*12:00 A.M.-Informal Question and Answers Lovely New Colors Reg. 6.59 Gal. CEILIN8 WHITE ONLY WE DO CUSTOM MIXING Freshly Baked BREAD , TELEGRAPH It ELIZABETH LAKE HD. They All Love ft^ jPSSBPf* the FOOD ' AV Sw£33L Here Jg&S} Winter Prices Now SAVE UP TO 30% ^jpSP’ FREES Motor Storage >B with Tone-lJp Cw inside and outside 1/ WINTER BOAT-STORAGE OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. CMIISE-OUT Boat Sales & Service 3 i. Walton FE 8*4402 PEBEEB-r ■ MndnA¥-fiiccnAV-i MONDAY-TUESDAY —WEDNESDAY ONLY COUPON j - COUPON e LADIES' MAIN SKIRTS | __ , tlllT, OR SWEATERS ! #* UBIIF lUiTS e MEN’S PANTS I OR PLAIN COATS TAILOR MADE - SARAN PLASTIC IHSTAttED WHILE YOU WAIT - COMPLETE UA Hoop of Cleaning for a We* Bit ’O Mono/’ OPEN DAILY 7 AM M A P.M. SAT. • A.M. to 4 P.M. Telephono FE 2-0231 ON THESE CLOSE-OUT SPECIALS FREE SHOCKS SPECKAE MWOAtOHLTr gg.ld.toEiM Set elSTiw5 7.50*14 0.00x14 8.50x14 * (Take-Off. Slightly Uied) Fall Fashion Festival !„*At ■ Jv BloontfiOld Miracle Milo OFFERS EVERYTHING EXCITING FOR EVERYONE... LOW PRICES! ® OvHIng White .*,. $3.29 Exterior White ... $4.50 h/nfm Latex Floor Paint..... $6.25 Drop Clothes . ... 20 WALLPAPERS - WALLTEX-SANITAS and Many Others! Be^kte A(Hon,a'Qooliiy NoNNieteN . ($2.00 Installation Each) •pedal littery Offer tor Limited If me 04 IntredvdiHl the Hercules Devble A«Hen Heevy-Outy She«k Abiorber. Ouerenteed fer 39,000 Mile* er One Yewt. PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER SPECIAL MASONRY PAINT ONE-STOP SHOPPINO at BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 48 Stores and Serrloet ^ OPEN 9:30 A.M.-9 PJW. FREE PARKING FOR 3,000 CARS §HOPPEB stoppers FE 4-4266 1075 W. Huron St Phono 334-9957 MBH11 THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1968 Ime to Think About That Winter Co Cooler weather has tamed thoughts to tifepur-i a new winter coat. If last year’i chat is oat of style' take a look at these three new coats for fell 19(9. Button up your overcoat this fall in the style shown at the left*.. Generous double rows of Itendsomebrass but* tons highlight thta few belted, notdi-coQared coat U As-trotex mohair blend. Laminated ftr fashion 1 I dim BUTTONS^NOT BOWS Vows Said, by Couple in Church Seven-branch gold candle-holders and vases of chrysanthemums graced the alfer in St. Andrew’s Church, Ann Arbor, where Mary Ann Me-Laughlin and Tommy Lynn O'Brien were wed today. Dr. Henry Lewis performed the early afternoon ceremony. The R. H, McLaughlins of Ann Arbor were bogs at the church reception for their daughter and the son of the Ward O'Briens of Lotus Court. Triple tiers of French Uto-sion held by a hexagonal STUDY THE CLASSICS Kathleen White Becomes Bride Kathleen Anne White chose gowns of emerald green satin brocade for her attendants as she became Mrs. Edward LaDouceur today in St. Benedict Church. Stephanotis and pompons. Mrs. Gerald Bradow c HRS. T. L. O'BRIEN crown fell< over the bride’s gown of white silk peau de sole and peau d’ ange lace. The box-pleated skirt opened into a chapel train. J » ' V* ' An orchid corsage centered her princess shower cascade Of roses and Stephanotis. Carol Jean McLaughlin," her sister’s maid of honor together with bridesmaids Sue Ka-gay and Anne Berkeley, both of Ann Arbor, wore gold peau de sole Empire gowns and Dior head bows. With David Dixon, best man, were ushers James McLaughlin, David Panks, Gordon Hlrschman, Lansing and William Kath of Detroit. After a 10-day honeymoon in northern Michigan, the couple will resume their studies at Michigan State University. A breakfast in Devon Gables for the wedding party followed the noon ceremony performed by Rev. Richard W. Thomas. The evening reception wii) be in the Coral Reef Room at Airway Lanes. Daughter of the Steve J. Whites of Bow Lane, the bride appeared in a tiered and sequihed gown of Chantilly lace, styled with chapel sweep. Her butterfly veil of illusion fell from a Swedish crown of pearls and crystals. White cymbidium orchids centered her bouquet of, Henry £ carnations and sweetheart roses complemented a gown of champagne silk for Mrs. Lawrence B. Williams of Birmingham, who wax honor matron, ★ ★ On the esquire side were best man Jerry Krippel of' Dearborn and Charles Moll of Boyne City who ushered. The new Mrs. Kircher is a graduate of Northwestern Lois Eileen Moore, daughter of. the Ralph W. Moores, Birmingham, and Everett Frank Kircher, for the daughter Of the George Martens of Joslyn Avenue and Mrs. :e. LoDOUCEUR wash Where It Is When possible, suds off plashes “where they are’’ — draperies and shades while hanging,' bed covers oh the bed, and slipcovers while over the furniture. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Teddy R. Bowes of Gham-berlain Street. * ★ ★ The bride’s gown of white silk taffeta with knee-length overskirt and bodice.. of Chantilly lace swept into a chapel train. Her veil of silk illusion, secured by a lace and pearl tiara, was fingertip-length. She carried' pink and white carnations. Gall hferien, her sister’s maid of honor and their cousin Judith Marten of Flint who served as bridesmaid with Betty Strevel, wore pink taffeta brocade, They carried colonial bouquets of pink-tipped white carnations. , Tamera Marten of Fenton was flower girl, The bride is a recent graduate of the Detroit Practical Nursing Center. The couple #111 live in Sault Ste. Marie while he is stationed at Klncheloe AFB. The Blue Star Mothers Chapter 4 will serve as hostesses for Past presidents Club at a luncheon Tuesday. The Past Presidents club Is made up of all past presidents of Blue Star Mothers throughout the state. A past president of Chapter 4, Mrs. George Leinenger, is presl* Pine Knob Lodge, Clarks-ton, was fee setting for a luncheon - reception following toe nuptials Of Shelia Ann:-Lane to Michael John Reed t(riayJto~JQuM*»djfcrfrr toe Lakes Church, Waterford. The bride’s unclej Rev. James T. Sullivan, C.S.S.R. performed toe noon ceremony. . Daughter of Mrs. James ? J. Lane, Williams Lake Road, and the late Mr. Lane, the , bride appeared to wrote peau de «pie with full-length skirt of unpressed pfeats. PETAL PILLBOX / Bouffant veiling attached to a petal pillbox and a cascade of White roses and Stephanotis, centered with a Cattleya orchid, complemented her ensemble. Wearing persimmon peau satin, Patricia Ann Reed, maid of honor and sister of the bridegrqom, carried bronze pompons And brown-tipped Mary Jo roses. David Reed, untonLake, was best man for his broth-, er. They are sons of the Frank A. Reeds, South Roselawn Drive. dr— ★, Seating guests at toe small fairiily ceremony were Robert Decraene, Dearborn, and Robert Morris, Rochester. The, bridegroom is a junior at Wayne State University. Pontioak Unit Holds pinner Chapter 4 met Wednesday for their business meeting. Mrs. Herman Dennis was elected delegate to National Convention to be staged in Detroit to October. Mrs. Charles Cowley i* an alter- The Pontioak chapter of the National Secretaries Association International gathered for dinner Wednesday in Ted’s Restaurant. Mrs. Eileen Rector, the hostess, gave the invocation and Edytoe Perry, ways and means chairman, announced both a candy sale and a benefit sale this fell. MRS. MICHAEL J. REED Book Club Sets Session The Waterford Township Book Review Club will meet Monday at 1 p.m. to the home of Mrs. Tull LassWill of Lake-field Drive. Cohostesses will ■ be Mrs. Francis Klnkle and Mrs. William J. Ladanyl. Mrs. Kenneth Valentine will review “The Guns of August’’ by Barbara Tuchman. Wherever.... Whencyer However Yon Travel 7 TRiVUI *uv. ft-AO/J m'L MRS. ■'TEDDY R. BOWES FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY by HOWARD L DELL Your Nolfhborhood Htarmcrttet -tt&am r. Portrait Offer A Lovely 8x10 French Grey Portrait 7QC with 4^/ and this coupon This offer expire* Oct. 19jtt3. Group* . . ..-Cortot Adult* (lightly higher. Open Mon. 9 to S,frl. till 8 p.m. f* retem ih#. right to rapilal* •ltd Interpret the condition* under which title coupon may be uted. STCJDIO „ FB 4-1701 y xNEAR forest lake club ^ SUNDAY 1s5 P.M. , 3 bedroom Colonlai^o Jgndicaped acre, swimming pool. Carpeted living and dining rooffir^qF4>!ete. bath*, new 18x20 family room, 2 fireplaces. Basement, gat heat Possession at once. 200 PM LIEUT, and MRS. GARY S. CROWELL Good Musie—Singing-True to the Word Preaching God Meets With. US—You, Too, Are tmdted APOSTIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 485 CENTRAL Saturday Young People ......... 7*30 p.m. Sunday School and Worship ..... 10:00 a.m. , Sunday Evening Services .......< 7:30 p,m. Tuesddy and Thursday Services... 7.30 p.m. Church Phone.............. .V. FE 5-8361 Pastor's Phone................. 852-2382 COMING: 25th ANNIVERSARY, SEPT, 24, 1963 FIRST CONGREGATIONAL Rev. Malcolm Burton will speak on “intriguing Questions’1 at the 10:30 aim. service .tomorrow at the First Congregational Church. v Also featured will be the chancel choir singing “Praises We Sing to^Tbee,” by Haydn and 'Holy Is the D6rd” by Schubert. The southeastern Michigan Assoc iat ion of Congregational Churches will meet September 22 at the First Congregational Church In Wayne. FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST The Pontiac jCtty Quartet tJn-ion will sponsor its monthly musical at Friendship Baptist Church__________________ Williams Street tomorrow at I^diardaon ashreteweS; EVANGELICAL UNWED BRETHREN The Fellowship Class of the Evangelical United B/eihre Church will sponsor a Fall Rally and cooperative picnic at . the Beyerly Road home of Mr., and Mrs. Robert -Walker on Sylvan Lake at 6 p.m. today. Projects for the coining four months will be discussed and outlined. Wilbert Hiseock will give devotions. Class members nnd friends are invited to attend. The October meeting will be held in the church partem with Mrs. Don Lunsford and Mrs. Max Rev. Alvin Hawkins is pastor with Mrs. Robbie White as president. Hie public is welcome to attend the musical. NEWMAN AME The Senior Usher Board of Newman AME Church will sponsor their annual Usher’s Day program tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. -Guest speaker will be Rev. C. A. Strickland of Detroit. The public is welcome to attend. ' NEW BETHEL'BAPTIST New Bethel Baptist Church celestial choir is sponsoring Alberta Marshall in a reading recital tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the church building oil Branch Street. Rev. Amos G. Johnson, pastor, has announced that the recital I will be open to the public. The public is Invited to attend the recital whichp^beat be heard from the church grounds on West Long. Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills. LAKE STREET CHLHCH OF GOD The Lake Stieet Church of God announces a revival beginning tomorrow from 7 to 8 pjn. Rev. Escoto, student 6f Bay Ridge College in Texas Will be speaker for tomorrownlgfat’s service. Elders WlQie Burton and Henry White will alternate as speakers Monday torobgh Saturday ev- TRINITY BAPTST Church school will begin at 3:15 m. «t Trinity Baptist Church tomorrow. Rev. Lee A. Gragg of Clarksville, Tenn. will be guest speaker at tiie 10:45 am. morning worship with music by the combined choir. The annuel deacons and deaconess day program will be held at the 3:30 p.m. afternoon service. ' , ; Rev. Gragg will deliver the message for the evening vespers. KIRK IN ORE HILLS At 4 p.m. tomorrow Dr. Phil* lip Steinhaus wilt play the. final recital of the summer series bn the world’s largest carillon at the Kirk in the Hills Church. Dr. Steinhaus is carillonneur at "The Whofe Bible to the Whole World" ‘ THE MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH M-S9 at N. Call Lake Rd. Pontiac,Michigan f ’ , The Sind ANNUAL MISSIONARY CONVENTION • ‘ * awoHj-wu. wiowaip SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 thru 22 INSPIRATIONAL MESSAGES DAILY From the Missionaries and p International President of the Missionary Alliance Church REV. BENJMMIN F. JENKINS Song leader & soloist extraordinary....mlnls-tsrs in large summer Conferences & Camps... Evangelistic meetings & Missionary Conventions. the Kiris as well as its organist use the Epistle of James as the v ■'* basis for his sermon at the 11 a.in. morning worship tomorrow at the United Presbyterian Church. Several members of the church are spending the weekend at the annual Caseville Christian Retreat at Caseville. -Rev. -Paul (L Cooley, paptor has announced that the revival meetings will be open to the pub-Uc. I _ FIRST CHRISTIAN The First Christian Church will play host to the district convention of the Detroit District of Christian Churches September 22. Rptr. Ray Bosh of Hiram College will be the featured speak; er In the evening session. BIRMINGHAM Ul«TARlAN Members of the religjm education department will present a drama Friday evening at the monthly church cooperative din- . Author-producer Is Mrs. H. C. Mehlenbacher, program chairman is Mrs. William Reddig. ST. STEPHEN’S EPISCOPAL The flirrit day of church school Will begin at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church tomorrow. The cooperative day nursery will open | Monday at 0:18 a-m. UNITEDPRESBYTERIAN~ Rev. F. William Palmer will CENTRAL METHODIST Dr. Milton H. Bank will speak i “How to Find Real Life’^at both the 9:18 and 10:48 a. services tomorrow. The second sendee will be broadcast live. LUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION Pastor Mires Stine will preach the aermrrn nt hnth the 8:45and 11 a.m. services tomorrow at the Lutheran Church of the Ascension. Sunday school will be at 9:45 jjfi. __ l-yV . , : W/ ! ' ★ Promotion Suhday tomorrow will find Robert V^entby beginning a new senior high group. Directors are Eiwood Foreslund and Mrs. Roland Halqutet. The social ministry committee has planned a number of discussion groups for the week of Sept. 23 Basic subjects will be the rac-problem and juvenile delinquency. Serving on the committee are Robert Walker, Lewis Crew, Albert Hehl, Robert Elert, William Moorl«>U8e, Edward Meyer; Dale Plate and Clyde Chrtetian. The juriior choir will form two groups this year with the boys choir rehearsing at 9. a.m. Saturday morning at the Church and the girls choir rehearsing at 10 . ajn. bfiglnnjngSeptemba^YFhe choirs are under the direction of Mrs. Edward Meyer. World Peace Struggle to Be Discussed at Mai The vital importance of America’s role in the present struggle for world peace will be emphasized and discussed at the Pontiac Mall Community Room Sunday at 8 p.m. by members of the Baha’i faith of Pontiac. Pontiac attorney Wallace Baldwin will give the principle address. The occasion will be the observance of World Peace Day, created by the Baha’is to commemorate the introduction of the Bahai World Faith to the United States on September 18, 1893. The objective of, the World Peace Day is to emphasize the splrtUal destiny of America in the establishment of universal peace. This year’s theme, “America’s Role in World Peace”, was an- nounced recently by John Eddy, c! •'.irman of the Baha’i Assembly here. Eddy pointed out that current world problems and their related spirtuai values would be discussed freely at the meeting which is open to toe public. The Baha’i religion, founded in Iran, over 100 years ago, proclaims the oneness of fill great world religions. According to its teachings all major prophets are accepted bb equally Inspired and toe need, for unity of all mankind and the absolute equality for all people is stressed. The Baha’i faith Is recognized by the United Nations as an International nongovernmental organization. It has no political objectives. PRESIDENT: C & MA DR. NATHAN BAILEY President of th9 Christian & Missionary Alliance sines I960. In 1057...1962, he made world trips...inspected Alliance Mission, fields In South Amrica, Europe, Africa, Near East, Indonesia, Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan & Japan. Schedule of Services SUNDAY 9:45 A.M. y Sunday School and 7-P.M. Missionaries \ 6:00 A. Y.F. WEEK DAYS 10 A.M.-1S Missionary Service 7 P.M. Slides and Films 7.30 Service SATURDAY, Sept- 21 B 7:30 Viet Nam In Review REV, I. WESLEY BRILL Missionary to Indonesia since 1929...one of world's exports on Jungle trails In Indonesia. Worked In Kalimantan, formerly Borneo; Alar, Timur, & Sumba. MISS BETTY KIEFER Missionary to Gabon, Africa since 1858...teaching In the Bible School at Bongolo... medical work in dispensary. REM. ROSS DUNCAN Missionary to Yiat Nam. Home on first Fur lough...hear hit story of missionary work In a land of warfare, fevolution & pressures of Communism. MISSIONARY EXHIBIT SUNDAY SCHOOL BUILDING SAT , SEPT. 14-10 &M. to 9 P.M. \ . Nightly 6>43 to 7.29'p.m. £ • I LUTHERAN 1 | CHURCHES 1 | MISSOURI SYNOD $ | Cross of Christ | » 1100 ton* Pin* at T*l*graph 5 Bloomfield Hill, 6 Church School ot 9:45 A.M. •j: Service of Worthipat 41A.M. •:¥ He». D. H. Pauling, Puilor || Phone 6466832 $, r St. Stephen | Sashobaw at Kempf $ David Ludwig, Pastor >:< V Sunday School ..... 9,30 A.M. 5? % Church Service, . .... 11 00 A.M. ® I St. Trinity | Auburn ot Jegiie .. (East Side) \ :g Ralph (l. Clam, Pastor Sunday School....... 9,43 A M. £: Find S*rvic* ....... 8:30 A M. :v Second Service...11:00 A M. % St. Paul: I I™ Jotlyn at Third , v: ® (North Side) Rev. Maurice ShatkeU ' Early Service , . . . . 8:00 AM. ft! .•'■•ndoy School....... 9:05 A.M. :*!; lot* Service ...... .10:45 A.M. % PEACE . I Service, held ot Wotertord Towmhlp High ffi School, Highland Hoad at Crenent law :S «ood. s •. ; m ,4 ‘4 Sunday School 9,00 A.M. ' 1 Worship Servic* 10:30 AM ; ® | Richard H. Ftueht, Pattpr S 11' Grace i Corner Genets** and Glendal* 5 , (Weit Side) . 1 >: I Richard C. Sluckmeyer, Pastor •: vi Church Servic* 9:00 A M-1 iji Sunday School.. .,... .9,00AM. 8 Church Service.... ,.*. tt:00'AMa Sunday School,. 11:00 AM. ■“Tho Moran How* ouor * qaw 12,30 PM. Every Sunday at Orchard take Church Rfiv. Edward D. Auchard,‘pastor-of toe Orchard Latte Community Church, Presbyterian, will continue toe series on “Twelve Servants of One Lord”^ begun last Sunday. * < Tomorrow’s sermon will be on Peter, entitled “The Rolling Stone.” I Ma r t h a KureweO, violinist, iwesent “Adoration” by at 9 a. m. The chancel stag “Ave Verum” at too U a. to. serv-worship. 2: Rev. Auchard will participate in toe ground-breaking for ton new medical unit .at Presbyterian Village, a home for senior citizens, Rev. Auchardi la president of thfi Presbyterian Board ^ct Church Extention of the Presbytery of Detroit, s#ch supervises health and welfare facilities as writ as [fTOvrcWrFr^etopmeiit and ‘ urban ministries of United Presbyterians In the Detroit area. PLAN TO MEET The senior high fellowship will meet for ,f discussion of the Chrtetian use of leisure time un-j der the leadership of tliq moderator, Joanne Auchard at16 p. m. I Mr. Auchard will meet with a special seminary group of | young peo|de studying toe ' Christian faith at 8 p. m. Mrs. Thomas Bertrand, presK' dent'of to# Women’s Association, | will lead a prayer; time meeting Monday at 1:30 p.m. for the. women of toe church. ^ .-W'.;u it* • ilr s Abo on Monday evening the trustees will meet under the lead-ership of William T. Irons. The pastor will preside at the session meeting on Tuesday evening. ■■ -■ r • w ' ■ L A new ndult fellowship group,, The Pairs and Spares will meet • at, toe church Wednesday at 8 p/m. for a treasure hunt. , The first autumn meeting of toe junior high fellowship te scheduled for Thursday at 5:30 p, pi. BETHEL TABERNACLE Flnt PentecoU Church of fontioe Sun. School 10 AM. Wonhlg II AM JVANOELISTIC SERVICE Sun., Tuei. and Thun—7:30 PM. Rev. and Mn. E. Crouch “Our purpose Is obey God and serve only Him. Come, be with us." Worship Lord's Day V 10:30 a.m. Lord's Day Evr 1 7:00 p.m. -Wednesday Evening 7:00 p.m. CHURCH OF CHRIST 87 Lafayette Street First Preisbyterian Church HURON AT WAYNE REV. GALEN E. HERSHEY. PASTOR REV. PAULO. CROSS, ASST- PASTOR ALBERT A. RIDDERING. Christian' Education Diraclor. Worship Service.. ...,*. 9-.30 ond 11 A.M. Church School.......9:30 and 11 AM. “Waterford Town,hip American Baptist Clank* Sunday School 9:45 AM Worship 11 AM ------. . 6:30 PM Baptist FollowsMp i'" v targe forking lot _ ^ Nursery During All Servtam *w. toUrl L Man, hear • ' ■ p' 1 T 't ■1 [ CHURCH of CHRIST k . 210 HUGHES ST. FB S-1TS6 Roosevelt Well,, EvangellM ■ Sunday Bible Study fpr all-ages, 9,45 a.m, -| Sunday Worship Periods 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. | Tuesday Weekly Bible Study 8 p.trt. I th* Church that "Speak, a, ibe OraclM of God* , 1 (PETER 4.TI) , ' BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rd. North of West Long lake Rd. Sunday School ... 10 o m. Evening Worship .. 6,00 p.m. Morning Worship .. U a.m, j Prayer Meet., Wed. 7:30 p.m. REV. HAROLD W. GIESEKE, PASTOR PHONE 647-3463 BIRMINGHAM \ UNITARIAN CHURCH Ml Woodward Avt. at lono Pin* Rd., Bloomfield Hill, - Ml 7-2380 ONE SERVICE AT 10:30 A.M. "Conildorth* Chlldron-How They Grow" Robert MarahqlL Mini,ter COLUMBIA AVENUE “ BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. - FE 5-9960 Sunday School........ 9.45 AM ^Morning Worship '.. .... 11.00 AM. Training Union ....... 6.30 PM. Evening Worship....... 7.30 P.M. Midweek Service (Wed.). 7.45 PM Be our Guest and You'll he Blert 'v hl m' >». End ybur search for a friendly Church p. CLAY rt/Uv Pastor (Affiliated Whh the Southern BapUrt Convention) CLARENCE B. JACKSON. Minister of Education CARROLL HUBBS. Music Director EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH - 645 S. Telegraph Rd. (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) A Fundamental, Independent, Bible Believing Baptist Church THE BIBLE HOUR ... 10 A.M. Departmentalized Sunday School for All Ages... with NO Literature but the Bible. 1 1- ^■ HEAR DR. MALONE teach the word of God versrt by verae In the large Auditorium Bible Class;' broadcast on WPON 10.15-10.45 AM. Rev. Leland Lloyd, Sunday School Sopti In the 1.200 Seal Auditorium Baptism Every Sunday Night 7 P,M. Dr. Tom Malone, Pastor WPON 10.15.10,45 AM NURSERY AT ALL SERVICES BUS TRANSPORTATION CALL FE 2-8328 JOYCE MAKjNE, Director of Musk MUSIC TO BLESS THE HEART J 0 a.m. Solo Louise Eaton .11 A.M, Choir Arrangement 7.p.m. Solo Bill Blount TJie Haimonettes Trio Sunday School Attendance Last Sun, i 1403 TOE PONTIAC PRESS, SATCBDAT, SEPTEMBER 14, 1963, Church Cranbrook Aids | summer among the Indians and Yukon, and then out to distant v 1 * villages to teach school. ] In small villages of only a couple of hundred people the girls found them relatively untouched by white people. Working for two weeks in one place, the partners found the people fairly simple; and very friendly. Children were enthusiastic and eager to learn. Schools in Alaska have not been on a par with schools in the lower forty-eight (as they call the contiguous U.S.) until a few years ago, and there is Still a weed for teachers. Both the Bureau of Indian Affairs and state schools are making rapid progress on both the elementary and secondary level. Fort Yukon, where the girls received their braining,'graduated its first high school seniors last Alaska asked for college girls to sending two girls to Fairbanks. ________.. ... teach in their native Bible Sohja Johnion, a University of Eskimos in Alaska, schools, Christ Church Cranbrook Michigan senior end Lee Eyler.l Both girls were sent to - Williams Lake Church of the Nazarene . 2840 Airport Road Paul Coleman* Minister „ 10 AM.-SUNDAY SCHOOL. 11 AM.—WORSHIP HOUR 7 PiM.-^WORSHIP HOUR Christ's Church of Light1 " NON-DENOMINATIONAl lotus lake School, Waterford Cor. Percy lOnu and Harper St. Sunday School 9:45 A M. Worship 11:00 A.M. Information call OR 3-7650 or OR 3-4/10 1ST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH Oregon and .Kansas and live there for the school year. Alaska is not only our biggest state (roughly one third the size of the lower forty-eight) but it. also has unusual weather con-! ditidns, a wide variety of animal and plant life, and a midnight sister Sonja. Sonja was in Alaska this summer teaching vacation Bible School. ADMIRING TRINKETS — Lynda Johnson (left) of 3262 Wellington admires jade and other trinkets brought from Alaska by her 576 Orchard Lake Ave. SERVICE - 7:30 P.M. PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH, • 8 N. Genesee (Corner. W. Huron) 335-2773. EVERETTE A. DELL, Minister 11 A.M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL "UtftTY IS A WAY OF LIFE" MARCUS BACH APOSTOLIC FAITH TABERNACLE 93 Parkdale I North of the Arctic Circle,!! H about 125 miles from Russia, the! 1 tundra has no trees or shrubs, I only some 350 varieties of wild 1' flowers. In observing Eskimo and Indian I ways of life the girls noted that's BB; women do all the cooking, In- ll eluding making bread, skinning r| seals, gathering berries season, I Bn and nuking clothing, including1! H mukluks, parkas and mittens to I H be worn in the -60 degree winters. | H Summer weather averages about! HB. 40 degrees. Most Eskimo sun ^B hunt for a living. ■ CSonJa ami Lee botiynoted that ESkirrfo'wnd Indian, families were/ , . M . large. Elght oMdrie children wasv *“ * ,M* not uncommon. Older brothers Lee was in Alaska this summer teaching and sisters have been taught fo vacation Bible School through Christ Church c&re fof the younger ones. 1 Cranbrook. —They said that this was very; j apparent in the Bible schools where teenagers watched out for ^ «r 'and played with little ones; | Most children ware easy to manage. Fort Yukon was where they .encountered the most trouble. It is the largest Indian village with about 700 people, Having had much contact with white men, there is a drinking problem and brawls occur often. I The mission nouse was the I center of activity where the girls I met many of the townspeople,.. H AM—MORNING WORSHIP Sunday School.......10 AM. ■Sun. Worship..... 11:15 A.M. Eve. Worship ......7:30 PM. Tues. Bible Study ... 7:30 PM. Thors. Young People 7:30 PM. £ldeHroeMWardell;Pd>ior * FE 4-4695 WORLD PEACE -DAY , A National Baha'i E*Wt to ipraad the knowledge of. AMERICA'S.ROLE IN WORLD PEACE To bn observed this Sunday, September IS, 1963 America. wm the flrrt to weld Into one netlon—effectively .federated and' unlonUed—a croup of Independent political _entltles such as tne thirteen colonies constituted at1 the end of the Bevolutionanr Wsx,. It was upon this foundation <5 systsmUSd federation—unique In ilia world s history—that America's vast edifice of prosperity was to-be srseted. CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN PUBLIC MEETING Speaker: Mr. Wallsca D; Baldwin Topic: America's Role in World Peece Time: 8f:00 P. M, Place: The Pontiac Mall Community Room. SUMMER PARKA - Lee Eyler of 18347 Beford, Beverly Hills, proudly displays a summer parka she brought with her from Alaska. CHRIgT LUTHERAN CHURCH Albert and Williams lake Mb. Fr. Cashing is Leaving St Michael's THE BAHA'IS OF PONTIAC PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180 N. PERRY'ST. • IE 2-5289 Listen to |he "Herald of Truth* Each Sunday—CKLW, Chao. 9—U AM. ........:........ Also WXYZ 1270 at 10 PM. Rev. Charles E. Cushing, assistant pasfor of St. Michael’s Catholic Church is being transferred to St. .Mary Mag-delen in Hazel Park. Fr. Cushing has been at St. Michael’s for the past four years. During his stay at St. Michael’s Fr. Cushing has started the St. Paul Guild, published a column In the parish weekly newspaper, took over the direction of the. altar boys, and served as spiritual advisor to the St. Vincent de Paul and the Holy Name Societies. 'Among hia regular duties have been visiting parishioners in the hospital. Fr. Cushing has received over thirty, converts a year into the church over the past four years:1 This is well above the national average. \ Jews throughout the world will.tense introspection and personal celebrate the arrival of the new prayer* for forgiveness of one’s year 5724 (according to the He- sins as well as repentance for brew calendar, marking the ere- one’s evil thoughts and deeds, ation of the world) at sunset The shofar (ram’s horn) will be Wednesday. sounded to awake man’s con- This is a serious occasion in science and bring hiih closer to the life of the Jew. It begins a the awareness of God’s will. x period of self-sewching. at the services at conservative con-end of which God Judges his chil- Ration B’nal Israel will be dren and ordains the course held Wednesday and Thursday ahead of than. evening* at «: 15 p.m. and on _ , *■ * , * „ Thursday and Friday mornings Rosh Hashhanah (the new at8a.m. Yeftr) starts this period of in- _ .... , 1 _ __________—,, ................. Rabbi Israel Goodman will con- ■".......... ■ 1 duct the services and preach the The reform Temple Beth Ja- ( cob will hold , services Wednes- , day at 8:88 p.m. with Rabbi . Erast Conrad officiating. Thursday morning services will The temple youth group will ... , ,rr1-!..:. . * conduct a service for religious school students at 2 p.m. on Thursday. CHURCH SCHOOL 9,45 AM. BIBLE STUDY........9:50 AAA Classes for all ages MORNING WORSHIP 10:50 AM ;y "STILL BABS" EVENING SERVICE .... 6 PM, "BE NOT DECEIVED" MORNING M WORSHIP 11A.M. First rfraSH Christian Church DISCIPLES of CHRIST Rev. Jack H- C. Clark, Pallor CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP MALTA TEMPLE—2Cti4,IONTIACl ROAD (PorjMny & Lulu*'* MrtModl* Owdi) SUNDAY SERVICES 2:30 and 7:30 P.M. Lily Valllt pfA Flint, speaker - C « Sept. 22 — Dorothy Beasley SUNNY VALE CHAPEL .5311 Pontiac Lake Rd. era Auditorium. The program will begin at 7:30 p.m. Tonight the Kickoff Youth for Christ Rally for the 1963*64 season will be hold at the Pontiac North- ’ The Oakland Youth For Christ Chorale and trumpet trio will be performing along with the special musical guests, "The Reeser Sisters’* from Owosso. These girls have been overseas with Youth For Christ International. . .......... Revival Meeting Wed. Sept. 18-29 Rev. ?. L. Liddel, v I Evangelist, and Musician §5 Services Sunday 11:30 a.m. andj7:30 p.m. . . J SERVICES NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M. CLINTONVILLE CHURCH 1 of the NAZARENE J. G. McGuire, Pastor OR 4-0879 Central Methodist 3882 Highland Rd. . *«onh.8ani Rev, Wm. H. Brody, Aitoe. Min. — Rev. Richard L. Clemons, Asio, Mil AIR CONDITIONED * Morning Worship 9:15 and 10:55 "HOW TO FIND REAL LIFE" Rev. Bank Spooking CHURCH SCHOOL 9:15 and 10:45 A.M. CARL G, ADAMS, Minister vJOHN A. HAIL, Mlm of Vlijtptlon ’: ' ' South Saginaw d> Judidn MORNING WORSHIP 8:30 and 11 A.M. v "THREE MODERN TEMPTATIONS" ' , Rev. Carl G. Adams, Preaching 9:46 A.M.-CHURCH SCHOOL , MYF 6:15 PM.“ ' Wed. Bibb Study and Prayer Fellowship 7:30 , P.M. A free demonstration of the Gabriel Richard Institute leadership course will be given Thursday at 8 p. m. at St. Michael Catholic Church basement. The course consists of nine sessions held once a week beginning Oct, 1 at Sfc Michael’s church basement at 8 p. m. Those unable to attend the demonstration may contact Alfred Duff or write the Gabriel Richard Institute. Charles Wilson, director of music and organist, will direct the The University of Kentucky holds a series edge on only three of its 1963 football foes—Virginia Tech, Detroit and Miami of Flor- The special feature of the eve-ning will be the premier showing of the film, "Bora tp Witness’’. This is a film which will be of CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH ; W. A. Cunningham, MilttiUr 374 N. Sagindw Biblt School ..... 943 A.M.' Morning Worship ... II i00 A.M. Youth Service . , . , 6:00 P.M. Evangelical Service ... 7:00 P.M. Proytr Meeting and Bible Study Wednesday ... 7:30 P.M. Clintonvllb & Mann Rds. ANNUAL MISSIONARY CONVENTION . . . 210 North Perry St! "FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD" TUES., SEPT. 17th-Through THUR., SEPT. 19th m ' ST. PAUL METHObiST W Hi M3 E. Square Lok« Rd. fE 8-8233 - FE 2-2752 ||: Morning Wpriljlp 1“Ot00 A.M. and 11115 A.M. p.; ’Church School j 0:00 A.M. m Intermodlate and Senior Youth Groupi, 6:00 P.M. Sjiji'c S^Amplu Parking REV. JAMES A. McCLUNG, Mlnliter Supervised NurjeryX:^ S|j; 11 COVfjRT 1 ST. L m METHODIST CHURCH | METHODIS 8778 PONTIAC LAKE K>.' | * 0012 POI «;H Rtv. W. E. Courier, Pastor ' Sf Woyit* Smell II Church Service..... 9:30 A.M. | Church School.... RS Church School..... 10:45 A.M. 1 Morning Worihtp, HARBOR LIGHTS QUARTET Inspirational Gospel Singing This Is No Spiritual "Hootenapny" » No Tickets No Reserve Seats : ,METW“: .........T“" The" First Free Methodist Church 501 Mt. Clemens COME EARLY AND ENJOY THE GOSPEL SONGS Pastor C.W. Koerner ... 10 A.M. 1 littf A.M. REV. HOWARD HAWSES ELEVEN YEARS ON TM| ' . mission Held of Pakistan. , THE HAWKES ATTEND® rj THE RECEPTION FOR QUEEN ELiZABEIH IN CHITTAGONG MISS MARTHA UNDERWOOD EIGHT YEARS IN THE CONGO! H , SERVED AS LEADER IN YOUTH yWORK, TEACHER/ I 4.....TEACHER TRAUHlNG., J REV. & MRS. E. GRAMS MINISTER IN THE ORANGE FREE STATE pf S. AFRICA II? ELMWOOD METHODIST :#•: GRANT ST. AT AUBURN AVE. Eric G, Wehrli, PoJlor *1® Sunday SehootiA, *•. . WAN.'1 W: .Worghlp ....J8.45 - 11.15 A.M. W, Evening 7 PM - Prayer Wed. 7 P.M. ALDERS GATE HUNDRED5'TN'THTS'AREA METHODIS: CHURCH s 1536 BALDWIN AVE. . 'g Mbrace Murry, Pallor , 's Church Service. .....9:45 A.M. •Church Scheel ■ ■. ... ■ ■ ■. I1.Q0 Ate. HAVE BEEN CONVERTED .IN THIS "GQLDFIELD". ••mis cosPEL or the kingdom shall be mjHfeUap 'ALL ARE WELCOME TO ATTEND" PASTOR A. Q. HASHMAN-ftjW630 TWELVE , THE PON'I IAC PKKSS. _ SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER U, 1968 installation Services for ; Rev. Staton tomorrow bstsIlatioB service for Rev. Mack C. Staton, new pastor of 4he South Side Church of God will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow. Presently residing in Ferndale, he. is m native eif North Carolina. At home are Mark Andres JO, Thomas Delbert, 6, and wife Odessa. There are two mar- Methodists to Hold Mission WESUEYAN METHODIST 67 N. lynit St. SUNDAY SCHOOL........10 00 A M. WORSHIP...............1*00 AM W.Y.P.S...............6:45 P.M. EVENING SERVICE...... 7.00 PM. WED. PRAYER AND BIBLE.. 7.30 P.M. FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH. ifrBldldWn t -7—FE 4-7631 Sunday School.... 10:00 AM^ ~Suiddy Worship.. 11:00 AM. Sunday Evening .. 7:30 PM. Wed. Prayer . . . 7:30 P.M. Saturday Service.. 7:30 PM Rev. Tommy Guest, Pastor FE 2-0384 CALVARYJABERNACIE —Apostolic— 3651 Hatfield Drive ' Drayton Plaint Sunday School 10 A.M. Worship 11 AM Sun. Evangelistic 7:30 PM , Wed- Bible Study 7.30 P.M. REV BILLY G. LOBBS, pastor Phone 673-5384 Pontiac area Methodist church- 1«8 are ln the midst of. prepara-til * - “* ’ —' tions tor the coming Wesley Mis-I sion Gctober 13-18. I Preliminary services are being 1 held each Sunday evening,at 7:30 I p.m. in various Pontiac churches I with outstanding Methodist lead-ers as speakers. Tomorrow's ■MBBMj. service wiU be at.-thh .Oakland ■■MHBH Park Methodist Church. Speakerv tomorrow will be Rev. Dr. Wayne Ev North; formerly a JJM1UIIIUIJS8F member of the General Board of Evangelism and now serving the Adrian church. All. Methodist churches in the immediate vicinity are participate # ing in Oils program. Rev. James W. Deeg is general chairman of the Mission. The. public is invited to all ■j*eiwices.'"3gr yT, * Pontl.o Pre»« Phot* MAILING LETTERS - ReV. James W, Deeg, pastor of the Oakland Park Methodist Church receives some assistance from Mrs. John Fuller in mailing out letters concerning the Wesley Mission October 13-18. Rev. Deeg is general chairman of the Mission. Fuller is the secretary. BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH W. Huron at Marie Worship Service at 11:00 a m. Sermon "JESUS PREACHES FROM A COIN" Dr. Emil Kontz, Pastor 9:45’a.m. Church School Classes for All Ages Wednesday, 630 PM "ECHOES OF SUMMER" Church Supper Coin Illustrates at Bethany Baptist A FRIENDLY WELCOME AWAITS YOU AT THE GOOD SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD . 1092 Scon lot* Rd. 10 AIM. Sunday School...... Morning Worthio . . . Eve. Evangel S*r........ /:30 PM Rimor RmmM Cooper . 538-6253 The congregation at Bethany Baptist Church will be given the text to hold while hearing .the sermon tomorrow. A U.S. coin will be given everyone as he ™Hpp»~-tha._snnctijftry according to pastor Dr. Emil Kontz.' It will constitute the text of die* menage. The sermon is upon one of the significant statements of Jepus. 1ST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH pf Drayton Plains 3010 Mdrlington Rd. (Off Hatchery Rd.) Rev. R. L. Gregory . 10 a.m SUNDAY SCHOOL . WORSHIP........ EVENING WORSHIP 7:30 p.m ,11 a.m The sanctuary choir, directed by George Scott, , will sing the antherfi entitled “Give Ear To My Prayer” by Morgan, With Mrs. Shirley Ettinger at the organ. Leading the .Bible reading will be Ken Goff. Rev. Chalmer Mas-tin, minister of education will assist in' the service. The church school has resumed its fall schedule with sessions being held every Sunday at 9:45 a.m. under the leadership of Mrs. Robert Sickels, superintendent. The three youth groups of the church resume their faU meetings FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North Eait Blvd. FE 4-1811 Foster, WM. K. BURGESS SUNDAY SCHOOL.......10 A.M. WORSHIP ...... y . . . . 11A-M. "The Child and The Kingdom" EVENING WORSHIP . ... 7 PM Rev. Vern Granger, speaker WORSHIP TOMORROW AT THE Emgelial Missionary Mi 280b Wafkini Lake Rd. near Oak. County Market • Sun. School 10 AM/Cpl. Ai. Eberle, Supt. • Preaching 11 A.M. & 7:30 P.M.-Yduth 6:30 P.M. • Coming: Stamps Quartet-Sun., Sept. 22ndl Radio CKLW Sun. 7,30 A.M- A. J.^Baualw, NORTH EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN 620 Mt. Clemem at featherjtane 9:45 A.(A SUNDAY SCHOOL - 11 A.M. WORSHIP Sermon: "Schools — Seminars — Servants" — Reception of Members . ' L. S. SCHEIFELLE, Pastor - FE 8-1744 . tbmorrow evening at 6:30 p.m. Meetings Will include the consideration and discussion of plans made at the recent retreat and planning conference at the Baptist Camp in Lapeer. ~~Aiso-inelud«d.-Will be the election of new officers for the^conf ing year, to be installed the following Sunday. The annual : “Echoes of Sumter” program will be held Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. Church Celebrates 2nd Anniversary The Rev. Jesse DeWitt, executive secretary of the Detroit Conference Board of Missions and Church Extension, will speak at the second anniversary celebration of Trinity Methodist Church tomorrow at 12:1$ p.m. at the CAl building on Williams Luke Road. The special day will begin with 10:30 a.m. church services at Schoolcraft School. Rev. Ronald Thompson’s sermon, “What Makes the Church Live”, as well as other portions of the service will be tape recorded for broadcast at 8 p.m. that evening. A cooperative family meal will be held at the CAI building following church services. Rev. De-Witt will give the anniversary message at this time. The day’s activities have been planned by the official board of there is some misunderstanding and confusion in people’s minds about certain topics, the Sunday morning messages for the next several weeks will center around some of these problems." stated Rev. Theodore R. Allebach, pastor of the Oakland Avenue UnitedTresbyterianChuFGh-.