Thf WeotfMr THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition llStb VEAR ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHiaAN. SATURDAY, JUNE 18, PAGES , Press Big Fish Derby On TOKYO — The new U.S.-Japan security treaty weathered the biggest of the leftist demonstraticHis against it and won Japan’s ratification Sunday. Time had run out for the Communists and their Socialist allies in the fight against the pact. The ratification became effective automatically an instant after .midnight (lOT a.m. Pontiac time) Prime Minister Nobu-i suke KishiH conservative it it it government expressed gratification. A government q>okesman. Chief Cabinet Secretary Etauaaburo Shilna. said this final confirmation will bring dose U.S.-Japan FOMT ENTRY — It wasn't the "early worm” that lured the first reported Mack bass of the 1B60 season in the Pmitiac area, but an attractive "flatfidi." The bronzeback. a 16H4nch specimen, was the first entry in The Press' "Big Pish Derby." The lucky angler was 17-year.old Richard Copes, 3602 Baker St., Oray-.ton Plains Iwilh fia^, He^^^ hll prize ead> this morai^ on Lake Oakland. (See story on page 3.) Press Sports Editor Wins News Contest By CHARLES C. CAIN AP SUte Editor The aches and pains Sports Editor Bruno Kearns of The Pontiac Press suffered while taking judo lessons paid off today when he was named sweepstmces winner in the annual newswriting contest of the Michigan AP Editorial Asm. Kearns’ series on lesser known sports was adjudged the best of 120 entries submitted by staffers on 25 Michigan AP neWs^per members. The rasults were announced at the annual AP editors meeting at Hidden Valley, Gaylord, today. Art Oallagho', %fttor of the*~ Ann Arbor News, headed the newswriting contest committee. Waldron S. Stewart of the Adrian Triegnun won Uw iwecpatakea award tot papera in the amaller circulation Held. Hte atory on akin (jiving alao took aecond place In the liagle leetiirei daaaificatlon. The »y«ar-(rid Kearaa, editor Qf the Ocveland Plain er. He aaid of KeanM’ aeriet, "It waa bright without being trite, readable and held your intereat duoughout the entire aeries." U. or M. JUDGES The preliminary Judging of the 130 entries was done by fearipait series fhr The Fantiae One atory was on judo, another on water skiing, a third on akin diving and another on polo. KMma had no fint hand experiem^e in any of the sports and m>oit a day or two taking lessons from experts in each field. Then he went through his paces with n photographer recording the events. Kearns, who won third place in the sports daasification in the 1951 AP newswriting contest, said the judo lessons were the most pataifu' part of the experience. Me won $1W as (op prise In the contest resnlls listed today. He was ihe first MeMgaa Rterts By HARVBT ZUCKERBERG A spectacular performance in livid red enjoyed a terrific box office last night at Pontiac Northern High School as 226 graduates played to a standing-room-cmly crowd. They were repaid kindly in turn by a humorous Judging of the sweepatakes en- a? UgRMlNG 119 BABD WAT Tokyo Leftists Fuss, hut Fail relations and contribute to peace and prosperity. Skllne declared (he treaty h "enpperted by (he overwhelming majority of the Japoneee The widely pnbHelsed He called the revised treaty an apeement "in cwtlormity with Ja-pin's policy of cooperating with the free nations." Foes of Kishi'a government, 300, 000 strong, had blocked traffic, milled and snake-danced through downtown Tokyo Friday night in vain'effort to wreck this nation’! military alliance with the United States, extended now to 1970. As the deadline passed, thousands of dennonstrators continued mill around the Parliament Buikiing; some 10,000 vowed to remain there all night As the masses swirled around the building and Kiahi's official realdeiice nearby, the Prime Minister rep(»1edly watched a baae-ball'game on television. The Tokyo Giants lost, 3-1, to (h« Nw While tbe milling masses sugpt Building, life in other parti kyq went on as usual. Tbe baseball game drew a capacity dOJIOO Kishi smiled and posed for photographers at a dramatic midnigbt news conference conducted by Shjina. The Prime Minister de-cli^ to make He wae aurrounded by some of Ms Cabinet and officials of his (C^inued on P«ge 2, Col. 2) ruling I iberal Dcnaocrat party. Humorous Speaker Pays Dividend Northern GradiPack'Em In The levity with which Dana Rose trfeated a serious subject evoked peals of laughter from the audience. Mercifully devoid of awesome prophecy, the address. "Day After Tomorrow," by the asgistant vice president of Michigw Bell Telephone Co., was and enlightening. Hervtag a pesspectaa Japan Ratifies TrecityWithU.S, Will Take Effect After