—_ included in the problem subjects to be discussed are creation, th > Trinity, sin, Satan, salvation, stewardship, miracles, suffering, healing, temptation, heaven, hell and rewards. Tomorrow at 10 a.m. the pastor Will speak on ‘/What the Bible Teaches about Creation.” The annual camp and conference echoes program will be presented at the 7 p.m. sendee. The pastor will lead the discussion on “How to Pray” at the p.m, Wednesday prayer meeting series. The annual Sunday school and church picnic will be held at Hawthorne Park Sept. 21. the church with Gerald Otzman chairman. > St. Stephen’s Catholic Church will hold sr “Gala I Dessert Buffet” tomorrow ! in the parish hall at / I p.m. .. Frank Quackenboss will j I present the vestry report j | and recommendation on | ! Christian education needs i 1 for a discussion and vote. FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 Airport Road lnd«pendent and Fundamental Sunday School 10 a,m. we need YOU to . . BLAST OFF sundayi MORNING, WORSHIP:., .1,1 A.M. 7:30 P.M. THE MOTION PICTURE OF*THE YEAR! 1ST SHOWING IN PONTIAC AREAI "QUESTION 7" * —Action Packed Drama Courage Behind the Ber|ln Wall. , Billy Graham Say*: **Thit it pne film that ihould be (sen by every Amtrioan” m SILENT GLASS 10 AM ■«S | ■: mm m. Pastor Begins Problem Series The Prayer Bands of the World Gospel Mission will hold their 3(th annual Missionary Convention Wednesday and Thursday at the First Free Methodist Church on Mt. Clemens Street. Missionary speakers will Ifr elude Virginia Sapp from Honduras, Central America and Rev. Harold Shingledecker from Burundi, Africa. Services will be at 10 a.m., 1:30 p. ml and 7:30 p. m. The public welcome. David Felton, the new youth minister of the First Congregational C h u r c h, Rochester will preach both services tomorrow. Mr. Felton is from Great Bend, Kan. He is obtaining his undergraduate degree from Kansas State University and is now beginning his second year at the Oberlia Graduate School of Theology. His responsibilities will encom-pass teaching a high school class, the Confirmation class and guiding pilgrim fellowship. 16 Receive Certificates Sixteen members of the Mari-mont Baptist Church will receive their correspondence school . certificates from the Moody Bible Institute tomorrow for completing the course “Hebrews From Shadow to Substance.” Those receiving certificates include E.A. Lundeen, Mr. and Mrs. Allan Frick, Clarence Lewis, Mrs. Frances Meyer, Ray E. Patton, Mrs. Marcella Spear, Mrs. Margaret Vincent, Patricia Waugh, Mr. and Mrs. George Van Horn, Mrs. Pauline Williams, Lewis Z. Ball, Frances Case, Mrs. Treva Chi vers and Mrs. Erma Kate Dunnam. The youth groops will elect officers at their 6:30 p.m. meeting following a talk by Robert Gav-ette on the responsibilities of today's youth., There will be a “Church Sing-spiration” immediately following the evening service. Churches Send Chicks The 1,500 baby chicks, sent to the Congo recently by Heifer Project, Inc., the interdenominational “livestock” agency, are now installed in coops ail over South Kasai, the Rev. Archie Graber reports. One “dear Christian woman” told , him she was now able to clothe her family with the money shjS received from the chicks her one hen raised.,,, Area Church Hosts Work! Convention New Youth Minister to Preach Tomorrow ROBERT REGAL First Presbyterian Ctourch returns to its regular schedule oi worship and church school at 9:30 a.jp. and 11 ami. tomorrow. ■ ■- ★_ ★' ★ ■ At both services Rev. Galen E Hershey, pastor will speak on “Your Labor Is not in Vain in the Lord.” ' # SM * The Chancel Choir, under the direction 6f Lyndon Salathiel, will sing an anthem “Man Shall ljfot Live by Bread Alone,” by Gard ner and Mrs. Richard 'Harris, contralto, will present' “Hear Thou My Prayer’’ by Hamblen as an offertory solo. fiehertRegaf Will Appear in Pontiac Thoughout the church school Children and youth will; be pro- ments af 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m: A dedication of, the church school Robert R e g a 1, will present special music tonight, Saturday and Sunday at the Salvation Army Pontiac Citadel Regal has been soloist on radio and television in the Tucion-Phoe* nix , area, where he began his career. He Won two auditions with the Metropolitan Opera Auditions of the Air for the State of Arizona in 1957 and 1962 and was guest ar-tist with the Tucson Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Paul Whiteman. Featured for the remainder of the week will be, The Lamplighters on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday; The Captains and The Inman Trio on Thursday; The Temple Trio on Friday; and The Disciples Quartet on Friday. Evangelist for all 7:15p.m. sessions will be Brigadier Ed Nelson. He is a Salvation Army officer of more than 30 years experience and carries the designation of territorial evangelist for all central states. Brigadier Nelson has commanded a number of Corps ps well as having been editor of the Strids-ropet, divisi | for the Eastern Michigan Division anct also the Scandinavian Division. Drive Begins Sunday at St! Paul Lutheran St. Paul Lutheran Church will officially launch its two month Stewardship education .effort tomorrow. This eight week program will reach its culmination with a visit into the home of every family in the congregation during the last two weeks in Octo- ber. At one of these, two loyalty evenings a new Lutheran entitled “A Letter to Nancy” will be shown. It is the first feature length full color film to be produced by the Lutlferan Church, Missouri Synod. The purpose of this full coverage every member visitation is to acquaint the members Of the church with the principles of Christian Giving and Living and to invite each family to one of two loyalty evenings to be held at church Nov. 3 and 6. Members of the stewards!)! education effort steering committee include Bruce Reigle, Ben Hawkins, Edwin Hefner, Norbert Giroux, Ralph Dietterick and Ardel Schmidgall. They will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. HARBOR LIGHTS QUARTET — Featured in a performance Sunday evening at 7 p.m., at the First Free Methodist Church will be the Harbor Lights'Quartet. The boys, all. frbm Battle Creek, will bring pvith them special songs that have a spiritual emphasis. « CHURCH of GOD East Pike at Anderson PARSONAGE PHONE FE 2-8609 m All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike St. the REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector v/l ' The REV. WM- E. LYLE Aiaoclate The REV. ALEXANDER T. STEWART '."'.Vicar ,8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:15 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Morning Prayeraqd Sermon By the Rector. Opening of church school ' . Thurs, Sept. 19--,T0a.rh. H[6ly C&mmunion Saturday Sept. 21 —;St. Matthew, Apostle and Evangelist 7 A.M. --Holy Communion . CHURCH of the RESURRECTION ;■ fn6«t In Clbrkiton Elementary School, 6595 Waldron Rd. THE REV. ALEXANDER T. STEWART, vicar 9:3Q,o.m.—l'loly Communion and Sermon Begin Fall Schedule Tomorrow ..United..... Presbyterian Churches OAKLAND AVENUE Oakland at Cadillac Theodor# *. Allebach,; Paitor , Audrey Umkeman, Youth Director Morning Worhsip.. 10:00 A.M. Sunday School... 11:20 A.M. Youth Meetings . . . 5:45 P.M. Evening Worship.. . 7:00 P.M. Wednesday Prayer.. 7:00 P.M. AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Primary Street F. Wm. Palmer, Paitor 9:30 A.M. — Sunday School 11:00 AM.-Morning Worship call lor Humility" DRAYTON /prayton Plains, Michigan , W. J. T.enwlssen, Poster Bible School . . . . 9:45 AM. Morning Worship.. 11:00 AM. Youth Groups .... 6:30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Study-Hour . < . 7:30 P.M. teachers will take placet during the hours of worship. Teachers of the church school will hold a retreat at Camp Owekl in Clarkston Saturday under the leadership of Albert Rlddering, the church director of Christian Education. CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH , 1-2 Warren St. : Speaker 7:30 P.M. Horace John Drake-Silver Tea, Wednesday 7,30 P.M. •CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT for SUNDAY SUBSTANCE SundTay Services and-Sunday School 11:00 AM.- Wednesday Evening Services 8 P.M. , Reading Room ... 14 w. Huron5f. Open Daily ^ ,11A.M. to 5.P.M. ■ Friday to 9 P.M. First Church of' Christ, Scientist Lawrence and Williams PONTIAC j, FIRST NAZARENE - —r- —, .j6Q STATE ST. - SUNDAY SCHOOL ..; .7~^9f4$AWU MORNING WORSHIP . . . .11:00 A.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP ..... 6:00 P.M. > EVANGELISTIC SERVICE . . 7:00 P.M. Morning Sermon: "ABIDING WORDS OF GOD" ; INSPIRING MUSIC In Every Service John Burton, Minister of Music J. E. VAN ALLEN PASTOR EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212 Baldwin Ave. Phone 332-0726 WORSHIP 11:00 A.M. - SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. SERMON: "The Propl^-ic Life of the Church" MIDWEEK SERVICES: Wednesday 7.15 P.M. Reverend Dwight Rolbtlng, Minister MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. Walton , FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL ^.. - - V rr *. . . . v r... 10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP HOUR....... 11:00 AM. "THE BULWORK OF THE SANCTURY" EVENING SERVICE.. .........,...7t30 P.M. "BLIND FORGETFULNESS" Pastor Somers Speaking at Both Services Public Cordially Invited . • FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 North Rotelawn * SUMDAY SCHOOL 10 AM. - MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. "To Small for Service" | 7 p.m. Sing-Spiration , Rev. 1. W< Blackwell, Paitor • Bflffet CliUAcfc * SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 o.m. * MORNING SERVICE I0s45 a.m. ♦ RADIO BROADCAST Station CKLW 11*00 o.m. ♦ YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 5)45 p.m. ♦ EVENING SERVICE LOO p.m. ♦ MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE ♦Wedneidug . 7)30 p.m. ♦ RADIOBROADCAST $aturdag«$totion WBFG 6tl5 p.m. i OAKLAND S SAGINAW Reu. Robert Shelton*Pastor ^folding forth Ite Wont of Life since 1821 • HftHftt MOT Baptist church 'll T K THE PONTIAC PRESS SftTUfeflAY, iEPTEjVIBBK 14, >968 THIRTEEN" PONTIAC, MICHIGAN at the left of the photograph cuts off the informality of the Early American dining area, at just the right angle. Behind the gold-and-white wrought iron divider is a big, comfortable den made especially for relaxing. The folding door can isolate the formal from the infernal. LOOKS SMALL, BUT ... - This house on Cranbrook Road is strictly an optical illusion. Inside, there is an open spaciousness that belies the outside appearance. A jalousied porch CHARMING ENTRANCE—Mrs. Bundy “just loves” the formal living: pushes out into the well-landscaped back yard, and the large terrace there adds even more space. ■ ■ /■ w room. All of the soft, mellow colors were taken from her favorite picture over the avocado-green and aqua silk pofa. Most of the wood in the accessories and chairs are frUitwood and cherry against off-white Walls. The decorator’s gold screen HomeRevedls Secret Charm I above an arch help make < this wide hall the very heart of the home. Beyond the gold and white divider, white walls accentuate the newest colors of greens, blues and gold in the sofa, chairs, and imported^ lamps. You’d want to take off your shoes and sink down into the thick-piled white carpeting — it’s that soft. A grandfather clock in the hall facing the living room softly chimes out the hours every 15 minutes of the day. At the far end of the living room is a lovely gold decorator’s screen, emphasizing the formal decor of this room. A pole lamp stands in the corner, and three hdbnailed globes look like white doves poised for flight. Down the hall is a cheery, llght-pink-tiled bathroom with unusual dqep-pink embroidered tear curtains. Above the tile, pale-blue butterflies flit among pastel flowers on a white background. Throughout all of the lovely roopis there is a predominance of Mjs. Bpndy’s favorite colon of avacadq green, soft tangerine and browns. “All the wonderful colors of fall,” she said. PHOTO STORY By REBA HEINTZELMAN Pontiac Press Home Editor You COuid drive right by the William J. Bundy home and never realize all the charm and warmth that exists within. Local interior decorator John Lowrey had full reign *(with a feW Bundy-changes) in projecting an atmosphere of completely formal ele-. gance cleverly combined with casual, Early-American decor. The house1 and furnishings are so arranged that, stepping into thp attractive front foyer, you are not aware of the two extremes kept apart by a custom-made, wrought iron “fence” perched on a wooden room divider. In the olden days, it was fashionable to have rooms off a long hall running the full length of the house, but this was later disregarded because it was dark and confining. Not so with the- Bundys’ ball, which jgoes. down. through the center of the house. Cream-colored grass wallpaper on one side, openness and striped paper overhead valance. The solid gold-colored dust ruffles are complemented by -the beige carpeting. A large aquamarine tiled bathroom opens from this attractive bedroom, r ~ SUN PORCH’S CHEERY One step dOWh matchstick draperies specked with gold. To out of the dining room and you’re in one of the the left and not shown is a large glass-topped cheeriest rooms in the county. Aquamarine- table for oiitdoor eating, and the windows are and-whitd printed cushions on aqua wrought jalousied.. iron furniture are set off by pure white r COLORFUL FURNISHINGS - The lovely autumn colors that are so prevalent throughout the Bundy home are repeated in the master bedroom. Browns,- golds and soft greens make up the quilted, polished cotton bedspreads and HEART OF THE HOUSE - Three lUtlrf imported lights illuminate ttye airy hall that runs through the center of the Bundy home. On one side of the hall Is the formal living room, then the bedroom area and baths. On the other, is Early American Informality in a bidden. Down the hall not shown, one of the bedrooms has been made into a much-used office — what every house should have, according to decorator John Lowrey. PEARS ON TREE — A few tiny ripe pears remain on the fireplace chimney which is banked by colorful nasturtiums. This scenic arep is part of a large terrace at th« hnpkifliiha-houaa. and adjoins a spacious, well-manicured lawn and garden. SMALL COUNTRY KITCHEN ~ In order to give the kitch- to a darker finish. The kitchen area is small but efficient, and' en cupboards a more distinctive lobk, the Bundys had narrow the space nekt to the snaqk bar is a fine place for intimate cof- screen molding installed on the drawers and doors, then rubbed fee Matches or conversation^ • r* fjiSssiM THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1*, 1963 Louis XIV's Palace Used first Pumping Station OPEN HOUSE BBB Realty 3161 Airport Rd. bOUon home-im- provement projects, rangjng from a one-room paint job hi the do-it-yourself category to major remodeling and enlargement of the Clean the leaves of your green plants by wiping them gently with a cloth dipped in an equal solution of milk and water. Brush fuzzy-Ieafed plants. CONSTRUCTION CO. we Like a M 'J)n Lake Angela! **, PONTIAC'S "ONE STOP CHECK THESE SPECIAL FEATURES Recreation room, pool fable, shuffleboard, ping pong, dart board. Two parking areas for .each1, family. Private locker 13-ft. x 9-ft. with electric plug for hobby. Built-in range and oven, refrigerator. Picnic area. Good boating, fishing, swimming in hatural spring-fed lake. Prorated monthly expense of approx. $49.00 includes taxes, fire insurance on building, heat and hot water, lease on land, lawn, snow-and beach tare, water and outside light, reserve for repairs. licensed Contractor CUSTOM FEATURES DESIGNED FOR YOU • ADDITIONS • CONCRETE WORI • ALUMINUM SIDING • RECREATION RO' ifflSSU. :Koo«s • PATIOS ' • .•DENS • OARAGES • BATHROOMS • BREEZEWAYS • Storm and Semen Door* ( • CUSTOM DESIGNED 2nd STORY ADDITIONS , CONSTRUCTION CO. BuMlng in Pontiae Since 1946-Operator on Duty 24 Bom Dotty FE 2-1211 *1900 DOWN 2256 Dixie Highway Of all metals used in home construction, aluminum is the easiest to paint. This Is fortunate because exposure to the elements 1 soon dulls die original brightness 1 and often creates a mottled appearance. i The atmosphere of coastal 1 and industrial areas can often 1 pit it badly. Aluminum is generally given a protective coating of oil in the factory to protect it against damage during shipment or erection. ’ Some home buljders are making a discovery: women are yearning for the return of the old-fashioned pantry. A house with a walk-in pantry, with plenty of room for canned goods, jars; etc., makes an instant hit with female home- washing with a, phosphoric add compound available at most paint PRICE $9,900 . «• $11.500 Drive Out and Sw for Yourself! Follow the instructions on the container for best results. Let the surface dry completely before Zinc chromate is most commonly recommended, particularly where there are corrosive conditions, When the prime coat has dried hard—the label will tell you how long to wait-one or two coats of the finish paint can then be put on with abrudi, roller or spray. DIXIE GARAGES Water Consumption Up U.S. citizens are a clean people, judging by the volume of water we use dally. Per capita use of water in 1900 was about 100 gallons a day.' Today it Is No Money Down UploE Yrt.-FHA about ISO gallons daily, reports the Cast Iron Pipe Research Association. To keep our water supply contamination - free from its source to our homes and businesses, it is piped through cast iron mains. v T\ RECREATION ROOMS - ATTICS PIPTttN MU W KBmml paved streets, curbs arid gutters, sidewalks WINTER PRICES NOW IN EFFECT JAMES RAY HELFER & SON • builder and developer BUILDERS presents 1,500 SQ. FT. 3 BEDROOMS SEPARATE PANELLED DINING AREA l’/a BATHS FINISHED FAMILY ROOM OAK PARQUET FLOOR IN DINING AREA 80' AND WIDER LOTS HOTPOINT BUILT-IN OVEN AND RANGE Call Now for a Free Estimate 24-Hour Phone Service FE 3-7833 THE PQOTIAC PRESS, SATtTRDAY, SEPTEMBER It, 1968 Create Pattern far Your Flotit modem decor. A Jacquard pat?, tern from a knitting book Wilt help you design a modernistic an-, imal for a child’s floor — and you can repeat It on one wall. You don’t have to be a geo*, jus to create your own patterns with floor tiles. Do it yourself fans can do it themselves by combining overall pattern tiles with accent tiles. ROSS HOMES with the policy provisions. If a discrepancy exists, have the policy amended immediately. Remove all matches, rags, turpentine and other flammable materials. Have rugs and upholstered fur-niture moth-proofed. BUILT FOR ENJOYMENT: This crisp, contemporary four-bedroom ranch was built to enjoy maximum recreational and aesthetic , An occasional single accent tile — burnt orange, red, purple- "<*• dropped into the overall floor pattern and matched to accent colors in the furniture will create a brilliant decorator effect. A random pattern — using several contrast-color tiles in oblongs Cover all chimney tops with, screens to prevent squirrels from entering the house. It hept will be shut off, drain all plumbing to avoid frozen pipelines. If heat wfll be left on at a reduced temperature (to protect m u steal instruments or decorative pieces) arrange for periodic inspections!. •Coat chrome kitchen and bathroom fixtures, mqjtai garden and sporting equipment, door hinges within thin layer of petroleum jelly to keep rust from fornidng. Cover furniture with sheets, disconnect electric cords, and turn off aU pilot lights except for J93 Statistics Three bedroom contemporary ranch with three full baths plus lavatory and two showers (option- -all in nool service area. Living area excrudftig ga-. rage and porches is 2,187 square feet. Covered front porch is 10 feet wide and approximately 80 square feet. Rear terrace is 9 feet wide; terrace porch is 14 feet by 14 feet 6 inches. Garage is 18 feet wide by 19 feet 9 inches deep Containing 378 square feet, including storage a.r e a.. Overall dimensions are 85 feet 4 inches wide by 47 feet, 2 inches deep. FOR SALE the beating plant. Notify police of yoifr absence and leave -youlr regular address and telephone number with a permanent resident of the area to Insure prompt notification in case FLOOR FLAN: Family room and kitchen and walls i floors are finished in resilient tile; floors of wood grai both pool service areas are tiled in ceramics, and porch: Pool Creates Splash in Contemporary Ranch There was a tftne when swim- Today’s House of the Week, ming pools, like air conditioners in the series, was designed and two-car garages, were con- architect Rudolph A. Maten sidered extravagances of the idle take maximum advantage of I Geographic location and position of a home are factors to be considered in Color selection of asphalt roofing shingles. Bright-Colored asphalt shingles makes a house appear, taller. Subdued colors tend to make a tall house look shorter. ceramics and their walls are similar piratic treated panels. USES EVERY INCH The kitchen-family room is designed for convenience and makes optimum use of every-available inch. " There is plenty of counter space, and cabinets are numerous; the uninterrupted counter (with cabinets above and below) on the wall adjoining the living room is 10 feet 6 inches long. HOWTO BUILD, BUY OR SELL YOUR HOME But the trend toward family pools is gathering momentum Full study {dan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, fop $1, a booklet called YOUR HOME — How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The-Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan. Already there are so many types of pools available it’s getting confusing, installation has become a business in itself, and the indication is that it won’t he long before pools have stepped down from the, luxury category altogether. ★ a One result of the Booth already is noticeable fat pool-studded suburbia: There are precious few homes which can accommodate a pool to its fullest advantage. ■; ,h" §t\ ^ it - % Though recreation plainly is Its primary purpose, a pool should be more than Just a backyard swimming hole. * The refreshing natural beaity of pooled water as a landscape attraction is recognized everywhere from the Taj Mahal to fee Washington Monument — and so It can be wife your Meanwhile,' the convenient shower room adjoining the laundry could be used for storage; a partition could substitute for the door between the pool bath and main bath. ALUMINUM SIDING FREK ESTIMATES! SAVOIE INSULATION CO. 4112 W. WALTON BLVO. OR 3-3610 , Protect children, pets, property ANCHOR* FENCE through midday spldsh parties to a refreshing dip at night, this is a house built for enjoyment. Enclosed Is 50 cento for baby blueprint on Pins Coupon HW J-98 Enclosed is $1 for YOUR HOME booklet The house is a crisply contemporary four-bedroom ranch. Its exterior is subdued and uncluttered. . : * A dramatic prow-shaped liv-I ing room bay Wife exposed roof beams complements fee sturdy A hydronic (hot water) home heating system can provide simple efficient zoned heating in which different areas of the home are individually controlled by separate thermostats, or zone valves, says fee National Better Heating-Cooling Council. Only one boiler is needed for zoned heating with a hydronic system. narisgloB” Model Vertical siding contrasts with the horizontal roofline. Living area excluding garage and porches is 2,167 square feet; overall dimensions are 85 feet 4 inches wide by 47 feet 2 inches deep. Hie delightful vista of the pool can be enjoyed not only from the broad terrace and pool porch wife is angled walla, but from five inside rooms as well: fee family room, kitchen, dining room and eyen fee living room and master STLVAHRBJULTT CO. 682-2300 or 631-1886 Because of the excellent shower arrangement In the service area behind the garage, you might choose to eliminate the pool bath in fee bedroom wing. If to, it could become a large walk-in closet. The hall door to fee adjoining bath then would be walled, making it a private master bath. rwrc your fflEC v CHOICE 4' ' ALUMINUM Storm Door * Canopy or Pieturo Window Storm With Each Oomplata Insulation Job ! nicely placed to serve fee three family bedrooms. The .house is furnished for ease of upkeep —, a factor all pool owners will appreciate. The family room and kitchen floor are finished wife resilient tile in a flagstone design and fee walls are plastic coated panels wife a wood grain finish. ★ * *4, . - The floors of both pool service areas are completely tiled in We Use Only FULLY Qfe Glass Fiber Insulation Luxu^y_ene^ andtm bedroom apartments fiw rental irfirmatam call JO. 6*3890 ■|u ■ MODEL HOURS 1 P.ftU-e ML Let us come out and show you our models, and Glva specifications and pricas on your garage 377 S. TELEGRAPH -P Tins P6OTIAC PRESS, SAT?tfRDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1968 W« AHAboard the flowed OldRailroad Net Profit* -30 Cents , I^AYKTTEVILLK, Ark/ (AP)-i: cort a safecracker money to Pyschiatrist Coaches Ador of the so-calledhreak-The .shows are natfhap pcliiatry—and fertunate-te at night for the kid- asey” moves to Wednes-it k competition with' le BeWly Hillbillies.” between doctor and patient; read scores of case histories and watched psychiatrists at work in dinks. Reflecting the movie trend to will deal with such problems as nymphomania, homosexuality, rape, etc, “Let’s face it,” says Richards, “these fellows don't treat gas pains.” , ’■ \:-.W'‘'-W - Rut mainly the series will deal With people who crack under the FELTON, Calif. (UPD-The ancient steam locomotive Dixiana Shay with its four 1880-styled passenger cars puffs from the station hourly on the nation’s newest-yet oldest—railroad. career as a young psychiatrist in toe ABC television series “Hie Breaking Point” which premieres How did he prepare for it? "How else?” he answered. “I went to a psychiatrist.” “As a patient?” “Yes, as a patient.” ★ ★ ■ ★ Richards thus becomes the first Hollywood actor ever to deduct It is the Roaring Camp & Big Trees Narrow Gauge Railroad (RCftBTNGRR) and it Carries excursionists through the redwood groves of Santa Cruz County, about 70 miles sopth of ADULT ENTERTAINMENT! .San Francisco. Its maiden pas-senger-paying run Was made on Palm Sunday this year. Eventually, the road will - his psychiatrist as both a medical mid business expense. MORE THAN COUCH Richards did touch more research than mere couching in toe doctor's office. He listened to raw' realism, “Breaking Point” from its starting terminal, then back on itself, on a round trip to the top of Bwr Mountain. The locomotive is a genuine steam boiler, made in' lima, Ohio, in 1912 for the Smoky Mountain Railroad in Tennessee. K Was purchased by the RC&BT-NGRR in Virgina where it had served on a now-abandoned railroad out of Dixiana. KmwsmwimS HOSPITAL ROOF BURNS *- Chicago firemen are shown in action yesterday as they- fight a fire on the upper floors of Mercy Hospital, pie firemen are spraying lie building with water and bringing rescue apparatus into readiness. There were no casualties., With OUMtt The coaches, built by H. A. Pulaski, Inc., of Irwindale, Calif,, were used in the 1880’s on the narrow guage Nevada-Califomia-Oregon Railroad along toe eastern slopes of the Sierra Nevada. The rads were made in . the same years for the long gone Carson ^Colorado Railway. They originally came around toe Horn on a sailing ship. The roadbed is laid on hand-split ties. thrills! “The LITTLE SHOP of HORRORS” Operations Side following a fire tost forced CHICAGO (AP) ... ..... have returned to near normal at Mercy Hospital on toe city's South evacuation of 109 patients Friday. W' ' ★ • ★ \ No patients were Injured as hos- Starring Eha Martinelli In Her Most Shocking And Amusing Rota! pital personnel rushed them from the blazing four-story wing-built in 1889—to fireproof areas. About 170 firemen fought the fire, which was contained to one wing of toe hospital. _ ^ Judge Orders Chaplin Prove He's Solvent NICE, France (UPI) -- A French magistrate demanded Patients taken from three lpwer floors of toe damaged wing were returned to their rooms by late afternoon and a massive cleanup operation was launched. Heavy smoke pushed under toe doors of an operating room, forcing surgeons to halt a delicate brain operation. An appendectomy, a tonsillectomy mto a gall bladder removal were Completed shortly after the fire waatoscovered. The surgical patients rare then retooved to safety. \ The blaze was set off in mid-morning near aNspot where workmen were using an acetylene tordi to remove mbtol ornamen- i 9 oigo seel seel lentertaf.. _ “We want to bring the romance and color of steam railroading back to America,” said railroad president F. Norman Clark. “It is our intention to give Americans the opportunity actually to participate in the|r heritage, not just to read about it.” ....ASEARINQ STORY FROM TODAY’S HEADLINES! 7 Women I Hell” yesterday that Charlie Chaplin prove his financial solvency before attorneys , for toe actor pre* pamphlets published by -the Robert Wiard clinic claiming that injections of a “cell extract", enabled Chaplin to sire a child at the age of 74. . . Magistrate Gilbert Dubois noted today that Chaplin is a British subject living in Switzerland who does not own property in France. He asked Chaplin's lawyer to deposit $120 to, prove he could pay court expenses. Chaplin’s movies have made him a millionaire several times over. • The case against the clinic will probably be beard today. The pamphlet, according to Chaplin, had caused him moral damage. Chaplin is married to Oona O’Neill, daughter of playwright COMHEftCE NAMENIY and UNION LK. NO. EM 34661 FRI.-SAT.-SUH. EAGLE ' • Sat.-Mon.: *fl Married a Monster," Tom Tryon; “Hie Bibb” Steven McQueen, color. Tue. • Thu.: “The Chapman Report,” Jane Fonda, Shelley Winters, color; “A Girl Named Tam? iko.” Martha Hyer, Laurence Harvey, color. starts Fri.: “Night of toe Blood Beast,” Michael Emmet, color; “The A m a z in g Transparent Man,” Marguerite Chapmen. HURON Sat. - Thu.: “Bye-Bye Birdie,” Dick VanDyke, Janet Leigh, color. Starts Fri.: “Tammy and the Doctor,” Sandra Dee, Peter Fonda, color; “Lancelot and Guine-yere,” COmel , Wilde, Jean Wallace, color. Mice Live a Year The common field mouse seldom lives more than a year. Since the tiny creature must devour its own weight in grass and seeds every day, it wears Itself out in toe never-ending hunt for food The mouse also is too prey of many larger animals and birds. NWK time I SINATRA-LOLLOBRIGIDA, ’NEVER SO FEW’ ■—-.COlOH COUIMBVtmES PRESENTS A KOHLMAR-SIDNEY piiijp a Film Festival Stripper Facing Trial Today EDINBURGH, Scotland (UPI) — Anna Kesselaar, the 19-year-old blonde whose unscheduled striptease was the, sensation of 90-Day CoKn Trial Sjp en NEW YORK (UPD - The perjury trial of Roy M. Cohn, who made headlines a decade ago as Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s chief aide, .will last at least three months, Cphn's lawyer predict- this year’s Edinburgh festival, It’s what happens when 10,000 kids meet on 5,000 Beach Blankets! / AvUtioM EXCmi EXCrriHS CIRCUS rIi drape and covered toe rest of the distance on foot. ★ ★ f She told newsmen the strip was “a bit Of a giggle to jazz up telegraph rd., at square lake rd. ILOCK NORTH TELEGRAPH RO. •COLON one indiscretion GOOD OLD DAYS Matinee -TUESDAY- ADULTS 30c 1to4fl A.M. to laQO P.M. With This Coupon DRIVE-IN THEATRE 332-3200 BLUE SKY EAGLE CHILDREN^Under* IZ-k ?A£e. the, poyqh^c; litEBSr &At#rday^ September iWjitea- SEVENTEEN 2 Earthquakes Hit Los Angeles Area Red China Near $33-Mil/ign Jet Deal With British '64 Hopefuls Woo Oyster Bay LOS ANGELES '(AP)^Ttfo earthquakes bit the Los Angeles area Friday night but no damage was reported. ; LONDON Of) - Red China may soon clou a 12-million pound ($33.6-million) deal for 10 British Comet jetliners, the London Dally Herald reported today. By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - For the seedy la n« rose to the pres- RUTH idency. MONTGOMERY The present-day “squire of Nassau County” it a kingmaker, rather than a king. For this role, he is now beiog ardently “watching developments very closely,” and added sagely: “The pivotal election will be the New • Hampshire p r i m a r y next ’ March.” , If Goldwater s h o u I d beat . Rockefeller in his own back-, yard, where Rocky graduated f from Dartmouth College and . continues as an active trustee, . die conservative senator would . be “tough to stop” for the pres- sed Canada.” •* Probably as astute a politician as ^s generation has. produced, j Hall in 1955-58 put together a winning back-stop team including CUff Eolgeftj the OOP’s biggest money raiser, and pubUcist Lou Guylay, whom Hall has described as '‘the best public relations man in party history.” Hie political winds of ’64 are now blowing hpt on the necks of a new crop of presidential aspirants, and the prevaUing westerly current seems to be sweeping them inevitably towards Oyster Bay. PARTY PROS One of the reasons f&r their mer undersecretary of the Treasury. Len Hall’s steady rise to power is in the classic American tradition. The son of Teddy Roosevelt’s coachman at the Oyster Bay estate, he worked his fray through The first was felt strongly in the San Pedro area. Residents flooded pbllce switchboards with reports of clattering dishes and windows. The second tremor was so weak that residents apparently were uh-' disturbed. Atlantic, talks today with top The Royal Air Force uses a Danish government officials. converted version of the Comet “I. am not tired,” Johnson as a high-speed military trails-told friends who informed him port. When the British agreed there was growing concern that late in 1981 to sell six Viscount the strenuous tour had sapped airliners to the Red Chinese, his strength: Uv S. officials told there were protests in the United newsmen last night the vice States which does not recognize president was not ill. Peking. Johnson’s decision to skip a The Herald said the sale of visit to Greenland on his way the Comets had been discussed back to Washington raised a spec- at secret talks in Peking. The ulation that the IS,000-mile, five- newspaper said it understood nation trip had befen too much of there would be no opposition a strain on the vice president, fr#m the British government if who suffered a near-fatal heart the deal is signed, attack a number of years ago. The Herald suggested the Red At times he has seemed to be Chinese are turning to the West extremely tired but last night, at for new jets because of the ideo-a Danish government banquet in logical split with the Soviets, It his honor, Johnson was alert, smiling and appeared to be to law school, became sheriff of Nassau County, a New York assemblyman, and then a representative here in the; House before resigning to become a surrogate judge to New York. Few participants will ever forget the huge testimonial dinner given in Hall’s honor in 1953 When he retired from national politics to become a $30,000-a-year judge. idential nominal Dr. Charles Richter of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena said the first quake was centered about 200 miles from Pasadena, and the second about 80 miles away. He did not determine the direction. The portents are that Len Hall will sit it out to his county law office until the New Hampshire votes are tallied. Then he can probably be had by the winner. DENOUNCES APPEAL — Orthodox Archbishop Chrys-ostomos, primate of the Church of Greece, yesterday rejected Pope Paul’s appeal unusual interest in a county law- Rockefeller and GoM water for Orthodox churches to join with the Roman Church. He denounced the Roman Catholic Church as “capitalistic and absolutist.’’. Len Hall goes, so goes” a big chunk of the party pros. Hall is not only on a first-name basis with more Republican precinct workers around die country than any o t h e r man, but he will probably also influence the choice of such big party wheeIs as Folger, a Washington broker and former ambassador to Belgium; William Casey* > top tax author* . Leonard W. Hall has been quietly practicing law^since the days when, as chairman of the Republican National Committee, he masterminded the second Eis-enhower-Nixon election which produced the biggest GOP landslide in history. After Americans returned Ike to office by a nearly 10 million-vote majority, Hall remarked with a grin: “if we’d had anoth- began working on him that same evening to accept the chairmanship of the Republican Notional Committee. One month later, he quit the judgeship to plunge again into the political maelstrom. problems to maintaining their ex- of the Danish government, about 75 members of Parliament, civil leaders, representatives of the Danish press and U. S. diplomats. No comment was immediate^ available to British government quarters, When President Eisenhower suffered a heart attack in September 1955, speculation ran rampant as to whom the GOP would tap for its standard-bearer tol956. HOPEFULS JOCKEY Presidential hopefuls began jockeying for position, but Hall Better late than never! But 40 years? That was the reaction of Henry O. Ax tell who several days ago received to the, mail a. picture postcard from his cousin Mildred to Tolley, N.D,, dated Jan. .15, 1924. SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — A burglary suspect, sprawled oh a display lawn chair inside a drug store and surrounded by liquor bottles, slept through his arrest Friday. , ; A[’i ■ Police said Karl Harris, 40, of j South Bend, snoozed peacefully as they handcuffed him to the chair and checked the store for missing items. They awakened him then and took him to jail. Harris, clad in a bathrobe, had an assortment of liquor bottles and cigarettes beside him. Two of thfe bottles were opened. MORE MONEY? NOW YOU MAY APPLY FOR A LARGER LOAN UP TO $1,000 “Like the Mounties, I guess the post office always gets its man,” said Axtell, 01, of 540 Judson. “I’m just glad ihe didn’t have anything too important to say,” he said. Mildred, now Mrs. Davidson, was only 12 years old when she mailed the penny postcard to Axtell, then 22. HE CAN’T FIGURE IT OUT “I’ve tried to figure it from all angles,” said Axtell, a 40-year employe at Pontiac Motors, “but I haven’t got the slightest idea where the card has been all those years.” Neither does the Pontiac Post Office. One Official said the card, still in excellent condition, may have fallen to a crick at some post office and only been discovered when the building was torn down. S , “And you know the mail must always go through,” he said. stepped quickly into the breach, announcing with quiet conviction; “Boys, the 1050 presidential ticket will be Eisenhower and Nixon.” Nearly everyone thought be was whistling through his tears, but Hail had the last laugh. Len Hall had long entertained only one personal dream — to become governor of New York. He made the bid in 1058, but the Rockefeller steamroller was too powerful, and just before the nominating convention, Hall wistfully withdrew his candidacy. The strong hand of Hall was again felt in I960, when he did as much as any other man to quash Harold Stassen's abortive See us to arrange a consolidation of your bills Into one monthly payment of your choice. Get cash to meet present needs or purchases. Arrangements may be quickly mode by a visit to bur office or a phone call to FE 2-9206. The Adirondack region of; NOW Hampshire is said to account for practically all of the output of garnets to the U.S. “Stop Nixon” drive for the presi-drntfnl nnminalHi—^«saa!gi Emissaries from Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and Sen. Barry Goldwater are now seeking to persuade Hag to become campaign manager for their respective candidates. Learning of this fact from the rival camps, this correspondent telephoned the squire of Nassau County to ask his leanings. Large 514 Bushel LAWN SWEEPER Prosecutor Selling GOP Fete Tickets Cleans big 24" path. Four rugged sweeping fiber brushes. 100% 514 bushel pure vinyl bag* Giant 10" semi-pneumatic tires. Quick easy assembly. Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor is sponsoring a drive to sell the county’s allotment of some 50 tickets to a $100-a-plate Republican party dinner featuring an Address by U. Sr Sen. Barry Goldwater. The event is scheduled for Nov. 23 in Grand Rapids. The amount raised in the -county for the dinner, will be applied, after expenses, to tfie Aluminum STEEL TINE QUILT-LINED WASHABLE POPLIN JACKETS Mom,you'll love Aluminum (form and screen basement windows. Keeps you warm in winter — cool In summer. county OOP’s share of the state partyV budget for 1063, according to Jack I. Slater. Jr,, exceptive secretary of thq, county GOP. - , ' ' The sale of 50 tickets would mean about $4,000 to be added to the $44,000 the county party organization already has paid to the state GOP on its obligation of $79,000 this year. NEAT CABLES Smartly styled in sturdy cotton poplin with the added details your boy goes for—eolorfiiiknit,collar, cuffs, waistband, and a front zipper closing. Take your pick of the newest Fall shades in sizes 8 to 18. JOBS WAITING FOR SECRETARIES Available in white and natural colors in cartridges, ft Learn Shorthand * Evenings prepare yourself now for a better paying and more exciting job by attending our evening Secretarial classes. Learn Durable Plastic office skills^ without giving up your present job, FREE JOB PLACEMENT SERVICE For Graduates FAMOUS OWENS OORNINQ DUST STOP Furnace Fitter^ 16x20x1. M I|1W ; Econom ices I n g II ^ and Safe. H|V ▼ Stop jeo damage in downspouts, gutters, and roofs. Install bofore winter sots Air-conditioned for your shopping comfort "OPEN SUNDAYS 12 NOON to .\J By Dr. I M. Levitt, Tom Cooke and Phil 1 Ummitarn If Astrological*FfimpPi * * * * m m By SYDNEY OMARR ___ ___rM^rTiii Cestiny . .rnWiiT MiBti tie w" ' aries (Mat. 11 to Apr. II): Important that you "settle flown." Review --*• Including one connected with Job . „"Yhe-w . Key , PRACTICAL APPROACH. TAURUS (Apr. SO to «»I SO) t Your ........ —™f wide.. Yt---------■* people, win them ovw hBRRHRH|H Especially good time for creative endeavor e, romance and civic activity. GEMINI (Stay Si.to June SI): Don' imitate. Be original, natural. Hones efforts pay off. Pino for entertaining a home. Key Is being CONSIDERATE. Ac cept friendship from Individual who baa similar Interests. * CANCER (JUHO SS to July SI to discard feeltni of restriction, yourself. Make new eontacta. OL... | eoctal group aotlvlty favored. Accept to-vltatlons. especially from OEM1NI In* fiafftl' promises to yourlolf. Emphasis on tlnanoes. Moans keep resolution, recently made . . - limit extravagance, ■hew appMdnttM to loved ones. " VIRGO (Aug. SS to aopt. SS)! Don't beat around tno bush. Be frank. Honest talk with spiritual adVMor clears the air. There are numerous opportunities for happiness. Look around ... and ttke tetfon . Weis high I ubra (dept. S3 to oct. 33): Important «cu keep firm footing. Don't take of. faose if one dose to you offers advise. Palse flattery today can prove harmful. Welcome construct!?# criticism. . , SCORPIO (Oct.' S3 to Nov. ID: Do-mettle situation requtrel adjustment. Hot as awesome as you- might sup. Bpsa . ■ . It can be solved. Keg la willingness to be PATIINT. Realise Whers have to DEVELOP. Help •tout_____ , ' BAOITTARIUS (Nov. S3 to Dec. You can have your own way, hut of victory will be missing. Means be sympathetic. Realise perfection Is a hard order to fill.. Spiritual counsel jKfgg'iir “ ■ *■ ■ ..._____4 of "bouncing back." flood dap for gaining greater security ' through lovod ones. "• • Aquarius (Jan. SI to Pcb. It): Finish what you start. Read TAURUS message. What starts out aa dispute, can end in your favor. Be willing to forglva. •how appreciation to one -** JUI proved i loyal. PISCES (Fob. SO to Mar. St conclusions which defy the tael emphaatae GOOD SENSE, Keep fee solidly, on ground. Time to utilise Mg tlon intelligence—but see dearly, Up to your pobsntial. IP SUNDAY " IS YOUR BIRTHDAY , . . you arc diplomatic, enjoy comforts of home, have appreciation for the — !Hwf ★ 'll1 GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle Up for VIRQO, LIBRA bcorpio. Special word to TAOTUBi Other* era lookiir *--*■■ "Tks wise man centrals his destiny . . . Aitroiogy point# the way." i j ARIES (Mar. si to Apr. if): Consider making changes in outlook, have the ability to maka ........... clslons. Means analyst situation, aln forhigher -Mhlavemenfa.: You need take1 a back seat to attyone now. TAURUS (Apr. 30 to May 10): vorsble lunar aapoot Indicates flu* Pastures romance, progress, ohanc Chow off abilities. Sparklsl You make loved ones happy new by gptolsl attention. OEmini (May It to June 111: At-goolatea due to offer aurprise announcement. Beet to listen nnd GAIN KNOWLEDGE. Key Is progressive attitude. . Avoid hasty judgments, STICK TO PACTS. CANCER (Juno 33 to July 31): to socialise, meet people. make contacts. Aoctpt Invitations. -You profit from sow experiences. Confidence njuned by geallalng you hav%dmM|Brii offer LEO (JM* 33 to Aug. 31)1______________ routine mutters surly, important that you rolAk Inter. Start thinking -■**•■* future projeet*. And your- own YOU -Rig capable of advancing-., , v.«-fesdonally and paraonajly. VIRGO (Aug. 33 to Sept. 33): Unusual Mtlons on part'Of associates Indicated. Your cycle continue* high. Be ready with’ - ji BURPIUBB OF YOUR OWN. T*kt Initiative. Btrau variety, varaatiUty. >3 to Oct. 33): Pin* 'Bar Charitable work, activity in conns* Hon with Institutions. publications. Strive for tlw "long -—••• “**— — set waak gr— ‘ ' iIcorpio (Odt.U to Nov. Ill: Your '.chancs for cuccom can be helghwnsd by maw contact*, JrlcnSa. Avoid occlusion. ' Day to tee* the world. . and yoof awn ambitlOM. PISCES individual cmi b'iAO?TTARIUS (Nov. M W Dec. 31): Day to upovror” idea* Across. Meam irmnatlso. tliuatrate. too important pvo-MR' CaU, oojnmwwc Ihose In nuthorttg. T-'. now pfOVI ltr „ CAPRICORN (Dee. 33 to Jan, 301: YOU Hff This i A. Aim for QUALITY. 1* 1 •ijfc£ tT gour BURR Do your Job too Pontiqc Press Sports, Saturday, September 14, 1963 PCH Outclassed,f33-0; Huskies Steamroller Troy, 49-12 Griefs Display LofsofHustle in SVC tiame Bay City Central IV H Lives Up to Rating; Horton Stands Out By DON VOGEL : Where there is a will there is a way. 1 . • ' ‘ This saying could very well apply to Pontiac Central's foot*': ball team. The Chiefs are inexperienced, but they proved last night in Wiener Stadium that they have determination. Even though they were outclassed by high-powered Bay City Central, 33-0, in their first game, the Chiefs hustled to the very end. . ... , Sr it it The general feeling after the Saginaw Valley encounter was that if the PCH players continue the^A down on the mistakes, a future foe or two may get stung where it hurts most — in the league standings. Sophomore halfback Walter Horton was PCH’s chief offensive weapon. He broke loose twice for h runs of 20' and 41 yards only to be caught from behind. The llSfoond halfback almost got away a third time, but was tripped off stride just enough to be battled down. He ; gained 89 of the Chiefs 111 BC Central... 33 Northern..... 49 W. Bi'mfieM.. 37 Rochester ....33 Seaholm..... 12 Kettering.... .14 PCH..........0 Troy..........12 Waterford 13 Utica.;............19 Groves...... 0 Lake Orion... 13 NEEDED BLOCK - Walter Horton of Pontiac Central looks hopefully at the block teammate Ken Seay is about to throw at Bay City Central’s Harold Dean in last night’s game at Wiener Stadium, Horton was the running star for the Chiefs who lost, 33-0. Curtain Going Up for Lions Tonight By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press LOS ANGELES, Calif. - Hie dress rehearsal is over and the curtain goes up for real for the Detroit Lions tonight In trouble->me Los Angeles Coliseum. Picked as top challengers and possible champions of the western division, the Liohs must face * a team in the 1963 opener that has been one of their toughest foes through the years of the NFL. The Rams are one hf the few teams in the NFL. yvho hold the all-time edge on tile Lions , and even though Detroit has won the last five games they have always had trouble against the lowly second division LA teams. A victory for the Lions would even the all-time record against the Rams at IS wins apiece without ajlS game ever being played. / There has never., been a shutout between the two tennis, and before defense became such a can win games as often as a good offense. Lkuu, every game was a high-scoring contest filled with ex* plosive plays. After taking a 48-35 lacing in i960, the Lions have won the last five games by' the closest margins, 12-10, 14-13, 28-10, 13-10 and 124. The Rams have been rebuUd-ing with the accent on youth the. psuit two years and with former New York Giant Harlan Svare at the helm, a believer of defense, the Rams have adopted the NFL philosophy that a good defense 11 times. Horton also made himself felt on defense, particularly in the second half, with several key tackles from his defensive half-hack dot. Bay City’s large, veteran line outcharged the Chiefs throughout the game. The Wolves relied on power ploys off tackle with quarterback Irv Schiller and halfbacks Kent Antle and Dennis Krzyzniak doing most of the running. f. iiIxSuLJ 'I Schiller also keptthe PCH secondary honest by connecting on five Of eight passes. Hall control The Wolves controlled the ball and the game. They ran 70 plays from scrimmage to 36 for PCH. Hie second half margin was 40-15. The Bay City eleven gave the Chiefs a lesson the first two times it had the ball. Pontiac Central received the opening kickoff and, after making a first down, was forced to punt. Bay City halfback Fred West-Over gathered in the ball on the Wdves’ 24, faked a handoff and headed across the field to the far sideline. His blockers were lined up along that side from the 25 to the 50-yard lines. He sped 71 yards untouched behind his . teammates who blocked Into the middle of the field. It was a pictare play. On the kickoff, Bob Wirgowski of file Wolves took A healthy kick at file ball, but It squirted off the (Continued on Page 21, Cel. I) ' it * , STATISTICS Falcons Take Advantage of Ulica Mistakes, 33-19 .Opportunity knocke'd knocked at Rochester last night and the Falcons answered with a 33-19 opening triumph over Utica. A fumble recovery and a blocksd kick had Rochester ahead 14-9 almost before a throng of .several thousand had settled into the stadium seats. A i it ’ ' ★ The next TD came the hard way in the second period for a 20-0 margin, but then the Falcons began playing giveaway "and when the lead shrank to 20-13 by halftime, both teams were locked in an exciting struggle. Carl Stefanski scored all three of Rochester’s first halt touchdowns, *<) BCO—Lothian J »n»«k (Oowd pan) m PONTIAC OBNWAti < .. ■ ends Andesron, Edwards, Houts, dmiT Sfceorg.jrAOittis - rjtswjw Srump. JBSSf &S& 1 ♦ • i (Schiller ; ^*09 < GONE — The ball drops out of the arms of Pontiac Central's Ken Seay as he is tackled by ■■Mm,Down. Mayer, owm__ WHWHHHHOHHHHMi Bay City’s Dennis Krzyzanlak. &.rtea - SS# Wolves defensive back ta-oreLln^een ^fontl oXiSi.00"^ covered the- pigskin. ririt d« Verde Seined Rushing ... '“dined Passing .. t Yards Gained . Passes Completed >rtV.> f. Passes intercepted By ....- Punts end Avoraia Verde .. ..(-37 141 d Yerde Fanallttd. 1-50 1-70 riitra Rooh—Stefanski, 33-pass (Konloy klol Rooh—Stefanski, 07-pass. Wwee—-WUee. (1-pen. Utica—Balten, 37-pass (Za.ke kick). Roclv—Sullivan, 0-run (Konlay kick). Utloa—Wiles, 10-run. , Hazel Park Triumphs on Late,. Interception Leonard Sak.returned an Intoty copied pass 90 yards for a touchdown with three minutes to play last night to give Hazel Park a 2449 victory over Fitzgerald. Glenn Cherup ran four and 35 yards-for-TDa and pasMd 35 to Jim Kanak for Fitzgerald's is. Tony Krakosky ran 96 yards with a punt, Jim Boreland passed 60 yards to Tom Stephens and Lloyd Welch van 15 yards for ■HPtouehdownk Clarkston I? 'Runs Over' Oxford, 6-0 Clarkston backs John Williams and Dan Jenks gained 300 yards between them last night on the Oxford gridiron, but ttys Wolves could only cross , file goal line once. It was once too often for Oxford however, and the Wildcats suffered a 6-0 opening game setback. Williams was the game’s star; He carried the bail 13 times for 163 yards. One of his dashes carried 52 yards for the only touchdown. It came lit the third period. Jenks totaled 117 yards on 20 tries. The Wolves pushed fo file Oxford seven-yard line twice only to be thrown back. They scored touchdown that was nullified by a penalty, Actually, considering lost yardage, Clarkston only netted 21)9 yards, one less than Williams and Jenks rushed. Oxford moved inside the Clarkston 15 on two occasions, but the Wildcats were stymied. Clarkston coach Ralph Kenyon praised the defensive play of linemen Len Bullard, Frank Miller, John Wilber and I)on Clement and quarterback Dan Craven. LITTLE PASSING Neither foam could m< much of a passing attack, Clarkston comjpletod only one of eii “ tosses. Oxford Intercepted two. All five of the Wildcats’ aerials were received. Clarkston defenders picked^off two of the passes. Clarkston ran only four plays from scrimmage in the third quarter. Williams made one of the efforts pay off with his long run. pSi ....1 First, Dorns1........... was Gained Rushing .... urds Osinsd Passing ...... |U1 Net Ysrds Gained ... me__________■ ■ ftssss AUemptod: Posits Completod .... Potssi IntsrcAptdd . JJ, FUmblOS Lost ......... 0 Iuf MV, u mston ..f lij . J.U.V4J •Uj Uj.JI “ . RCORINO PLAYS O—’WlUlsmi 53 run n\ Archery Shoot Sunday The'Al Ow memorial shoot will begin Sunday at 6 a.m. at the White Buck Archery Chib’s course on Ponttac Lake Road. There wfil be Jspecfal competition in fifo* 111 be kpeclal < e broadnead clasi ALMOST LOST — Halfback Jay Shlmmick of Bloomfield Hills manages to hold the ball pinned against his body with an elbow as he his tackled by several Oak Park players including Gary Bucci (61). Bloomfield Hills won, 3341. (See story on page 26). 7T t ‘ ( 1 i’ ^ ' Grid Scores Airport 11, MmrosJsIttrtoB klblon 35, Jsokson Porkslds i Alltn Pork 6, Mslvindsls 0 »u e - _ wBuooo Vli Mount CMS I „ , Alley g Arraodo 18, Cllntondsle 13 Holy Rodoi Bay City CMtrt) 33, Pontloo----- •onton^Horoor U, Rollsnd W ■ Birmingham Sosholm 13, Blrmlnghom Orovos 5 • . i . jit.j w,)|( m oak Pgrk • 18, South Lyon 7 ___■ HE i,po<«t ' : j _____YilmMBitwt'0 *' ■- j'ti ay, War ran 3(, Warren Couslnoif Walled Lake 27. Royal Oak Kimball 35 Waterford Battering 37, WaMrlord 13 ■ ---------Lake 13, Webervllle Davidson 13, Pllnt Kearsley 12 Dearborn Msel Ford IT, Tavlor Center ( Detroit Lutheran Vast 3, St. Oil Shores boksshoro • Dryden 0, Waterford Our Lady ot t LfikOB 0 East Lapsing 30, Lsnslng Easters 0 Perndals 10, Berkley 0 Pllnt Ainsworth 18. Owosso 0 . Pllnt Handy 41, Msf Lothrop 0 . *■*•-* Bputhwestern | Filnt NOrthern-T, I n Vlanney li prassr so, L’Anse Crsuee 11 med.lDono Mi arandugi a, runs neeouer e 40, oirand Rapids Contrsl •rand Roplds Union 10, iluokogon Heights 0 Hamtramok 40, St. LodlslOUS U , ... -—* pgrk 34, warron Pttsterald is f, nkt BonSlo 0 ■ How«U 13. Bsnwi li d - ’ ’ "WP - fGrand ■, Raplda Livonia Bentley 10. Par Lapeer 13, Flushing If < Lus Fsnton 31, Byron TOfOh",f. j. I/.. Loosing Boys Vocational 10, Leslie It.4 Lansing Ssxton so, Muskegon o Lincoln hit 10, Fordoon 0 Mlddlevllle 0. Richland I. Mori Moui irrlto 14, 0 sdMpn 12, Livonia Franklin 13 s«un City Holy Cross 0, Riel-' syvllls 34, OspaO 0 „ -Jdland 30, Bay city Handy ) Milford 40, Avondale t New Haven 44, Yale 7 ' NapolFon il. last Jagkson fl; Otsogo 301 Bangor 0, • Zooland 30, CooporavUIs II Late Rally Wins lor Lapeer, 13-12 Mike Powell took a five-yard pass from Tom Hall with threa minutes fo play and Fran Yefoh ran the extra point to give Lapeer a 13-12 win over Flushing last night. Hie Panthers marched in for the winning TD after Flushing’ George-Wolfe had put the Raiders in front, 13-7, with a orie-yard plunge. Wolffe opened the scoring by passing 20 yards to Dave TSlofif for a touchdown in the second quarter. Darrell Kramer tied the game for Lapeer in the third quarter on a 40-yard run with an intercepted pass. and rightfully so, about this opening game. They know that file Rams have aa good running com-on in the league aa any with Jon Arnett, Dick and highly Improved Pervla Atkins. Defense has been stressed in pre-season trades and the addition of Rosie Grier from the New York Giants has bolstered the unit. « Hie “defensive rookie of the year” in 1962 waS Merita Olsen, a 265-pound tackle, while at file other tadde spot was aaoiMr “all-pro tackle” Joe Carollo. The Rams figure that with Olson, And Carollo they have the best defensive tackle combination the NFL defensively since the Alex Karras-Roger Brown duo of the past two Seasons. Karras Is gone. Pontiac Central football fans remember Carollo when Wyandotte High School visited Wisher Stadium with its powerhouse team in 1957. Carollo and center Steve Steiler were two of the finest prep stars seen that 'year, both receiving — altatate honors. , Carollo became a standout at Notre Dame and played in aev-eral All-Star games upon graduation. He was a 2nd draft choice of the Rams to 1962. Yesterday the Lions wen through a brisk and spirited workout at Santa Monica. It was far different from the Thursday siornat Hollywood Where beat and smog took its toll of players. The temperature at, Santa Monica was 81 compared to the 104 the previous day at Hollywood and the ocean breezes made breathing much easier. One thing that has pleased the lions’ coaches is that the players have been pointing to the LA game without a single mention dint they have looked ahead to Green Bay next week. -■ Hie game is expected to draw 40,000 with the kickoff getting der way about 11 p.m. Pontiac time. PNH Gallops in 1st Start of Season Mike Samuilow Tallies Three Timet; Kimmel Passes for 4 Scores By JERE CRAIG Pontiac Northern showed It means business this season in its bid to break into the elite group of county football powerhouses hy smashing Hoy’s Colts last night, 49-12. In the process, the Huskies rah through and around the losers at wfil to dump them like Hoy has not been dumped for sometime. The beaten Colte relinquished their usual position of preeminence after offering some early oposition that couldn’t prevent PNH from building a 3542 halftime margin. . The Colts Were more like ponies - matched against purebred stallions, as first Don Wey< Northern captain and then Mike Samuilow and Steve Dam;, iels took turns barreling through the more than adequate holes opened by the bigger PNH line. SamniloW scored ike-first three touchdowns without a Troy defender touching him. He galloped 51 yards on a reverse end sweep with 9:26 left ta the first period for the font of seven Huskie six-pointers. The score climaxed an 61-yard drive following the opraing kickoff by Troy. Dean Souden kicked the first of his tlx points after touchdowns. AflSfor the home team pMt* punted, Northern drove from its 28 to paydirt ta four plays. This time the fleet Samuilow cut Inside left tackle, then broke outside to oiitrace the secondary for a 60-yard gallop. I Down 14-0, Hoy showed spark by taking the ensuing kickoff mid driving 82 yards for lta first Big quarterback Dim Armstrong powered hfo way five yards for the payoff with 3:22 still showing in the first quarter. show 6lass Hie Huskies showed the class of a winning team for their next six-pointer. After S: fumble rm covery by several players Including center Cliff Ashley at file Hoy 10, PNH was penalized twice (once costing Samuilow a TD run of 12 yards). With the ball on the 25-yard-line and goal to go on fourth Samuilow went straight down the field from his whig-back slot to gather in quarterback Jim KimmeTs well-thrown aerial in the end zone two steps Plymouth Tops Northville 11; Brighton Wins Plymouth got golng in the second half last night to spoil North-ville’s home opener, 2642. Brighton, scoring in every quarter, threshed South Lyon, 42-7, to start hew coach George Preiskora off on the right foot, Roger Tobey and Dave Agnew each plunged three yards in the third quarter for Plymouth touchdowns to break a 6-6 halftime deadlock. Tobey put the game on ice in the tourttt quarter with a 29-yard jaunt. Gary Grady started Plymouth off hy returning the opening kickoff 65 yards for a touchdown. Northville tied the score ta the second quarter as Dave Cnmmtags hit pay dirt from 76 yards out. ' 7 ^ ■ Bob Tuck picked up a fumble and raced 60 yards for Northville fourth quarter TD. Posting touchdowns for Bright-op were Bob Larabee (25), Buzz Davison (12 and four), Chuck Harman (46, pass from Dennis J, Dotig Zimmerman (26) Stine (36). Reml King plunged three yards for South Lyon’s TD. \ Guard Jerry Wallace promptly covered another Hoy tarn-ble on the first play foltawtag file kickoff. Kimmel throw on first dotn to Souden who made a fine over-the-head catch running backwards at file 16; shook off a clinging tackier and rambled into the end zone for PNH’s second six-pointer in 58 seconds. Hie Colts follower wife a 56-yard kickoff return by Ken Hold-The first play from Scrimmage saw Armstrong fire an aerial to Jeff Qtiandt who ran the ball into paydirt to complete a 41-yard play with 7:36 showing in the clock. The Huskies final taHy )n the first half was recorded fy Steve (Continued on page 21, col. 2) it. it it Pom* Rushing .. Down* Passing . a* ••• al%^ Yart/SiMedi iv ism CompntM li"!”’' ism . Wld Avsrag* T*n l*PNH—M. Bamutlow, «0 run mol (ftouaon kick) ?MMSta 40 tm .KWh ’TOO^--4u»ndt « WW'i'OER ftwm wsium IS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1*. 1968 TffEFONTIAC 1 Frederick Seekinglolnd Victory Famine Seaholm Defeats Groves Before 7,000 Spectators St, Michael's Series Edge 17-8-3; Players Moved Around, had little time to search but bis receivers, however, before the heavier Maples surged through the Groves* line. SOME SUCCESS Stephenson had Isolated successes in hitting A1 Proctor, senior halfback, mu) ‘Ran Sheppard, also a senior halfback. but could not string his oasses together to endanger the Seaholm goal line . Ihe Maples dominated play and were effective defensively, but did not overpower Groves on offense as had been expected. slipping around right end on a reverse and galloping M yards. He demonstrated some trade speed midway in the fourth quarter when he. again took skirted right end from’ the Seaholm 25-yard marker ami outdistanced Falcon defensemen for a 75-yard TD run. ' By GARY THORNE A 170-pound senior halfback spelled the difference last night as Birmingham Seaholm subdued cross-town rival Birmingham Groves, 12-0, before 7,000 fans. Ken Heft, veteran team captain, sprinted 242 yards and contributed both Seaholm tallies, despite a much Improved Groves defense. Heft broke away for I touchdown late' in the first quarter, when ft collides with cross-town rival St Frederick at 2:90 pm. on the Wisner Stadium turf. Last year the Mikemeh pinned a 21-0 loss on SI. Fred and laid first claim to the Steve Griffin Memorial Trophy, donated last season by MbM Rpse Griffin in honor of her brother. The Rome have lost 11 of the last 12 gSmes between the Northwest Catholic League teams, including four straight, and would like nothing better than to earn their first, leg on the coveted trophy by putting a stop to St. Mike’s gridiron domination. Last year they put up their strongest showing since IMS when they last won, 34-12. St. Fled teams demiaatod tee oar- on a trap play. Guard Sandy Eyson (42) already is pulling out to lead the play. fenstvely. Proctor topped Groves with 148 yards 6n the ground and 120 yards on pass receiving. Stephenson, meantime, t o I S a d 21 passes and completed eight. Stephenson even received on one pen. The 2-2 quarterback outreached a half dozen toes to snarl a 16-yard ton late in the fourth quarter. Looking past the qhurit with Groves, Seaholm Coach Lemle re- string of onccesses in 1950. The Rams won the first gams in 1936 by a 23-7 count, and held a 4-2-3 advantage after a 254) victory In 1943. Their biggest margin came the preceding year, 2641. The most lopsided decision in the 38-game series was St. Mike’s 6841 conquesftwo years ago. The Interception by fcOK Hurt It* Chancei be don, with Avondale expected to come out on top. But the roof caved in on the Yellow Jackets early and late. a ★ . ★ Another mild upset was posted by Holly. The Broncos — rated a Wayne-Oakland League sleeper by some — tripped Flint Bendle, H Milford strode with devastating suddenness. * Jim Ward sprinted 48 and 19 ' yards for first period IDs and 1 Skip Miller added a third In the second quarter on a 50-yard shock of the football season in its opening game last night by routing Avondale 404) before a large homefield crowd. The contest was supposed to A last-minute pass interception in enemy territory cemented a wild 27-25 decision for Walled Lajke over Royal Oak Kimball last night. JJut the only thing Is the interception was made by the lpsing team, Kimball. Had the defender knocked the ball down, the Royal Oak squad would have been in a very good position to rvin the game. Walled Lake Fas protecting its from getting off a pass. But Singer succeeds as Barons Jay Shlmmick (41) and Sandy Eynon (42) move in. The Yellow Jackets never recovered from the 294) halftime deficit. They held Milford at bay in the third quarter, but Miller turned the deluge back on in the final 12 minutes by scoring on runs of 25 and six yards. Dave Meagher topped off 20-point explosion by returning On intercepted pass 65 yards for a touchdown. Jack Ward kicked four of six PAT. Jim Ward chalked up 158 yards in nine rashes while Miller accumulated 104 in eight carries. STOPPED PORT Avondale crossed the midfield stripe only mice. A 31-yard pass from quarter-back Tom Fagan to BUI Stark in the third quarter produced Holly’s winning touchdown, The same combination worked for the extra point. The 'game was a defensive struggle. Bendle pushed to the Holly 25 in the last quarter but they lost the bad on an interception. Linebacker Gary Thrall back precariously close to his end zone in punt formation mi a fourth down. .The snap was wild and went Clawson Claws Lamphere, 37-6, In first Game over Thomas’ head. He raced back to pick It cp, saw he had no chance to get the punt away, SO threvr far downfield to where one of his ends had gone In anticipation Of a kick. Instead «f knocking it down, ^ Kimball backfield man elected to grab the pass off, and Dick Janz moved from halfback to quarterback and was the offensive star. He raced 23 yards for a TD, passed 19 yards to end Gary Appleby for another and ran two conversions. grand scale last night by whipping Lamphere, 37-6. . Highlight of the game wai a 26- Reserve John Thronburgh electrified the crowd by sprinting 66 yards off-tackle for a touchdown. Vidor picked up the other ste-points on aio-yard jaunt aided by key blocks from halfback Jay Shlmmick and tackle Roger Wotila, ' was quickly downed. Time ran ont shortly with the losers on tbeWLte. The score was nip-and-hick all the way; The biggest lead was a 19-7 Kimball margin in the sec-ong period. < * ;/* ; * : v ■ Thomas. senior QB and son of former Detroit Lion lineman Russ Thomas, paced the team again as he did in leading the Vikings to the Inter-Lakesx League title last fall. Thomas scored two TDs (on runs of 6 and 6 yards) and passed to Dave Fagerlie for another (25). Don Robinson’s 45-yard scamper provided tiie winners with their other six-pointer. John Bauman scored two TDs for Kimball. . ★ 4r ★ Dean Cherre ran for two of the all-important Walled Lake extra points and Thomas plunged for the other. STATivriea ^ Pint Down, Ruthin* ..... 10 wJH Plr«t Downs P*ulng ...... 3 * Plrst Down, Pan*IU«t ... . 0 1 brother Tom at the right end post-tlon. Mike Bnckes, a 170-pounder, will probably fill the other rah- Dryden, Waterf Play Scoreless Contest ring back slot at kickoff time Sunday. St. Fred will have a veteran backfield and some experience on its starting line. Larry Walters, the left-handed quarterback, will team with Marv Robare, John Shearer and Marcello Gallardo In a ’’pony” backfield. v PROBABLE STARTING UNBUPS ■ ... ST. PUD Pm. ST. MSkl Palma* r <1M) UK Iayo)*.. (1001 Rodrigue* (HD) LT Oott,c;ik (110* ■mother* (110) LO Henretty W0 tSadry (it#) C_ T»ytor wo ■ram dost bo Uulnar (M0) OroM (100) St Murran (110) Data 100) M T. Patch (Ut) I IS8»W , HO) 00 iiii mUtfdo iltO) CH Stalnh’er HD) ■hearer ‘tipi RH LaRouta (WO) Robare (WO) PB Backai (HO) of Holly earned praise from coach Ray Figg for Ms defensive play. Waterford Our Lady of the | Lakes and Dryden settled noth-1 ing last night during the first! football meeting between the 1 schools. The game at Dryden was scoreless; New Haven warmed up for Us coming charge at the Southern Thumb title by sacking Yale, 44*7, in a non-league game. Dryden spent most of the game in Waterford Our Lady territory. The Cardinals reached the nine in the second quarter only to be thrown back. They stormed across the goal line in the last quarter, but a penalty nullified the TD and tiia Lakers held- Three lest fumbles and two OLL interceptions kept Dryden sputtering. A 40-yard (including 10 for the end zone) field goal try by Dry-den’s Dennis Hilliker on the last play of tile game was on line but : fell five yards short. > The Lakers moved to the Dry-| den 15 the first time they had the ball, but a 15-yard penalty ■the drive.. They never Dryden’s 40 again. 'Mo' Moore jn 6th Spot EUGENE, Ore. (AP)-Marllyn Smith was in first place as the third round of the 110,000 Eugene Women's Open Golf Tournamsnt got under way today. Op Friday sheahota four-under-par 70 on the Eugene Country Indianapolis Champ ATLANTA (AP) — Indianapolis is tiie new owner of the Governor’s Cup as the International League closed out its 1961 base-ballseaaon. The Indiana, beat defending champion Atlanta 0-4 Friday night, winning the bestarf-eeven terceptlon Mack ran 40, 16 and v WOLVES BLOCKED f- Dave Edwards (ft) and Dave Route 35 yards for TDs. Thi Rockets of Pontiac Central break through to block a placekick by Bay __iiL ^ WO riUm 19a town gmlaillww TIca Am tfmmA A mill BSi^H lit: im Another AL Sacked by rest of coach Art Paddy's veter-tof fine Waterford backs, tallied anbackftold. both of the Skippers’ TDs, a29* With the bespectacled Greg yard double reverse in the sec-leadhtg the way, WB, jumped ond period and a five-yard sweep off to a 12*6 lead and left the in'the fading minutes of the con- iku via m tur log Individual, really didn’t surprise Waterford Township's team. The senior quarterback, in his fourth varsity season, showed he has lost none of his ball-handling and passing manic. But West Bloomfield V light-as-a-feather line astounded those who witnessed last night’s easy 37-13 Victory for the Lakers at Waterford. With not one member of its reg-1 ular forward wall scaling over190 i pounds (look at these weights: i 132, 142, IS), die Lakers showed a much bigger Waterford team a i lot of hard, crisp blocking to »clear the way for Greig and the MINNEAPOLIS^. PAUL (AP) better pitching than my first two; —To the surprise of no one, the ami Pepitone has made our £7 UP Mi in the inftold’terrific." their 28th American League pen- r* i 7 " IV”- nant Friday night, eliminating ...^ their nearest chalteigers for the The Bomber manner also credi, earliest clinching date In 22 years, ited Berra with providing a big The 1941 Yankees wrapped up lift "He’s been a great help,” the pennant on Sept. 4. The Na- Houk said. “I've been able to sped tkmal League record is Sept. 8 by Elbe (Elston Howard) and keep the 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers. him rested, and Yogi has hit weQ The Bombers finishsd the 19(3 too.” flag race by beating Minnesota 28 f# * ★ behind " Jim BoUtob’s seven-hit ttwa* Hook's third straight pitehtagimdthe home nms of pennant in as many years since Johnny Blanchard and, Joe Pepi- cagey gtengel. The ton® j. , . . • Yankees^mv have won four ran 35 yanfe for Ms team’s third TD after being apparently trapped in hb bKdmebL Greig’s favorite target on his passes was end Jliti Smith, second-string quarterback in 1982. Smith pulled in four for 57 yards. Waterford, hampered by inexperience at the quarterback slob showed a workable offense otherwise. It got fine running from La Bair, attack dashman, who made 100 yards in lb carries. Coach Stu Thorell of WTHS uti-| Used a trio of signal-callers in an effort to find the right cumbina-, tiori, but at game’s end had yet to find a definite leader. Sacrifice fly lit 9th Gives Regan Victory Over Baltimore test> WHO’S GOT IT? Greig had the, .game in his hands from the start, causing gasps from this .crowd and exclamations of “Who's got the ball?”, “Where is It now?”, with his brilliant baU-handling. Particularly adept at finding his receiver im pass plays and throwing an easy-to^catch “soft” ball, Greig completed 10 of 15 passes for 134 yards. The Lakers really poured it on in the third period, Greig connecting on two TE> aerials within 78 seoonds to boost the lead to 80-7. Minutes later, Greig tossed his third scoring pass of the period (and second to Jitn Smith) on a 31-yard play to cap the winners’ scoring for the night. Rick La Bair, one of (.number TheTigerswUl DETROIT (A gratefully accept fourth placets salvage from a season that once promised so much more. HOUR’S HAPPY - There’s nothing like a pennant celebration to make a manager relax —unless ft is a World Series one — and New York Yankee manager Ralph Houk puts his hands behind his head and enjoys a cigar after last night’s* clinching victory at Min- Although Manager Ralph Houk hasr no doubt his 1983 chib is the finest Yankee aggregation in his years wttibi tfeua team, tin refuaedi >• to make any claims that New York had the pennant won before the season was half over. ^ Discounting contentions the Yankees won with a spurt of 10 wins in IT games in mid-June after Mickey Mantle broke his ankle at Baltimore, Houk said: "I don’t think any manager feels like he’s won anything until H*s clinched. You just never take anything for granted. We’ve won a lot of one-run games that could have gone either way-'* ' I OLD STUFF ( Two veteran Yankee campaign-- ers, Mickey Mantle and Yogi Ber-’ ra concur with Houk on Ms appraisal of the newly re-crowned i American League champions. Pontiac** Closest unseat the Baltimore Orioles, the team they edged 341 Friday night on a ninth-inning run. The victory left the Tigers 4to games behind the Orioles. Detroit plays five of its remaining 14 games with Baltimore, two ntare mis weekend" and three in 1963> last series in two weeks. The Tigers played as If World Series money were at stake in fnrinfof back the Orioles, a club that’s beaten them 10 times in iZ previous meetings. They beat Steve Barber, one of the American League’s best, Who was rebuffed in a bid for INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY PARK Sun., Sept. 15 BOB FORD DAY Bob Ford Racing Team Match Racing for Championship In their clast**. By The Associated Press “They’ve got to be concerned now. A week ago they were sure they were in and weren’t concerned/ It’s different how. They know It and we know It.” They is the Dodgers. We Is the Speaking is St. Louis Manager Johnny Keane following the second-place Cardinals’ 16th victory in 17 games, a 7-0 triumph over Milwaukee Friday nigit built on Curt Simmons’ third straight shutout and key Mtting by Stan Musial and Ken Boy^r. , “We’ve got so many guys who can play so many positions,” Mantle said. “The defense is the best of any dub I’ve ever been on. I’d rate the pitching just as good as when the Yankees had Vic Raschi, Allie Reynolds and Eddie lU^at. (Mr pitchers this year aren’t any better than- those throe. But they’ro just as good.” ' He referred toWhitey Ford, Jim Bouton, A1 Downing and Ralph Fast Eddie Pontiac BEST OF THREE The Tigers broke a 2-2 tie in the ninth on George Thomas’ short sacrifice fly with Dressed at his masterminding best. Gus Triandos started the Tigers off with a one-out single. Dressen HGates Brown as a runner. Smith followed with a single and Brown streaked to third; COUNTERMOVES Here Dressen brought in Willie Horton as a pinchhitter for Regan. Baltimore’s Billy Hitchcock countered by lifting -Barber for relief ace Stu MUler. Dressen fired right back by having Billy Bruton pinch hit for Horton. Hitchcock had Miller walk Bra-ton intentionally, filling the bases. The Orioles brought their infield and outfield in for a play at the “Sure we’re closing in on them j but we all realize we’re still behind,” Keane acknowledged real- ] istically. “We can’t afford to lose > any more. We’re just hoping that somebody hangs a couple of de-, feats on them. hs this game you’ve , got to have help” , The Cardinals, who have sliced , Los Angeles’ National League lead from seven games two weeks ago to 2% after Friday night’s action* got some help from Philadel- j phia. The Phillies took the,opener of a twi-night doubleheader it be-1 fore the Dodgers won the night-, cap trh , ’ 14 GAMES LEFT M I The Dodgers have 14 games re-, maining, the Cardinals 13, including a three-game showdown se-I ries between the contenders at St. , Louis starting Monday, i In other NL action Friday, Willie Stargeil figured in all the scoring as Pittsburgh edged San Fran-1 Don Nottebart two-hit the New York Meta l-0 and Chicago’s Cubs ! defeated Cincinnati 3-2. : THERE HE GOES! - Barry Rubin (22) of Oak Park reaches back too late to head off Bloomfield mis’ Dick .Jans who is headed for a good gain behind the blocking Of fullback Tarry. ;Berra said he would rate the current Yankee champions superior to tiie great New York dubs of tiie late 1940s on the basis of versatility. Dtok Brannan v* Jackthaw Chevrolet * ■ * * * V* 26 MILE RD. 9 Milos Cast of Gratiot Strip Extended 1,000 Feet (Totally Awed) Open 9 A.M. Elimination 2 P.M. Phone 822-8701 Kettering Triumphs, 14-13 “I doubt,” Berra said, “if the teams of the late '40s could have lost two of its top three outfielders like we did this year and XUU win.” Houk said this year’s team “had last night,/taking a 15-48 decision Hook, in a new role as a place-kicker this season, booted points through the uprights after both Of Kettering’s TDs to provide tiie difference. The story was all Kettering’s in the first half when the Captains scored all their prints. QB Mel Patterson’s two-yard sneak capped a 48-yard drive in the first quarter and In the next period the winners mounted an 81-yard, march which was climaxed by fullback Jim Rogers’ four-yard scoring touchdown. Kettering out-rushed Orion, 126 “By Hook or by crook." Take the first half of that phrase end you've wrapped up the Waterford Kettering 14-13 opening squeaker over LakU Orion yards). Cucksey ran for the extra point on the final TD, but a pass play had gone errant wheh LO attempted its first crack at a PAT. . / -Orion pltedupl45 yardktmthe ground to Kettering's 62 in the final half and was. bringing the fans to their feet with a minute remaining during a concerted drive. Lake, led all participants With a 10:37 clocking. Berkley’s Ron Pulford followed him across the finish line, the Vikings took third and fourth place, and aim sixth and seventh. Mark Karell was titird, followed by team captain John Lundqulst. Charles Gross and Jim Jenks (sixth and seventh), and Elvte Lawson (ninth) closed out the scoring for the winners in their first meet of the season. Instead of, pinchhitting far Thomas, Dressen let him bat. He hoisted a fly to short center and Brown, sent in in a gamble, beat Rum Sneer ’s throw easily. Jim Burning (11-13) was to pitch today for the Tigers against Baltimore’s Robin Roberts (13- Northern Has 20 Penalties But a Kettering interception at that point killed any hopes of a last-minute victory. , Quarterback Patterson was a Leonard 11 Under for (Continued from page 19) Daniels, tiie fullback, with excellent assistance from the line. Starting at the Northern 26, the 180-pounder gained eight yards in two tries, rested while Samuilow went 12 for the first down, then rambled 42 yards to the Troy 8* yard-stripe.. KUnnwl called on the full- to 28 In completely dominating the first half, also recording more first downs (8-2). TIME CHANGED Orion coach Frank Kownacki must have said something inspiring in tiie locker room at halftime, for tiie Dragons came roaring out breathing fire and the role of domination was reversed for the final two quarters, Jon Cucksey, at halfback now after two fine years at quarterbacking, scored a tonchdown ta standout offensively for the Captains. STATISTICS ^ T»tal Flnt Dowbi .............. If G Tttttl N«t Ysnli CMned ....... JRr VU Fuili Attempted ............... 11 J Paetee Completed J I Fiihi Intercepted br ,. ........ O 9 Punte and Ay»r»|« Ytrdl .... J-33 4-30 Fumbles ... ................. I. f Fumbles Lost i.................. I .9 Yarde Penalised ............... »® •# always . answnr, /Tha vary bast you' can possibly afford!" L, Jack Nicklaus, defending champion and winner of the World Series of Golf, did not. NicMaus had a par 72 Friday, but his open* SEATTLE (8) — Stan Leonard believes that too much golf can spoil a golfer. The 48-year-old Canadian was in a nice position to prove his point as he teed off today in the third round of the $35,006 Seattle Open, leading the pack with an ll-underpar 133: Not wind, nor ridn, nor a horrendous four-putt start on Friday the 13th could upset the poker-faced Vancouver veteran as he added a 67 to his first round 60 to taka the lead. I One stroke back was Bobby Nichols of Corona, Calif., and in third place was power-hitting, 21-year-old Ray Floyd of Fayetteville, N.C., with 135. The 6,607 yards of the Inglewood course were swept by wind. bathed by showers and dried by aun at irregular intervals and most scores soared. The field was culled after Friday's play to the low 05 professionals, plus 10 amateurs e* mpt from the cut. Any player with 147—three over par—survived. • advice and help on the quality and grade of tires available is of the utmost importance. At GARTERS we*ve got over 1QO years of tire experience waiting to help you with your tire selection. And we're big enough to bring you the best price! In town, and small enough to do our fob of serving you carefully and well. (Come on down to 970 and try ui, Your neighbor likes doing busltteif* for the score with 4:47 left In the half. Following intermission, the winners scored one TD in each of tha last two periods. Kimmel col-, There store more ups than downs. Bob Rosburg went from a Thursday 67 to a Friday 70; Bob McCallister from a 07 to a 75 and Ken Still, who bad tied with Nichols, Floyd and Leonard in the first round, sagged to a T2. / - uy uie wuivw, aim mw v«»wb Bemao. Sikes Redch ij . 'Jr game/' 0t O. S. Amdteur Event best in the state, was mainly relie, this match won’t last long. I sponsible for rolling up 25 first was horrible.” downs on 857 yards rushing and plonshlp in 1960 had « (n ^ ^ qutrter _ the only greens Friday at the 6.896-yard, threat before being par 36-36—72 Wakonda Club* When japped on downs, it looked like he might be losing Ta^.e away the last minute of his momentum after building • the opening half and the final 60 huge early lead, , he banged to seconds of the game, however, laboratod with end Tom NlchoIs on a 62-yard scoring pass-run play. The 185-pound receiver ran out of the arms of one tackier i anti togged it down the sidelines after 8:47 had elapsed to the third quarter. 'Vv. "* *' Then to the fourth period, the slender Kimmel replaced sub Tom Laverdure on • fourth down play at the Colts’ 23 and floated a heave into tiie waiting arms of halfback John Gojocar in tha end tone with 4:17 remaining in the contest. Laverdure kicked the PAT twice (a five-yard penalty nullifying tha first one). Tty drove to the PNH 22-aod it • yards stripes only to lose the bill on downs for its only threat In the last half. It was an enjoyable night for coach Bob Dlngman who was In his flnt game with the Pontiac team. Not even 20 penalties for 1 221 yards (12 for 18 yards) could dim his enthusiastic recaption of1 the players to the post-game lock-! er room. < Tha Huskies/#era caught clip-1 ping wveraLfonea while throw-1 ling'downftoul/blocks for their bail carriers Who spent most of That’s where the 63rd national championsnip Will be decided between the two young fellows who make a putter their greatest successive pujtts of 27,18 and 17 feet. LOST TOUCH Sikes, the NCAA champion from Arkansas who has a fantastic 4M record in match play competition the last three years, lost his touch in the afternoon sun. But ha beat the veteran Coe, 1910 and 1050 amateur champ, with one magnificent stretch In the morning. After 12 holes of the 304)ala test, Richard was one dowry and wavering. He got even with e par at the 13tii, then fired throe deadly buitoeyes. On the 14tii, he got a 15-footer for a birdie. On the 15th, be repped to a 22-footer for -another birdie. On the 16th, he! CORRECTION In Lakewood Lanes Bowling ad yesterday, through error information about todays leagues was omitted. ,It should have redd: Saturday Mixed League 6 P.M. weapon. From,tee to green, tiiey are little more' than average. “There Isn’t a tournament really that Isn't decided on the greens,” Beman, of Bethesda, Md. said after his 5 and 4 victory to the semifinals over the California cowpoke, George Archer, “But it’i especially true heto where the greens are good but very difficult to read. I’d have been nowhere here If i badn't bean putting/’ .. : / ★ f W r* ;1 “I “dqn’t know how I'll play but JBHle other six-pointers were scored by Schiller on a sneak and ] Kryzaniak on a four-yard slant. The score was 2041 at the haft. Junior Bob Wiggins played the* entire game at QB for PCH and showed definite promise, Dick | Northcross at tackle and defensive end Dave Houts recovered several times from solid blocks to make tackles. i| Saturday Junior League 10 JLM. LAKEWOOD , LANES Silt W* Huron Street Rhone 914-7941 TIRE CO-j m i mm " FE. 5-61301 W^II-JUSI^W Exoban^g THK JONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SBETBM'BEft H, 1868 nyt-two (7) Bachelor Father v (96) World History Vy 2:0T(2) Password mni m . v (4)(Color) People Will Tdk (7) Rebels ’ (96) Adventures in Science 2:25 (4) News 2:30 (2) Hennesey ; (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court (96) Graphic Arts 2:99 (7) News 2:60 (2) To Tell the Truth 14) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day ' (56) Spanish Lesson (1659) Joan Crawford, Barry Sullivan (4) Thriller (9) Movie: “The inspector General." ,(1946) Danny Kaye, Walter Slezak, 16:29 (4) News 16:20 (2)1 Love Lucy . | (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Girl Talk ’(9) Movie: "A LadyMis-laid." (1959, British) 16:46 (96) French Lesson 8UNDAY EVENING 6:00 (2) Twentieth Century (4) (Color) Meet the Press (9) Popeye and Pals ' 6:26 (2) Thte Adventure (4) America Wants,to Know (7) Mr. Lucky 7:66 (2) Lassie < Television Features New Big-Money Quiz Show MONDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:26 (2) On file Farm Front 6:29 (2) News . 6:26 (2) Spectrum ’63 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 7:00 (2) News (4) Today • (7) Johnny Ginger 7:65 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odle 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo f (7) Big Show 8:26 (7) Movie: “Tell It to the Judge." (1949) Robert (4) Ensign O’Toole , (7) Biography (9) Movie: “Man With the ‘ Gun." (1995) Robert Mitchum, Jan Sterling 7:2612) Dennis the Menace (4) (Color) Walt Disney's ~ iyorld LIEUTENANT, 7:20 p.m. (4) Gary Lockwood, Robert Vaughn star in new series about young officer in peacetime Marine Corps. MOVIE, 8:20 p. m. (2) “Blue Skies." Husband prefers adventure to steady career. Bing Crosby, Fred Astdire, Joan jCeulfield star., ■ , > GRINDL, 6:26 p. m. (4) Imogene Coca makes her bow as itinerant working girl hired out by employment agency for various Jobs. 3:25 (2) News 2:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You DOn't Say! - (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Vacation Time 4:66 (2) Secret Storm H (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: “The Night Has a Thousand Eyes." (1948) Edward G. Rob-' inson, John Lund (4) Mickey Mouse Club (6) Hercules 5:66 C4f (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Shadow on the Window.” (1957) John Drew Barrymore (9) jLarry and Jerry (7) Jaimie McPheeters 8:66 (2) Ed Sullivan 8:39 (4) Grindl . (7) Arrest and Trial (9) Some of Those Days 6:66 (2) Hennesey (4) (Color) Bonanza (9) (Special) Rebellion 9:16 (2) True (9) Discovery 16:66 (2) Candid Camera (4) (Color) Show of the Week (7) 100 Grand , Monday aFIernoon 12:00 (2) Love of Lire (4) (Color) First, impres-. . sion. ~ (7) Ernie Ford (9) Hawkeye 12:29 (2) News 12:86 (2) Search for Tomorrow . (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict 12:19 (66) Spanish Lesson 12:49 (2) Guiding Light 12:96 (56) Understanding Num- FOOTBALL, 10:45 p. m. (2) Detroit Lions vs, Los Angeles Rams. SHOW pF THE WEEK, 10:00 p. m. (4) Season premiere features Oscar winner Ed Begley in drama of aged Irish Republican Army veterans plotting assassination. SUNDAY ‘ FOOTBALL, 1:00 p.m. (2) Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers. 166 GRAND, 10:00 p.m. (7) First big-money quiz show since scandals. Ultimate prize is $100,000 as amateur experts compete with professional authorities, with questions JAlMlE MCPHEETERS, 7:30 p.m. (7) Debut of series about carefree father (Dan O’Herlihy) and 12-year-old son (Kurt Russell) leaving Paducah, Ky., for California in 1840. McGuire, Ruth Roman (4) Living (9) Romper Room 0:10 (56) Understanding Numbers 9:30 (9) Jack Laianne 9:85 (66) Careers 10:00 (4) Say When (9) Robin Hood (56) Spanish Lesson 10:15 (7) News (56) Our Scientific World 12:59 (4) News 1:66 (2) Star Performance (4) People Are Funny (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Chicago Confidential.” (1957) Brian Keith, Beverly Garland 1:16 (56) French Lesson 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho > (7) ABC News Reports (9) International Detective 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Sports, Weather 11:20 (9) Golf Tip 11:29 (2) Movie: “Crest of the Wave." (1994) Gene Kelly (7) Movie: “Queen Bee.” 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:39 (56) What's New 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:58 (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvall Malaysia Is Backed Watch for the Grand Opening UNITED NATIONS, N Y. W-Secretary General U Thant reported today “a sizeable majority” of the population of North Borneo and Sarawak want to join Malaysia, anti-Communist federation to be bom in Southeast Asia tomorrow midnight. (7) Wide World of Sports (9) Popeye and Pals 6i|0 (2) Highway Patrol (4) Surfside 6 (7) Rebel 7:00 (2) Death Valley Days (7) Dickens-Fenster (9) Movie: “Windom’s Way,” (1958) Peter '' Finch, Mary Ure. 7-30 (2) Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour (4) Lieutenant C7X Gallant Men 8:60 (9) Dr. Finlay’s Casebook 8:30 (2) (Special) Movie: “Blue Sides." (1946) Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire (4) (Color) Joey Bishop (7) Hootenanny 1:66 (4) Movie: “Ten North Frederick.” (1958) Gary Cooper, Suzy Parker, Diane Varsi (7) Lawrence Welk (9) Football: Ottawa Rough Riders vs. Winnipeg Blue Bombers 10:60 (7) Boring: Rubin Carter vs. Farid Salim (10 Rounds) 10:36 (2) Pro Press Box 16:49 (2) FOotball: Detroit Lions VS. Los Angeles Rams (7) Make That Spare 11:66 (4) (7) News, Weather, . Sports 11:29 (7) Movies: 1. “The Harder They Fall.” (1956) Humphrey Bogart, Jan Sterling. 2. “Three Weird Sisters.” (1949, British) 11:36 (4) Movie: “Penny Sere -nade.” (1941) Cary Grant, Irene Dunne (9) News, Weather Sports 11:56 (9) Movie: 1. “Juke Girl.” (1942) Ann Sheridan, 2. “San Quentin.'! (1937) Pat O’Brien, Humphrey Bogart, Ann Sheridan 1:16 (2) Movie: “Annie Oakley." Beautiful Greta Popular 'Traffic Stopper' By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — A lot of girls are alleged to stop traffic just by walking, but one who really does — and often wishes she didn’t — is Greta Thyssen, that blonde chunk Of Danish pastry jfij | jf| West bounce and future, who says, “I don’t think It has helped me any. It has only hurt.” Greta’s been pidced out to be the new Mae West by Jack Linder, who presented Mae in “Diamond LIT and now wants to star Greta in “Lady Chatterley’s Lover.”* ■ ■ dr ★ ★ . ,• “Maybe, at last,” says Greta, “my figure is going to get me a good role. It has cost me In this girl-watching contests everywhere, jt seems fair to say WILSON that I’ve seen Greta undulate down Seventh Av. past the Stage Delicatessen “Bagel Beach” area — and cause men to come out , of the saloons and barbershops to wolf-howl. Track drivers screeched their brakes. Not since Marilyn Monroe has anybody stopped traffic like Greta. ' “It almost prevented me from getting married,” Greta says. “My fiance didn’t like the track drivers honking their horns and construction workers admiring my construction.” JA ★. ,★ ,★ She and Ted Guenther broke the engagement, but says Greta, “by loving him a lot, I made him feel secure. I tamed the animal. We’ve been married almost two months now.” EARL’S PEARLS: Jack Herbert reports he and his wife had a big argument about getting a dishwasher. She didn’t think he needed one... That’s earl, brother. SUNDAY MORNING 7:15 (7) Americans at Work 7:36 (7) Speak Up 7:85 (2) Meditations (4) News 8:66 (2) Fun Parade (4) Country Living (7) Inquiring Mind 8:16 (9)%arm-Up 8:19 (9) Sacred Heart 8;S6 (2) Mass for Shut-Ins (4) Southern Baptist Hour (7) Christopher Program (9) Temple Baptist Church 9:66 (2) Gilead Baptist Church (4) Church at the Crossroads : (7) Understanding Our World (9) Oral Roberts 0:19 (2) To Dwell Together 9:30 (2) Man to Man (4) (Color). Bozo the Clown (7) Rural Newsreel (9) Christopher Program 0:49 (2) Off to Adventure 10:60 (2) This Is the Life (7) Starlit Stairway (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow 10:30 (2) Christopher Program (4) (Color) Davey and Goliath. (7) Air Power 10:45 (2) With This Ring (4) Industry on Parade. 11:00 (2) Felix the Cat (4) House Detective (7) World Adventure Series (9) Herald of Truth 11:15 (2) Cartoon Cinema 11:30 (2) It Is Written (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Movie: “Curly Tap.” (1935) Shirley Temple, Rochelle Hudson 12:15 (2) Pro Football Kickoff 12:30 (2) Voice of the Fans (4) Bold Journey (7) Issues and Answers 12:45 (2) Pro Press Box 1:00 (2) Football: Chicago Bears vs. Green Bay Packers (7) Championship Bowling (9) Movie: “His Majesty O'Keefe.” (1954) Burt Lancaster 1:30 (4) BuUwinkle 2:00 (4), Top Star Bowling (7) Movie: “Odongo.” (1956) Rhonda ,Flaming, Macdonald Carey * 3:00 (4) Movie: “The Whole Town’s Talking.” (1935) Edward G. Robinson, Jean Arthur 3:30 (7) Football: Buffalo Bills VS. Oakland Raiders (9) Movie: “Destination Tokyo.” (1943) Cary / Grant, Faye Emerson 4:00 (2) Movie: “The Road to Rio.” (1947) Bing Crosby, Bob Hope 5:00 (4) Opinion 5:30 (4) Probe (9) Mr. Magoo SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Rosh Hashonoh (4) U. of M. Presents (7) Exclusively Outdoors —Weekend Radio Programs— WJQCrOO) WXYEO 270) CKIW(IOO) WWJN8Q) WCARQ130) WPON(l 460) WJBKQ 300) WHFi-FM(94.7) CKLW, .BM WHFI.Mu* ___ WJH. Dental Agpol: ^Modern* »iH~CKLW, A WJBK, Jack : aic8Ei»>r Ol*»—WPON 7:15—CKLW, Health tSa^OTLW^1' McClellan WJRiReport Card Ii«-WJR. Karl Haat ; 0:3*—WWJ, Interlochen WJR, Dane* OrtdMitra Mi**-wwj. --------------- , wjit, Modem Mooaa 11:30—WJR. Preu Boh W:«-WJR. Football: WHpfi jffi mitmSSB- WWJ, Muele m Dawn Oiis-iWJR. Ortan Eneore* WJBK. Heartbeat Theatei WXVZ, Young People 9W CKLW March ot Faith 9 iM—WJR. New*. • Hymn* ■; WXYZ, 'American Parmer CKLW. Church of "WJBK Hour of 0 Wpdi, Hew*. Wot- WWW. Matt-re Church we. wxrk CKLW, Tour, Worship Hour WJBK Mutlo with word* wpon. at. john’e Church WHPI, Newe, Muelc 8:30—wxyz, Revival Hour OKI W, Pontiac Baptlet Mb—WJR, Newt WXYZ, I n Church OiSO-WJR, Solonoc, ~WJ, New*. Mune rXYZ, Moraine Chorale - — v lMrenade, wwj, New*, WXYZ, Mom _ WPON, Sunday Sen CKLW. Heb. Chrtatl mmsm . WHPI. New*. Muuo MjfPWJR. New*, Mutlo WWJ. Hem, Radio Pulpit WXYZ, Wlnp* of Healinf _____ Wipe* o CKLW, Redfo B______ WJBK, Proteatant Hour WPON, The Christopher: SBf. itf£»wj] WXYZ, CKLW, n^ Action n the *People SUNDAY AFTERNOON JtiM-WJR. Maw*. Qtttat WWJ. New*, wax a, new*, uav* rnnci WPON, Dwight Wheeler dkLW. Bob Slaton l.-eo-WJR. New*. Mualo WCAR. Muaic WPON. fi....... CKLW. Ntwai Staton r**f int 1 »n»CT*L eoxt, newn. mueiu l:M—WCAR. New*, Logo cklw N»wt,: Staton WHPI, Now*. Mualo 4:#0—WJR, New*. MOP*..'' ----jv-.. HjynKtt WWJ, Newai Melody Parade CKLW. New*: Btatoh T 4:30—WJB, Dougla* Edwgrd* WWJ, New*, Monitor Hawaiian Mi l:M~WJR, New*. Cl Concert WPON, Dwight Wb* 7:*0—WJR. 1 Wpon, , co...____ . CKLW, Radio Church •i**-wjr, now*, into tram cklw. Volo* of Proph. ■ WPON, Church ot Week WJBK, Young Amerloa, WHPI, New*. Mu*lo IiJPOCLW, Th» Quiet Hour WJBK, Name to Remember 1100—WJR, News. Religion WJBK. Law. New*, Health WCAR, Brotherhood Show WPO:i. Bob William* tiM~-WJBT Chapel Hour CKLW. Bible Study WJBK. Science. Adoleacent* ll'OO—WJR. Laymen' 'WWJ. Catholic Hou. WXYJ, truth Herald, Nrwa CKLW, Hr. of Deulalon WJBK. New*, Conoert WHPI, New*, MW* ,W, Light, Life* 1, sternal Light -WJR. New#, 1Ipot witra, newa, muaio 11:30—WJR, Mualo 'tore I Diplomatic sources, however, voiced concern over renewed- objections from the Philippines and Indonesia over formation of fee federation, this time concerning fee findings of a U.N. sion assigned to sound out-population of North Borneo and Sarawak on whether'they wished to join Malaysia. A report on fee mission’s 10-day survey of fee two British territories was released by Thant today wife an appendix containing his own conclusions. The nine-man mission was led by American Laurence Michel- 1 2 r 4 r- F“ fr 8 r- nr TT flt 16 14 rr 16 1> 18 19 21 22 sr w 26 27 26 29 30 31 32 . ft 2d 37 66 34 fen 46 46 TT 46 49 150 81 52 W 64 bb 57 BF 55” 66 61 62 sr ! 64 66 -J2 Malaysia will link North Borneo, Sarawak, Malaya and Singapore in a new 1,500-mile crescentshaped nation wife a population of 10 million, The new federation has encountered rough sledding ever since COPENHAGEN, Denmark If) Five Lutheran ministers joined today in a protest against fee film about playgirl Christine Keeler and fee late Dr. Stephen Ward being made in a Danish studio: MONDAY MORNING «:H—WJR. Agriculture WW&- Roberta WXYZ. Pr*d Wolf, Newa CKLW, ram Row* WJBK, Newa, Av«ry mm iiwjb. M*wt» mn----------- (i«0—WJR, New*, Hurrl* 1:30—WJR, Lee Murray cklw Mary Morgan 10:00—WJR, Now*, Karl Jlaaa WWJ, Ne**, Aik Your Neighbor WXYZ, Breaktaat Club C-LW, Jo* Van , WJBK, New*, Clark Ret I vtoftw. -if|wi, Oleen ,W. Kennedy Cal'In* CKLW, Tim* to Chat wm, HOW*. Winter lliM-OCLW, Jo* Van . /CAR, I WHPI, New*, Burdiok 13:30—WJR, Bud OUOIt cklw, .Joe Van -WJBK, New*,‘tteid 1:00—WJR, New*. Llnkletter 1:30-wjr, carry Moore, Oiar Abby 1:00—WJR, Newe, Bhowoaa* WPON, Nowe, Bob Lar------1 WJBK, Newe, Robert WXYZ. New*, neuaetir WWJ, Newe, Hultman ACROSS 1 Green vegetable 4 Strong vegetable 9 Kind of beet 12 Tear 13 Hospital, worker 14 Exist 15 Native metal 16 New York, for Instance 17 Electrified particle 18 High home 20 Thick 22 Pigpen 24 Island (Fr.) 25 Cheddar or Edam 28 Genus of marine worms ?2 Conducted, 33LWdpflrcelT ™ 4 135 Indonesian of Mindanao 36 Chemical suffix 37 Sheltered side 38 Selected (ab.)' 39 Bullfighter 42 Reiterate 45 Tier 46 Body of water 47 Swiss — 50 Musical instruments 54 Lubricant 55 Expunge 59 High mountain 60 Fruit drink 61 More recent 62 By way of 63 Pasture 64 Drops of eye fluid 65 Auricle ' DOWN 6 Masculine appellation 7 Hops’kiln 8 Sewing tool 9 Shower 10 Dove god 11 Low sand hill 19 Suffix „ 21 Ever (contr.) ' ‘ 23 Carrot color 24 Buries Coagulum 26 Marsh (comb, form) 27 European river 29 Relaxation 30 Genus of willows 31 Seasoning for vegetables 34 Violet whirlwind 4Q Stefly , - ’ ' * 41 Rabbit: for one 43 Conger fisherlnen 44 Salary 47 Fuel 48 Conceal 49 Athena 51> Rant 52 Charles Lamb Mast 63 Mast 56 Scottish sheepfold 57 Hawaiian milkflsh* 58 Weight of India 1 Malaysian canoe 2 Ireland 3 Mimlcker 4 Beginnings 5 Hard-shelled fruit Answer to Previous Puzzle Malayan Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman began campaigning for its formation two years ago, * AGREED TO DELAY Malaysia was originally scheduled to be created last Aug: 31, but Malaya agreed to its postponement until midnight tomorrow after fee Philippines and Indonesia demanded feat the population of North Borneo and Sarawak be polled on whether they wished to join fee federation. Malaya, however, has Indicated feat, come what may, fee federation will be formed midnight tomorrow. Diplomatic sources said Thant sent Indonesia and the Phillp-copies of the 96- Danish Clerics Join in Protest of Keeler Film pines _________ page report earlier this week. The sources said both governments sent letters to fee secretary general criticizing fee mission as having been too passive In its survey and declaring feat they did not recognize Its findings feat a large majority of fee people In fee two territories were for Malqy- The priests, all of fee state church, said in a resolution feat fee film “is bound to be a speculation in sex and apt to destroy fee morals of youths in Denmark and other countries.” They added feat fee film Is “a commercial exploitation of a public scandal hi a neighboring country, and all decent people should be against such a thing/* Sponsors of a protest resolution being distributed, all over Denmark, announced feat some 5,000 people have signed it. It will be handed to fee government Wife a demand feat fee film1 be banned. Secrecy has surrounded the filmaboutthered-hairedcentral figure in Britain's sexf-and-sebu-rity scandal. Relay 1, Syncom Used in Same Transmission NUTLEY, N.J. (AP) - For fee first time, the satellites Relay and Syncom have been used in fee same space communications circuit. ^ in a demonstration Friday by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, voice trans-j missions were bounced between Rio de Janeiro; Lakehurst, N.J., and fed ship Kingsport, anchored off Nigeria. : A bh Women buy about 80 per cent of men’s neckties and most sales are made around fee holiday Indonesia previously objected to fee federation, branding it as an excuse for continuing British rule in Southeast Asia. The Philippines has .objected to the federation on grounds it claims a section of North Borneo. BACKED BY U.S. The United States has backed fee federation. But at a i in Manila last month fee Philippines and Indonesia said they would welcome formation of the federation If Thant found feat fee people in fee two territories supported it. Thant made it clear he felt fee 10 days fee mission devofed to on-the-spot hearings was suffi- cient and more time “would not have affected the conclusions to any significant extent.’’ But the secretary general criticized Malaya fod setting the deadHneforfoFmationoffeefed^ eration without waiting for his. conclusions on fee survey. 5480 Highland Rand Vi Mile Cast af Alrpart OR 3*44921 featuring ROUND OAK GAS aid OIL FURNACES the Furnace with the 1 EXCLUSIVE LIFETIME : GUARANTEE Rosamond Williams S0N0T0NE rvie»*nd.tupplloi for ETERNAL LIFE (Receiving by Believing or Trusting) • “Thi* is God’s commandment, that we should bolievo on the name or-his Son Jesus Christ.” I John 3:23 • “Whoeoeverllveth and bellveth In me shall never die.” John Ili26 Salvation is a heart knowledge. Wo are told in the Bible “that God knoweth the heart”. It states in Romans lOilO “For with the heart man believeth onto righteousness”. A born-again Christian believes God’s Word, the Bible, whether tie can understand it or not and trusts God’ promises from the bottom oi his heart. >’ The Payoff for, being a born-again Christian is h any comparison that this world has to offer. Free Gospel Tracts1 on Request THE ifoyTIA# tftBSS, SATtr^PAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 196B TWENTY-THREE Deaths in Pontiac Area IRA E. GARRETT \ Service for Ira E. Garret, 63, of 23 Rairgrpve wp be Monday at 2 p n». at the Voorheia Siple Funeral Hptne. Burial will be In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Garrett, a member' of the First Baptist Church In Galatia, 111., died suddenly yesterday. He worked for GM Truck and Coach Division.' ,* Surviving are his wife, Edna; three brothers, Cecil and Wayne, Mrs. Frattdsa Sanches; and Mrs. Maria B. Seghra, all of Idaho, and Mrs. Lillian Alvaradb of Pontiac; two sons, Louis and Paul, both of Pontiac; one brothiir; and one sister. MRS. JACOB BENNER HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice fofMrs. Jacob (P. Mae) Ben-ner, 77, of 2521 puck Lake, will mUw be Monday at i p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home in both of Pontiac, and’ Ray of [Milford. Burial will follow in Flint; and two sisters. WILLIAM T. SHELTON Service for former Pontiac resident William T. Shelton. ^O, of California will be Monday at p.m. at White Chapel- Memorial Cemetery. His body will be at foe Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home after 3 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Shelton died Monday. Surviving are four sisters, Mrs. Mary L. Bowman and Veachel Shelton, both of Pojitiac, Mrs. Marie Hogan of Saginaw, and Mrs. Ida Wheeldon of Central City, Ky.; and one brother. MRS. THOMAS VILLARREAL Requiem Mass for Mrs. Thomas (Guadalupe G.) Villarreal, 71, of 719 Hollister, will be sung Monday at 9 a.m- in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Burial will follow in Mt. Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. . Mrs. Villarreal, a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church, died Thursday following a one-month ilfoess. Surviving are her husband; four daughters, Mrs. Maria J. Uranga, MINIATURE MODEL OF NEW HEARING AID GIVEN A unique free otter of apeclol interest “ those who hear but do not und triad worde hue just been unnounced by Ouulltone Co. • A true Ute, uctuel sire, inactive ‘ the emutleet Ouulltone will be given absolutely ____ „ ..... one sending Id title ud- vertlsement. Try It on U the prlyaoy ... — .-— without cost or obllgu-ad. It’e yours to keep The ely* of thlg Ouulltone of Its muny feuturae. It Hull | third of un built ... ell ut eur level, In ------- wlree leed from, body w neuu. Here is truly new hope for the herd of heurtng. replicas are free while the d supply last*, so we suggest ... .trite for yours now. Again we repeat, there Is no cost and certainly rati PONTIAO MALL OPTICAL CENTER Only On* Office and Iff at tbo Pontiac Mali Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Benner, a member of the Detroit Chapter .of the DAR, died yesterday following a long 3SS. • Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Gertrude V. Pett of Highland Township, and Mrs. Dorothea, Rippe of Winter Park, Fla.; three grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren, whjJAm CROTHERS ROCHESTER — Service for William Crothers, 67, 323 Lin-wood, will be 2 p.m. Monday at Pixiey Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will follow in Mt. Avon Cemetery, Rochester. Mr., Crothers died this morning after a lengthy illness A member of St. Paul’s Methodist Church, Rochester, he also belonged to the Rochester Senior Citizens Club. Surviving are one brother, Alvin, of Mt. Clemens, and two ters, Mrs. Ralph Mclnnes, of Rochester, and Mrs. George Rowe, of Livonia. MRS. THOMAS O’HARE ORCHARD LAKE-Service for Mrs. Thomas (Maude A.) O’Hare, 75, of 7262 Buckthorn, will be Monday at 11 a.m. at the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home. Cremation will follow In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. O’Hare died yesterday following a six-month illness. Surviving are one daughter; Mrs. Julia Shaver of Orchard Lake; and four grandchildren. News in Brief Whisky* and cigarettes valued at nearly $1,300 were stolen from Law’s Supermarket, 200 Earle-moor, after thieves chopped a hole in the root, Arthur J. Law, 57, the owner, reported to Pontiac police yesterday. Rummage Sale, Saturday and Sunday. 477 E. Montcalm. 10 to 0 p.m. —adv, Variety sale, furniture, record albums, etc. 2385 Middlebelt Rd. —adv. The.colts-foot Is a small Brit ish herb that is sometimes smoked by sufferers from asthma. , jl l vooauEa EVERY MINUTE STARTS AN HOUR Paul Gaildota • W« plan a major project;' that first minute of eonatruotiva thought ii the catalyit. A farmer would never have a crop—unless there Was that firot minute when teed wai planted. An Aitro* nout listen* to “3, 2,1” and then “Boom!” and he is off into space; that first minute itarti hi* hour of (lory. A little child itarti off to kindergarten. That Ii her first minute into a life of adulthood. She looks forward to that fint minute when the enter* college, when the wean a cap and gown. That minute stretches into hours, days months and yean of happiness. No man in science hai ever gone further than itretehing that fint. minute into a scientific break-through, laurels and acclaim'. He realises that every project hai a minute to itart, that ticks into hour* and achievement*. The man who made a mistake, look* for that minute to change hit life into something better. He must, and does, roaliae that he must chooie that one minute to itart. Hii rehabilitation can’t be rushed. It can’t be short-circuited. It muit be lived one tick at a time. Tboic ticki add up to glory, honors and famo, VOORHEES'SIPLE FUNERAL ROME 268 North Pony Street___________________ Phone FE 2-8278 M. 8.811’LE. 5:|5 Pipeline; to Chicago Long-Distance Carrier Eyed for People, Too TULSA, ; Okto. (UPI) - Some day you may be able to walk onto a subway capsule in midtown New York and whiz at 600 an -hour to Chicago — underground all the way. •People are just foe latest cargoes being considered for foe transportation industry’s baby giant, the long distance pipeline. ." ★ ★ ★ Originally developed as carriers of oil and gas, pipelines now transport sugar in Hawaii, uranium ore in South Africa and wood in Canada. An Irish brewery in Dublin even delivers beer through a 20-mile pipeline. Long distance pipelines made possible foe natural gas business, now foe nation’s fifth largest industry. Until a few years ago, trillions of cubic feet of natural gas were lost into the atmosphere because there was no way to ship the fuel to foe big markets in the north and east. Nine oil and chemical companies have joined to build a 1400-mile pipeline from foe Texas Coast to foe New York area. The 1300-million project, named the Colonial and scheduled for completion later this year, will carry up to 600,000 barrels of petroleum products daily — the equivalent of 50 average-size tankers, NEW BUSINESS Pipelines now handle 20 per cent of ail intercity freight traffic in the United Slates and almost half of the nation’s fuel. And they are picking up new business annually. , As might be expected, pipe-liners have1 met stiff opposition from railroads, truck lines and barge lines. Railroads have refused to grant coal-carrying pipelines right-of-way. An administration • sponsored bill before congress would give pipelines right of. eminent domain everywhere In the country* • ', ; f ' > ■ Some labor unions' also have fought foe pipelines because they are highly automated and require an amazingly - low number of workers per ton mile. Petrochemicals have advanced through use of pipelines which permit plants to exchange the merous ingredients that go into plastics and other wonder materials. .. * \ a*--.............~l Pipeline growth can be illustrated with the history of Tennessee Gas Transmission Co. of Houston. It was foe first firm to deliver natural gas from Texas to the East. Tennessee Gas opened for busies in Sept., 1043, Today it has assets of over $2 billion. It delivered its first gas to West Virginia in October, 1944 through a 1,265-mile pipeline. Now Tennessee Gas has 13,-000 miles of lines and is seeking government approval for "a 1,400 • mile Texas-to-Callfornia natural gas pipeline. Inspection Is Due of Soviet Bases at South Pole WASHINGTON (UPI) - T h e United States' announced today it wilT inspect bases of foe Soviet Union and at least-six other nations in foe antarctic to moke sure they are engaging only in peaceful work. . Officials here could recall no previous instance of U9. inspection of a Soviet installation, but said the coming action was not the result of any suspicion that the Russians had violated a treaty provision calling for only operations of a peaceful nature in little America, The annuoncement came as the Senate was in the midst of 'debate in foe nuclear test-ban treaty. The debate has been punctuated with d&nands that the United States adopt safeguards against any possible ’’cheating1 by Russia. ....- • , The unprecedented Antarctic inspection will he carried out under terms of an Antarctic treaty signed for 12 nations including Russia and the United States in 1959. The treaty gives signatories the right to conduct such inspections II they see fit. Although there are many markets still to be tapped by natural gas, the real growth potential for pipelines seems to be the transportation of coal and ores in slurry form. Slurries are mixtures of the basic material and a liquid. Iron and copper ores, coal, limestone, gilsonite, borax and paper haVe been moved successfully in slurry form. Solids can be moved in pipelines with the < use of capsules and compressed Study Will Prove a Real Headache OKLAHOMA CITY (*>.- Volunteers willing to let research^ ers make their heads ache are1 assisting in research supported by the National Institute of Health at the University of Oklahoma Medical Center studying tiie development and treatment of migraine headache. A headband of light metal with rubber lining is inflated to produce enough pressure to bring on paih typical of tension headaches. Once foe subject gets a headache, researchers test various pain-killing drugs. Different Individual reactions to pain also are recorded. Purdue Cattle Study Lafayette, ind. m - studies at Purdue Univdhity have shown that the middle-sized herd of cattle — meaning 40 to 50 cows — has proved foe most efficient. The per hundredweight cost of milk production increased -in herds of over 50, for both the erage and efficient farmers, Even the most efficient farmers have to expend $4.03 to produce a hundredweight of milk in small herds, $3.36 in foe largest herds, and only $3.05 in medium-sized herds. Business Notes Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service*9 M William* St. Phone FE S-5MI Estriol succinate, a steroid compound, helps to control hetti* arrhage. Remember Your Loved One» With a MARKER OR MONUMENT MARKERS M6#V MONUMENTS ISO up i •0NTIAC GRANITE 6 MARBLE Co. \G«o. e. Slonakor & Song Our 32nd roar 269 Oakland Ave. FE 2-4800 _ ADVERTISEMENT FOR RIDS Proposals wilt be rscslvsd until 1:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Tims, October 10, 1003, by the Board of Education, Clark-ston community schools, - ciarkston, Michigan, (or the construction of an Elementary School. Proposals will bo read aloud at the Administration Building located immediately South of the Senior High School, 0110 Waldoh Road, Ciarkston, Michigan. A twenty-five dollar deposit will be required for eaoh set of Contract Documents. Refund of deposit will ' by th* Architect If documents turned —In- good condition wit days after notlos of award. Flans and speoifloatlons arc .... and may be examined at the following looatlons: 1, office of Richard Frlnoe, Architect, Mil s. Park Strait, Kaiamasoo, Michigan I, Board of Bducation Clarkiton Community School* SUSS Weldon Road _ Ciarkston, Michigan ! 1. F. W. Dodge Corporation In . Detroit, Ifionlgaa ..i Detroit. Michigan No proposal will, be considered unless eoompanied by a certified check, bank H *“ amount of itti Idaied demeans, contract^ and' flic neoesss ry*1 in durance I within ten day* after notice of award by tha Owner or Architect. i j Separate bids will b* received as tol-lows: " i r ' "■ ' e 1. General Oonstruetlon Work 3- Meehahloal Work • , i 3,, Electric*) work , . Th* Board of BduoStlon reserves the right to accept qr reject «ny or all bids snd to waive irregularities In pronossl*. No bid msy be withdrawn within 39 days from > tha/at* of reception. , Published by authority of th*, Board of Education,*, Clarkiton Ooffitmuutr Schools, Clarkiton, Michigan. i, WALTER ' 1 secretary • sept, isanttli, »ea The appointinent of Rex A; Lentz of Farmington as sales manager of the Lathe Division of Detroit Broach & Machine Co. of Rochester was announced today by Gustav von Reis, president. Lentz of 28015 Leamington has been coordinating sales of the company’s line of t r a c e r machine developments for the past #ear. For many years, Lentz was associated with Burleigh & Stocker Machine Co. in Pleasant Ridge and foe Chrysler Corp. Dr. William G. Agnew of Rochester has been named assistant head of General Motors Research Laboratories Fuels and Lubricants De-partment In Warren. He joined the department as a research e n g 1-J in July 1952“ a f t rr T6-calving hif Ph.D. in me- AGNEW chanlcal engineering from Purdue University. He was promoted to senior research engineer foe following year, senior combustion engineer 1958 and research associate In 1957. He, his wife and their two sons live at 4064 Hufin Circle. Radi Hot Sale Items PORT WASHINGTON, N. Y. UPi-tA large sign painted* in a childish scrawl and prominently/displayed on a tree in foe i front lawn of a house in a fashionable section of this Bubufrbah community announces: ’/STOP I Get ’em while they’re hot! Cute kittens, plus foey’re free!” Death Notices I' Due* Lake. Road, ______ _-,.nshlp; age ff: dear mother of MrsT oertruae V. Pett and Mrs. . Dorothea Rippe; lilao. survived by three grairaeblldreii and seven great-grandchildren. Funeral service win be held Monday, September 18. at 1 p.m. it the Richardson • Bird Funeral . Home, MUtord. with Rov. Howard . Short officiating. Interment in Forest LaWn Cemetery. Detroit Mrs. Benner wltt lie in state at the Richardson - Blfd funeral Home, MUford GARRETT, BEFTBMBBIR 13, ll«. ffll I, .13 Falrgrove Avenue; age <3: beloved busband of Edna Oarrett; dear brother of Joyce. Cecil, Ray and Wayjt* Oarrett and Mrs. Kathleen wldger. Fu-. neral service will be held Mon- day, September IS, at 2 p.m. at the Voorheee-Siple Chapel With ‘ Rev. Chalmm’ iMaaUn officiate lng. Interment in cak, Hill Cemetery. • Mr. Oarrett will. ![• in state at th»r Voorhees-Blple Funeral Home. of IfceTJuila ihiver; alio sur-»lVervirw.U,««: r^n»4’^nU.fHd«ri with Rev. Hiram Jones officiating. Cremation at WklM Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. CHar* win lie In state at tha Dencison-Jehns Funeral Home.__________ SCHULTZ. SEPTEMBER ji,. 1*S3. TILLIE, 1467 Portage, Union Lake; ac* 6f; beloved wife of Otto Benultr; dear mother of Mrs. Stanley (Virginia! Bott. Mra. Melvin (Margaret! __and Richard Behulte; dear i of 1Mrs. Grace Zuber. -Mr*. BlJlT Mr*. Joseph Walltoe tatton of the Itoeary will b* sun-• day, Soplomber 15, at g p.m. at the Coatt'Funeral Home, Drayton PlaUu. Funeral lervle* wilt be held Monday, September IX at 10 a.m. at (ha St. Patrick’s Church. Union Lake wltt.Fattier Lewis iS3Hs .officiating. Interment m Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. BehUitt will lie fn state at tte Coats Funeral Home. Drayton Plains, untu Monday at S a.m., 'At which time she win be taken to tte eburch for ssrvles. SHELTON, SEPTEMBER I, JM3. WILLIAM fmmerljr Fienj Sfarle ' Htwan, Afis.” Ida ildon, Mr*. kBwr Louisa Bowman, Howard and vaaehet Shelton. Funeral servieo wlu be held TOtottM’ |yiS r.^STwIS U* to sute at tte Rparki^Jrlffln Funeral Homo after 3 p.m. Sun-day, September 15. Card of Thanks 1 kindness, messages of sympathy, and beautiful floral offerings received from our relations, friends, aito'neighbors during our recent-bereavement In the lose ol our beloved husband and fatter. We especially thank the Muir Brother* Hi —nation ana tnanxs „„„ neighbors for thetr ___ shown U* during our. bereavement, especially to the Mace-donla. Baptist church. Rev. Flemlngo and the Frank Cnrruth-er* Funeral Home; The CAyton ■Family.' ; 1 j WISH TO EXTEND OUR WE WI81 heartfelt the Time Office Amjployee* of Pontiac Motor and Quality Oaeket during our recent bereavement. Wo ' especially thank the Rev. Oaten E. -BOX REPLIES— At 16 a-m. Today there : were replies at The 1 Press office In the fol-1 lowing boxes: 6, 17, 18, 19, 26, 26, 39, ► 40, 48, 50, 56, 62, 64, 76, > 76, 84, 36, 160. ___J . TABLE TENNIS Pine Knob All Star* ve. Detroit AU -nttre, Mon., Sept. 19, • p.m. at Pine Knob Retort. ■ PAY OFF YOUR BILLS AND REMODEL YOUR HOME Any home owner, widow, retiree or even ttoee with credit dtffleul-ties, can be eligible providing ttelr home is half or more paid for. EXAMPLE, Blue ,ui.......... *2.000 MODERNIZATION .... 12.000 HOUSE BAL. ....... *3,ooo Total Owed ....... 17,000 A* Low Aa $50 Per Month MAIL COUPON OR CALL FROM ANT PLACE IN MICHIGAN FE 8-2657 BONAFTDE. IMPROVEMENT Sc INVESTMENT CO. It w. Lawrence , Pontiac, Michigan | NAME .................... ADDRESS ................. CITY ..................'..., Hem* phone' or { Nearest phone ........... Dial 332*8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOn FAST ACTION FOLLowma slrr All error* should be ; “ —oK#ly,< r fitter thin the /ay ' following publication. If no notification it etloh error is made by. that , .time, It will be aasumed the Ad Is correct. The Press assumes no rssoonslbuity for errors other than to cancel the charges for that portion of the first insertion of the advertisement which has been rendered valueless ttnugn the error. Th* deadline for eanoella-tion of transient Want Ads is * a.m. th* day of pub- ad|ustm*t|t* will- ho given cnoetng time for advertisements containing type iisn larger than regular ink -type la 12 o'clock noon the day previous to publication. CASK WJjNT AD RATES $f.K 1.00 3.SO Tjj 'iM 4.8S 1.96 3.05 , 5.49 ^9.40 4.88 *94 | 0.49 9.73 15.12 Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad 3^2-8181 "AVON CALLINO’'—FOR SERVICE to your hornet FT! 4-4508. hi! TdtJT of’ pKBT OK A PLAN. COUNSELORS i • *702 Pontige Mato Bank Bids. 1 FR a-0456 .. . ■ Pontiac’s oldest and largest budget assistance 'cempany, GET OUT OF DEBT . 'with payment* as low a* 110.00 BUDGET SERVICE II W. Huron PS A09O1 TRY DIADAX TABLETS ’ (FORM-*Hy Dex-A-Dlet) New name, jam# ECHOES. 7 male for nil Pay Off Your Bills City. Adjustment Service 714 W. Huron FB 5-9251 fomoral Directors 4 C. J. OODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Kcego Barber, ph. 6824B0b. COATS DRAYTON*PLAL^8* HOMICOB 3-7787 D. E. Pursley Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME ' "Designed for Tunerals" HUNTOON ■•Thoughtful Service" FE 2-5541 Voorhees-Siple Cemetery Let* mounY ''FaZK will divide. FB 4-9852, after 8 p-m. WhHE cHAPEL, 6 LOTS. WILL DI- ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINO Lake Rd.■ CsG oBs^,.-.. .. LOST: TRI-COLORED MALE FEA-gle. Sashabnw and ' Maybe* Rd*. 189.00 REWARD * X on I I. Phone I Help 1 EXPERIENCED ROOFERS. NON-drinkers, seml-retlred okay,, call after 9 p.m, FE 4-6579. MECHANIC . WITH TOOLS. ‘ ^worfc, ^Caverly Mercury, m T CLAM TOOL makers, tun or hart time, lot* of overtime, Pontiac Area, reply Pontiac Prose Box 84. 2 MEN DOOft-fO-DodR EoM 510 per day and two meats. EM 5-5702. aa mechanic'"' wmifoBEE plenty of worlj, caverley Mercury. All ARduNU ^irbY clabs tool maker*, full or part-time, lot* of overtime, Pontlae Area, reply Ptmtlee Prege Box 84. • Automatic Screw Machine Bet up and opernt* 3% lb. RB-3 and 3M) In; RAr3 National Aetnei. 14811 W. 11 Mil* Rd., Oak Park bet. Oeolws* ind greenfield.... ....., Additional Income , TRAIN, QUALIFIED YOU MUBT BE AOBD 32 OR MORE — RETIREES ARE ELIBI-BLE — MUST HAVE tRANBPOR-TATION AND BJL A HIGH BCHOOL ORADUATB., CALL FB 5/343, BOYS — 18, FOR RESTAURANT |kilH| time, Out Of school, *—Telegraph at Maple »Mil* Rd.______________________ Blood' Donors URGENTLY NEEDED 35 Rh 'FqeMY*. 37 Rh Negative DETROIT SLOOD SERVICE 18 SOUTH CASS FB 4-3*47 Now Open Mon. thru Fri. BUTCHERS MEAT: CUTTERS COUNTER ’ MEN . only. Apply In for 5ppt. FB 3-il9o or FE 3-6114. Pontlao Froeser Foods, Inc. 536 N. Perry. bus BOY FOR FULL OR PART time, hours 6:39 p.m,-3 a.m., no phonb calls acespted, apply In person only Huron Bowl Bnaok Bar after 8:30 p.m. BREAKFASr COOK WITH GRILL experience. Apply at Big Boy Drive *lti Telegraph'and Huron. CAB DRIVERS. PAID VACATION and Hospltallantlon Insurance. 101 W. Huron. ---------600K-— " Grill add broiler work. Moray’s Oojf and Country Club. 3310 Union Lake Rd. Off Commerce Rd. CAB DRIVERS, DAV’ANO Ni6hT b!*w’alS?w Hotel. ^0,,'Pafkr DESIGNERS ■ DETAILERS. CHECKERS v .' Draftsmen . PRODUCT DYES AND TOOLS ; Body Assembly Fixture SPECIAL MACHINES ' LONG PROGRAMS—OVERTIME— HEA I ENGINEERING / 8 Llvernole Troy, Mich. 1—1 Square Lake and S. Blvd. JR 9-0900. Help Wanted Mels Certified Ate : /Welders «t pi raw rRd.,l«ka'g DIE MAKER' TO BUILD AND maintain dies for mediuift sized stamping plant, located within 18 minutes of Pontiac. Overtime. Writ* stating experience to Box 199, Pontiac -Preea. ’ ESwSwSEncId body man. H itchuison * Leipprandt. 4454 ■ Elixitteth LakP-Rft/T' BXPjBRUiNCED FURNACE INSTAL-ler, Exo Working conditions and pay Fw 4*” j | Auburn Rd.. Auburn Helthtt , EXPERIENCED PRODUCE CLERK. Apply 2135 Pixie Hwy. Food Town. EXPritlENCED C^A R ply*D*v*»’ Ashland/ 3649 Auburn Ave., Aubum Helgbtt. . Experienced aluminum win- dow;''assemblers and screen men. Apply at Walled Lake Mfg,. 2700 E. Manld. Walled Lake. , ' i EXPERIENCED SERVICE STATION ' ATTENDANTS. STEADY' EMPLOY-, MENT: APPLY MOBIL STATION AT CORNER OF MAPLE AND ADAMS, BIRMINGHAM. EXPERIENCED SINGLE MAN FoR general farm . work. 2460 Dutton Bd„ Rochester. _______^ FURNACE MAN. SERVICE aRd or ttstoll boilers. Full or part time; Trans., TOoli. Reply P. O. Box 34. Southfield. 5m station! experienced men. Shell. Telegraph at Long - LaltoRd.. Bloomileld Bills. • WORK. ALL YEAR EMPLOY-MENT, APPLY AFTER S A M.. AVON ORBQORY OIL OO.. M E. WALTON. . e:jin'fiir>: HIRING,........„.LT NeW fictOry branch is taking np-pltcatlong Monday U a.m. and 1:80 p.m. M«» hired will start work Immediately. Must be 39 to 37, married men preferred. Car neeeaetry. Monthly salary guarantee. paid vacation. Bonus. No lay-offs. Reilly 508 N. Main, Boyal Oak. , INSTITUTIONAL food salesman National Co. manufaoturer* of high quality Institutional food ~ nae opening for Inetltul specialty salesmen with r need apply. Car a Jaw and eotnmlr-’—-o Pontiac Press IMMEDIATE OPENINO IN ONE girl office of Nationally known . firm. Permanent 20 hours 4 day week. Excellent tor mother of ' high school or college age children. Consist* of typing, filing, , and Considerable wsrking With , figures.' Apply in person at Room 3, 54 Auburn Ave., from I a.m. * i. Tudtday, Sept. 17th. ' MEN WANTED ■ 'APPLY ; Buick Motor Division temployment; Office Leith Street/. Flint, Michigan , OPEN DAILY 5 A.M. TO 5 P.M. INCLUD1NO SATURDAY, iBPT. 14 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY mJKrkd-f1 _____races, dependability, and honesty. Capable of hiring employes and doing administration work. Elderly man preferred. Long noun — »130 per wets — Apply ol Wayne and Lawrence. MAN FOR AVIATION SUPPLY business, must be high school graduate. If not. Interested, ln.fyp MAJOR OIL COMPANY NOW HIR- i. 6*3-6264. Ask for . Must MWto A HELPER FOR hSaTINO lonrsTdoJr-- ijBSd I. 682-3100. NEAT, ______________ man. Aggreaslve, Willing to work. Have oar. to tell, collect Insurance debits. Office Appt*. 11 a.m. to 12 Noon Mondays thru Fridays,, 54 Auburn Avo., Room I. !• NATIONALLY OROANIZED ' h year old Texas Oil Company offers unusual opportunity to 4 men above 39. Selling Specialised. Pe-. troleum I Products. Knowledge of tractors and machinery hHpfu*. Sales eXperlOlWa not necessary. We - train If hired. Dra9lni~iniii||to when qualified. Must na position offering with managerii ^position open PRODUCE' Merchandiser capable of buyli 1 and managing, reliable and * perleneed only. Apply In peri or call for apmt. FE a-lftO PARKtWO LOT ATTENDANTS. 17 yrs. or over. Must be good driver. 65. cents per hr., steady work. Apply parking lot, CUhton fc Wayne opposite Consumers Power. 2-4 p.m, fibUTEMAN FOR QUALITY DRY ,t.anlSP.srU3’uSUW,,%- Smithfleld, Mteb, Retired binole man For’ fart E^sreiskerTLak* Apt. furn. for ESTATE BALli:8MlAN. )dioK-igan Business Sales. FB 4il555. RIal "'estate baIesmen Need two full time sales people to handle now and used homos, plenty of leads and floor time, ' Experienced preferred but ; Will train. Call FI 8-1471, Oik for Mr. Sohram. ROUGH ANb Ft'NHIH CARFlRfiX drew wanted, 299 house project and apartment, Wgl >4399,’Ll " 6 369.9181, WE 3-8493, ' _ R0UTE MAn U30 guaranteed peoflt to start With, possible 36.00 liverease per week for first 4 Weils, Slmpls routs ; Work, Married, 23-40, High Scliool Knd;i smsr tor 100“**• phon* '.SEAT COVER .' INSTALLERS, monWomery^ard He|p WaHtil iftifo » 8INOLE MUDDLE AOED MAN YOU, general farming. By tt*,_toewtt., . ExperleBeed oc&. FE -MW.- _ ... Salesmen ‘ We have run tlma and part time openings for enwttMR to the following department*! _ * . HARDWARE -VACUUM CLEANERS TIRES B benefits. Ap-rtment. MONTGOMERY WARD Fentine Mali " SHOE 5HIHE IftY WAlfilS SALESMAN Full time, . men’s ’ clothing : experience preferred, ^ many employee benefit*.. ’ APPLY IN PERSON 5:19 A.M. TO 9:80 P.M. ROBERT HALL CLOTHES 800 N. BAOINAW 1 TEEN-AGE M'bCK BOY, FULL« time, stetdr position, Apply to per. ■on. Barnett's Clothes Shop. 189 N. Saginaw. itk1 ' TRAINEES. Need, sever*; young men between, 'the. ages of 18 and 35 to work in production shop; No shop experience necessary, we will, train you. Apply at 1965 Haggerty Rd., Walled 'EAiMilBISCED MAH lor heating and duet work. Call 553-2133. Bet, I pm and 19 p.m. WANTED REAL ESTATE SALitt- nbi* to'’appraise trad* ins snd have knowledge of mortgages and processing - Suitable person willing to devote his effort* YOUNG MAN TO LEARN St 4 A it cuttlng trade. Get paid while learning to br---------- -..ii*.— igh school _______________ ,_____i to learn t good trade. Please send resume and phon* to Occupant, 106* w. Long Lake Rd- Bloomflsld Hills. WANTED NIGHT CASHIER AND , ear waehers. Jax Kar Wash, 399 E. Hunter Blvd., Birmingham. Apply bet. 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. WANTED : COMMERCIAL ’COH- ' struetion cost eatlmat* work, ateidy —Ooed pay! Send complete rwum* toPontlae PressBexi.--------■— WANTED 5 MEN TO START WOftK Immediately AU applies! alderation. C_____________________ lor lnduetrloui men. Opportunity for early promotion. Apply enmtay-ment office, 389 8. Telegraph. Pon- 1 neighbor* for •u»wn u* during •» especially to . the Maeedqola Bap Flamingo ant utters Funera Homs. The Carton Family. YOfolO'llAE FoE WORK ON hunting preserve, experienced with handling dogs, and bird huntlnk knowledge required. Apply in person at S839 Ferry Lax* YOUNd'uiW 30 ANb oVyUCToK, Tabor. 6M-0S7S. Help Wawfoti Notate'_ 7' BABYSITTER WANTED TO UVH -In, FE 6-247* after 9 p.m. BEAUTY OPERATOR am flirncR . ft diyi tor OM cmra. «un uava ofor, ra ft-aii>sA pm: . . m BSTARUSHlto WATlffl^fbCy^pi. HOUSEMAN OR'. HOUSEKEEPER. ■ neat, maturt man r " in. 2 in family- mu or drlrdr'l Bwtgft required. Sib days HAVE AN IMMEDIATE OPENINO fbr 2 sales pe ‘ -------- estate departmei ferred but wlU Plenty of floor time and proapet Call i: A.Taylar, ORAiaMT^ KITCHEN HELP WANTED, MUST —-ypfalablr *■ “ opportunity Furnished i >srtment plus salary! Salesladies Part time, ready to wear, - experienced.preferred. ■ Many employee benefits. APPLY IN PERSON 9:30 A.M.\ TO 9:30 P.M. ROBERT HALL .CLOTHES 0 N. 8AOINAW TOY CHEST i.Emi. ' Unusual Opportunity Energehtic, alert: .unmarried woman, 3# or over." ifust have some business and sales ability, Free to - travel extensively. Unusual lifetime opportunity for high earnings and permanent future. We train you at our expense, Phone Mrs. I. Healy at WOodward 2-0000, Detroit. WAITRESS, nights, no EXPERI-enoe necessary, apply In person after I p.m. Dell’s Inn, 3401 Elizabeth Lake Rd.. WAlTRKbS DAY OR AFTERNOON snot available, Leu'* Coney le-land, 402~, Dixie Hwy. 673,9903. WEEKEND COOK — CLEAN PER-. SON — 2 waitresses, Pontiac Lake Jhit. 7800 MM. Apply In person. ■■44814,. WANTiP: BABY SITTER PROM WOMAN, i» - 40. MAY HAVE 1 • child, live ta: housekeeping and 1 meal a day for owner. More for home than wages. PE 5-6633 until 7. After 7 oall PE ~ WOMAN TO LIVE IN. GENERAL house work and assistance , semi-invalid. WlU consider a widow with 1 small child. Clarkston WAITRESS WANTED, JOE’S Coney Island. 10»1 s. Telegraph. Sales Help, Male-Famala 8-A EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY' If you are Interested In pan employment with earnings of I to 890 per week, contact h Smith. Personnel Director betwe -..of 12 and 4, 051-0574. IF YOU LIKE MUSIC AND HAVE way with people, lot us train yt. to .become a sales representative of One oMhe largest and meat highly Featuring Steinway Ptanoa, “d organs. Conn Band In-mmm Magaavox television and many other exetustve franchises. You do not have to play amuziCal . instrument to enjoy the many plus benefits iuoh as . Profit Sharing, when you become a member of or fine sales organisation. Apply j person to Pontlad Mall Branco. GRINNELL'S REAL ESTATE We need two 'more live $ people to round out our il tv of leads and floor tlms WAR DEN 1 TOY DEMONSTRATORS The Toy Cbesl doesn’t promise , ‘5(6 Moon The Impossible Fantastic Discounts Tha Toy Chest does give Highest Earnings Leas! work and worry , Customer Satisfaction We honestly believe we have the World’s finest Party Plan Come and'iee our toys today and EVELYN EDWARDS Lt V JFJftiBIWONAL ' COUNUUNO. EIRVlCH" ' Telephone FE 4-0584 mi 'Mn Jluron _ , SiHte FEMAEe PLACEMENT PRESTON WALKER SMITH SM W. MAPLE, SUITE 321 Btantagbam. Mehtaan - 646-3663 .Young -Man For clerical duties and good typ-tag. Must be up school graduz*- Midwest Employment BRAHMS SCHOOL OF MUSIC 7132 Highland Rd. FREE eaglet 12 bass trainer aoeord ‘ S - *"0M' ||j||ggj ' » P BL Finish High School |Kmki|U|||jj “ — -jme in spare time.' t awarded. For free booklet 17742 Mound Rd., Warren. I ■ add placement aid RN HEAVY EQUIPMENT, . eks, on Dosere. Drag Lines, ate. M placement. '‘Kay?' 6330 W *> la Rd„ Detroit 2LDI 1-7223,, WM " Improve your HMint sons by experitnoid teacner. « FI 4-4451, ask for Mrs. Paul. VOICE LESSONS Experienced.teacher from t Detroit Institute of Arts will. In Pontioo on Mondays. P further Information cull PE Work Wanted Mala E 8-3087 w t BARBI SEMI-RETIRED PAINTER. REA-sontble. 336-8903 YOUNO ‘ WANTS WORK OP Sj MICHIOAN ) CRAWLER—14-yard Die-' set. combination beck TOW and Dorn Read. 3 howl AND RATO, S®ST Dresden. iht party, m rCLEANTli lie. MA 6-318 3 ROOMS, BATH, PRIVATE RN- : MAIN iMm xrrdSRN t&rti Iiath, separated ’ bedroom. Slater apart-monk M j. Huron St- PR 4-3846 ROOMS AND BATH, NICE LO-catton. pvt. entrance. 298 HMR! ‘ k TO 1-4125. 3 ROOMS. NEWLY DECORATED, private. Adults. No drinkers or Pets. FE 346t4. (t-AROE ROOMS AND BATH 6n ROOMS^i ANJ^ PMVA^™!2BgA T H. GENERAL HOS- Painting t PscoraHng 23 •IPAINTING, FREE ESTIMATES. t-1 DECORATING plastering ulsenuntt f„_____ ___ LADY WTBRIOR DECORa5oA. INTTNO ■ Pros est GRIFFIS BROTHERS MASON _raOMPSON—DECORATOR. price. EXPERIENCED TYPIST WANTS = work at heme. PE 2-7176.___ r HOUSE CLEANING AND IRONINOB S wanted. Ft 4-7131. . r RKLIAn-E WOMAN .NEAR TEL- . , , , * - - j ---- ------- pre-sohooi child Tswvilisn-Kadio Ssrvics 24 is. Mrs. Mackley HAVE YOUR ■ RADIO AND TELEVlPON REPAIR WORK DONE WHI YOU SHOP Building $crvic<«-SuggHa«~TI BRICK. BLOCK.------------ work, chimneys, fireplaces, CMaas, MY3-1UI. j BLOCK CARPENTRY AND DRIVE, FATI08. CALL ... .jllgstion, of course THE TOY CHEST FE 8-4731 ... ■ - -, WANTED EXPERIENCED SALE8 lady between age 30-40, " and qualiflcatlona to Pon NEW DOORS. OOOD SELECTION of exteriors, all sites. Interior: sll s&esT Ml 4-7422. “* PLA8TERINO ALL KINDI. Meyers. OR 3 Inturoitct ,. bjd, P INSURANCE: FIRE. WINDSTORM 20 per cent off. FE 2*8011. FE 4-3403. Wanted Children to Board 28 CHILDREN TO BOARD IN LI- Aluminum Sidini Architectural Drawing } REMODELING ASPHALT PAVING. WORK < DRIVEWAY, PAVINO SPECIALISTS Cenerators—Rcgulators—Starters Batteries $5.95' Exchange R •7, Building Modsrnliatlan 2-CAR OARAGE. 5099 Incl. OH Doors, Concrete Floors ' GUINN . CONSTRUCTION, Hams Improvements, porches, wrisi additions. All types o. .. nient work, patios, driveways, and ildowtika. Terms. FE t-tlge _ FE 5-5000. SEEDINO, SODDING, BACK MOE-^taUkkmta,. Free estimates. EM SODDING, SEEDINO. AND TRAC- SCHWEITZER CARPET SERVICE. cleanlnMf repairing, laying, fre® ftstinutCB, FE 5-6jt33 or FE 2-7893. Csmsnt Wark rtM ENT CONTRACTOR. cot&Btd city sidewalk builder terms. FE 5-9122. ALTERATIONS A1 dresses, leather Electrical Contractors TALBOTT LUMBER Olass installed In dooes and wti dows. Complete building service. IQw , Oakland Ave. FE 4-451 -Painting PAINTING DONE, COMMERCIAL, Residential, interior and Exterior. 052-0706. Piono Tuning AAA Piano tUnino . WIEOAND’B TO 5-4954 ---A-VTUNINO AND RBPAIRINOm_ Oecar Schmidt FE, 5-5217 Plastering Service A-l PLASTERING Reasonable. Pat I Roof Repairs $10 Up Tras Trimming Ssrvics General Tree Service UL else Job. PE 5-80251 MONTROSS TREE SERVICE CALIFORNIA DRIVE AWAY -Deliveries to California and surrounding area. Must be at least 25 years with references. Apply at MAM Molor Sales. 2527 Dixie Hlgh- BACHELOR EFFICIENCY CORNER of Ormond' and Dufflald near Whtta Lake, 540 per mo. or 3-5WI TOymm j | ROOMS, ^NS CARETAKER. NEAT U ATUhk ______________673-1190. JUST AVAILABLE Several lovely redecorated apart-ments. - Furnished ear unfurnished, close to downtown, lovely neighborhood no children or pots. For further Information cell FE 5-7007 »» TO 5-4855. . ROOMS. am~ur LAKKFRONT, KITCHENETTE. $20 WEEK..ROOMS. Hint Housos—Unfurnished 40 Kiel SUttPINO ROOMS. BUmmtt.. PE 8-0805. 11 NICE SLEEPING ROOM FOR taa.5SLM clean room IH jntleman. private entrance. 345 ■folson. TO 4-4573. LARQB CLBAN ROOM,, PRIVATE it Side. PE 3-0010, PROMT ROOM." PRI-vate pome, TV and ph, privileges. Man. PE 4-fl«40. , ■ ... .. . IHHk llih OR BOAM^. 13514 Oakland AtaTU W . Koomst GENTLEMAN AFTERNOON S AS , THE FARMER TOLD THE TOURIST when asked directions to a particular spot. “You can't gat there from where you1 are," (because of conetructlcn of Perimeter Road In front ef It and Huron Street 05 feet to the north of It) but this 1100 so. ft. newly refurbished store will 3»,Yft, A vPrJ»* „jocatton when tW constroctfon Is completed In about three weeks. - Leslie R.-Tripp, Realtor 75 West Huron Street n mst 554 TORkBERRY.. 3 BEDROOM ' •jBHpfiMesmml TO1-T376. • $75£LDOWN - "VA. (MUM, 3-bedrbom ranch.' Wll ,,-pV, In Drayton Plains, 100 x lot. -large, kitchen, vacant. . P^“ STANLEY 1. PAYNE MI 7,3033 your lot. Fun b oak noora. tile bath, bin boardc. QR 3-5040 altar JL____ ROis'McNAB__________art Umfmf 00,000 SMALL HOME, IDEAL FOR r coupia or newlyweds, fe .. MILE-WOODWARD, FINE 3-bedroom brick. In a most abta area, many extras. 51 can for detam.(BM810. ATTENTION ■ WE BUILD 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL TOATURmO: built-in vanity, cupboards .galore, formica counter tops, oak floora, plastered walls, brick trim, 50,508 on your lot To 'seif model, call HIUen Realty. FE 2-0170 or FE 4-3090. NYONE - 2-BEDROOM HOME I West Bloomfield TO wash ip. Walled Lake Sohool District - 62 ■ASSUME-' /• FHA Mortgage, With payments-Of only OOOOw Per month. 3 bedroom, mil basement, ranch style home, oniy 51.450 down to my present mortgage. OWNER < ..NORTHERN HIGH “TT " Rant OHics Spues 47 RENT 2-ROOM OFFICE. GROUND “ r. 400 so. IK, M-60 across airport. 074-0401 or 303-7476. Rant Business Praparty 47-A ________ NO BASEMENT OR garage, Rochester area, " equity. FE 4- NEW 2 ROOMS, KITCHENETTE Apartm»nti-Unfumi»h«d 31 ROOMb. KITCHEN AND BATH. Separated,, bedroom. Slater Aput-menu. 90 B. Huron St„ TO 4-M40. DRIVING WEEK ENDS NORTH TO U.P., riders wanted. MY 2-1305. LEAVtNO FOR ATLANTA. OllORO-'a Sunday morning.. Would like 2 I — FE 4-5614. DAY CARE FOR CHILDREN Wnntad Household Guodi 29 OR 3-0847 or MBlrose 7- Wanted Misceliansout 30 Wanted tu Rant Trucking KAULINO AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any lime. FE 54)0" LIU HI AND HEAVY TROCKINO. rubbish, fUi dirt, grading aiid gravel ^and front end loading, FE LlGHTllUJCKINOANDHAOLlNd TOP BOiL, PRAT. BLACK blRT, road gravel, and till dirt. EM 3-3415 Truck Rental Trucks to Rent i-Ton pickups lti-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS Dump Truoks - _______ Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. S3 8. WOODWARD EAKLES CUSTOM UPHOLSTER-UiJ^MJO Burleigh. Union Uke. — THOMAS UPHOLSTERIlia BLOOMFIELD. WALL CLEANERS. WAJll and, wtaoaws, Reas. faction guaranteed. FE 2-1031. Shan Living Quarters 33 YOUNO WOMAN ^TO IHAR1 !MteafterTWp>m.t662-'fi87M<> C°n' SHARE MY WfOME WITH LADY. Nice location. 812.50 week. 143 Euclid. __ 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY Alberta Apartment: Wanted Real Estate AN INVESTOR W cash for FHA or If behind In ^payr FE. 3 HAVE BUYERS FOR : Clerk Real Estate. PRIVATE PARTY WANTb TWO ©ft * bedroom home with basement ar Drayton Shopping Center. FE , NEEDED AH/ types of Real Estate. If yo have property to sell call us fo hely In disposing of It, No obi OBOROE R. IRWIN. REALTOR 98 W. Walton FE 3-708 WANT TO SELL? CALL OBOROE BLAIR REAL ESTATE Blair. No obligation. poor repair, wo’U help you got top d0,Ur w. h‘ bass REALTOR FE 3-7310 BUD “SpcclallOIng In Trades” Apnrtments—Furnlihed 37 1 ROOM AND BATH, 390 N, PAD-dock, TO 2-8000. t 6lean room, private bath, ............I»n,tt' HANIC, yPON- jthltlos, m Mi refined adult, PE a •BEDROOM, 39 I Hac, MY 3-117)1. IT’S SO EASY to Place a . Low Cost Pres* PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD 1 * Just Dial FE 2-8181 . I ROOMS. HEAT, HOT WATOR, 1ST floor, close In. Fg 2*7475. , CARPETED. ROOM FLA 17 Hovcy St. Cull 784-6702 1 • Rent . , - lorton Avenue. 4 room and bath. >wer apartment, prefer middle AND BATH. 8TOVB. ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL ' Adulte Only__ FE' 5-9918 Rent HeuMI, Furnlihed 39 "1 BEDROOM, COUPLE ONLY BEDROOM BRICK RANCH home, living and family room, utility room, lib bath, 1 car garage — 53400 Dequtndre — Rochester, 001-3003. 3 BEDROOMS. STOVE AND RE-frlgerator, nice area. 0130. 335-0324. LL MODERN CONVENIENCES lakefront home, oil heai. spacious grounds, near Union .Lake, lease to May. adults. 9480 Oarforth, Mandon Lake, EM 3-3133. KBBOO ON CAM LAKE, CLEAN 3-bedroom. gat heat, utlllttea turn., adulte only. Inquire 2101 Willow Beach. SMALL 3-ROOM TORNI8HED. 332-0500.__________ Rent Houtsi—Unfurnished 40 2 BEDROOM TERRACE. 099 MONTH - 3»8 E. Blvd. PE 2-1271.__ 2- BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE, quire 120 S. Edith. FE 4-0378. 3- BEDROOM; i-BATH AT SYLVAN Lake, awrflable Oct. L 0125 a , morth, 602-2048 after 0. .__ 3-BEDROOM HOME. NEWLY DEC- reasonable'0REALW'VALi7e, til 0878.________________________ 3 BEDROOM. ROCHBBTIR (138. OL 1-0907 ; 4 ROOMS AND BATH, .NEAR OP- dyke Rd. FE 2-2008.__________ 5 ROOMB AND BATH. 375 FERRY. i room duplex, sYmary '5aY, gas heat. 113-DU 3-0300. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS lib ACRES ON WOODRUFF LAKE. 30-foot house trailer inoluded. $3.- HOU8E WITH 1 dies west of. Pontiac. offer. 338 Pratt 1 3 BEDROOM. BASEMENT — OAK floors, alum, elding, plastered, patio, attached garage, plue ,2 car In rear, corner lot. 512:050. FLATTLEY REALTY 3260 COMMERCE RD.^ 308-6811 OR.................. BY; OWNER —- VICINITY PONTIAC Mall, ranch type 85x24 3-bedroom, gas heat. Recreation 12x24 — $12,500, discounted 10 per cent from bank appraisal loan value. Make Offer. Phone Farmington 470-0240.. COOLEY LAKE FRONT. LOVELY 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL BRIC front, family room, hot water hea ceramic tile, vanity In bat storms, screens, gutters, birch cal lnctsyformjca tops. Nothing do« °JOHNC MYLES, BUILDER EM 3-0733 -BEDROOM BUNGALOW. A L U M-lnum storms and screens, softener, fence. In Northern High area. FE o-awo. garage extra tot. gw.Rw. un d-6622. * •BEDROOM RANCH. 2-CAR GA-rage, basement, large lot. all appliances. 073-0820. •BIDROOM HOME, NORTH SIDE of Pontlao. Good condition schools. Contact o .t FE 6- -room, Rath, toxiio lot. i down, take over payments, 04060 sash, Lake Orion, < 4-BEDHOOM, $10,750, $900 DOWN. NELSON BU1LDINO ( - BEDROOM COMPLETELY RE-modeled 2 loti, fenced, Waterford Villager trees, shrubs, OR 3-1007, BEDROOM. 2 BAJHS.JHb ACRES. Bedroom Unit — ““ Month it Manxger JOUNTRY LIVING 5 MILE northeast downtown Pontlao, net 2-bedroom, newly deoorated, oer it and'iai FOR RENT: 2-B with family .roo tached garage, i privileges. $95 pel -In- -advancerAval ‘Bud’’ Niche,lie month. 2 months IN WATERFORD - FOR REFINED HOME, 4 BED-room, mutt have hO||M|l|ta Lake Rd. 5 mil 0OT4543, . ’ lotus Lake, wateRford. year around lake front, 2 bedrooms, oil ft^nao^^safe beach. 1100 per mo. LOTUS , lake front. wateR-ford. 3 bedroom. OU furnaoe. Nice grounde. 2100 mo. OR 3-1434. NORTH UTICA HOUSE -5 and noth, A dream, nee Phone ST 1-4824 after 6 p.m. NEAR PONTIAC aENBRAU room home. SRO per mo. ft. Smith, Realtor, PE 3-7849. l0fiT NEWLY 'DECORATED 2 BEDROOM, NEW 3- AND 4-BEDROOM HOMES 227 W. Yale at Stanlty RENT OPTION— $59.66 MONTH Excluding taxee and inaurance Basement, paved street, model open J “y and Sunday. , MtCHAELIB REALTY 383,7588 WE 3)4200 UN 3-22M ~*1 i.annic nthn. hou¥ST room, ooo mo., Telegraph Rd„ 5-ROOM HOUSE, PULL BASEMENT, lib-car garage. Close to all echoole. $1,000 doWn/FEJ-8408._______ “room" perma'-btone hoS/e! 2 car garage,, 2 lots, Scott Lake, OR 3-1069, _________________ 1-ROOM RANCH TYPE, 24b acres, some mulch and peat, eell *or trade lor 2-famlly apt., west Associate NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA ASSOCIATE BROKERS _ 145 Franklin Blfd. FE 8-9663 Wyman Low)# TO 8-30QI BY OWNER: 5-ROOM-AND-BATH. gas heat, Auburn Heights. ’ shown y appointment only. UL 3-3719. Sole Heuiei .4* ; GOOt) VALIUM , . HOMEY HOME wood more. Largo wwijjf tjK ded lot. Large garage, W,980,.FHA INSPECT THIS SHARP "ftobiTi UM nca* ihiw «w» -"Jib Jsxj! attached garage. Keegc Harbor. • v . ■ As a A1 Pauly, Realtor M IHxte. r BY OWNER i rooms, full basement, large 15 t 22 carport, oloee to ecnools, BASIC BUILT ment on oure. We have . -to ehow. 2, 3. and 4 bedrooms. A. C. Compton & Sons 900 W. Huron OR 3-741 Eves. OR 3-4853 FE 2-70* BARGAIN 3-bedroom, tb-acre lot, -pave streets, 1 block to echoole. down, $63 mo. Dlorah Building C°- BY OWNER lands. I" Insulated, scaped coi FE 5-0970. ... PIONEER HIOH- 2-bedroom frame, fully heat, well lana-lake prlvlleget. OR 3-31 LAKEFRONT WATKINS LAKE _ TT Modern 4-bedroom, Roman brick, 24b bathe, attached 3lb-oar g»-rase. recreation room. ■" Mixed Neighborhood 3-BEDROOM—FULL BASEMENT No doWn payment No jnori«M»coet—.~ First month fret Payment! Uke rant MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-5 WESf^Wf^REALTY 490 Irwin off Eaet BIvd:_ FE 0-2763 afternoone. Ll 2-4077 Evee. MIXED 4ARRA, NEW. MS’ ment, gae heat, terms. Trado for land contract. MA 0-3108. Better Homes orchard laxR village 4 bgd-- ranob.. pkYfd- «root. Caee i prlvUeges. 540.005 on terme. OTTER LAKEFRONT,, oyer 8,000 MODEL 3- or 4-bedroom, b NO MONEY DOWN Trl-levol or ranch etartcr homes on you, tat. Model open 10-0. C. FLATTLEY, BLDR. 363-0081 . / Evee, EM 3-0483 ROOM AND BATH PRAC-ltb-acre of “ M . I 3 Bedrooms Face Brick Homes „ $150 ... -DOWN. • ^ - GAS HEAT — PAVED STREETS -LARGE ROLURO LOTS ■ ■ omEcnricms. • t ' Off M-34 Just north of Lake Orion, Boh&d Alban’o Country gnwwnm' “ ■ Contract *or Mtg. SOUTH BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS. 3 bedroom briok ranch. ty landscaped lot. 531,20 -WARDEN" TAYLOR PONTIAC LAKEFRONT — 4.bod-—n Early Amtrlcan, modern, nearly 3 aorta. Ideal for ..andy to —, - stores. Lako privileges. Payments leee than rant. Only 85,500. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP—5300 i'E CtEAN 2-BEDROOM HOUSE, close to bus line, stores Mj| NO WArriNO—READY NOW New 3-bedroom homes on-Woo— lots, full basement, west suburban, lake privileges, Pontlao Lakb P—1 to Hlghgate St., by Sunni Chapel, turn right One blool m NELSON BUILPINO CO. NO 14b bathi W'jB’fSB terms, km j-dyuj, HACKETT REALTY. ' ■ COOLEY LAKE FRONT., LOVELY 4 bedroom, part - baoomentr--ga«-4MHiei—tW”1i6iirTffeHaoe. large tot; Over 100 ft. oh lakes $21,800 terme. EM 3-6703, HACKETT REALTY. HANOINO NEIGHBORHOOD home In exeellent condition, PHA approved — Immediate occupancy PE 2-5310. CASS LAKE FRONT $6,990 9-yetr-old 3-bedroom eumnfer cottage. Excellent condition, Including range, refrigerator and tome fur. nlsnragt. Shaded lot. boating, swimming and fishing at front door. Terms. EARL A. GILFORD, BROKER ins r I 15 s ■pmipm . large breexeway and 344s oar garage, pantry and storage room, buut-ta laundry, all handy in this 1900 ft. home In warm cedar paneling and picture wlndowe with unexcelled view. Ideal for raising children am* --- * — 500. MY 3-27 f $34,- CASS AND ELIZABETH LAKB PRIVILEGES llh this 2-bedroom home, breeae-aya garage, 3 lots, $350 down, 078 lonthly. Elwood Realty, «$r — COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK For Home Ownership Loans e Easy ■ TO 2-8171 $100 Down—iNo Costs ROPABAUGH ’FE 2-8053 Realtor Woodward at Squaro Lake Road .JK«2, ROCKWELL—9000—DOWN*~f Land Contract, 3 bedrms., garage, extra lot, SAUNDERS A WYATT REALTY Open dally 10 to 0 74 Auburn '_____ FE 3-7001 2350 DOWN 0350 Is all you need to move Into . Watkins Pontlao Estates—no Ted tape — no other cost — Just move In NOW,. Extra roomy ^-bedroom ranch type with attaohed garage. Anohor fenced baok yard. 594 per month Includes everything. NOW HURRY! - RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 8. TELEGRAPH OPEN 0 to 9 S 3-714 MtlLI ,T1PLB LISTING SERVICE $400 DOWN 3'Bedroom, Nearly New ecraened porch, shutters, dryer, Double etalnlen ste tojever: 044-380 CHEAPER THAN , RENT IN NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down NEW 3-BEDROOM HOWE $55 Month Ixoludi eryon< Xp'. CUSTOM HOMES Quality built — Priced right Deal direct with Builder. JiiiErigan.Co«s'4 Holly 034-0201 Roch, CUSTOM BUILT ; HOMES YOUR LOT OR OURS Ross Homes, Inc. FE 4-0591 DRASTICALLY REDUCED . Lovely old, colonial 0-bedroom home. \ 3 baths, 2 living romi. Generous ened dining room and kitchen. Large family room. 5 outside entrance! (a natural for converting Into Income). New hot water heating plant, 3-car ga-' rage. 150' on paved road. Nicely landscaped Jot. 013,000 wlljh Ipw Dorothy Srlyder Lavender 7001 Highland Road ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES 3 bedroom, alum sldliig, $1,000 dn. OR 4-1010. 470 Lakeiide Dr. , HIGHLAND ESTATES, 3 BEDROOM ranch, attached 2 c— «n J-7^34 MONEY DOWN NO MORTGAOE COSTS, brand ne' Just a Job movot you In. Lari 3 bedrooms with walk-in cloeeL. oak floors, family slxed kitchen, REALLY MEANS BETTER BUILT RUSSELL YOUNO Bt NEW 3 AND 4 BEDROOM HOME 297 Yale at Stanley 0 Down—-$59.69 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance Basement, larj ANOeAis * FRONTAGE — the discriminating, executive. 5 bedroom brick ranch type home with carpeting, drapes, Intercom system. Built-In features In large country kitchen. 4ib bathe, full walkout absement to good beach. Family room overlooking Lake Angelus with fireplace In living room and family room. Exclusive slid appealing.— -“JwTOinroSURBAN^—Large 4 bed-room Colonial with large finished family room, basement for storage. 2Vb bathe, carpeting, gae hot water heat, water softener. Incinerator, garbage disposal. Over-slsed 2 car plastered garage. Fenced corner lot and many, many deluxe extras. Ideal for added living comfort. arge lot. pi ok PossessI ....... ... ...the ’’New” Model Open dally and Sundaya MICHEAL8 REALTY „ 333-7850 WE 3-4200 UN 2-2282 NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT 1st MO. FULL BASEMENT PE 8-2763 .1 to I afternoons Belaire Home Builders Li 2-7327 _____After 7 p,r OLDSTER Time tested walls have echoed with laughter of many little onee. 3 bedrooms, full basement, recently installed gas furnaoe, lw bathe. 1-car gkrage. Close to everything. Unbelievable I 37.800. $46.75 month plue tax and Ini. HAOSTROM ALTOR. 4950 W. Huron, OR 4- Eves, oall 663-9438. _______J PRIVILEGES ON CASS FE 8-1168 RETIREES ONLY., NICE, HOME, Tel-Huron. 00900. FE 4-0400. Evee. ROCHESTER AREA. MS A MONTH, cozy 5 rooms, basement, tb acre. $0,900. Newlnoham Realtor. UL 2-5375. RUG CLEANERS One of Oakland County’s ( and most profitable operations. Well established and has enjoyed outstanding reputation for ycare. Owners home Included. Available or will trade for home, contract. Income or other property. " “ details now. REALTOR PARTRIDGE Is the Bird to See .. W. Huron FE 4, Mem. Partridge A Assoc. SMALL 1 BEDROOM HOME ON 2 Vs aero. $800 down. . OL 1-0840. 8AM WARWICK HAS tkf RyLVAN ■ Lake:. / 5-bedroom. 314-bath. 2412 Rontrew Avo„ all olty services, lako privileges, MO.ooo cash, open ..Sunday 2-4 p.m. 682-2820. 002-1714. SBCEuDE® 3-BEDROOM HOME. 2V4-car garage. Walled ' *v* area. Large landeoapw UNION LAKE AREA ,9-bedroom, bath, 114-car g.„.... blK kitchen, studio celling In 11! Ing room, dean, lake * ** Only $04 a month taxes and Insurance. Hilltop Realty Plnclu flreplai Only 82.700 terms. Mr. Stone w he waiting (or you. Joelyn.11 left on 4th S‘ r- tone wlli , ■ .. _ yn,_turn h St, lo OPEN SION. ARR’O \ye Build—:We Trade steal on this 3-bedroom ranch with crawl spaca. Loads , of Oloeets. Plenty of cupboards and snack . bar and family' >!se kitchen. Water softener, alumt- PRICE REDUCED on thle 8-room bungalow, oak floors, plastered walls, full bath with shower. Stairs to unfinished, floored attic. Oood north end location. LeBaron and Northern High Sohool district, 50.280.._ to^gorage. Outiide ftroplaoo, 812,- II with $-boi . carpeting, gu _ ____, full basement, gae heat, breezeway. Aluminum elding, storms and zoroonz. Largo well landscaped yard. Will taka good land contract ao down pay- PHONE 682-2211 3143 UAHS-ELIZABETH ROAD i» LISTING SERVICE OPEN Sunday 2-6 3450 Vail Zandt ■ (off Williams Uke Rd.. 1 mile west of DIxie HWy.I 3 bedroom. 1$ baths, full base- , Lake, Privileges West ouburban home!In an excellent neighborhood, On 5 beautiful wooded lota. I bedrooms, large living room, full dining >obm, basement with gat heat. 88,300. LAKE Front Modern ranch utmost new. A kitchen that has everythin*, In-mujHiir * wall^ hung refrigerator. , l. Priced brioef e Rolfe H.‘ Smith, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph '■ >1«46 hA 8-5431 m SafoHouw , NEW HOMES ” „ Full Basement. V > •. $00 • DOWN! 49 s27l THB PONTIAC PRflSS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1063 TWENTY-FIVE] per mo. Excluding (MU and Insurance. Vlalt 3-bedroom model on Car-lilt* off W. Kennett, 3 Hooka from Maher Body. OPEN 10*8 DAILY BPOTLIOHT BLDO. CO. Aak a ANNETT tile bath, oompact- kitchen and dtnln. epaoe, gas beat, fenced rear yard. IN per mo. dm per eent interest after dn. pymt. 4 Bedroonwf—Vacant Lot 80*150 lie, rooms, fir. eptraboe hall, LRi Upper Long Lake Ultra modern kltehen In this , euatom built home, Ideal for am. family. Life, carpeted LR with random atone fireplace wall studio celling, 3 spa-clous bedrma.. Z% ceramic bathe, HW heat. 3-car .att. Sand utility rm. Chain meed yard, lake priv-828,900, term*. ' . place, kit, pine paneled. -bedrme.. 1 bath*, plenty of closet*, on HW heat, low fclawn!roS^*&tmDA$ foT* *■ WILL , TRADE Realtors, 28 E. Huron St. ; Open Evening* h Sunday 1-4 j FE 8-0466 SCHRAM OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. 624 Peacock 2-bedroom tn-level, 14x18 living r 9*15 kitchen and dining aria, 13, family room, gaa forced , air heat and oh a large, loti Drive out Joslyn Ave. to Peacock " turn right to open Mgns. Trade in the OLD and live GI No Down , 4 bedroom*, separate dining fuU Ule basement with oil forced heat, fenoed lot, close to Northern and M a d I s o n Jr. High Schools. Only $10,300,, closing coat* move you In,'' 1 bedroom* with 13x18 living room 13x13 rumpus room, full bale ment with gM heaj, >ojtr jraraye^ IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 942 JOSLYN COB.MANSFIELD OPEN EVENINQS ■_AND SUNDAY MUTLlPLE U8TOIO SERVICE Sail Houses 3 Bedroom : Tri Level $9,895 I $1,000 DOWN' 1V4 - CAB GARAGE S3’ LOT FAMILY ROOK OAS HEAT SMALL FARM - Approximately 12 acre*, Ugh and dr/, with good *• twHrnnm ranch, full baaement, ga-excellent buy at tU OOO DOLL ROUSH — *250 down. 2-bedroom ranch, north , eld*. Paved street, fenced yard. Mies ftodHIMh couple 'or retiree*. .Full price Se^ it .today.7! ■v/.- 'OPEN , ' DAILY 9 TO 6 P.M. ,,, 1 SUN. 2 TO 8 P.M, will duplicate on your lot 2386 LAKKNA . ■ m Per month for veteran* or 10 per cent bank terms and no money down for nice 5-room bungalow, BRICK ......... .....— large Cyclone fenoed yard with' high *cenlc back- ............. heat—central NORTH STD furnished, 'J’errna.’ CalF b7 cTTilltTr."' Bealtyi 3880 Ells, Lake Rd„ FE 2-0179 or PH 4-3990 or FE 8-7880. OPEN SUN. 2 to 8. , - thing for comfortable living—only 8 minute* - from Mall—approx, ms per mo. Including taxes and In surance. W* FHA financing. $17. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE Magniiw 8j?y. - Clsrkiu *284818 Eve*. MA 8-12 CANAL FRONT On Cass Uke with 2 lot*. Lovely ivi itory home In exoellsnt condition. llvms room, dining room. bcd-room, V4 bath and a beautiful kitchen with den ana, large picture window overlooking * WAfer*"’ landscaped yard. Two bodro and fuu bath up. Basement 1 recreation room, ‘/a bath and __ per etoraga and olpset »pace. Two and Vi car attached garage. P-*""' at $14.90) wltb *1.490 dOWhh per month. 10 ACRE ESTATE 9 SUNDAY * TO 8 A secluded area near Clarkston,-off M-li. Pour mUes north of the Chrysler ^Expretswjiy, bedroom*, PwMk living Dom, kitchen,’walkout msdiI 1 at 819,900. Shown large kitchen, 2 bedroom* bath, fireplace, carpeting drapes, large closet*. Lake — baa family room with fireplace, ig L, ’kitchen, bedroom* — r room and iced Ink* Three large I R08SHIRE COURT Owner retiring a Five large of tble good buy. andbatp, modernised, birch cupboards, m John K. Irwin „ :** Realtor* ■ 313 W, Huron —Since 1928 Phone -FE 8.0440 EVE,—FE 2* " ■^OpflT'SFnilay 1-5 P.M, location, tnunediate $7,800 with liberal te North Johnson on U to Evelyn Crt. and ToUb, TRADE THE BATEMAN WAY nomes. C really work* I A TRADE-IN PLAN that guarantee* you a eels of four present Hnmii to enable you to use your equity to purchase the bom* of -&..!?%VeSty and larrne*. backed. IIP with dollar. I* our Buy now and eel! later without the ad d own*ng two .am Jak anru\intmsnt fnr rifttnilii . . . the PLAN that for appointment f OPEN OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 965 Voorheis PIONEER HIOHLANDS: 3 bed--oom*. full basement, gas heat, iKSf* '•p'Svijn?* Bonus^ Deal Rets, weit'to' property. ” ’ OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 'for^io^nepne at $ price. Only *l»00 down, ate. Telegraph to Voor- 3124 St. Jude BEAUTIFUL PICTURE WIN-DOW; scenic lake View with large private sand beach jug* across street. Wonderful lotting for thlc 3 year old brlok rancher loaded with extra*, even , Frlgldalre and freeaer eombina- OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 5650 Harrel EXCEPTIONALLY NICE , 3 hod-room raneher with take prlvi-legos, sand beach Juet-S ‘‘JP*11 throw and. beautiful Ilk* view. ?ePd*g*r»?k flreplaeS and- paneled ally nice. Only .11700 down, plus costs. M-SO.to Airport Rd . nght to William* Lake Rd., .right to Coventry, right .tojijuxol—- OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 . 2926 Voorheis CHEROKEE HILLS! as Sharp A-I BUYS wiS'*2 Paved street. Excellent garage. Paved street. Exeeu nelg%»rhood. Priced .at $18,890 >r young l* 17,480. ■■■■■■Mi* garage, located okMe lo YMCA. Exceptional condl-.7nr ....... only *«l,800 Wlgl HIITER large lot. can today. am* and hath, all it. full basement, hue. only " DORRIS OPEN |rMH*, ind a magnificent ■ of lakes, hill* and dales, U sportsman* paradta* we ai rering a sprawling brick ant .. ifornM Redwood Contemporary home with 2 massive log burning nreplacee. 2tk baths, family -‘•3 18' a 38' and living room -25’.. 3>car garage, price Ml. DIRECTIONS: M-24 to Chry Exjreeeway ~ » Chrysler >r Dixie to OPEN OUTSTANDINO RANCH HOME Rochester «rca mile* north of Rochester, off Rochester Road, follow OPEN signs, to 818 Whims Lane, and ------1 a custom multi rambling ______ brick ranch home with all the selling appointments demanded by today7* moat delcriminatlng buyer, you will admire the ..comfortable living room 18’ x l8'/a' with fireplace, dining room 0V4’ x 14’. modem streamlihed kitchen 10’ x 12’. 3 bright cheerful bedrooms and family room, .also an outstanding recreation room . With fireplace, full deramlc bath and additional lavatory with stall shower. And 2-car attached garage, situated qn a— — hanced by towering landscaped, and Ml curroundlng homes. 8! LAKE FRONT HOME: ........... ... beautiful Loon .Lake, 230' deep, describe! this exceptional lake front lot with a madam--whtta' .frame-bungalow with marble fireplace, ceramic bath, basement. CARNIVAL By Dick Turner- mm NICHOLIE ingalow. living Kitchen, utility WEST SUBURBAN Three bedroom - ! and dining area. NOR^H SUBURBAN i bedroom bungalow. Living dbun| area. Ktlchan and util-roam. Attached garage. **--heat. Vacant. Blf lot. SASHABAW AND MAYBEE AREA Three bbdroom bungalow. Living and dining ana. Kitchen and utility room. Carport. Large t [A, Ik. TJ4. lUf. Ok FW, OR "Whara love? CMi, it’s the feeling you have for your parents on birthdays and at Christmas time!" SMALL FARM In the Clarkston Or-- Ion area. Nearly new 8-bedroom ranch home with cedar shake exterior. Clean as a whistle, ntce kitchen, separate .dining’------- full walk-out baaement, 3 with 18 young bearing fruit grapes, excellent garden . new 2Vk-car garage. The perfect modern country home, 814,F“ — Sales Houses 49 BY OWNER QPEN SUNDAY 2-8 * or by appointment 3-bedroom, Large family room. Aluminum storms and eereeni. Attached Itk-car garage. Anchor fence — Land*cap.ed. Payed.drive WALLED LAKE idscaped. patio $u.M0. -ouacnebury. Out Maybee: right Queensbury. FE ltUww: right, < NORTHWEST SUBURBAN LAKE PRIVILEGES ON MACEDAY and WILUAMS LAKES 0 rooms. lVe-story. baaement, and good condition. 100x151.-^. Close to shopping. A VERY OOOD BUY AT 80.780. BUY GI RESALE SUBURBAN WEST Attractive frame ranch, with brick and atone front, 3 bedroom*, cherry paneled dining room, large Kitty pine .parteled kitchen. 10x1$ ft. » closets, plus ample storage wace. on heat, many excellent features. 8M.M per month Including taxes and Insurance 4V4 per cept Interest. WHY WAIT, CALL NOW! $1500 DOWN win take this S-room HBUfaldw with Elisabeth Lake privileges. Smith. Wideman kitchen, all tiled bath, add price Included a new PA'furnace, other selling appointments: Carpeting, DANDY BUNGALOW ~ 87.480. Gff Oakland. 8380 down, vacant, ; “ asesaed home that la buy, _ppk floors, g heat, anchor fenced lot. d 'garage on beautifully lanascapea lot. Ledgestone Cr*-place, new carpeting, and newly decorated. You must aa* Ujta one. Only $1800 down, plu* costa will banal*. W. Huron to Voor. hell, right to property. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 tlon. 3 bedrooms, i ..... .ly landaoaped corner lot. Terrtflo Valu# with $3700 down, plua coat, Dixie R(i.. rlgl iwnee* !• OPENagSUNDAY 2-5 1880 Meadowridge LONG AND RAMBLING: brl -Ick 4 BEDRM. COLONIAL: 3 baths, .... of hew home*: suburban S2flSSbmw clown plus oostii. Commerce Rd, io B. Cqmmero* Rd., left to Dookor, left to Meadowridge, left to property. . ■ _ OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 6639 Windiate, DriVe LAKBFRONT at a prloe you can afford. 4 bedrooihe, beautlj fully maintained and snuggled wonderful place for real family hlndl*VTlx1^%|y“" to^Ander. eonvllle fid., weet to Windiate, left to property. room in basement. Family comfort with formal dining rm. and largo 20x11 ft., screened rear porch. Wonderful condittOT Wd fStfTOhSSf to E. Iroquois, left to property. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 1495 Carlisle 0 rqom. 3 bedroom cedar shake ranch home, * yr*. old In Uke-new condition and located on Davod street. Excellent kitchen with built-in oven, range and exhaust fan. Celling, high Ro-00x180 It., lot. Spacious 8 room ranctwr with attached 2 .c»fti" ■ brecssway. Fenoed at Only $12,980 plus costs. Trading Is Our Business yard, full basement Mid 1300 down, BATEMAN REALTY ^ . Sunday 1-1 377 S. Telegraph Ref jjof* GILES OWEN SCHOOL AREA 3 bedrooms, large kitchen, full basement, recreation room, gas heat, fenced lot. Close to school# and stores. wmmmmm. t room* bath. 18x28. paneled family roi with flrcplacb and grill. 80x2 wltn fenced back : rage, m at *U.B0C . Priced t $6,800 PULL PRICE on this wci suburban^ 8^- room home, oa Private beach privileges, 1 a r ( lot, taty term*, ft can't last. GILES REALTY CO. FE 8-8178 221 Baldwin AVI MULTIPLE LISTING §ERVICE -OPEN •Sun. 2 to 5 P.M. 3-Bedroom Brick Rancher—624 Slocum St T ii,. n.«. "•iMistom ’ built" 3 bed CITY NORTH SIDE. A good com-f oriablc low jwlecd'bome. 8 room* and bath, 3 bedrooms, full basement, gas furnace, only *7,-960, low down payment. ______ Nicely decorated three- bedroom. face brick and frame bilevel home. 2 mile* east of Walled Lake, Beautiful W acre lot with fruit trees. Large family room »>. Telegrapmoad , Member Mutllpie Listing Service BARGAIN i^OOMJl.AND BATH^OTAft AUT^l WRIGHT Eves, after 8:00 FE 4- JOHNSON looconstructioN i Oxbow Lake. PINE LAKE ARL--Ideal home for a young or retire! couple. Cute a» a pin. Knotty plni living room with fireplace, hath, 1 bedroom, new wall,to i irpettng, gas furnace. Bpsel lne Lake Country Club. Call ..... 4-bedroom 3-etory hr *, rooreatlon room, 114-ear i i, fenced In yard. Clean a* Evenings after 8 call Clark Wheaton FE 4-8284 A/ JOHNSON & SONS REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE FE 4-2533 > NEAR PONTIAC Nine acres, 2 bedrooms, J.'_ unfinished, large living, room, beau tttul fireplace, 114 bath. Only *13, ooo — Term*. NOTICE! FOR SALE! , GOVERNMENT..HOMES— . .5*#. INTEREST FE 435-3T- FE 4-3531 93 Dewey Street Near Flshtr. Body—I bedrooms, Iqlt Basement, gas furnace, paved street. A clean home. $74 per mo. $9,750 FHA . 406 Lynch 121 Rutgers 3 bedroom home, fully carpeted Lari* klMMSiJfiumiAum storm and screens. *75 p«r r“ — 1----* Insuri eluding taxei and Insnrance. r $9;300,FHA BLOOMFIELD NEIGHBORHC— Past the Stage of family .. Like your utility’ room’"handy? storage clutter? Cosy, warm floors tor grandchildren’s joy -*■ your Own too? Consider this quality custom brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 tiled baths, 214 ear garage, air-conditioned, living room. 28x15, overlooking magnlfloent i home . of _____jslonally d throughout lneludlng hi carpeting, new G.E. eta washer, Compare thl *31,000. OPEN DAILY. Bloomfield BlUe TRADE OPEN Folki, here Is a tremendous buy, nestled and highly 'restricted Pleasant Lake Wood*, this c“— attached 2-car garage. It’s modem and up to ,the minute tn ide-slgn, -Included expensive carpeting and drape*. It is vacant. Come In Sunday and see for yo -‘-\o your pro* DIRECTIO! h Lake to Bay- Near Waterford High a real sharp 3-bedroom son with carpeting throughout, thi I* a lovely U'xlB' family roe furnished In knotty pine, 1V4 i wlde lot. Sell South City Bungalow - with 3 bedrooms, peted living room, nice *i area, toll basement and gas I already appraised^ ^FHTL $500* dow'n/V'you can qualify, will trad* ymall or large home Frushour OPEN Sunday 3 to t llders model, 3-b*droom brick ich. 2-car garage, plus family -,jm. Presenting workmanship and quality. Pontlae Lake Rd., ’’ *• ’ Market, tight ity. Pea) County n on Blelby to MODEL. HILL 'N DALI HOMES, OR 3-2984 400 DOWN — Plua mortgage cost* Is all you need to purchase this lovely modern home near Northern High. Attaehed breeseway and two oar garage. Full * ment. Oas heat. AIui------------ storms. Ceramio tile bath. This — - ■- just like new. Paved | Nice lawn. LITTLE FARM — With almost 72 ft. rancher. Attaqhed two garage. Aluminum . siding storms. FIVE ACRES of land for only $14,240. Her* I* thl for ehildren. school hue. little iand and b*tt*r Hvlng." CUi Mrs. Hillman OR 1-1191 o~ •*-Wooley MA 4-2120. ELL OR TRADE — Large Brlek PONTIAC WATKINS SUB — Here ■ dandy, Brlek ranoher In ’ • • l large garage. 547 Inglewood $7,450 FHA 81 Rutgers Clean 2 bedroom home oh $874 required to a 197 Victory Near East Blvd. and Mt. Clemens. 3 bedroom ranch home, IwiPK’aJfft: . Val-U-Way Realty ’ GOVERNMENT REPRESENTATIVES ' 344 OAKLAND J OFFICE OPEN SUN. ] ____M materials tad workmanship. 3 carpeted bedrooms. It* baths.. Built in washer, dr;--oven and range. Large flVepj with raised hearth. Oodles .. closets and storage space. Easy to heat and maintain. Low taxes. TEN ACRES OF LAND. Sohool bus in front. Only *30,000. calf Mrs. Wooley MA 8-**" Hillman OR 3-3301. i itm dandy. Brlek ra __ A-l neighborhood i 100x150 lot. urg* it---- 1, bailment, Beautiful' recreu- OFEN SUNDAY 1-7Large brisk Colonial homd with two ear attached Oarage, Located In lovely FOX BAY — The neighborhood that every one Is talking about, FOUR LARGE BEDROOMS. Oai heat. Full basement. Lars place. Best of material workmanship. Many exti... ... this one. Situated on large 100X-130 lot and paved street. OPEN DAILY 4-4 and on Bunds ' I— 2*7 Out Elisabeth Lak< -’ right — We accept ple'Llst/ng1 si CLARK REASONABLY PRICED, 3 bedroom ranch bom 111,000. Nice corner ........ basement, vestibule entrance and cloeet, oak floor*, plastered w eeramle tile bath, ' appointment. 40x130 ftM, outer- nice ftoturet^ HlghDlstriCt.lH.lOO. PRICE REDUCBD TO ONLY $17,1 ■ Bloomfield Township.' Desire f bedroom toga) “ ’— , draperies, modam ■ I 1*4 location. Ideal for inhli- MANY MORE SELECTIONS. Drive ,out to OUri offloa and aea gig ° OPEN VlN. l TO 4, CLARK REAL ESTATE . TO BUY; SELL 4s TRADE ____3101 W. HURONPONTIAC FE 3.7880 RES. FE 4 Multiple Listing Service bullt-lns. This home le within walking distance of Pontlae Huron KAMPSEN OPEN INCOME' 4 UNTTS.v SEE AT , 7*1 , Dorris and Feathelstone Rd.. hr Income Investment i "One package deaf, oonei*te of 4 ' nice clean bungalows on apw*. 114 acres. Surrounded by ntaw fawn*, flowers aid snade tree* in : a good suburban ana. Convenient to schools and shopping 4 Is tr I * t Home tor yourself has 8 rooms, hath and Utility’., .Other 3 homes completely furnished have living . room kltehen i^iioU*, ~ bath and utility room. /All wood floors, crawl space. All have gaa heat, 2 garages. 1 — 18x36 other fa x 32. opportunity to Make mon-ay. Must.be scan to b* fully *p-^rectated. owner logJSW.F^ 1 contract. Shown ROOM1NO flOUSE lN.P0lmAC,3 Lake Propsrty SUN. 2-6 4 - Bedroom Colonial 3655 Loreria Dr. in Watkins Hills Let’s Trad^, Our lovely new home for your*’ old on*. A close in West suburban location, 214 eeramle tile hatha, panelled family room, natural fireplace, ”U shaped kitchen with breakfast nook, formal dining room, basement,gas hot- water heat, attached . 2-car garage, paved drive, community — — tem. only 42,4*0.0- _____ costs. US 1* to Watkins Road to model. Your host Rosevear. THIS BEAUTIFUL 6-ROOM brisk rJE OPEN WE TRADE CRAWFORD AGENCY £5 SUN. 2 to 5 4097 Baybrpok . 3-Bedroom Brick LAKE-FRONT. 4-BEDfiOOM BRICK ranch* 3 fireplaces, m«u» extras. $22,750. OR 3*788*. LAKE LIyINO LOTS - 15 MINUTES iSmRbs^m: FE 4-4809. Blaeh Bros. Corp. kitchen with »—.» ramie tile bath, earpeted Uvlng basement, gas heat, two arage, 75’xl8*' lot, paved *•»*»» “' ,$f,d*0.p0 down urive, sis.vDu.uu, fi.ww.™ ** pins cost* — Your host Leo Kampsen. US-1* to Watkins Lake Road to Baybrook ’ property. / OPEN SUN. 2 to 5 22 Wisner St. Off Oakland Ave. 7 Vacant Six b(g rooms plus stairway to floored attl* for 4tn bedroom. Nicely decorated recreation area, gas furnace, storms and screens, large shade tree*, rag*, Offered at $19,- kltehen, bullt-lns. family room, walk-ont basement, gae heat, 3 ear garage. *20,300, terms. 2140* down. Owner. 874-138*. ROUftD LAKE. NEAR 1-75. 3-BED- 800.00—terms i OPEN SUN. 2 to 5 365 Ascot St,, EUz. LakfLEatatts *• Beautiful" home, being offered tor your leleunly lnapeotlon. Five rooms 1VB baths, 19.4’xl5’ living room with fireplace, recreation room With fireplace. -*- patio" plua aneloied i, 1V4 ear garage, only ARRO REALTY, 8143 Cass-lSIaabeth Rd. Phone 682-2211 TRADE MUITIES^ MJMX--LAW—---tront homr TSr 8-«idroom_ ranch. trade. Your host Raoh Elisabeth Lake Rd. to property.1 WALTERS LAKE, privileges, ru lot ME up. Also etorier hoi |*8z™l office. 88*5 Mohawk v OPEN A Large* Family Home New brlek 2-story Cqlpnial ready to.nwve into 4 tormM----------- ohflarone study and 2 run eied.family — “ Mods place. Modern kltehen, with: bullt-lns. Fully earpetod. ful ment, 2V4-ear attached gars —»« *" HOW paved drive. SEE IT HOW AT HIGH HILL mLAOE/jMiVil; BELL RD. ANp~LAPEER H10HCRE8T DRIVE. LADD'S, INC. 383$ Lapeer Rd. _ ^..(foPT — 5-9291 or OR 3-1231 after 1 Onen Si- Hau Seminole Hills 4-bedroom. 2-etory, all Mumln exterior, full bMement. hullt-ta car garage, flroploc*. oarpetlng and drapes, by owner, FE 2-4944 before 9 p.m. ____ AUBURN HEIGHTS ARIA, room, fuU baaement, automatte oil heat, 1 ear garage. Beautifully - - -- - 100x300* lot. Aluml- lot. Aluminum atorma and aereana, roof. Only . *7,800 with downpayment. REAGAN sa. Large eomor tot. No credit neck, SPOTLIGHT BLDO CO. DOWN, 2 BEDROOM, garage.^Ajilcurn-Qpdyk* a SPOTLIGHT BLDO. CO. Aak about our trade-in plan. WILL BUILD On your tot or oura -YotiV plan or oura DON MCDONALD Llcankad Bulldar_OR 3-2S37 BLOOMFIELD Uke you cry thing m_____, pu MHB ment with storage clutter? Cosy, warm floor* for —>- *— ity custom brisk ranch, 3 bedroom* 2 tiled baths, 214-oar garage *'■■-conditioned, uvtog room 24 overlooklns magnlfloent tot professionally decMktod throughout including handsome new earoat-lng. new OE stove aMTdifhwaaMr, Compare thl* value at $31,000, OPEN DAILY, 14 870 N. PEMBERTON ROAD BLOOMFIELD HILLS Income Property^ 50 UNITS FURNISHED, WILL PAY . for total valu* in $ year* ; excellent city location. *15,90*. C. SCHUETT FE 8-Q458 118 HOWARD STRkb I, w uiqeaL wow v» fto) sm ll pay lor the purchase to rto year*. 2 rental unit* ^ bring. Dome to $356 per month. $14,000 __________ uXw I ....... ■ will aoeept good’ land oontraoti or mortgage || payment. * *» «**»*“ part t Reaito m BAS r: W, Murgn. ? ft furnl»hed, r'Reasonabiy prloed. ~ pSiTgALB BY OWNER ... 4-fainlTv brlok apartment,, toy end Lola. Each dpt. I entranoe, full batn, basem. »•-Dughout num atorma and * 2838-Union Lake Read d 3-3308 RM 3-7181 LOTUS LAKE PRIVILBOES New apaeloUa 3 bedrooin r"—“ room. Basement, garage, njr isn, 18.498, *280 down. OR 3-1MS. FE 4-4509. Mr. Fuller. Bloch Bro- Corn. ...'’..u/i.:.' _ PLUS APPROX. mite, wivnin iv mwwfff jwvw# downtown PenilM. JAlM sell. Price reduced from *14,800. to *0.000 for ■ ' iale. Hurry on this one. within 18 n $3,000 * Bandy < hills,—Clarkston Orion Rd. to Eaton ft 31 WEST OF PONTIAC Lovely waterfront, .3 bedroom rancher, living room with fife-place. large family j"1*"* garage .- “** “ - *19.950 — $3000. down. Ridgeway ’““S”TR 8 W. WALTON LOT CLEARANCE Sylvan Uke — canal wd lake-front. $2050. and *3800.^ Generous .terms. Also exeoptlonal improved Case Lakefront, 100x160. Only 8W.OOO JACK LOVELAND- sur Cess Late Rd. 688-1288 tjurfjuni Propiiy 51-A ISABELLA COUNTY 400 hundred aofes. beet of hunting, V* oil mineral rights; $12,000, Urine. FE 4-8800 a 6 R18, 1 full pride. amp rite, 028 down, NORTklnuf1 MKaM^^AdkSA(U^ “gM$B FRANKLIN, MICH,.. - FURihaam Rsiort Prapurty furnished, a steal, $13,800 terms. OR 3-1286, PE 4-4509. Mr. Fuller. Bloch Bros. Con). ’* -l; MOBILE 81TE8, DON’T RENT, BUY NEW COTTAOE. -- LAROE' WOOD-ed tot, north resort area, adjoining state forest. ... _____fishing, iwlmmlng. 01.3*8. 8180 (»im> n8 a mo. Jernr Morrow, Oladwln (Skeels). Mloh. OA 8-7000 Fre* Sportsmen map. REDWOOD COTTAOE. 20 X 84’ • Diamond Lake, Barrytot, targe landscaped tot. ertrtto Wen. ertiil. sslitft tank^^fjreplaee^ 1 ~ Anderson. )*. partly fur lnquiro 210 I Suburban Property Rochester Attractive 8 rooms, bath, utility .........— ,J CALL OLIVE *4)371, ’» , Maurice Watson, Realtor 331 W. UNIVERSITY ROCHESTER Lots-Acreage Bffl ^BliilMS at Bi MlAR PONTflAC 78x180’ Near Maoeday Li-. . iSkAsa lake. m aown. wn iwpw* ______■ Blooh Bro*. Core. iigh HUI VinaM yKOtoetod community ot eSttss, Winding, pavra stflisig. Oa* avgUaMriMW yulep loea-tion*. ExeeUent. mue, raiUng wjth LADD’S, INC. , v-.' A protected community ef fine hpmWtes, WlnmntT pwodjwifflu'1 - - allable. .Many hffiwp lri|» m home* lions/Exeeilent mw. 3V« hot cent Interest Low/as *1,880) 8200 dew j.; HE PONTIAC FB!iSS, SAOTlU3A.Y» SEPTEMBER 14,1963 Si gBAwiiiO. fPI Maurice Watson, Realtor JU W, UNIVERSITY BOCHBBIEB REAGAN 8ra^"~*- .. ..IK; No Smoke-rNo Smog 8 ACRES of rolling iconic lend. *29 . LUT ef Hd frontage. m *g“u>ui ‘ 'weUtbatis a borne lit*. Surrounded by choke -— —-vuorter mile of the blacktop and doee to Ctaffcstoa. MM per an*. C PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE > eie im M. ' HA 74015 Cherokee Hills You’ll like thle eontroteo cor amity, of better bnoM. end 1 close-in. convenient location Only l mile weft, of Feutli Men) Drive im aft • -Open Siin. 12 to t ■. Ids Forms 60 Acre Scenic Farm Clerkston area, 11 bedroom home, n ear garage and bwn. $11,900, C. PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE, 422 Mill St. NA 7-3t MILFORD 1 l.srge country torn* ”40 BroKS MTOWBLErT^WN^ilTOUNTRY REAL ESTATE ACadamy 7-UI1, "**” MUtUel 5-2C 11 ACRES OF OOOD BOttf—Large — brick farm home — barn — ti mile frontage — If mile* couth of Flint. 1 paved — *1*0 email leL. Clsrketon echoole — non-modern farm home — hern — will divide la S parcels. 105 ACRE COUNTRY ESTATE — high and scenic on Improved you — dose to pavement Early American farm home 1 tenant Itouea — large barn sitae — milk house — currently need for dairy farm. 5 ROOM' ROME - Basement . acres — needs decorating and minor ropatr —110,500. WE WELCOME NEW PARM LIST- Ives. Ma MM1 GAYLORD tW JSP JTSo much value and so much to' tell yon about It. call our office and Pat all the information you want. H mom or MY MML Lapeer SMyHi mm \, ihhhhbi i j« ■\1 1 1---------------------- '' * Buildp K. L. Templeton, Realtor ^ tiA Bo* mi tarn WeBraFlRr BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY IOLjI. wwBBi tow «SER,.. I BORROW UP TO $1,000 eg ri, ,^l’,|PVlWWL“lk ■ MMivMl __ . Jty Loeettoo. Off vasrs^a'” M cars, eerrlce ga-k~— eigne, tool* Md equipment, building included. — 535.000. 812.000 down. MA 44801. AUBURN HEIGHTS PARTY STORE. Beautiful ultramodern store. SoWsra.* RYAN. SHBli mm CLASS C this bar wffl not $12,427 per year, with an Investment *16.090 down. —. 1bttPsb 334-3581 "V OPPORTUNITY FOR INVESTMENT to age. A real opportunity for only $17,500 on favorable teitni. ft will pay you to Investigate Realty — TAYLOR - —_______ 7732 Highland Rd. CM5») OH44K6 WATERFORD . VaJ^AOE," EXCEL- terms. OR 3-1295.FE 44 BY OWNER ■ Vary, fine restaurant In bu$y ar on main hwy. Unlimited poei blUtles. Includes building M equipment. 35 par cent down trade. Phone OR 6*4297. BEERBTORE — PROPERTY Elisabeth Lake Rond. Just wort Pontiac. Comer. Snort hour*. i~ Sunday. Old owner here 15 years, retiring. Buaiaesa can easily be Increased. Very nfio ijST down on all. Ineludaa big 1 Call RYAN StSdaC BEAUTY SHOP FOR SAll. __ tswuhed buslnees. oall PE 24)963. COAST ESTABLISHED BUSINESS ROUTE, fudO n^edllto,sLrt. FE Ships! NOROE IS CU. FOOT RBPRIOER-stor. 1 door, n trad* in, rur* fTrestone store IMS Orchard Lake kETAIL SOLE ROUTE. SBLLINO ■||i|Csey''' ^ a-J-- —“ dgh gallonagc. ---- I quired. CALL MR. BEST — FE 2-2121. LIQUOR AND HOTEL "KtlCHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. jomrtrtitoMiMr —■“ 1573 Telegraph ~—HD OF RENT! m TWEED 01 overhead? mrod of driving OffiiiR iWkt Business bulld-1.500 sa. ft., 5-ro— ___________ed. Must be goon be apprwIrtedT By owner, 524 STATE WIDE REA LI8TATE 1717 S. TELEORAPH. PONTIAC ~ 4^521. Eve*. — — WANTEDII! A W1NO BUSINBSB. Have buyers waiting with from 22,MO to .SSS.0M to pay down. What have you? WARDEN REALTY . CLASS C BAR Laundromat Commerce. Only 112,500 takes over everytUng Including building, 2 rental units, lota and good going PARTY STORE No. 1770. BDD-SDM. With living qnartera, grossing over 5100,000. Priced At 121,500. 013,000 down includes stock. Cell for mor details, State Wide—Lake Orion OA 0-1000 AFTER 5 OL 1-2003 WILL EXCHANGE 130,000. Resort. r$ic. Oseoda, Mich, on Lake Huron, hat 3 B.R. borne and 7 cottages, scenic indeed. Owner wants Investment property. lew hileman; s.e.c. Realtor-Exchani W. HURON m 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER R0MEQ 214 E. ST. CLAIR when^iTneed $25 to $1,000 W* will begled to heto you. STATE FINANCECO. SOI Peotleo StaU Bank Bldg. , T^E 4-1574 CASH TO $1,000 QUICK. FRIENDLY SERVICE NO RED TAPE Baxter, & Livingstone Finance Co. im State Bank IMsiiiHnv FE LOANS ...tTQAOB ON ONE ACRE ... with 150-foot frontage. No appraisal fee. B. D. Charles. Equitable Farm 1 -'ni l Telegraph, Loan Service. 1717 FE 4-0521. ' . WW "'ETiSWi OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED r current blfis. 1* lew monthly ra cash U you fe.81* B“r payment. And exl need same. Call ai Construottaii Oe. 1 CASH Loans to $3/000 Consolidate your debt* with up to 41 month* to repay. No fees of any Und^and ws provlda credit Uta Family Acceptance Corp. _ ________ _____suburban up to *15,500. Call Mre. Bteln. PE 5-5140, repreMUting Clark Raal Estate. J ‘ OaUOB REMINGTON Automatic for alumln: * —-• table or seh. OR 2- Swaps 63 Good condition. FE 1-4405. ' X - PAHt '■’-7:00-474-—PntSTOOWE-Town 2c Country snow tires. New last faU. $50 or trad* for 7 OR 2-0150. ANTIQUE AND OARAOE MI8CEL-laneous sale, 5230 Reese Rd„ **t!BaE«BSC~”vgv!r''*“ ANTIQUES, BEDROOM BUTlil, desk, bookcase, and mise. 652417*. 0x12 LINEOLUM RUGS ....*3.00 PLASTIC TILE j. . . 3 FOR to TILE. CEMENT, TRIM FOR BATHTUB AREA ...... ASPHALT Tv^ •- THE FLOOR HP? . 2250 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 8x12 RVOS, (BRAND NEW) FOAM bach. $14.95 up. Braided ruse, $28-W.^Annlnster_ heavy nig pjtda Dr, —OB 3-753Q. ^ ^BROWNING OUNS ’ CHEVY DUMP TRUCK FOR SUPER- acreage EQUITY 1003 DODGE 4 - DOOR stick g, for clean trsnsporto-tlon, 334-6551. FOR SALE OR SWAP 4 GOOD NO. $00-20-10 ply tires and tube*. FE FOR SALE OR TRADE. 1 art Brittany, uulralnct ten sink, laundry tub ____r mlao. Items. FE 5-0372. CHEVY DUMP TRUCK FOR SUP£r h fast bitch, MA GO-CART WILL SWAP FOR ANY-thlng^of value. FE 54142 before HOU8EBCS EQUIPPED FOR DEER hunting. FE 4-3283. _______ KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR. ’ ^decp^Ireese. shot gun or MAPLE POSTER BED WITH NEW box spring and mattress, swap. FE 4-8788. SELL OR TRADE, 7 ROOM HOUSE garaga. to bo moved off lot, take let* modal oar or house —-er. FE 3-2000. swap: Large uprioht freez-or for sortabta TV. OR 5-WW. tngor PE 418 Sale Land Contracts Wright R for Mr. W _________ $7,800. PAYABLE AT $70. MONTH--lyHl per cent interest. Will dts- $6,000. aMr.P*rClar“. ‘ #E 2 Residence PE 4-4513. Clark Real „ DISCOUNT,ON MODERN 3 bedroom or 14 acre, near Pontiac. Credit approved buyer, v C. SCHUETT FE 8-0458 ob6b 54.0M lAnd coriTltA&r. bio Larid Contracts u* before you deal. 7T Realtor. 77 N, Saglna FE 3-3155 ACTION a your, land oontraot, largo or nail, ceil Mr. HUter FE 2-0179 Wanted Confracts-^Mtg. 60-A Land Contracts JTELY THE FASTEST i to your land oontraot, c< • waiting, Call Realtor E 44551.1 CASH Loimt poeelble dl that nomT Call Ted MoCullough, I fFOR LAND Mty®' mmhv. Aik for Lawrence W. -Gaylord , tforffi. ■ Lake Orion . 3"" ■ file jwlwn Prly rty >7 Ait tIJWnPhoNTAOE mSWKB Huron ft., with buildInfi. Hear cart, W| 4-1S75. NM to lean *1 MORE MONEY? low w* can land up to SUMO. tent of ypur choice, end euh i meet present needs or pur- tflce. or ■ phone call to FB 24200. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 PonUM^atate Bank Bldg. HOURS: Sin to IlMTsat. 0:30 to - gauge shotgun. FI 4-U44. Salt CtoHilt uin r ngiaaira niniariwr Used OB refrigerator CRUMP ELECTRIC 340S Auburn Rd. FB 4-S573 220 A MONTH BUYS 2 ROOMS OP . FURNITURE - Consists bf: 2-plece living room suke withes top 2 GOWNS BALLERINA LENGTH, one gold, the ■ outer blue. Ceil 885-2101 (MUtUel): BO?g‘. OIRL8’ OOOD WINTER COMPLETE DININO ROOM BET. 2 vacuums. 163-2171. 7-ptroe*'bedroom suit* with ‘ double CRIR AND CHIFPENRODB7. Excellent condition. OR 3>433L dresser, chest, full else bed with hmcrsprlng mattress and box spring ' ciothlng', else 44^* Shoel^'oVat?’0^-Mlsc. household Hems. Ml 44050. CRIB AND CHIFFEROBE. Excellent condition. OR 3-4331. CR08LEY REFRIOERATOR. 130 5-pleoe dinette tet, 4 chrome chairs, formica, top table.- 1 bookcase. 1 0x12 fug included. All for $300. jtisT M ARR IE D. BEAUTIFUi floor length wedding gown, elf* 10. with train. FE 4-7376. CaU after »rP.m, ____________ YOUNO MAN SIZE 14-10. SPORT Sale Household Coeds 65 10 INCH TV. isol* II In., 025,1 imblnatlon radio, 1 RCA CONSOLE S451 1 Muntl con.... .. H 1 SUvortono oomblnaUon__________ phono, hi-fi 050 with ilorage table: 1 HO train tot with ft. track, switches end access, 0401 1 couch, 2 chairs, 05 oa, FB S-5S50. 1 — 3 - PIECE SECTIONAL. 034. Apartment gee stove, 022. Bottled gas Stove, 035. Love seat 014.50. SUidlo couch, foam rubber, 020. Prowers n us. l-pleoe bedroom $iilte. 530. WMliers -flO- up. West-inghouse oleotrlo dryer, 555. Re- ' frfirerators, *29 up. TVs. beds, springe', ete. Pearson’s Furniture, 210 e. Pike. 2 PIECE SECTIONAL MAPLE SET. 7 maple end tables. 1 single beds ipmptote. is ft. wooden boat. 073- iFlECi SECTIONAL. ORAY, 2 E oud tabloo jute * ‘ ' nut. FB 2-2728. Ph.OR~3.M15: “gas atovs. PE i-4350, *ft*r 3 ROOMS FUBHlttJBte Brand new WITH RANOB-REPRIOERATOR $319 $15 MONTH New furniture of ail kinds. Pee-, tory seconds. About % price. Beau* tifui bedroom and living, room /USED FURNITURE SALE China oahlnot, $35: apertmont gee range, $15i choice of 50 clean, guaranteed refrljiertteri, stoves and wiener*, . gu *l*e*. OO-IOOi Clothe*,dryer, $37i big picture TV, 480i bedroom, OMi living room. 215. odd Mdi, dreeitre., onoete. hunk Md$. radios, ruge, dinette rtta.and sofas. iBmmput ta_used furniture Gnat closed, Us* Lafayette ■ Pe ?rt“JVi r a®! wo ouy, sou ur sraue. vwn- — and took around. 2 acres of fro* parking. Phone PE 5-9241. 3pen ’Mon. to Set. 04: Prl 24 MONTHS TO PAY I miles B. of Ponttao or 1 E. of Auburn Heights on At SWEETS RADIO k APPUA1 .... i 3344077 21 INCH USED TV. 032. WALTON TV. PE 24257. Open f | J7, “ Walton. Corner of Joslyn. 43-INCH YOUNOSTbWN CABINET BUNK BEDS (BRAND NEW) COM-$35.95 up. Alio, trundle I trundle beds. Pesrson'l 210 B. - BEDROOM OUTFIT, DRE88ER. bed, box spring and mattress, $75. Also Ilka naw baby stroller, 15. OR 3 3300.______________ ■ no. special price H FIRESTONE STORE 140 N. Segtoaw CLEARANCE SALE Take Over Payments on Wringer Washer $2.00 per week ,"NJ GOODYEAR STORE 20 C*M PE 1-0121 pound freeter 0-3875. CLOSING OUT ALL FLOOR SAMPLES Opan 0 'til 3:30 Mon. 'til Bedroom art*, box ipring* And 1 U5U Easy Terms CDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 91x1* Drayton Patina OR 54724__________' DANISH WALNUT TWIN BEDS uid box ^ sprimg*’ chair4. ruga and ELECTRIC STOVE. ' FRIOIDAIRB. -------------T tool-r— ELNA AUTOMATIC 2110 ZAO SEW-big machine, suponnatlo model.” Makes all designs, eoeltope. button holei, blind hems. etc. Take over payment* of 57.30 per mo. for 0 months or 171 ossh balanca. Unl-Company. FB 44005. FOR SAtiE—COMPLETE BABY BED I. Call OR HUMRIPbunH. oaks mw, cereal, soup, vegetables, fruit Juiooi, Kleenex, pet milk. YES! ' UP TO 40 PBR CENT Por free catalog and Information showing now you oan buy , at thwa prices. 647-1377, 0-5. FRIOIDAJbi STOVE AND REFRIO- FOTtMiC> sERVino taBle, coF-Ih* dish, portabls bar, 55. t Bond *Mtrto.*riftn|ai6> o lamp, TV tables, muoel-silver, 'oriatal and other oo6d FRUIT PRESS $25, PORT-able Universal Sewing Machine, >13. OR 34336. ORAV LIMED OAK DOUBLE BED, springs and ctonn cotton mat- ORAV NYLON DAVENPORT. Sllvortone consols TV. OR 3-2835. HOLLYWOOD BED. C rKYriobrator, iso.1 s-Mci bedroom sot, oompiete bed, mattress, 05, Mlao. -FE KEFRIOERATOR WITH TO fresser, $40. Electric dryer a washer tat, $75.jOood working TV >15 to 240. PE 54756, V. Hanrl*. September Specials - OE portable 11” TV, new . g 00.53 Motorola 25” TV walnut Lowboy, i __ year warranty.......$109.08 OE automatic washer, delivered, . ----—$175.00 5X16,00 4i40b*8 SHOP FE 4-1555 laytag dryer, ii I toot family a freeser, dellv STECK ORAND PIANO, BLOND. tebld, 525. MI 74785. osuwns, evars. . joearoom ei.eo, poroh. $1.55. Irrogutora, samples. Prices onlyfaetory can-give. — Michigan Pluoreaoent, 303 Or- treaDL_ ____________FE 3-3233 BLOND LOWRBY, OROAN, OC condition, 3035 unMxaha Rd. chard Lake—15. OPDYKE MARKET Walton and OPdFka FE 3-75 Oden Bund SINGER CONSOLE ZIO-ZAO 529.50. Large aalaotton. OR 4-1101. Curt’r "jrake Over Payments or G-E TV’s and Stereos 1983 Modols --.New Warranty <5 Down —41,50 per week — GOODYEAR Store d toys. 9- wyman FURNITURE GO. 17 B. HURON IY 44 USED SPEED QUEEN ‘WE HAVE CARPET KNOW-HOW A-l CARPET SALES mebiure that ”Ntw Hems’ __„_a_ 'at plant In Pontlat - 330 Whlttemore — FE 4-7110. Wyman’S USED BAROAIN STORE Odd tapaatry iota a1..^oos '.‘..'.Moif ....iio.i Apt. site 31 i. E-Z Tsrmi PE 4-11 WALNUT OFFICE CHAIR. EXCEL-lent oondlttonT I2S-4I04. WESTINOHOUSB CLOTHES bRY- fHITE FORMICA KITCHEN TABLE and 4 upholstered ehalrt. MA I-Wt. ANTIQUE 'SHOW AND SALE. 4 days. Seht. 15, 19. 10, 1 p.m.-10 ptm.. Sept. 11, lj>.m.4 p.m. Community House. Batu and Town-•apd, Birmingham. Sponsored by Piety Hill Chapter? DAB. Stereos. Sals Mitcellaneous HBYWOod - TtrAksydCB: WS-1 - •- LTri’VTrr’” —-■*»• — pleto bsdrootn eet~— ra 2-»51. - _ 1 SIOUX VALVE PACfR WtTK ■A ALUMINUM 8I0INO. AWN STORM WINDOWS. VINYL i Installed or materials enly. 1 quality, guarantied Job. call— OE VALLELY CO, ... PE FHA Terns —no money dr Licensed, insured. Rafawpi IEATINO SY8TE itlng?CQR 34^1. OOOD USED LUMBER ‘_______PE $-0017 OAS FURNACE. USED, tlKE new, can ra 2-7160. 0047ART POR SALE, 88 MILES per hpur. Call OL 1-1642. s, $20, baby buggy, 9$. OR 2-HOT waTer BASEBOARD sM- BALDWIN organ, 2700. r organ for ohurch o HOT WATER HEATER. 20 OALLON Consumers approved 190.08 $39.95 and $40.55------------—J SLEEPS .. MM ___________.ton. 5350. OR 14162. lJtON^UTE. LAMPS. CLOTHES AND lENMORE OA8 STOVE $50 Whirl Washer, ,035, I053 jchevy Kitchen caKJnKt SINKS, Rvalue. -peeling paint-) ■ — puii ... .. _______ _______ Warwick Supply Co., 2373 Orchard Lake , like new. PE 54735. lqvKLy sinoer slant needle ^MwWci°hrin.?MKy* off account In S me. « >7.50 per month of 257 cash bslanee. Uni-vereal Company. 4 MICA Stocky jdeee^nd ixlds Mica $.25 square ft. at Slightly ut.i awna be... 20,76 and up — Pauoette’a $6.95 Range hoed* 124.50 and up. toll end vinyls up to 60 per eent oft. PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES TB 44329 017 Orehard Laita nn NBW.B LBCTRIC H< HATER V bed. i STOVE, DUO-THERM MPMIWMst*MMaMmiMfeaM 2-7082 after 4. N O R O E REFRIGERATOR, iio! Apartment gas stove, e* la, *2. 4^ft, hath tub. (Lege) $8, PE NEW CARLTON STAINLESS STEEL doubto sink, single lever fiveet, 249,95. Spray and strainers ------ Automatic ioRj|j|eri cash an PLUMB1NO BAROAlNS I____________ Standing toilet, $10.05; 30-gallon heater. |40.06; 3-pl*oe bath aata, 182.22, Laupdry tray, total, $19.95. . Wuuh ibpwar'(tali, trim, 232.05, ’ rbowl link. 52.95, lav*,, 52.95, tube. Saginaw, ra 54100. POOL TABLES f’LySCORE CASH AND CARRY - H” 4X0 .......... PONTIAC PLYWOOD ■M __Idwln PE 2-2545 RUkhiApp SALE S’i’AMi PIANO TUNING—LESSONS 400 Elisabeth Leke Road CONSOLE piano in good condition, to' rant brand mw plani included enly M per me may purchase for only, month. In beautiful wi and 10 year guarantee. Organs to rent for the beginner, lee. eon* Included only 011.95 tor on* month. Gallagher Music Co. IS Beet Huron Open Monday and Friday *UI 2 FE 4-0S66 GUITARS. ACCORDIONI prices. Loaners and toi 54428. RENT A Trumpet, Cornet, - Trombone, FtUte, Clarinet, Violin or Snare Drum Kit only $5.00 A MONTE Grinnells HAMMOND CHORD ORGAN Walnut with bench nnd lets music, 0473.00, terms, MORRIS MUSIC 12. Telegraph Rd. FB 2d Aorossjfrom Tel Huron_ Saturday and maybe .Sunday. Power, tools, garden torts, do it ------ 4000 Pontiac Uhe Rd. NEW...... ■, tsmnsmmw^-'Wll tnu USED ORGANS Baldwin Spinet, Ilk* mw, aave Lowrey Holiday, a real bar|ail UPRIOHT PIANO, tend condltlt _ NEW STORE MODNi . Daily 0:30 am to 0:30 pm .Thure, and Fri, 0.1JO ar - RENT A NEW GRINNEIX PIANO Only OO Per Week Muita toeeona Included ::.UBOSCTyow iuTa finish Jl moments apply if you d*etd« Grinnells iMlimkai loo* . ' 71 Planti-Traai-Shrubi 8>A ID PAN, AMERICAN B-FLAT CLARI la. 1 Mi Good condition. 118. PE 3 e 8924 t ■ 3 raw west el CommeroeL yilMge. DeUy. 004-0033. P ORGAN SALE f i$. The famous Gonn Bleotrputo orgam - “■ *M'ORRl[S MUSIC !'( M 34 B. Telegraph Rd. FB 24561 nt (across from Tel-Buron) NttptftY GROWN EVSmCH»S. . , uprights, spreadem. pig .them 1 Dixie Hwy MA 5-1922. J Uvsstock ’n 4-..r 13 * wte - eves. MA 5-1241. 4 PONY MARIS. PE 3-29**. " , * Oftlc# Eqalpiiwnt 72 2-YEAiM>ii> APPALOOM AND A ; quartor hone — Ponirt, ridgr*. drive, single or double. Al*o equlp-’ inoni j^^^^TO^Reineo. a LIQUIDATING — ELBOTIUC AND p hand adding machines; Type- 31 file cabinets! *csll *now Ml *' r 4152. if no answar call m-HU. 1 ’ffliMilillW. | Stan Eqalpmant 71 brow ,sow Vm -week* eld Dig*. MA 34702. 1 BROASTERS, 4 1953 MODELS FOR I! s. Fish, Bex 128, Richland, Mich. 9 fixtures and supplies for art*. 2*4-- 2425. 122 W. Huron. EVENING Alfb SATURDAY RIDING LESSONS ALL APPALOOSA HORSES Childrien, Adults HORSES BOARDED goldeFTh corral Or Htull 74 - 1,M 34EU * " KfiNtNsit Beet Inrtruetlon. IM 54171. it dyke Hardware—-Pf 5-4514. NEW RIDING STABLE Siding ttwtto^^euLle^'iraii on M40 end 1st oeuUon llght east YOUNG high oradN holstbiN dairy cows, some fresh, heavy producers. MA M741. * APACHE CAMP TRAILER-CLEAR-- ance sale, new 1965 models at. used trailer prlees. Open daily 1 p.m. dloaedi Sundays. Apache footory • 'home town dealer, Bill Crtlar, 1 . . mile east of Lapeer on M-21. 5. BROWNINQ OUN8 . New and used, we buy, e*U and ft \ ’ a»me»-RgrgrgYM 1 Hdw. K ^43 W. Huron. ‘ : .■ v . b. OTfTiSiSSSr ». GUN AND SPORTS CENTER The most complete one atop tor £ ^Wd.mfLP^-BtSg: neii-weaver and Browning acepei. 17 : We also ato authorlaad dealer ■r for all BROWNING. WINCHES- B TER, REMINGTON, ITHACA. P WEATHERBY Ouna on display. ^ Timfc MOUHWNO r> and OUNSMITHINO n 50 yd. and 100 yd,\ t- Range and Trap Shooting _ 15210 Holly Rd. ME 4f771 d —Open Dally and Sunday*— \ »• Holly. Mlohlgan Hny—GrHn—Fssd 84 CU8TOM ,COMBINING. SELF PRO-after 5:30 p.m. FB 4-7530. SECOND CUTTING ALFALFA HAY. tTmr-. 152-4031 Poultry ; 15 GUINEAS, DUCKS. OBESE. CHICK-enT, pheasants end petuwoke. ME 7-8109. ■ ' 5-2838 d OUNS - BUY SELL. TRADE YBAILOLD. OEkSE \ MA 5-1540 d OUN REPAIRS, SCOPE MOUNTINO # Me-W-eUrW. eranh Rd. PE 24700. PMmJProrfuco 14 200 balNs of mixed HAY, 50 cents n bale, ra 3-2SSS. 1 SHOTGUN, DEER RIFLE AND * hunting dog ter sale. 973-5220. ^ S SaMkOnwMMrt 76 APPLES SPRAYED. PICK YOUR own. Open Sat. and Bun. Weekdays after. 4. _ p.m. Monger Orchard. 0300 S. Hadley Rd. PR. Come early and ntoid (he rush. r A-l TOP SOIL, REASONABLE. OR 3-5730 * aaa Peaches $2:99 A BUSHEL 3015 Auburn Rd. Near Adame Rd. t A-l PiAT. STATE TEST SHOWS i ri ra iw r. eton. MY 24471. BARTLETY PEARS. MAHAN OR-chard's. 615 B. Walton. Closed Sun- . A-l CRUSHED STONE 04.00 A ■ sr. a i fgg3.t”SSi SSSSStt 1 MA 04ldl. BARTLETT PEARS, *S. BUSHEL. 4370 Leering Rd. Waterford, or 3-5424. BA«7mTOSta«.«% Predmore, Leke Orion. MY 2-1*61. Bob & Bill’s ——^“Pi odace‘~SwClgl ' Best Grade Peaches," $2.99 a Bushel :' NONE, PRICED HIGHER Metotori) Apples . .53,42 bu. Bartlett Pears .......,...*2.02 bu. SReet corn 6 del. big .01,42 No. 1 fanoy potatoes, *0 lb. bag $1.40 10 lb. bag i, 90 Homo grown tomato** ...peek $ .70 Other. produce at good prices. Bob & Bill’s Produce; Co. 7009 Highland Rd. '(M-50) Pontiac, Web. <78-5021 U mile WMt of Airport Rd.) . A-l BLACK DIRT — TOP SOU* PwlillUU^aws* j-Slll ' r AL^s'^LAraSCAPPINO, YoP SOIL, i black dirt fill, gravel and manures. ra 4-4228 Scott Lake Rd. BLACK DIRT. DELIVERED. MA 5-1929. 1 6 R O J C K FARM TOP SOIL, 8 yards 212 and Mack dirt ,8 yards' C *10. delivered. PE 54*81. . . • DARK RICH PARM TOP SOIL, yard*. *10 dallvarod, PE 4-0*00. 1 GOOD RICH. BLACK DIRT 0 ! yards 210, delivared. FB 44588. : LUCKY’S TRUCKING Beautiful top aoll, Waok dirt, fUl. sand and 'gravaL UL 24470. OR > 34730. Bt,uib DAMSON' PLklMS-NO 8UN-day calls please. OR 3-7220. 1 MEL’S TRUCKING A-l top eoU. black dirt, fm dirt, sand and gravel. PE 2-7774. CUSTOM COMBINING — WE WILL eombtao your Wheat, 12’ self-propelled comhine. ready to go. For a data oall Ed Groulx, attar 7 p.m. OA 8-2601. PONTIAC LAKE GUILDERS SUP-jjly^sand, gravel, fill dirt. OR CHOICE BEEF SIDES. 45o LB., V« 48c lb., hou 25c lb., many small binds, fronts, rides and halvas at frort savings. Bleb-mond Meat Paekers. in*., 4000 M.59, % mile east of the Pontiac Airport. Friendly people serving you with respect. Open < day*, not Buna., 8 ’tU 0. <0 days is eash. For payment* Call OR 4-1440. WaafKaal-Caks-Fa*! 77 liii'0 LANDSCAPPIFO, WOOD OF All kindle tree removal. FE 4-4228. ’ Pets-Hunting Dog* 79 BIO EATING POTATOES *1.00 PBR hundred lbs. 3525 Orion Clerkston ltd. l.pAY SPECIAL. CHIHUAHUA TOY Tex, ra each. NA 74931. dodd'b orchard and markKt, 3330 W. Clarkston Rd. now Bald, win, penrs, plums, npples. r'PBkALE bkaole. iti yr, old, running food: 1 female pup* tor eale; pe 8-3995. KENTUCKY WONDER BEANS. YOU pick, 02.00 n, bu.. green beans, fa JO n bu. sweet corn, 21.50 a bag. Tomatoes. <710 Montclair off South Blvd., Troy. 0704624. 1 TOY POk; CHIHUAHUA (abort, long-hair), peodtaa. NA PEACHES—APPLES PEARS — PLUMS Last of Halehavena, Katahavene— fin* tor froaslng and oannlng, Bart-. tail near*, apples tor aatlng and eeekug. • a.m. to 0 p.m. dally dur-uig peach aeaton.. Oakland Orchards, 2265 E. Commerce Rd., I mile B of Milford. * 10-MONTH-OLD BEAOLE8, Kp and tomMa, *35 per pair. NA 74101. i MONlSofcfiMOT male. $20. OR iWl. 8-MONTH-OLD OERMAN 8HEP-herd, female. PE 44512. ' A POODLE, *80 UP. NO I50NEY down, *1.12 n week. FB 24112, open evenings till 0. TOMATOES. *2 PER BUSHEL. YOU pick. 9430 Olddings Rd. ADORABLE KITTENS, PRBB TO good home. OR 44160. TOldAtOK8 BY THE BUSHEL AT 2747 La peer Road. ARC DACHSHUND POPPIES.-1 male*, l female. OA 0-UM or OA MOM. WHEAT STRAW, Me A BALE, B& Frit*, corner of Ltvernota and B. Blvd., Troy, <704362. ACK BRITTANY PUPS. Farm Iqvlpmaat 37 AKC DACHSHUND PUPS, 210 DOWN stud dogs, ra 04220 1045 GMO DUMP. HEAVY DUTY traitor, Oltvar o-c-8 front end loader. 81,300 or best of far. EM 3-3409 attar 0 p.m. AKC REGISTERED MALI 8TAND-ard poodle, brown, t yr. eld, 974-.0104, 2301 Mlkewood. BEAUTIFUL PART ANGORA KIT-tons, partly heueehroken, free to good homo. PE *.9*72. siK oul LINE oV NEW ANb used traetors. W* trad* and Jl-nance. Davis Maoblnery Co. Or-tonvUle. NA 74292. Your John Deere, , Homellto and” New Idea dealer. BRIT Any FEMALE ARC, 3 Ml years. , polnis-retrlevei, alio * weeks Brlteny mata *18. MA 4-9240. ENGLISH SPRINGERS, 5 MONTHS, 025, 0*2-3373 attar 0 p.m. see us first And save. John D E E R E. HAR1LAND AREA FB 4-7330. USED TRACTORS All rise* and make* KING BROS. FB 44734 FE 4-1002 Ponttao Rd. at Opdyka FOR SALE OERMAN SHEPARD PUpplM, 1 weeks old, males *30, females 020 — 003-9000. OUINEA PIGS. ALL PET SHOP. 82 Williams. FB 44433. WANTED—OLD HAND SHREDDER for garden u*e for. corn italki: UL 2-2001, ■ MALI DACHSHUND PUPPY. AKC. 82347*3 after 8 p.m. Trauai Trallart $8 Parakeet baby males. i4.o>. 208 First. Rochester. OL 14272 POODLE. FEMALE, WHITk ifw6 years, profor family, with children. Term*, ra 94225. 1902 YELLOWSTONE 16 FOOT self contained. <1.700. 902-1044. REGISTERED SIAMESE CATS. *5. 4107 Hunters Dr., I. Highland, off Duek Lake^ Road. miniature, female,. 10 moe. old. 1003 10’ ST. CLAIR (041, 3!V WA-Wa *20*. . U**d Reese Hltchs. Ooodeell, 3200 B. Rochester Rd., UL 3-4850. ’ . Air-Elo Alroraft constructed, llfe-tlme guar-antot, Trot wood. Oarway, Bee-line, ftollQ, Scamper, Siesta. Nomad Camper with boat, Good selection rt tfsrit New. rentals. Jacobson wu1,mm L8lt8 Mll , 8PRINOER SPANIEL. MALE. 2 |9iri oldo good hunter. $23. EM TOY f6x TERRIERS — FOX Terrier puppies. Reasonable. Hutohinga, 1625 Hadtay Rd., off Oakwood Rd., Ortonvllta. NA 7-2710. • ^AUtU^REAM Slnee. jra, , Guaranteed for life, he* them end get a demoMtre-tlpn *t Warner Trailer Sales, 2002 Wt Huron Mf jgift , tHit r w TOY TERRIER, 7_ WEEKS OLD. 009-5999 Auction go wai’y pyam’s exciting caravans). AUUTIONS WEDNESDAYS 7 P.M. WUl-O-Way country Mart, SU W. Long Lako Rd, HI 74439. FRIDAY—SATURDAY—SUNDAY Ok WHILE THEY USX RENTAL 1 CLEARANCE SALE , — PROM *1,088 TO 11,402 ULrire tr* < (1) 12’ st. Clair (1) U* Saga* PRIOR’S AUCTION. FURNITURE, household ltami, and antique! accepted tor auotton or will pay eaeh. wed. thru Sun. 12-5. ok 0-1200. 2627 Lakeville Road, Oxford. B 4) B AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY BATORDAY 7:20 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY 1:02 P.M. Sporting Oooda — All Typos Door torliea Evory Auction Ws buy-sell-trade, retell 7 day* CotxilgnmenU wtuootns 8029 Dlxltt S$EE3 OR 14717 •m loos modela and apoileu. «> new 1*21 Century* l*ft pentuiry Travel Trailers .—jrOM STACHLER 3001AW^^„M°Btt“8AL,,5?..M. HALLS AUCTION SALES: 8ATUH tlque bed, ehaet. Antique phonograph and record*. Bleotrlo dove, refrigerators. TV. radio. Saw end table*, eouen, odd table*, lot* of new and uMK (Imni. )Sodflgnm*nt accepted daily. Jack W. Hall uid 8um^ Prou^x^ Auctioneer*, Call MY _ j LAYTON toaflerr -Jogding travel SHORT’S MOBILE HOMES 171 W. Huron It. FB 4.0743 Plants—Trssi—tlirMbi 11-A R5W shPWiNg SSJ*,?** HoUy Travel traitors and TruckrCampers. alio Star Camping ELLiSWORTH AUT0 TRAILER SALES 077 Dixie Hwy., jg* 1-1400 SPECIMEN LANDSCAPE EVER-greens, shads trees, shrubs. Privet BLsrst-i« st Sunday. ^ ' , 1 ! THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER U, 1963 - I - TWENTY*gRtpffj jTrtnwl Trailers inn. RESULTS OF SUMMER TRADING IS good /dial: New Yellowstone* and Oem*. 16' to ' ttiifepr ■ T1 " 1 Self-conti vW'tffl* _.11 ■ OXFORD TRAILER BALKS ■ 1 mild aouth^ Lake^Orlon on MM SniTiSTRENTALS ■" I'lilil " Avalolr—1Iho nu„ __— . r Tawao^Brave1 Mil ntaln*/ Ur ELLSWORTH AOtO and TRAILER1 SALES M7T Dixie . MA 8-1400 Liquidation of AU i :vTfavd''Tfaue)r^. ■ Now and Ueed. Everything go** — Rental*, below ‘wholmli. I to choose from, ALL CRKK8 — ....- sleep* bp~toF frOer OwrMew 1984 21' VAN, With twin bed ' model, (*UF contained, ' with ... tandem wheel*. Will demon* atrate hauling. . ' Save Extra $$ qn These Used Trailers tu X to' ABC Mobil* Boole, 1 bed* i room, real sharp. Mtt io' pacemaker, s bedrooms, ii„f carpeted,' trout dining room, middle bedroom, never used. Cl'xB' CHAMPION 1958. 2-bed room, need* some. work. tlMS. crees, HVa to St' all on band tor " a quick deal, and Short time 1 only — Reese Hitch Initalled FRANKLINS M, 17%, and 13%, two /ot eaoh mode), A Pull Awning and winter storage, let YEAR FREE. BBS us LANT — tor the best deal , ever ottered - in our 10 year Holly^ravel Coach, Inc. UBlO HOllT Bd. Holly ME 4-6771 Ulfc krottJC Boitr, i katiMM. front kitchen, furnished, 63,BOO. 334- 1«W VAN DYKE, S0X10, EXCEL- room and bedrooms. 5t— between 1-8 p.m. FE 5-0183. cabinet. 678 complete. MY storage 3-1281. EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR ----r_. AlCQ> Wirt- I Hutchinson iO. 430l Dixi OXFORD TRAILER SALES \ 3-bedroom Marletl... best burs In mobile living anywhere today. See the latest in .ultra modern, 661 - 13* wide Vagabond deluxe. For those who want only tba boot. 06' X 16’ wide General, a complete home, 3 or 3 bedrooms. Them unite on dieplay right now. . 30 other now it' Wide* plug 30 used coaehesX all prices. Priced to cult the bu>q*. terme reaeon- OXFORD TRAILED. SALES mil* couth bf Lake Orion on M ~~T 3-8731 DAWSON’S CLEARANCE - SHI rglas runabout cod; top, reg. $1,625 ' now $1,285. Buy now and aave Big dhooiuits on all remaining 1963 merchandise. TOttyir, Steury. Owens, Traveler, Rlnker hosts, Kayo! pontoons, Xvlnrud* motors inn Fameo, triers. Take MOO. to W. Highland. Right on Hlokory Wdg* Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow *'— Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALKS at T1P8ICO ‘MU. Phone_MAta Mirt. CLEAR THE DECKS ! Everything Must Go! Up to 25% Discount! Fabulous Hydrodyne Comboards ’Your Evtorude Dealer’ M Harrington Boat Works; 1899 8. Telegraph Rd. ' 332-803! Sen Ffl, TtU 9 p.m. Sun. . 1C to INSIDE STORAGE 85 per foot, including 8-way»h CA88 LAKH MMUNB 3981 CASS ELIZABETH RD. OFBK 7DAY8 , JET BOAT>EALE REASONABLE , Flbreglae cruiser* sad run-Aboute. MICHIGAN TURBO-CRAFTS SALES BALSB-8ERV1CE ____ tb* ' BOAT „ ... 40 per oent off on Skis Owens Marine Supplies 388 Orchard lake FE 2-8020 MARINE INSURANCE 83.00 PER 1100 and up. Liability Jio.ooo for 810. Hanoen Agency. PE 3-7083. MiRdURY MARK 78, 70 HOR8E- Oal. Cruise A bargain al outoRow B — 27 It. Owens Skiff, 36 hours, like new. 185 bp., $5,306. M — 22 ft. Express Cruiser, t n.p„ very wean, 81.696. . Walt Mazurek . Lake and Sea Marina, toite'SMJiiwkR for evinrudb USED ! foot ho WINTER STORAGE Inside etorage for boats end motors, free/motor aiorage on all tune-up*. Clearance sale of'OSJohneon motora Sea-Ray. MFO. Aerocraft boats. PINTER'S BOATLAND (After the eale It’s the servlet Wants* Caw-Trocb 101 $25 MORE For that blah trade'used us, b* & i Dixie Highway. Phone OR 1 OR 100 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS SALES SIZZLER TIME NOW AT ROB HUTCHINSON Saving* galore on new 1963V— ' noblle homes. Over 30 floor p id P0N- I ■ tm qfuty ___livability. Y*» you fir an ' extra bonus on your present me bile name In the month of September. stop out today, you'll bo glad you did. , Bob Hutchinson1 MOBILE HOMES 4981 Dixie Highway OR 3-1208 Open 6 to 6 pally 13-8 Sat. 9-8 Parkhurst Trailer Sales Finest in mobile uvmois to Mien. VesiurfigN* — and Nomad*. Located half way beta Oxford on M24. next try Coueln. 8HORT8 MOBILE HOMES flood used home typo traitor*. 10 PER cent DOWN, Care wired °f P*r%wdeS°(Sean*TrMl.ri FE 4-0743 3171W.HU1 mi«w^lnMK -92 *90*i« : 670x18 . 700x18 . plus Tax and Reoxpable Tire 34 hr. service on recapping jfe 1 1100x30 magus i rebored. Zuck Ms- 1886 CUSHMAN, I HORSEPOWER, excellent eondltlon, call FE * 0133 after 4:W~ % ■vaisas.' NEW. PHONE ____ ... j* and really HKlflK MY 3-0721. (word ■ TOBSg'iilS#' ' 1683 HONDA TRAIL 80 $200. 338-0340 IWTBRdA SCRAMBLER "TAKIB .over payment» ** oB 3-3487. ■ Bicycigi , OIRL’B 28 INCH BIKE. I USED |8 UP; NEW $20.88 UP. Scarlett's Bloyole* and Bobby Shop **■ — ♦-------- “* PE 3-7843 Boats—Acctiioriai 8-FOOT hydro'— UTILITY — NEW — 7% horsepower motor — Ex-—““r oondlllon ~ |tt| **— VSSk 14-FOOT SAILBOAT OAT RIO, beautiful aaller, tight, eomplete, and la water, * after 6 p. as, trailer ana eell .--682-4406. 16 FOOT WHITEHOU8E CABIN ’ cruiser, Menmry 600, with eon-troli, AUW.WHlir. 63,400. 1640 L*p*er Rd.. Lak* Orion. (Trailer ’ . P6Tk--&Ot 66.) Li 34-VoOT 0TEELINER CRUISER. Cabin, hand,. 6-Wnladir Norberg —wlitj.—“ -------r.rMY*alK ... . BUY NOW—iSAVE! gCOTTtoT^V*5M^WJNNER ODAY SAIL BOATS _ CANOES—PONTOONt BOATS , inWbB^r&tMBr.vV , WE SERVICE ALL MAKES feaa^mACTxYo8N f» and truekt. OR 3- GLENN'S $ TOP DOLLAR $$ • POB ■ ■ . V* Clean Used- Cars JEROME "Bright Spot" Orchard Lake at Cast FE £ LLOYDS BUYING Good Clean Cars 2023 Dixie HWy. We pay more because We mU more _______■ • COUPE beVILLB CADILLAC, FE 5-3354, ALWAYS BUYINO AND PAYING MORE FOR OOOD CLEAN CARA ASK FOR BERNIE AT - ; , BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INC. , 913 8. Woodward iff 7-3314 M&M MOTOR SALES More Money FOR SHARP LATE MODELS OUT-STATE MARKETS 3827 DIXIE HWY. OB 4-0308 OR 4-0308 HI . DOLLAR! JUNK CABS AND t . —- ;.2g66 day*, evening*. iHAnr JUAXJU HUUttH liJWW. Averill's price* paid. St lias Bale* to Li MANSFIELD . 7 Auto Sales l50l Baldwin Ave. 335*5900 Are you buying a new or eourtesy ear. Jfe wfll Buy your late model ....WAYS BUYINO II JUNK CARS —FREE TOW IS TOP 66 WALL FE 5-810 SAM ALLEN A SON INC. WANTED: 1988-1963 CARS Ellsworth Nsw and Uisd Tracks 103 988 CHEVY PICKUP, gaodr 6300. 1641 AA Rocheiter, UL 3414|.\ 8 cylinder, 3 4peed, radio anrf heater, extra clean throughout. JEROME FERGUSON. Ford Sealer. QL 1-9711. VY % t6n cylinder. 4 epeed, 2 Ipeed axle, low mileage, extra sharp, JEROME FEROUSON, Rocheiter Ford D*al- er. OL 1-wil. ...... 1889 CHEVY % TON TRUCK. Call TO 4-4740 iSi 1661 DODOB pi dttton . 1............ OMC.^rood cmulition .... HUTCHINSON-SALE& 8638 Baldwin Rd.—OlngelvUl;__ FE 841741 mo FORD tt TON. OOOD CONDI- " 1887 FORD PICK UP. 8480. IU6 f&ftb PICK-UP. F-100 LONO r , 'radio, htatar. wy guod tntton, make offer. OR 3-0179. Tnwto 108 1987 FORD % TON STAKE. PE 8- I Oemun St; TeefH “Your AuthorlsW D OLIVER BUrCK and ' 310 Orchard Lake a;., 1863 r/djCOK jEUin/CHEkO PICK UP. 6 cylinder, autemaOe, heat -wMMWHls. JMens paint. Tbl* ■ mMmT JpKap n OU60N, Roehe*tar Nrd DhaierT OL 1-8711. Better 'v-Used Trucks GMC Factory Branch ..: OAKLAND AT CASS GOOD ' 1951 CHEVROLET. >i-TON SALE $695 ALSO I new '83 Ford EbonoUne van* Mow factory Invoice. Save c JOHN McAULIFFfe FORD ANY 'DRIVER 22 MOTOR — JOIN NOWI, FRANK A. ANDERSON AOENCY ■" H fe mn SAVE on Auto Insurance New Aetna Auto-RUe Policy e careful driver* REAL MONEY._ 618,000. llaMUfr.-ttiSM medical 81.000 death benefit. 830,000 ui ‘ aured motorist coverage. $11.00 QUARTERLY BRUMMETT AGENCY *'—cle Mile . PE 4-0881 Next to PofaHac State Bank Foreign Cars Austin us7. a-38 sedan, Ml 6-7389. ________ . t 'TOPtr'TraBi*' i960 ENGLISH FORD. 4 ON THE 3023 Oakland A VGUtSWAOBN. 1883 SUNROOF. VKAr, 1880 4 DOOR BfAOON. JUST the oar fdr shopping and driving chtldrtn to school. 2175 Cass Lake Rd., Keege wnwr. 1962 VW SEDAN .:. AUTOBAHN i vw bus 9-passRn6er. .. -ondltion, Pontlao Sports van, io. 467 Auburn. Call 336-1811. OLIVER RENAULT p to 40 mllea per gallon, give you up t Renault Is ihe RENAULT PAUPHINB .....614 RENAULT R-8 ......... 116 down on above ears, tow low payments OLIVER -—Ti RENAULT Clearance Sale VW, like new ....... 81688 1383 VW, nloe.......Best Offer BUNBEAM Alpine - Wire ... 6131 ... $126 ... 6 ? :::h A CHOICE Of 38 MORE IMPORTS Authorised S»*l*r(_for___Flaj^Mi- [organ Slple, aguar. MG. Also a stock of 38 new imports , EXCELLENT FINANCINO . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY SUPERIOR AUTO SALES 150 OAKLAND (USlO) -iSBT- VOLKBWACHBf BUB. ,BXC. condition. $575. Photto BT 1-4317. SIMCA I960 4-DOOR SEDAN. OOOD Ml TRIUMPH TR3, RADIO AND 1362 FIAT 4 boOR, 4 CYLDIDBR. 4 speed, 1800 series, radio and Rochester, Ford pealer, OL 1-6711, New and Used Cars BUICK 3-DOOR HARDTOP -Pull power. Excellent eondltlon, 8280, FE 2-4971.______________________ HEATER, WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES, EQUIPPED .WITH POWER. absolutely no Money DOWN. PAYMENTS OP $33.76 PER MO. See Mr - Parks at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7600. ... BUICK ELECTRA 4 DOOR hardtop, 4 way power, pvt. owner. Best Offer. FE 3-4076. 1962 SKYLARK CONVERTIBLE, loaded. 4 speed. 19,000 miles. FE 8-1303. If03- BUICK LeSABRR, TOWER brakes and stesrins. Excellent eondltlon. OR 3-** loU lUtcK UsabRA. 1989 CADILLAC. PRIVATE OWNER. ivais uwnvn, condition, under 30.000 aetuel miles, a real preitlM • FE 4-4077 days, FE 1953 CHEVROLET PANEL, CKXA “T7 Plymouth. 6, etl*k. Gordon re Oil Servloe, 101J Joslyn, F U liquidation prlo* 81 1955 CHEVROLET, DOOR. O* 338-1429. MARMADUKE , By Anderson & Leeming New and Used Cdri 10d New and Used Care 106 ; Do you suppose he’s gonna take it home? New and Ussd Cars 106 .SPECIALS '55 Chevy 0 stick .... ’'■■ fe'W'.— '' iii - 128 Oakland 1856 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-on. 4-door, V8, auto—-*'" price $180 with. 15 down. Marvel Motors WBI . ^oSwo.. 1955 CliBVROLBT' CONVERTIBLE, LIQUIDATION irft 60 S. Telegraph atom from Tel-Huron ■" CHEVY station waoon, 1958 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR 1498 mWMmms * "Pontlac’e DUcount Lot” 186 6. Saginaw •80 CHEVY. 2 DOOR, CLEAN, BAR-gain. EM 8-ow icon war, SOiJer. HARP 1988, hydromatlc. ■TlnWil IMPALA I re snJS.-isr UL 3-1 DE- ISM CHEVROLET 2-DOOR. V8. AU-tomatlc, run* like new, 9498. _ _ SURPLUS MOTORS , 171S. Saginaw 1966 (BtylVV RBL AIR HARDTOP. Radio and WhttewaUii, Auto, tranl-ffienTwao. PE CBM, , |B CHEVY V-t STICK,. OOOD condition. 81036. 338-3389. OLIVER BUICK 1903 BUICK Lesebre 4-door .. 1988 BUICK LeSabre hardtop ■’ 1981 BUICK LeSabre wagon .. 1963 BUICK EleCtra 97* 1862 heat'— * ■***J * VI te;:; 1962 RENAULT^ 4-door sedan .. 1961 buick lleetra Moor ... 1961 BUICK Special blaek. ... 1961 CHEVY 2-door,HIM .... 1961 B0IO1C Electra 838 ...... 1981 BUICK MBabm convert 1961 FORD convertible ... 1960/RENAUL. ...., I960BmCK Electra,m..... I960 tjbird Moor hardtop. 1960 MERCURY 1-door hardto i960 Mfl-rnr-, ---------- 1003 BUICK Okylart 3-door 1963 JEEP Cab, PC 170 ‘. 1963 JEEP waggo-M^^H 1963 JEEP plcxut 1963 RptAOT®-®__ 1963 RENAUI/T Dauph 1963 RENAULT R-8 4 OLIVER BUIGK SELLING OUT ALL I963’s COST or BELOW CREDIT APPROVED OVER PHONE ,.. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY DEALERB INVITED BIRMINGHAM . RAMBLER 868 BPUTH WOODWARD AVK. BIRMINGHAM PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth 001 N. Main Roohe*ter Convertible, V-8 engine, automatic, radio, hector, whitewalle. A Reel Buy at 6708. No Money down. RAY J SIMMONS DEMOS hardtop, with power .rake*. |adH wail*, low mlleege. o, 2-ipeed. whitewall*, waiih- Sir steering, brakes, pad-and 3 visor*. A beauty. 1963 FORD OALAXIE 800 Moor FORD F-100 %-ton style side lh o-cyi. itlok, *tep rear bump-' -“h mirror*, low mlleate, and 1983 FAIRLANE 3 1983 FORD Oalaxte 800 i-door « SIMMONS . FORD WHERE BETTER SERVICI ■ ■ KEEPS YOU SOLD 041 S. Lapeer Rd. ho Orion p7f ,'| Ift 2-20U v and tiiod Cars ,106 1954 FORD, 4 DOOR, 880. 385-5270. 1955 FORD. 9-PASSENQBR 8TA-‘■“i wagon, good condition, 8178. 2-0649. 210 Chip 1956 CHEVY WITH A' BLUE PIN-lih, spotless In and-out, itlok 0-' eyl. drlVM thl* one you'll buy ’ PATTERSON Chryslcr-Plymo,uth 1001 N. Main Rochester 1050 CHEVY IMPALA /vOnVlrtlel*' V-6j matlc transmission, radio, h*at- 1086 CHEVY IMPALA 3. POOR hardtop, pal* .yellow , and green interior, green tinted wt«MM%rimr* ev brakes, steering, windows, —*’- verr cgL. H| i beet offer. 731-6167. I960 MONZA EXTRAS, A4 666% W— **M803. PATTERSON I960 CHEVY IMPALA. EXCELLENT -jSy- . ,vw. M4B4, , 1960 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR aedan, 6 cylinder, Powergllde, If ■*'- heater. Turouol*e mu*h, i 1961 CHEVY B1SOAYNB 4-DOOR •0, itandar" i * j i Sharo. FE RANK AUTO"____-~ AUCTION TUESDAY. SEPT. 17 OR ^ 'USED CARS ROMMEL CAR CO. 3162 West Huron Street ... CORVAIR 4-DOOR MONZA with automatic transmission, dto, heater/ whitewall*. 3120$. JOHN McAULIFfI -FORD ___... __ trade. Automatic transmission, radio, beater. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND 1 (US1Q) PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth 1001 N. Main Roeh 1162 CORVAIR Monia dto, heater, whitewalUi, beautiful white finish, with red trim. $1888. ■ ™ l 1962 Corvair Morjza Coupe with a beautiful solid blaol finish, 103 engine, ma, 9 full; . s^itoptd. Low-low mileage, oni; Cnssman Chevrolet Co. ».’ O.M. e • equipment extra*. OR It White 963 CHEVY 4 DOOR, V-8, STICK clean. Can see any wsikdgy at 76 Palrgrov* St. between 2130 second ear. Only 8718. Suburban Olds 1 6. Woodward MI 4-4488 ... DESOTO CONVERTIBLE. Excellent eondltlon. Pull power, new tires. Best offer. MA 6-8098. boDoE....iota ’ btATJon ""Wao'GW, body In good shape, belt offer. 2178 C*e* Lake Rd„ Keego Her- 1961 Econoline Bus , h radio, heater, 2nd and 3rd r BEATTIE “Your FORD DEALER Since 19*0” ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD AT TOE 8TOPLWHT OR 3-1291 BARGAINS IN AUTO" GEMS whltewaiiii, a gemi 000 PONTIAC Catalina Moor hard- WE HAVE A FEW 1963 pEMOS THAT MUST OOII ' TERRIFIC DEALS! „ . STOP IN_. ' LET’S DEAL TODAY! Haupt Pontiac One MUe North of U.s. io oh M-U Open Mo ----- - '" *■ Thurs iaupi ronuac U* Norih or U.B. 10 oh M-U m Monday, Tueaday antr' BniHnay untn t p,m, \ No Mittei* What tiie Need, a Press Want. Ad Is Always Available to-Help You Fulfill It~r '■ and Fasti ............- 1958 '' DESOTO.' 2-DOOR /’ HARDTOP, ' poweratoerinji^,^^^toakee. W,imww vi w,ooo > /'fold ''beater;:" and slon, a real nice cor. Full author- vate^bPA ( 962 DOdSe POLARA 800 HARD-top, picket seats, large engine, full power. A very exceptional ear. $100 or’ your old' car ■“— •' —payments. SPARTAN. Dodge, Inc* 211 8. Saginaw tW HbsXL A-DodR"' AfiTbMATip 1988 mm RANCH WAOEON. . 6 ^ Y. >707 OR 3-7304. - 4 FORD 2-DQORi ' 8TAM0A»fr transmission, very c Marvel Motors R FORD .3-i>00R V8 AUTOMATIC, price with no mbnOy down. ,~ LUCKY AUTO SALES ; ‘ ’'Pontiac’s Discount tot'' 193 8. Saginaw FE 4-2214 1987 FORD 2-DOOR JHARDTOP. AU-*—atlc. radio and neater, 007 with ST weekly payment* of 81.08 Aero** from Tel-Huron 1957 1 1988 FORD CONVERTIBLE, with Bordomatto. ' radio--- beater, whitewall tires. Full.prloe only 8297 and, email monthly payment* «f ml*. , T , ’ King Auto Sales ■ m W. “ FE | automatle. HMR excellent, perfect P,l whitewall*, 1 Owner/ 91505. JEROME FEROUSON, Rochester OL 1-9711. ”1963 Ford 30B T 4-door. 8-oyllnder, standard t/ane-mlsslon. Very low mileage, *1,895. Van Camp Chevrolet 1963 FORD XL CONVERTIBLE, fully equipped, tow mileage, executive «gr, must see to apprecl-lvate, MA 6-3708, ”■¥Imw 1963 FALCON SPRINT V-8. FLOOR shift, my equity. MA 4-3318 ~~ EM 34 ' 1863 FALCON FUTURA CONVERTI-. ble. 4 speed, tow mileage. Perfect. Private owner. 696-Mffi 1963 Falcon futura, 2 door. W radio, heater. White ' wall ‘ tires, - 170 engine, standard transmission, 1963 4-DOOR FALCON, WHITEWALL tire*, standard shut, radio, heater, 7.000 mile*. $1,650. Ml 7-3434 between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. After 1957 UNOOU4 PR_____ „„ harxjtop^bargaln, full power, Surplus motors m B. Saginaw FE 8-403 TOLN CONTINENTAL CON-i. Reasonable. 903 N, John- 1959 MERCURY MONTCLAIR A , door sedan, . auto, tranemlerion, ■ radio, beater, power steering and hrakes, original' owner, moving IS* M state, will aell for 8330, —* ';4S-1 "“ttetrord; HUlcrest- Dr,,—Wyten 1961 MERCURY 2 DOOR, EXCEL- ____condition -- MY 3-^778. 1863 ComeT. .RADIO. HEATER, new tire*. 91478, OR 3-8138, COMEjT. BLACK. RED tNTi-nor, bucket seats, 4-speed, must eeU, Beet offer, OL 8-2351. /, 1958 PONTIAC 4-DOOR. EXCELLENT mechanical condition, no tUM. new tire*, wfll trade. OR 3-1391, 1963 USED CAR CLEAN OUT : '37 Old* ................. (126 '86 Ford ................ 6128 ’87 DeSoto ............... 3116 1963 Demonstrators Keego Pontiac Sale* ’ 986 MERCURY RUNB GOOD, t^anspnratrifui*p*olri at 896. -......."~l#wiwr 1961 OLDS DYNAMIC 88 4-DOOR hardtop, on* owner Birmingham *“■** gHH steering and brake*, Stibyrbqn Olds 8 a. Woodward .... OLDS — 86 — POUR DC , hardtop, Very clean, all pot 9668. EM 3-3418 after 6:30 I 1883 OLD8MOBILE 98 CONVERT-ihle. A real honey tor the money, ail - White with red interior, nui power With 9.000 aehia) mile*, 92,- Suburban Olds M S. Woodward 2-door hardtop, all vinyl trUn,' >' sharp' one-oWUar, 099 down. 170 p*r* month, BOBBORST 820 S.____ ...—ham MI 0-4830 1982 CUTLASrf COUPE, CONs6ij| on tho floor, power steering, sharp l-owner Birmingham trad*, $3,397. Suburban Olds Suburban Olds 8 s. woodward OLDS CONVERTIBLE. $115 OR BEST offer. OR 8-3810. Aftri I. »2 F-85 DELUXE STATION WAO-on. Fully equipped Including lug-gaj^ rack. 1-owner. Birmingham *. Beautiful.maroon with Sai* priced at 03.388. , Suburban Olds 865 8. Woodward 1959 bLDi ii i HakdtoF. Power steering, power vbraki Clean a* a pin. Only $1488. $ ■■ your old fr” J**“ SPARTAN Dodge, Inc. I960 OLDS 88 4 DOOR SEDAN. SPARTAN Dodge, Inc. i960 OLD8MOB1LE 4 DOOR HARD-top. 81,893 full prlo* with no money LUCKY AUTO SALES PATTERSON CHEVROLET For a real good dial. 1000 8. Woodward Ave. BlrmtoBnam ‘ HASKINS Back-to-School Used Cars- 1060 FALCON 2-door. ■*« saving 0 eyl. etondard transmission, radio. AIR 3-door, standard loads, of gt*. mileage, r, light blue finish, 1W1.CHEVYJtol AIr 4-door, r> heater! ltfl CHEVY Impel* 2-door hardtop, V0 engine, standard tranimliilw, radio, beautiful maroon finish. HASKINS ChevroletOlds IT Crossroad* to Saving*’’ u.s. 10 and M18 New and Iliad Can 1003 oiDS M HOLIDAY SPORT hardtop. 4 door, a beauty1 original tire*, extras including air conditioning, original price l$.<* - ;. ii6Jwii wie*. iw,7M. tSmmm ’Mi JuwtiaC ~ VENTuRAriaBii » miles, 81880. QR 3- 1061 OLDSMOBIMto-booK KfSkD-1 top. Power steering, -power brake*. Loaded with equipment. Can’t be told from new. Only 61.008. *180 or your o! SPARTAN Dodge, Inc. is 1967 PLYMOUTH STATION wagon, 9 passenger, 1340, Private; FE 2-4367. PLYMOUTH, 1959 CoNVkRTMjt, clean,, back to achool, must **'' (650 — MI 4-0179. PATTERSON Chryslei -Plymouth 1001 N. Main ‘, Roeh 1960. VALIANT 4-dO0r ■--- ' automatle transmission, radio, heater, a real economy oar, at a-special prl6e $908. QL 1-8869 1983 TEMPEST SPORTS dbUil ‘••tomatie, rai“-* *---- MI-0903,- 1 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR FURY1 B. of M1B. i 8877’N. Dlglo *Hwy. .„ PONTIAC STAR CHIEF 4-IX)OR FE 6-8488. 184 Mt. Ctomen*. • 19*8 PONTIAC, HYDROMATIC, motor -with rebuilt tr*nsmU.~„. body fair, $116 — 3780 Bald Mt. Apt. 3. | 11 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR, ‘ Yorktomj blue, A-l, low mileage, H'PfRTOtC CONirBRTnttSE~ AL’S MARATHON. 338-9328 1987 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP, deluxe radio, hewer brme, suer-Ml * “.." 1*87 PONTlAc SUKER' ' u . W___perfect; Ex- '.^Prieed ri^htl 1961 RAMBLER WAOON, AUTO* matlc and demonstrator travel trailer, sleep* 6. Lots of extra*, Never been lletnnd. Also QMC Pick-up. Leaving for Foreign U‘58 3-600It cRtiEFTAIN. TAKE over payment*. OR 4-1871. 1989 PONTIAC bHaRCHIEF. 1959 PONTIAC 8TARCHIEF, NEW front end and fmd*r8, 1880 engine ------u. L’U. WJ-Sflu, 1998 RAMBLER — LIKE NEW — A beautiful elaerie, with only' 39,-000 actual mile*, a one-owner DOW- 61.100. EM 3-7308, ,im -KWeville, like new, power iteering and brake*, 3 door -hardtop -* F*y of 6110$. Fe 3- SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND jUSlO) , power.________ 1819 PONTIAC 9 PASSENOBR ------ -* - ‘ , 84% Plor- SUPER MARKET union' EM.'3)4131 $2195 Pontiac Retail Store 65 Mt. Clemens St. - .EE 3-7954 > ) PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP, power steering, power britke*A$13tt full pries with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES 183 8. Sagintw FE 4-3314 Ml cat^Lina 1 con^bIU; PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth n N. Main Roeh whitewalle, deluxe owner, J|1M». , OL 1-381 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR excellent, condition, power, f—‘ ------------ CaU m 1959 Ford BEATTIE FORD DEALER Since 1030’’ ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD itT THE ETOPLxoSt • OR 3-1291 WILSON PONTIAC CADILLAC mlngham MA :atthews- T HARGREAVES CHEVROLET , Has* Opening' fop All Late‘Model. Utfed Cars 631 Oakland at Cass 1 TOP PRICES OFFERED COME VISIT RUSS JpHNSON’S Used Car Strip ’61 Bonneville Oonvdfttbl* . '61 Chevrolet Convertible , '63 Catalina Convertible .. '63 Meroury Comet ....... ’81 Corvair Monia ........ '33 corvair Monia ...... '$3Rambler American .... :: US .. 1198 '83 Tempest Coupe ..... '89 Rambler Super Wa|o ’69 Ford Oalaxle ..... ’69 Pontlee Hardtop .... '61 Rambler Weson ..,. ’81 Tempeet Bedan .... ’61 AagUa 3-Door .......... __ ’89 Rambler Wagon American 985 '80 Falcon 3-Door .. ’87 DOm jWMoi •58 Rambler f*dai •88 Fotd Hardtop IOHNSQN I’ontiac-Rambler Dealer MM at the Lake orlpn ChTALtihA 2-DOOR' hakL f. top. Blaek, blue venture trim, Hydramatlc. power steering .and brake*, tinted glass all the Way. DOOR, 11,000 transmUslon. power grille and" out. or ^-tS after gowmwT V-8. Ca2*''2teri6'30’ pS - _______IT SPORT COUPE. . ,ow mileage. After 6 p.m., 682-4918. 1863 PONTIAC CATALINA. . excellent eondl- ____ AM-FM radio, Safe-T-Track differential, 644-6513, 13 TEMPEST LEMANS CONVERT. tnatur extrai OR 8-9036. 603 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR hardtop, power, extra*, i860 MUM 63.088.^PE 4-0803. ... Grand ntit. ifcntiBi •leering, brake*, power window*, AM • pm radio, 4-«poed stick BUY YOUR NEW ^ -. RAMBLER > HOUGHTEN &. SON * N. Mabf and Rochester OL 1-1781 Jm-a:-w ■ ■ -gaBar RAMBLERS -ma W tho last roundup. Get t big deal on a '63 Rambler from liOSE RAMBLER EM 1-4133 RAMBLER STATION WAQON, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITE SIDE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OP $33.16 PER MO. 800 Mr: Park* at Harold Turner Ford. MI 4-7600. JUStARRIVRb New shipment of *03 Ramblers. A , eomplete lirn Of wagona and je-mm at Meeial price* to our cue-tomere. stop m today tor the deal of your om(m. A new RamMer 550 OAKLAND (UStO) 7 STUDEBAKBR SILVER HAWX I. stlokJllOT. . LIQUIDATION LOT 180 S. Saginaw SPECIAL SPECIAL I960 MERCURY , 2-Door Club Couj Dupe '• ■____________ ______ automatle iraiwnfielod like new car, sparkling Corona cream flaiim and ibarp. Matthews-Hargreaves ^ 111 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4547 Hunters Specials 1952 Ford Pickup 1963 Chevy Carry-All like new. Take the seat* out in I min. and you .have got your Jeep Wagon / .-wheel drive, go In woodl i* far a* you like. BILL SPENCE. Rambler*Jeep , 007$ Dlglo Hwy. at H-lf CLARKBTOM ; ____ MA 8 HpMER HIGHTS Motors Inc. 3 door, with VS.tnflna, > transmleiion, radio, neat- > grid and Whito, anarpM OXFORD Open tin tom Birmingham TRADES ] Every used car offered ' for retail to the publijt is a bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warranty. , SSiSISfBaS'::: ’W BUICK Skylark ..... a •82 RAMBLER 5,000 miles ... •68 BUICK 9-pkll. wagon *82 buick hardtop ■62 BUICK LeSabre .......... ; ’61 ELECTRA hMdtOP ... •61 LeBABRS ......... I ■60 buick hardtop .... | ■88 lUlCX hardtop ............ I ’(( buick oonv*rnhla ( :pS§l»' ‘ FISCHER’ BUICK y; ■ :e* IDAY, SEPTEMBER, H 1003 THtE PONTIAG PRESS, SATI TWENTY-MIGHT no phone orders, C.O.D.’s or deliveries' "'except large items Be Smart, Be Thrifty-Monday and Every Day! You Can Be Sure of Extra Savings at Sears! Limited Quantities eclipsev Cordtex lifts in Bandline Bras j^y) regularly "I 99 Charge 3 styles for men . shirt-jackets y 1-group O97 ■ Reg. $9.99 O —6.97and6.97 Hj $9.99 Corduroy Shirt-Jacket In rRr olive* charcoal, burgundy. (W/p- All-Cotton Corduroy, rcg. $17.99, in green, black orbronae. ■H 100% Wool •hirt-jacket in blue Bf plaid, man’s sites, ref. $15.99 Wf ". Men’s Clothing Dept. Seart Main floor ■ Reg. 099 •6.99 Charge It Boys* poncho stylo ahirt-jackets of wool-blends -with gold color button and Italian-typo collair. Always smart-looking for school in all boys sizes 8 to 20 at tentffo savings Monday at Scars, Hurry in. Boys’ Clothing Dept. ~ Sears-Main Floor $6.98 long-leg Charge It L. Charge It I V Made of sheer light- 1 A weight Wonder-SPAN] k elastic in pSnty or I girdle style with [ elastic back, front r panels. Siam S, M, L and XL. Save I Censtry Dtps'.-2nd Fir. Self-Adhering (Goodyear Viny BpR Sears Soft, Warm |^|s Sanforized Cotton M ' Flaitncl Prints ^ Magic-Cover Sale marquisette Reg. •1.98 Choose from beautiful pat; terns, for eveiy room in the home. No tools needed, just cut to size, remove backing and apply. Has many uses, 18 inches wide, 12 feet long. Conte in Monday . .'. save 67o on every roll you buy at Scarsl < Housewares Dept. — Sears Basement Charge Pilgrim Ban-Lon® Men’s Knit Shirts R®«. 099 •3.99 aU Charge It 14.99 Long-Sl«eve Model,.......... 8.M A wonderful collection of men’s Ban-Lon shirt* in choice eolort for Ball. You’ll want several et this lower Seine price! In all men’s siwis Monday at Sears! Men’s Furnishings-Main Floor Charge It Sow nightwear for the entire family... wide assortment of prints appropriate for men, women, children. Washfast colors. 36-inches wide,. Shop early Monday . . . these values won’t last long! Domestic Dept, Sears Main Floor 4 Charge It Easy-care (just wash and hdng): white fiberglas panels have 5* inch bottom heme and 114-inch double stitched hems. Never requires ironing. Full 81-inches long. Save Monday! Domestic Dept. —Sears Main Floor Green Your Lawn Fast WitBMerion Blue Grass Food Galvanized 4-Inch Gutters in 10-h. Lengths “Tako-Wlth’ -Charge It Heavy-gauge steel, galvanized to resist rust. So easy id- install, solder joints or use slip-joints (no soldering necessary). “K” type. Save! 5-Irt. White Aluminum, ll-ft. Reg. 33.98.. 2.98 FITTINGS EXTRA Building Materials, Perry St. Basement Charge It Helps develop a beautiful healthy lawn. Contains- 20% nitrogen and other plant nutrients for fast, long-lasting results. 22-lbs. covers 3,000 sq. ft. Save! Reg. $9.75 Spreader Has 16-inch spread. - 8.73 Sears Garden Shop, tiBtffXSt3£ M"* ■ Sens Semi-Gloss for Trimand Walls Reg. $5.98 4)M *•*• Chargo It No npsettlng paint odor. Washes beautifully, white plus assorted, color*. Save Monday. Paint Dipt., Main Basement Special Selection-of LP Records , Mon. Only Iff **• Charge It f Monaural records by top telling artists ... major labels. , I.ong.Plav SlnCCo . . . . .2.27 Radio and TF Dept., Main Floor Science Career 60-Power Telescopes See closenps of the moon! Easy finger-, Reg. 19.99 touch focusing. Tilts forward, back and • m nn swivels full 360°. Steel tripod. Includes: —Mi, star map and sky map. ....Toy Town, Porry St, Basement Charge Ir Perry St. Basement iigbf Sale! Gas Incinerator With Automatic Timer Trial Rags, IB 814.99 Value | m Charge It J Low loop texture Won’t mat, footprints! can’t take hold, Skid-resistant latexed back. With stylish fringed ends in assorted colors, Your choice of other sites at proportionate cavings Monday at - Sears. Shop early for best selection. Floor Coverings-Sears Second Floor Humidifiers with Humidistat* Reg. $39.93 29®® Humidifiers for Warm Air Furnaces Reg. $9.95 5n Charge It Liner, float, valve and cover are molded nylon. Won’t ebrrode. Plates, tubing included. " For any furnace, puta up to six, gallons of moisture per‘day into yo.ur house. Save!, $13.95 Humidifier------8.98 $1.89 Humidifier Plate*, 1.07 -------------- I’lumblngand Heating Dept., Perry St. P• 81470 Shve on All-Fabric Automatic Washer Sale 4-pc. Hollywood Beds Serofoam Mattresses Save Up to *9 on These Craftsman Power Tools 24-Month Nylon Silent Cushion Tire Sale Year Choice. 7.80x14 or 8.00x14 "I Q99 Tubeless Blackwall, plus tax JLtJ . urn TnAHK.IN NR OI TIRE Regularly at 159.95 ^ ®/Hn Monday Only Special TD^gf NO MONEY DOWN on Sear* Easy Payment Plan Includes buoyant urethane foam mattress, matching Monday Only! V I 111# No Trade-In XylJ NO MQNEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan \ Completely equipped with automatic bleach dispenser^ rbto-swirl agitator and water level selector. Full 12* lb. capacity with self-cleaning filter, porcelain top and basket, Shop Monday for huge, ravines! Appliance Dept. —Sears Main Basement Your Choice of 3, I C^tJU Regularly to 824.99 J each ■■ . ■ Charge-It , . Choose the Craftsman Oubitarsander wrth 35(W vihra-: tions per minute; the Craftsman finishing sander with 8Vix4v5i-in. pad or the Craftsman V4*in. Electric Drill with V&-HP motor. All exceptional buys Monday. Hardware Dept. -Sears Main Baiement Yow Choke, 7.50x14 or 8.00x14 T^9 Tubeless Whitewall, plus tax JL 4 NO THADE-IN REQl Extra deep tread grips the road at every stop. Quality for 1 frtr, price for pilot Allstate is your best tire buy. Shop ! gaejigy ’til 9,. .you’ll save even more. . Auto Accessories, Perry St. Basement box spring, .white plastic covered sweetheart head-board, sturdy leg-bracket set Twin else. Get your Hollywood bed this Monday and save $17.07 at Sears! Furniture Dept. *■'Sears Second Floor • Phone FE 5-4171 Satisfaction guaranteed or your money Downtown Pontiac MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY Thb Weather V.i, tt*aOl*r Fo Partly Okmdy, THE PONTIAC PRESS ONE COLOR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, im —28 BAGJBS House Rioters 'Dupes of Reds FROM OUR NEWS WIRES WASHINGTON -rChajrman Eclwin E. Willis of ^ the House Committee on Un-American Activities today T4 labeled as Communist dupes the bands of beatnik-style < / youths who battled police in a wild, two-day protest against the committee hearings on student travel to .S Cuba. ,. M The committee’s public hearings came to an end yes* terday as more than 100 police cleared at least 35 shout* i-’^ ing youths from the House Office Building. Seventeen n Romney Aide Says Program Was Okayed Before Results Known From Our Wire Services A private poll paved the way for 0<3f«j;-^|eorge Romney to propose the state income tax as a major por? tion of his fiscal reforin program? The poll wls conducted by the Market-Opinion' Research Co. of Detroit, a public opinion sampling organization, prior to Romney’s announcement of his tax reform program. Eight hundred citizens were interviewed. V Walter P. DeVries, research . aide to Romney, said yesterday “ of the demonstrators were ushered from the commit* L tee hearing room, amid, shouts of “Nazis” and “police brutality.”' Fifteen youths had been ousted I from the hearing Thursday in a similar wild melee. . Terming the demonstration r an “ugly episode,” Willis said , it was Communist - inspired, but he added that the demonstrators themselves were not I Communists. f1 “The .big boys who don’t show > up are the Communists,” he said, r ‘NEW LEFT CLUE’ One witness, Larry Phelps of BurUngton.N.C.,-acknowledged he had joined a “New Left Club” at the University'of North Carolina " for “people who are to the left of Kennedy.’V, , , The most serious outbreak came yesterday. Kathy Prensky was asked if she was a member of a Progressive Labor Student dub, Which , the committee called a Commu-, nist splinter group. , JOIN DEMONSTRATION — Two students walk past a line of policemen as they leave Phillis High School yesterday to join pupils from other Birmingham, Alci.7 schools in an integration protest. ' ' . ' , Dixie Mayor Boycotters in School Supervisors Will Meet Monday in Auditorium HUSTLED DOWN STAIRS ~ A demon- on Un-American Activities. The committee isk strator and his wife are hustled' down stairs of ' investigating the recent trip to Cuba by some the House Office Building after a; scuffle out- United States students. ■>’, v-/ side the hearing room of the House Committee - • ; ’~ v* ; i, ■, . , Lyu The Oakland County Board of Supervisors will meet Monday morning in the new courthouse auditorium to adopt a county budget for next year. of the poll were known. , De Vries said no revisions- were made as a result of the poll though the ’poll indicated extensive' opposition to miy major shakeuP’Of Michigan’s tpxing pro* FROM OUR NEWS WIRES BIRMINGHAM, Ala. ' —Boisterous yfhite -students, boycotting desegregated public schools, were tpld by Mayor Albert Boutwell yesterda-y. One of the key questions la Quintuplets Born adopted for this year. -It includes pay raises for all county employes, ranging from $100 annually in the lower brackets to $2,000 more In some supervisory positions. NO RAISES Wage scales of county employes haven’t been raised for two years, although many have been able to earn more by advancing in ranks and through increments for time in service. The pay raises, if approved by the board, will account for about two-thirds of die increase ABERDEEN, S.D. (AP)MJuln-tuplets were bom early' today to the 80-year-old wife of a shipping clerk. Doctors said the four girls and a boy were doing fine although born two months prematurely: 1 ■■ ih , the Western Hemisphere—the famed Dionnes of Canada in 1934 and the Diligent! children jin A)** gentina in 1943. Mfr .Fjscher was reported, to be doing fine. . .. V the' parents had given little thought to.names for the babies, said Fischer, a shipping clerk for the Nash-Finch wholesale food outlet here. KNEW 3 DAYS AGO Dr: James Berbos, who attend; ed the birth, said he was aware Her voice trembling with emotion, she said: “Yes, because I believe .socialism is the way to end racism, and under socialism we can have congressmen who are truly representative and who Mrs. Fischer, 5 fool 8 and red-haired delivered the babies in about 90 minute?.. The last born, arrived about 3.10 a.fo. The boy was the fourth born. The couple, Andrew andMary Ann Fischer, have five other children—also four girls and a boy—ages 3V& to 7. It was only the fourth recorded birth of quintuplets in the United States. Fischer said he had already moved his family outside of the city so he could keep a couple of are not elected because Negroes are not allowed to vote.. -..” , A sharp outburst of applause greeted this sally, Police began grabbing the fondest clappers and hustling them toward the door. “Leave them atone,” cried others. “Tyranny!” someone shouted pendents contributed heavily to-Romney’s victory last fall. ‘HIGHLY POPULAR’ In addition, a Romney aide said it became apparent that other The Fischers -were fold about it last Wednesday, the husband first, Mrs. Fischer Wednesday night shortly after entering the hospital. “After a half-hour after the doctor fold her she started crying and cried all. night,”. Fischer^ said. ' 1 "I don’t know how I took the news. In fact, I don’t think I came to for a couple of days.” i Now, Fischer said, he feels “pretty good.” - ' s ■ main ingredients of the Romney tax plan were -‘highly popular." * The aide said M per cent of Rune answering foe poll approved of foe job Romney was doing, and only J per cent of those answering foe poll approved of foe job Romney was doing, and duly 9 per cent discontinued on Page 2, Col. 1) . active duty. President Kennedy called up the 1$,000-man Alabama. Army and Air National Guard early in the week to thwart Gov. George C. Wallace’s efforts to block desegregation. cows to cut down his milk bill* “I don’t make the most money in the world and it does present some problems,” Fischer, 38, said. t . ' THIRD IN WEEK Birth of the South Dakota quintuplets ' was the third multiple birth in a week in the Western Hemisphere. Five boys were born , In other action, the board of supervisors will be asked for authorization for , the chairman, Delos Hamlin, to appoint a 12-member health board. ' 13 ModeIs Feature Styling, Performance “Down with HUAC! Down with HUAC!” cried a youth as he was mrached to the door—‘HUAC’ referring to House Un-American Activities Committee. other who waited in foe boat. In their getaway, the bandits fired once and stopped a couple who witnessed the robbery by chance and tried to chase the fleeing car in a sports car. , • ★ ★ .. ■ Police waited for a complete j inventory from the store to def termlne the exact loot, but estimated it was between $100,000 ] and $200,000. Hamlin said the board |s needed to study how Michigan’s new community health law can be enacted in Oakland County. . ★ * Some believe that placing the administration of mental care at the local level of government will eliminate much of the lengthy and costly institutionalizing of patients through early diagnosis and treatment at community clinics. Utah <0PD. Studebaker Corp. today showed its new 1964 model cars emphasizing styling and performance for the coming yedr. Studebaker President Sherwood H. Egbert said foe bask line of 13 models In six different series would be available at dealers across the country Sept. 2$. “The presentation of our cars at Bdnneville in this atmosphere of high performance is part of a determined effort to change public thinking about Studebaker,” . At Birmingham and Tuskegee, white pupils continued to boycott some of the newly integrated schools Friday but attendance was higher than jthe day before. Negro and white youngsters went to classes together without incident at Huntsville and Mobile. The Etowah County grand jury at Gadsden, Ala. did not ' Several girls squirmed out of the grasp of the police and slumped to the floor; they started screaming outside as they were propelled down the stairs. ★ it . h At least 13 persons were rushed out of the building and tossed down the front steps of the building, which is across Independence Avenue from the capital. A federal district.court jury deliberated 25 minutes yesterday before convicting Pontiac Teamster Local 614 President Leaun Harrelson on two charges of embezzlement and two counts of making false entries ip union records. There remained a possibility that Harrelson might av0^ conviction.on thp 1 four charges, which could give: him o 'maximiim peri-;i / alty of 12 years and a ■ $40,000 fine. ' ‘ ; ■ Federal Judge trod W. Kasas has yet to rule on a defense mo-i. / f ‘ tion for a directed acquittal On the charges. He took the motion ■ ^ *- SK.':), under advisement and Is expected r' to rule next Friday on two counts -.'WflV of the four chargu. “freadom walker.” Simpson, a storekeeper at Fort Payne, Ala., had been charged in mhmhm MMMMSKI I For New Hospitar I the ambush slaying of William L. I Moore the night of April 24 as I he walked along U.S. Highway 11 [near Attaila, Ala., a few miles I from Gadsden. Moore, 35, was on [the way to Jackson, Miss., to attempt to talk to Gov. Ross Barnett about racial moderation. “For years we have established our car as a thrifty long-lasting kind of vehicle. We also are well known today for our efforts in the field of building ultra-safe automobiles. Combined Staff OK'd we don't, we ,are dishonest and It’s a farce." ' STATE’S ELEVENTH The combined staff at Critten-ton Hospital, which is to bp built on Walton Just west of Rochester, would make it the. lRh hospital in the state with joint staff. Dr* Geist said Crtttenton would' be fost first major he?- with regulations of the Hill-Burton Fund, which could contribute as much as one-third of the hospital’s cost? under a federal ad. A combined staff of doctors of medicine and osteopathy for the proposed Avon Township branch of Crlttenton General Hospital has been approved by the Oakland County Medical Society. A resolution for a combined staff at the new hospital was For the first time since 1959, Studebaker claimed, a complete turnabout hi styling has been made. But the cars ‘still retain a hint of styling, continuity. The cars are almost six in- Indian Summer to Blanket Area “and today, in many instances, there is no difference between an M.D. and D.O." He added, however, that MD’s would head up staff committees, such as the credilals committee, and serve as department heads. He emphasized that osteopaths would have representation on all committaes and in all areas. ' , wert in 1963. FRONT LENGTHENED : “The entire front of the car ha? been -Extended with a forward ’ thrust to convey a strong feeling : of forward motion and the’frontal : area of Studebaker cars is new on a single plane, foe county medical society, said Dr. Edgar J. Geist Jr., society spokesman. Work on the Suburban Unit of Crlttenton General Hospital is slated to begin next spring after nearly six years of planning. addition; it would be foe. third major facility in foe state with a comblned stafi and accredited bythtf Joint CommiulononAe^ creditatlon Of Hospitals. Two areas of possible conflict were mentioned by .Dr. Geist: (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) About $1.1 million has been pledged for the 150-bed facility. * w Dr. Geist said the admission of osteopathic physicians complies The acquittal motion wis bnssd partly on a defense data that no evidence was presented to (Continued on Page 3, Col. 4) the ihultlpto' planes * formed by headlamps, grill and other front sheet metal.” 1 I THE P6OTIAC PRESS. SATtTRDAY, j SEPTEMBER 14, 1963 ~ Birmingham Area News Students Riot Court Denies inionction; School Building xkne of dozens o! similar demonstrations in the past week, was reported quiet as students attended classes under armed guard. Nearly 3,000 school pupils and university students have been arrested in Saigon. More than 1,000 were reported still in detention to Bersche. Construction Co.' of 200 W. Walton July 20. Schwans’bid Was 3851 less. Architects Tarapata-MacMahon Associates, Inc., Were named is codefendants in the suit, after recommending that the contract go to Bersche. /.. >, Besides asking the court to nullify the contract'; Schwanz is seeking $10,060 in damages against Tarapata-McMahon' for “fraudulent and slanderous” BLOOMFIELD HILLS-A petition for an injunction to halt work on a three-room addition to Hickory drove School has been denied. Oaldaaid County Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. Zicm yesterday afternoon turned down the request of Schwanz Construction Co„ 2801 Franklin, Bloomfield Township. The firm sought a temporary injunction to stop work there while, its. law suit against the Bloomfield Hills School District ispending inCircuit Court. Schwanz, low bidder for the Hickory Grove work, charges that, awarding of the contract to a higher bidder constituted "an extravagant misappropriation And misuse ofpublic tax moneys." The 381,650 contract was*let SAIGON, VW Nam CAP) -Pu*1 pits in three South Vietnamese cities rioted today against President Ngo Dinh Diem’s regime, reliable sources said. Word that the schoolboy rebellion had spread from Saigon to the counjjryskle came as Diem am DOCTOR STRIKE ENDS Reliable sourced said a strike by doctors and interns in four hospitals run by Saigon University ended this morning when a professor and his wife, and daugh- nounced that martial law throughout South Viet Nam will end at noon Monday. The announcement said all administrative functions will revert to civilian agencies. ter who had been arrested earlier in the week were released. Martial law went into effect just before government'security forces raided Buddhist pagodas last month. Birmingham Chapter No. 220, Order of the Eastern Star, will hold its. advanced officers’ night at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday at the The sources said 6,000 youths in the mountain capital of Dalat, 140 miles northeast of Saigon, barricaded themselves in four or five high schools in a shouting, brlok* for 1864. The Cruiser is built only in this fourdoor sedan model. Standard equipment is 289 V-8 engine. CLASSIC DIGNITY — Stylized chevron side trim on the quarter panel of the roof sets off Studebaker’s Cruiser model throwing demonstration that was quelled by Vietnamese soldiers. OTHER PROTESTS Smaller demonstrations were National assembly elections, scheduled for Aug. 31 but postponed because of the edict, presumably will be held soon-Today’s decree noted that while martial law will end, the state of national emergency that went into effect Oct. 15, 1961, Will remain in effect. Mrs, Leonard T. Bailey Service for Mrs. Leonard (Elizabeth L.) Bailey, 73, of 1132 Webster, will be 3 p.m. Monday at on Studebaker reported in high schools in Bien Hoa, 30 miles north of Saigon, and Vinh- Long in the Mekong Delta, 65 miles south of Saigon. Hundreds of students were carted 46 detention camps in all three cities, Informants said. "Or ★ ★ Saigon, which had been the the Manly-Bailey Funeral Home/ Burial will follow in Rosalind Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mrs. Bailey died suddenly ’Thursday. She is survived by her husband, Leonard T. the president is empowered by the national constitution to pile by de- tona, Cruiser, Gran Tuismo Hawk and Avanti. SEVEN ENGINES Studebaker has seven different engines available this year, six different transmissions, plus State Poll Led (Continued From Page One) approved. Thirty-one per cent . had no opinion. Those polled also agreed: that voters were "better conditioned” to a personal income tax than when Williams first proposed one in 1959. ★ ★ * Romney says he wants to meet with Jerome Cavanagh to discuss the Detroit mayor’s objections to his tax reform program. Romney, in Detroit yesterday far Witness a swearing-in ceremony for three new Wayne County judges, attempted to see Cavanagh, but was told the mayor was at lunch. "Tell him.I’d like to see Mm, when he gets the opportunity,’ Rdmney|pd. ’ } ;*V f* Cavanagh, when told of Romney’s visit, said he Would be “happy to meet with Mm to resolve this inequitable situation." ■i t; ★ it- it The governor and his staff were reported to be studying possible changes lit, the tax program. A Romney aide said the mayor used incorrect figures on the program’ impact on Detroit. Cavanagh pledged a hard fight to block adoption of the tax reform program after being told by City Controller Alfred M. Pelham that the loss would be at least 310 to 311 million. LI.S. Presses for Release of Flierjn Laos New sculptured lines are the key to the styling of the Studebaker line for 1964, • ★ ★ *■ Local dealers showing the new line Sept. 26 will be Davis Motors, 606 N. Main, Rochester; and Masters Motor Sales, 7675 Highland Road, Waterford TownsMp. Most apparent sheet metal changes are in sweeping new expanses of sculptured metal on the hoods, deck lids and roofs. The 13 different body models WASHINGTON % % /•'J- in Bridge Fall A 43 • year-old construction worker was in. fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today after falling 25 feet from a bridge at Adams and Square Lake roads in Troy. Johp R, Dodson, /Of Detroit, suffered chest injuries in the accident yesterday morning that saw him topple from a newly constructed bridge and land on a sandy embankment Dodson was employed by the Canonic Construction, Co., of South Haven, and .was doing cement york at the time of the accident. Wool Soaks Water FARGO, N.D. (UPD-Wool can absorb up to 30 per cent 'of its .own weight in moisture without feeling damp and 50 per cent of its own weight without becoming saturated, according to North Dakota State Unlver-I sity College of Agriculture. 03258761 Pontiac Press Sports, Saturday, September 14, 1963 PHC Outclassed, 33-0; Huskies Steamroller Troy, 49-12 Chiefs Display i BC Central... 33 Northern..... 49 W. Bl'mfield.. 37 Rochester.... 33 Seahofm.12 Kettering..141 Lots of Hustle | PCH.........0 Troy........ 12 Waterford,__13 Utica.......19 Groves.......0 Lake Orion v..13 j in SVC Game Bay City Central 11 Lives Up to Rating; Horton Stands Oat v By DON VOGEL Where there is a will there i« a way. "■ ■.. - This saying could very well apply to Pontiac Central's toot-ball team. The Chiefs are Inexperienced, but they proved last night in Wiener Stadium that they have determination. Even though they were outclassed by high-powered Bay City Central,. 33-0, in their first game, the Chiefs hustled to the very end. The general feeling after the Saginaw Valley encounter was that if the PCH players continue their aggressive pfoy, and cut down on the mistakes, a future foe or two may get stung where It hurts most — in the league standings. Curtain Going for Lions Tonight By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The dress rehearsal is pver and the curtain goes up for real for the {Detroit Lions tonight in troublesome Los Angeles Coliseum. Picked as, top challengers aqd possible champions of the western | division, the Lions must face a team in the 1963 opener that has been one of their toughest foes 18 wins apiece without a tie game ever being played. ' There has never been a shutout between the two teams, and before defense became such a predominate factor with the Lions, every game was a high-scoring contest filled with explosive plays. After taking a 48-35 lacing in 1 ' \ the Lions have won the' PNH Gallops in 1st Start of Season Mike Samifow Tallies Three Times; Kimmel Passes for 4 Scores By JERE CRAIG Pontiac Northern showed it means business this season, in its bid to break into; the elite can win games as often as a good1 group of county football power- offense. Lion*’ coaches are worried, and rightfully so, about this opening game. They know that the Rams have as good running combination in the league as any tei|m with Jon Arnett, Dick Bass and highly unproved Perris Atkins. Defense has been stressed FonUte Preil Photo NEEDED BLOCK — Walter Horton of Pon- Central’s Harold Dean in last night’s game at Sophomore halfback Walter ^ac Central looks hopefully at the block team- Wisner Stadium, Horton was the running star Horton was FCH’s chief offensive mate Ken ^ay is about to throw at Bay City for the Chiefs who lost, 334). , weapon. He broke loose'twice for;—.—;— ...j ,.—i—c..-——jL.— funs of 20 and 41 yards only to . through the years of the NPL. | The Rams are one of the few teams in the NFL who hold the all-time edge on the Lions, and even though Detroit has won the last five games they have always had trouble against the lowly second division LA teams. A victory for the Lions would even the all-time record against the Rams at five games by the closest mar- gins, 12-10, 14-13, 28-10, 13-10 and 12-3. in pre-season trades and the addi-l^arly oposition that couldn’t pre-tionof Rosie Grier from the Newivent PNH from building a 35-13 York Giants has bolstered the halftime margin. The Rams have' been rebuilding with the accent on youth the past two years and with former New York Giant''Harlan Svare at the helm, a believer of defense, the Rams have adopted the NFL philosophy that a good defense be caught from behind. The 142-pound halfback almost got away a third time, but was tripped off stride just enough to be hauled down. He gained 89 Of the Chiefs 119 yards rushing while carrying 11 times. ; Horton also made himself felt on defense, particularly in the second half, with several key tackles froih his defensive halfback slot, Bay City's large, veteran line outcharged the Chiefs throughout the game. The Wolves relied on power plays off tackle with quarterback Irv Schiller and halfbacks Kent Antle and Dennis Krzyzniak doing most of the running. Schiller also kept the PCH secondary honest by connecting on five of eight passes. BALL CONTROL The Wolves controlled the ball .and the game. They ran 70 plays from scrimmage to 36 for PCH. The second half margin was 40-• 16. ‘ - • The Bay City eleven gave the Chiefs a lesson the first two times it had the ball. Pontiac Central received the opening kickoff and, after making a first down, was forced to pitot. Bay City halfback Fred West-over gathered in the ball on toe Wolves! faked a handoff and headed across the field to the ‘ sideline. His blockferswere lined up along that side from toe 25 to the 50-yard lines. He lped 71 yards untouched behind his teammates who blocked into the middle of toe field. It was a picture play. On ^ kickoff, Bob Wirgowski of the Wolves took a healthy kick at the ball, but it squirted off the (Continued on Page 21, Col. 5) it ’it dr knocked at Rochester last night and; the Falcons answered with a 33-19 opening triumph over Utica. A fumble recovery and blocked kick had Rochester ahead 144) almost before a throng of several thousand had settled into the stadium seats. Falcons Take Advantage of Utica Mistakes. 33-19 Opportunity knocked andpered 48 yards unmolested for > First Downs Rushing . First Downs Passing . First Downs Penalties . Total Pint Downs ,. i Qalnsd Rushing The next TD came the herd way in the second period for a 204) margin, but then toe Falcons began playing giveaway and when the lead shrank to 20-13 by halftime, both teams u locked in an exciting struggle. Carl Stefanski scored all three of Rochestervs first half touchdowns, one on a two-yard rush and the others on pass receptions. ' He got the Initial tolly after guard Tony Sxafranie pounced on a Utica fumble at the four yard line. On the next series, guard Roger Carpenter blocked Ron Paschal’s punt on the 21. A five-yard penalty meant only temporary delay before QB Roger Thompson had a 22-yard scoring aerial In Stefanski’s arms LONG TD RUN A1 Boughiier raced 70 yards for Falcon TD in the second quarter, only to have it nullified by clipping. But moments later Thompson completed a 57-yard scoring pass to Stefanski. Boughner had more bad luck iter in the period. He batted a fourth-down Paschal pass into the u arms of Herb. Wiles, who scam- Paschal lost a 35-yard, touchdown pass to Balten in the fourth due to clipping, and on the next play his pass was intercepted by Sullivan. Rochester wasted no time in taking advantage of this final opportunity, and Thompson capped a 50-yard grind on a sneak from the one. Rochester’s ability to strike hard and sure after each Utica mistake gffset a fine one-man running show by Wiles. The speedy Chieftain back ran for 174 yards, just five under the Falcons’ total output on the ground. Yards Gained Failing . ToUl Net Yards Gained Paaue Attempted ........ Passes . Intercepted by .. Pastes Completed ....... Punts and Average Tarda 3-33,' Bay City Central . SCORING PLAY BCO—Westover fa punt linFStak) „ BCC—Krsyxantak 4 BCC-Bolilller 1 PONTIAC CENTRAL ENDS — Andesron, Edwards. Hunts, Colllas, Rogers. TACKLES — Peterson Northcross, Jenkins, Wright. GUARDS— Robmson, O. Jackson, Rotundo, Cooley, Haddad, quarterback — b. Wiggins. BACKS — Horton, Sony. Whltsrs, Knox, Crump, Mitchell, A. Wiggins. BAT CITY CBNTRAL __ . ,, ... ENDS - caap, Bauar, Wirgowski, GONE — The ball drops OUt of thq arms of Pontiac Central’s (Ken Seay a, he, is tackled by _ ■ - - Ka«yak, t Taosy, Bay City’s Dennis Krzyzanlak. The Wolves defensive back recovered toe pigskin. , Kantokl, JARTERBAC1 Campbell. BACKS over, Anil' O'Farrell, - Krayanlalt, Wist’ 9 w Utica’s first score. On toe final play of toe half, Paschal flipped a 27-yard pass to end Bob Balten, who tumbled into the end tone at the Straight football brought each team a third period tolly. Rochester marched 51 yards in eight plays from the kickoff with fullback Gary SulUvan carrying the final six. Utica retaliated by driving 69 yards in nine plays with Wiles going 16 yards for the score. .... Total Nit Yards Gained . Passes Attempted .......... Passat Completed ....... “.....intercepted By ..... and Ayoraga Yards Rooh—Stefanski, 33-psii (Korney kick). Roeh—Stafanskl, 57-pass. Utica—Wllest 40-pass. . Utloa—Balten, 31-pass iZaskO kick). Rooh—SulUvan, 6-run (Konley klok). Utica—Wiles, 16-nln. ^ Hazel Park Triumphs on Late interception Leonard Sak returned an Intercepted pass 90 yards for a touch* down with three minutes to play last night to giye Hazel Park a 24*19 victory over Fitzgerald. Glenn Cherup ran four and 35 yards for TDs and passed 35 to Jim K a n a k for Fitzgerald’s scores. Tony. Krakpsky rap 95 Clarkston II 'Runs Over' Oxford, 6-0 Clarkston backs John Williams and Dan Jenks gained 300 yards between them last night on the Oxford, gridiron, but the Wolves could only cross the goal line once. It was once too often for Oxford! however, and the Wildcats suffered a 64) opening game setback. Williams was the game’s star. He carried the ball 13 times for 183 yards. One of his dashes carried 52 yards for the only touchdown. It came in the third period. Jenks totaled 117 yards on 20 tries. The Wolves pushed to toe Oxford seven-yard line twice only to be thrown back. They scoffed touchdown that was nullified by a penalty. Actually, considering lost yardage, Clarkston only netted , 299 yards, one less than Williams and Jenks rushed, Oxford moved inside the Clarkston 15 on two occasions, but the Wildcats were stymied. Clarkston coach Ralph Kenyon praised the defensive play of linemen Len Bullard, Frank Miller, Jqhn Wilber and Don Clement and quarterback Dan Craven. UTILE PASSING Neither team could mount much of a passing attack. Clarkston completed only one of eight tosses. Oxford intercepted two. All live of the* Wildcats’ aerials were received. Clarkston defenders picked off two of the passes. Clarkston ran only four plays from scrimmage in the third quarter. Williams made one of the efforts pay off with his long houses by smashing Troy’s Colts last night, 49-12. In the process, the Huskies ran through and around the losers at will to dump them like Ttoy has not been dumped for sometime. The beaten Colts relinquished their usual position of preeminence after offering some unit. The “defensive rookie of toe year” in 1962 was Merlin Olsen, a 265-pound tackle, while at toe other tackle spirt was another “all-pro tackle” Joe Carollo. The RSms figure that with Olsen, Ami Carollo they have the best defensive tackle combination! the NFL defensively since the Alex Karras-Roger Brown duo of the past two seasons. Karras is Pontiac Central football fans remember Carollo when Wyandotte High School visited Wisner Stadium with its powerhouse team in 1957. Carollo and center Steve Stoher were two of the fin-jest prep stars seen that year, both receiving -~ all-state 1 ors. Carollo became a standout at ; Notre Dame and played in sev- The Colts ponies matched against pursued stallions, as first Don Wey* Northern captain and then Mike Samuilow and Steve Dan* tela took turns barreling through toe more than adequate holes opened by the bigger PNH Urns, Samu How seared th e s first three touchdowns without a Tray defender touching him. He galloped 51 yards on a re* Verse end sweep with 9:20 left In the first period for the first of seven Huskie six-pointers. The score climaxed an 81-yard drive following the opening kickoff by. Troy. Dean Soudfet*^ kicked the first of his six poteST* after touchdowns. *»> After the home team Chits punted, Northern drove from its 26 to paydirt in four plays. This time toe fleet Samuilow cut inside left tackle, then broke out- era! All-Star'games upon gradua-81®5 «*■ Hon. He was a 2nd & choice ^ £ ®“JaceH of the Rams hi m , |tor a 60-yard fallop. Yesterday the Lions through a hrisk and spirited pork- * ««utag kteboft out 1st Santa Monica It was far and 82 different from the Thursday ses-f^L®1® q“"1£?ack Don sion at Hollywood where heat and Amstrong powered his way five smog took its toll of players. M WjW 8:0 temperature at Santa Monica was.8*® showing In the first quarter. 81 compared to the 104 the pre- SHOW CLASS vioua day at Hollywood and tiie| The Huskies showed the clasy ocean breezes made breathingiof a winning team for their next Alpena 4, Saginaw Buena Vlata 0 Anchor Bay 30, Mount Clamena Chippewa Valley 0 Armada 13, Cllntondale 13 STATISTICS ..... Downs Rushing ......... 13 fjrat powne Failing >......... o First Downs Penalties ....... •# Total First Downs .........;. id- Yards Gained Ruehlng ........30* Yards Oalned Passing 7 Total Nat -Yards Gained .....306 Panel Attempted Pease* Completed Passes Intercepted s».rd Ar.M Fumbls Lost PenaTtf- JJIWt Clarkston ... oxford......... (iii? SCORING PLAYS c—williams »a run .3-87 3-33.0 Penalised 0-75 3-«6 Archery Shoot Sunday The A1 Orr memorial shoot will yards with a punt, Jim Boreland passed 60 yards to Tom Stephens and Lloyd Welch ran 15 yaraa for HP touchdowns. begin Sunday at 8 a.m. at the White Buck Archery Club’s course on Pontiac Lake Road. There will be special competition In the broadhead class. PontM* Press Plurta ALMOST LOST — Halfback Jay Shimmick of Bloontfield Hills manages to hold the ball pinned against his body with an elbow as he his tackled by several Oak Park players Including Gary Bucci (51). Bloomfield Hills won, 334). (See story on page 20). much easier. One thing that hai pleased the Lions’ coaches, to that toe players have been pointing to toe LA game without a single mention that they have looked ahead to Green Bay next week. The game is expected to draw 40,000 with the kickoff getting under way about 11 p.m. Pontiac Grid Scores paw Paw M, fitevenillle Plymouth 30, Northvllle 13 . u Troy 13 mam tmiwi---------- >d Ax* 13. Flint Holy R< 7ity Control 33, Pont in Harbor _jtlac Central 0 Holland 13 13, Birmingham Qrovaa o Bloomfield Hills 13, Oak Park O Brighton 41, South Lyon 1 Brown City 0, Peak 0 Clarkston 0, Okford Cheboygan 10, Gaylord 0 Clawson " *****—“ *** Detroit Lutheran 1 Shores Lakeahor* 0 Dryden -•*'-*—*—* Madison Heights Lamphere Flint Kearsley 13 Center IVBtldO nmihbtol — Rochester 13, UtlOa 18 River Rouge », Beorie 18 Romulua 37, Ypsiianti 13 Radford Union.31, Riverside 6 Sputhfleld 30, Thurstom , - Roseville 34, Warren Llnooln 7 . . Saginaw 1, Saginaw Arthur Hill 0 Saginaw St. Andrews 33, Saginaw DO) las MacArthur 0 Traverse City 33, Mount Pleasant 0 A Trenton 14, Wyandotte 0 --------- 13, Colon 3 >Mmi v, Miilingtou o Warren 34, Warren Couelno 6 Walled Lake 37, Royal Oak Kimball 35 Waterford Kettering 57, Waterford 13 Whlttmore Lake 13, weoervlUe Ypsiianti Lincoln 3, Ypellanti St. John Zeeland 30, Cooperevllle 13 i, waterfon T Our Lady of t Bast Lansing 30, Lansing Batters 0 Ferndale 18, Berkley 0 Flint Ainsworth IS, Owoaso 0 Flint Handy 48, New Lothrop 0 Flint Northern 7, Flint Southwestern < Flint St, Agnes 13, Flint Bentley 4 --1 r-'— "'anney 13, Flint AtUl Flint g Fraser 80, L’Ane* Creua* U > Grand Blanc IS, Flint Beecher 6 Grand Haven 40, Grand Rapid! i Holly 7, runt 'Bandit 0 HowaU 13. Fenton il _ Inkster Roblohaud 7 , C Livonia Bentley IK Farmington 0 Lapeer 13, Flushing 13 Lake Fenton 33, Byron 1 Laming Boys vocational Is, Leslie 13 Lansing Sexton 40. Muskegon 0 Llnooln Park IS, Pordlon o Middlevllle 0, Richland 0 Morrlce 14, Genesee O'' Mount Morris 80, Olio 14 Mlehloan School for Deaf- SO, Goodrich _____jon il, Livonia, Franklin It Marine City Holy Cross 0, Rlohn May vllle 34, Capao 0 Midland 30, Bay City Handy 3 , Milford 40, Avondale 0 New Haven 44, Yale 7 Napoleon as, last Jackson 31 otrngo 30, Bangor 0 late Rally Wins for Lapeer, 13-12 Mike Powell took a five-yard pass from Tom Hall with three minutes to play and Fran Yelch ran the extra point to give Lapeer a 13-12 win over Flushing ' night. The Panthers marched in for the whining TD after Flushing’ George Wolfe had put the Raiders in front, 13-7, with a one-yard plunge. ' Wolfe opened the scoring by passing 20 yards to Dave Bloff for a touchdown in the second quarter. Darrell Kramer tied the game for Lapeer in the third quarter on a 40-yard run with intercepted pass. Plymouth Tops Northville 11; Brighton Wins Plymouth got going in the second half laat night to spoil North-ville’s home opener, 26-12. Brighton, scoring in every quarter, thrashed South Lyon, 42-7, to start new coach George Preiskorn off on the right foot. Roger Tobey and Dave Agnew each plunged three yards in the third quarter for Plymouth touchdowns to break a 6-6 halftime deadlock. Tobey put the game on ice in the fourth quarter With a 29-yard jaUnt. Gary Grady started Plymouth off by returning the opening kickoff 65 yards tor a touchdown. Northvilte tied toe score to the second quarter as Dave Cummings hit pay dirt from 71 six-pointer. After a fumble re? covery by several players including center Cliff Ashley at too Tray 10, PNH was penalised twice (once costing Samuilow a TD run of 12 yards). , v With the ball on the 25-yartK line and goal to go on fourth down, Samuilow wont straight (town the field from his wing-back slot to gather in quarterback Jim Kimmel’s well-thrown aerial in the end zone two stops behind the nearest defender. Guard Jerry Wallace promptly covered another Troy fumble on the first play following the kickoff. Kimmel threw on first down to Souden who made a fine over-the-head catch running backwards at the 15, shook off clinging tackier and rambled into the end zone for PNH’s second six-pointer in 58 seconds, The Colts follower with a 59-yard kickoff return by Ken Holder. The first play from scrimmage saw Armstrong fire an aerial to Jeff Quandt who ran the ball into paydirt to complete a 41-yard play with 7:38 drawing in the dock.' ,,, 'S3 The Huskies final tally in the first half was recorded by Steve (Continued on page 21, col. 2) Bob Tuck picked up a fumble and raced 60 yards for Northvilte fourth quarter fD. Posting touchdowns for Brighton were Bob Larabee (25), Buzz Davison (12 and four), Chuck Harman (40* pass; from Dennis Hartman), Doug Zimmerman (26) and Phil Stine (80). Remi King plunged three yards for South Lyon’s TD. ★ ★ ★ Yards Oalned Ru.hln* loMjiSed;;: Completed ^SE^ Ydi:>i_______11 SCORING PLAYS pnh—M. Samuilow, oi ran m^N14°'8oud*giJC40 S. TIIE PONTIAC PRBS& SATUBDAY, SEPTEMBER U. 1008 en. Rams in Trophy Clash Tomorrow F» V;. ; > (V I hd Seaholm Defeats Groves line Before 7,000 Spectators $t. Mfehawl's Series Edge 17-8-3; Players Moved Around It wa» Seaholm’s third victory in as many games with Groves. The game was at Seaholm. “I’d say they are twice as good defensively as they were last year" Seaholm Coach Carl Lemle commented. • f * ★ The lightorFalcons attempted a running attack the first naif, but went to the air after halftime festivities. Quarterback Bill Stephenson slipping around right end on a reverse and galloping 4ft yards. He demonstrated some track speed midway in the fourth quarter when he again took skirted right end from the Seaholm 25-yard marker and outdistanced Falcon defensemen for a 75-yard TO run. Groves never threatened, bat contained the powerful Maples By GARY THORNE A 170-pound senior halfback spelled the difference last night as Birmingham Seaholm subdued cross-town riva 1 Birmingham Groves, 12-0, before 7,000 fans. Ken Heft, veteran team captain, sprinted 242 yards and contributed both Seaholm tallies, despite a much improved Groves defense. Heft broke away for a touchdown late in the first quarter, heavier Maples surged through the Groves’ line. SOME SUCCESS Stephenson had isolated successes' in hitting A1 Proctor, senior halfback,, and Tom Shep-perd, also a senior halfback, but Could not string his passes together to endanger the Seaholm goal line. The Maples dominated play and were effective defensively, but did not overpower Groves on.of-fense as had been expected. Coach Jim Kinnison, who seeks to improve on last year's 2-7 won-lost record, was pleased with his Falcon defense, but had only Proctor and when it collides with cross-town rival St. Frederick at 2:30 p.m. on the Wisner Stadium turf. Last year the Mikemen pinned a 21-0 loss on St Fred and laid first fiwm to the Steve Griffin Memorial Trophy, donated 1 a s t season by Miss Rose Griffin in honor ot her brother. The Rams have lost 11 of the last 12 games between the Norto-,west Catholic League teams, including four straight, and would like nothing better than to earn their first leg on the coveted trophy by puffing a stop to St.' MEkn’sgridbon domination. Last year they put np their strongest showing since 1M8 when they last won, 34-12. St. fTOd teams dominated the ear- on a trap play. Guard Sandy Eysort (42) already is pulling out to lead the play. Proctor topped Groves with 145 yards on the ground and l£> (yards' on pass receiving. Stephenson, meantime, tossed 21 passes and competed eight. Stephenson even received on lone pass. The 6-2 quarterback outreached a half dozen foes to snarl a 16-yard toss late hi tile fourth quarter. '* Looking past the dash with Grqves, Seaholm Coach Lemle reflected gloom over his squad’s poor passing. “We need a lot of work,” he added with perhaps a thought about next Friday’s contest with Royal Oak Kimball. FOOTBALL STATISTICS string of successes in 1956. { The Rams won the first game hi 1986 fay a 23-7 count, and held «444 advantage after a 254 victory in 1943. Their biggest margin came the preceding year, 264. 1 The most lopsided decision in the 26-game series was St. Mike’s 664 conquest two years ago. The Mikemen now hold a 1744 advantage, aided by their recent Interception by ROK Hurt Its Chances be close, with Avondale expected to come out on top. But the roof caved In oq the Yellow Jackets early and late. WWW Another mild, upset was posted by Holly. The Broncos — rated a Wayne-Oakland League sleeper by some — tripped Flint Bendle, 74. . ' - ' , , Milford struck with devastating suddenness. Jinr Ward sprinted 48 and 60 yards for first period TDs and Skip Miner added a third in the second quarter on a 50-yard Milford delivered the first shock/ of the football season in its opening game last night by routing Avondale 404 before a large homefield crowd. The control was supposed to A last-minute pass interception in enemy territory cemented a wild 27-25 decision for Walled Lake over Royal Oak Kimball last night. But the only thing id the interception was made by the losing team, Kimball. { Had the defender knocked the ball down, the Royal Oak squad would have been hi a very good position to win the game. ' W ; *W / Walled Lake was protecting its slender lead With 1:28 left, and quarterback John Thomas stood bdck precariously dose to his end Hh| Down* Failing ! First Downs Penalties. Total First Downs ... Yards Gained Rushing Yards Oalned Pawing Total Not Yards Gained Passes Attempted ..... Passes Completed .. Passe* Intercepted by Punts and Average Ya Fumbles Fumbles Lost..■■■■ Penalties WMffa i Bcaholm—Heft ran 41 Seaholm—Hett ran TO SCORE bp QUI EVERYTHING’S AIRBORNE - Ken Davies (24) of Bloomfield Hills leaves his feet in an attempt to keep Oak Park’s. Bob Singer Two long touchdown runs In the fourth quarter gave South-field a 20-7 non-league win over Thurston last night. . Livonia Bentley downed Farm- covered from toe 204 halftime zonQ hi punt formation on a fourth deficit. They held Milford at bay down, in tile third ^quarter, but Miller , «nap was wild and went turned toe deluge back on in the over Thomas’ head.. He raced final 12 minutes by scoring on back to pick it up, saw he had runs of 25 arid six yards. no chance to get the punt away, Dave Meagher topped off 20-so throw far downfield to where point explosion by returning an one of his ends had gone in anti-intercepted pass 65 yards far a cipation of a kick, touchdown. Jack Ward kicked ... .. Instead of knocking It down, te M Ll up 158 yards )nhll?vhfcfrries" was flutekly downed. TMe ran cumulated 104 in eight carries. m s4horfl/wlth fte i08er. on STOPPED SHORT the WL SO. Avondale crossed the midfield The. score was nlp-and-tuck all stripe only once. the way. The biggest lead was a A 31-yard pass from quarter-19-7 Kimball margin in toe sec-back Tom Fagan to Bill Stark ong period, in toe third quarter produced Hoi- WWW ly’s winning touchdown. The Thomas, senior QB and son of same combination worked for the former Detroit Lion lineman Russ extra point. Thomas, paced the team again The game was a defensive as he did in leading the Vikings struggle. Bendle pushed to< the to the Inter-Lakes League title Holly 25 in the last quarter but last fall, they lost the ball on an inter- Thomas scored two TDs (on nantlnn '7 .Inahnnlrai. Con, Thrall l-llflS nf S find ft Vflrfis) and DBSSed Clawson« Claws Lamphere, 37-0, in First Game Bloomfield Hills isn’t abouFWI, yield its share of toe Wayne-Oakland League football championship without a struggle. Dick Janz moved from halfback to quarterback and was the offensive star. He raced 23 yards for a TO, passed 19 yards to end Gary Appleby for another and ran two conversions. The Hills defense, led byPete Vidor, Jim Sprouts and Ken Davies, held Oak Park to 11 Clawson opened its season om/aro lu run inversion, grand scale last night by whip*-] John Beard ran 62 yards and ping Lamphere, 374. Jim Larsen 70 on dive plays In !r wi»L«.tsJux .FlL.'elilA. MM. . OIL' ilk. I.Ai JMRMmAam. AJk «l». ill* nlllf _ touchdown.1 yanFfleFd goalbyClawson’s Bro-| Jays a home field win. Harry Vidor picked up the other six-!dle Burton who also scored a Glass kicked two PAT. Farmington lost five Of six fumbles and could do very little against a strong Bentley defense. The Falcons had a total offense of only 60 yards, reckoned with by rolling past Oak Park, 334. Many felt Bloomfield would bejyaitfs rushing. The Redskins trifled the crowd by sprinting 66 Highlight of the game was a 26- the last quarter to give toe Blue in trouble because graduationjpassed 22 times, completing Ujyards off-tackle, for The defense produced the first ipoints on a 30-yard jaunt aided touchdown.'Bill Kerr scored twice touchdown in tfae opening period. | by key blocks from halfback Jay for tod winners. The Barons blocked a punt and Shimmlck and tackle Roger statistics Davies fell on the ball to the end Wotila. o f i Pint Downs Ruehln* ........ I I zone- STATISTICS First Down* PtMlng ........ 3 0 ----- 1 ...1| ...... — "in -OF Flnt Downs Penaltle* ........ O ' 1 1} f Total First Downs .......».... H i } 4 Yards Oalnad Rushing ........9)0 10 ,1 ,1 Yards Oalned Passing ....... 110 0 H It Total Net Yard* oalned...... 340 10 m ii Passes Attempted ............. 0 hr m Passes Completed ........... ,4 0 4 32 Posses Intercepted By ........ O 0 9 11 Punts and Average Yards .. 9-95 0-9B 0 0 Fumble* ..................... 3 7 0 4-38.5 Fumbles Lost ............. 0 15 4 3 Penalties and Yard* Penalised 90 99 31 SCORE BY QUARTERS no9-30 oiawsoh i........... 10 IS 7 7 W .... Lamphere ......... 0 8 0 0 0 0 T—33 SCORING PLAYS 0 p- o c—sickle 40-pass Irom Kedrow (Bradley 1 punt In c—Burton field goal 28 O—Burton l-plunge (Bradley klek). .. ..... c—Kerr l-plung* (kick tailed), f 'JM1* l—Loner* 45-run (ktok failed). C—Kerr 97-paee from Kedrow (Bradley Mmmlck ktok). , 4 c—MrbItio a-ruw (goullte T\m)e took toe top players from last W 74 yards, season’s squad that posted a 74-1 ~ record. The win jnay prove costly. Dryden, Waterford p2 Play Scoreless Contest ili 1 Bioomfle Waterford Our Lady of toe point second half. Lee piled up Lakes and Dryden settled noth- an awesome total of 242 yards. *ig »ne ng last night during the first Mack gained 192. Both halfbacks ggrj[j football meeting , between toe top six feet and weigh over 190 "ILj, schools. Pounds. Jo Pint Down* Rushing .... First Doyrns Passing ...... Pint Dbwni Penalties .... Total Pint Down*......... Yards QainM Rushing .. Yards Oalned Passing .... Total Net Yards Gained: . Paseea Attempted ........ Passes Completed ........ Passes Intercepted By .. Punts And AVcrage Yard* Penalties and Yards Penalised 9-45 8-40 SCORE BY QUARTERS Bentley ............... 0 7 t g It mrmlngton ............. o o o o o SCORING PLAYS B—Plurnley Bl-run (Plumley run). •—Farquhar 55-punt return (run failed). B—Parquhar 5-run (run failed). John Bauman scored two TDs for Kimball. W ^ 'W/Y Dean Cherre ran for two of toe ati-important Walled Lake extra points and Thomas plunged tor the other, STATISTICS U • First Downs Rushing ..... 10 7 First Down* Passing ...... 3 9 Total First Downs ..... Yards Gained Rushing . Yard* Gained Passing Total Net Tardg- Oalned Pastes Attempted ....... in Waterford Our Lady territory. The Cardinals reached toe nine in the second quarter only to be thrown back. They stormed across the goal tine in the last quarter, hut a penalty nullified the TO and toe Lakers held. Three lost fumbles and two OLL Interceptions kept Dryden sputtering. A 40-yard (including* 10 for the end zone) field goal try by Dry-den’s Dennis HiUlker 'on tot) last EUGENE, Ore. (AP)—Marilyn Smith was in first place as toe third round of the $10,000 Eugene Women’s Open Golf Tournament | got under Way today. | On Friday she shot a four-under- HhBBI | , The Lakers moved to tho Dry- Special to The Press den 15 toe first time (hey had I SARATOGA, Calif. r* Monroe the ball, but a 15-yard penalty Ifoqro of Pontiac assured himself .killed toe drive. They never M another payoff on toe Profes-1 crossed Dryden’s 40 again. Hi Bowlers’ AMoqlation tour Wes Borys, Pete Ottman, Jer-H mffia ahtth last night jn toe ry Ogg and Dave Sonnenberg 14-game qualifying portion of the sparked the OLL defense. Fred, forotbero. York, a 280-pound middle guard, Hbon had a 1,277 third block and end Dick Powers were toe iai moved him into fourth place, defensive standouts for Dryden. Shi supped back 1n toe final Dwight Lee and John Mack had gE-gamehtocfc with a 1400 total a field day for New Haven, I iw 1441 pins overall. Lee scored twice on runs of 55 IBs wow wtil compete in 10 head- yards and once on a 92-yard to-iiBa iymfc today with a teroeption. Mack ran 40, 15 and liiiai» b mv up in toe final 35 yards tor TDs. The Rockets I par 76 on toe Eugene Country | Club course. That with her 74 of Thursday gave her a score of 144 at toe half-why point of the 72-hole tournament. Mickey Wright, the top Woman professional money Winner In toe nation and toe first round leader, dropped to a tie for second. Miss Wright shot a 74 second round for a two-day score of 145. Kathy Whitworth toured the course to 72 Friday and tied with Miss Wright. Shirley Englehorn, Caldwell, Idaho, toe defending champion, waf 1 well down the list with 152. Indianapolis Champ ATLANTA (AP) — Indianapolis is toe new owner of toe Governor’s Cup as the International League closed out Its 1963. baseball season. ! The Indians beat defending dipmpion Atlanta 9-4 Friday night, whining the best-of-seven Series v' $ jw Pentlee Pne* Photo fumbled toe snap from center, giving the Chiefs time to con-vergtron too kicker. ( WOLVES BLOCKED — Dave Edwards (76) and Dave Houts of Pontiac Central break through to block a piaceklck by Bay City Central’s Irv Schilling...The holder Is Kent Antle who I