Senate OK and Swap of Documents TOKYO Uh—Japan’s ratificatioB br iQ hew railltaiy |»ct with the United States became final today. Only ratification by the U.S. Senate and an exchange of ratifica-1 documents, perhaps June 27 28 in Tokyo, must be acemn-plished before the treaty takes ef- fect. •at Jspaa’s approval beeame M days after the Lower Hsuse of Parilsimat ratified at a tamal-tuouB May M seasloa. This means that U.S. military saes will remain in Japan at least another decade, assuming the government can end the chaos the month of rioting has created. CONOBESS CONCERNED Washington reports say the U.Sl Senate may ratify the treaty Mon- H eaaeem hi Congress over Mem Etoeahowerio trip to Japaa U, S. ofitciak say thqr ei^ect new general electkms in Japan to come as soon as possible after final ratification (4 the treaty. Such elections will clear the air after month-long leftist demonstrations and riots against the treaty. the Diet aad eall (or aew elec-tioos saec he achieves his major They predict another conservative vic^ in the Japanese general election. A caretaker government, perhaps headed by elder statesmaa SMgnru YosMda, probably would lead tbe country while it prepares (or new electioM. Joins Michigan C. of C. Vows Defense ofQuemoyto ChianginTalk TAIPEI lifl —To the thunderous roar of ap* proval from a vast banner waving throng. President Eisenhower today denounced Communist China as a brutal tyranny bent oa enslaving hundreds of millions of mainland Chinese. ^ Speaking in a plaia facing the Chinese Nationalist Defense Ministry, Eisenhower pledged before at least a half mimon free Chinese that' the-United iStates w stand firm behind them in resisting any Red Chinese aggression. And, In na hour and 40-mimric private talk with President Chians Kai^itok. Qaenhower reaffinaed U.S. determinatian to defnd Que-moy against any Red attack whkii ■eemed a prelude to Mvaskai «< PONTIACS naST — Howard 0. Powers (left) is tbe first Pontiac businessman to join the new Michigan Chamber of Commerce after a team of state dfficials, started a membership drive here yesterday. With Powers la Robert P. Briggs, state prudent, wbo is conducting a statewide membersMp drive. Area Businessmen Back New C. of C. *Seir Phtion on Michigan rigMag up (or the new Michigan Chamber ,of Commerce yesterday alter they were exhorted lesshien all over tbe state to sell Michigan within the stole, Mtiamdiy and to the world.” The message cam^ from a team of four officials of the new state organizatkm, who were completing the first week of a whirlwind membership drive across the state. ; tfd'Ed 8Ml|Nl«i, A Goodby Rain! Fair and Warmer to Cheer Weekend The state team outlined aims and ambitions of the new body, not tbe least of wfaiefa is 3,600 members by winter. The Michigan Chamber of Cbm-lerce came into being earlier this year aa a direct result of Micbi-erxxwmic and busineas problems, said Briggs. Area Ghamber of Conuneroa aad groups la right other North Oak-toad Cooaty rommiwitles. "As far as-the rest of the country is concerned, the national image of Michigan looks like hell and we’ve got to do something about it," said a blunt Robert P. Briggs, executive vice president of Consumers Power Co., Jackson. OTHERS IN GROUP president of the State c, brought with him Harry Han, executive vice president; Rex B. Potter, manaHer of organ!- Temperatures were expected to reach the 70s today and hit a high of 78 Sunday. The low tonight will be near 57. Skiea will continue partly sunny tonight and tomorrow. Monday will be generally fair and rather warmer, the weatherman says. Morning winds southwest at (our miles an hour will become light variable from the south at 5 - 10 mUes late today and toMght. Rainfall registered .02 inches from 10:15 a.m. yesterday until the same time this morning. Forty-eight was the lowest recording in downtowd Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The 1 p m waa 68. are an the edge e( the age e( With fills age is the educational KRtoOhlUUty to handle fi, he said. ’The normal equipment ot cd-nded yaopto will be eesentlal,’* said Rose. "Your education it your 'Even routine jobs wlB require the ability to think, a trained imag-(Condnied on tW 3. In Todays Press Out Grand Old Newsman 83 and Still on the Ball Hebert Ervta. 3W OoramoBwenlfii St, bad a Mtrqwtte niiie eyed jat fiM TWo hundred and twenty-six seniors reosived tbrir (Uptomaa at commencemenr in the The Chamber, he said, is nonpartisan, supporting free eoterpriai and tbe profit motive. dMM. BeMdalM to n iiWiHid far Oeueral Eteetrlo Oe., OetroH. “We will prevMe the leaderehlp if yen hefy ae wUh mmuty aad The officiala said they were onn-cemed by the so-called Upjohh Re- create 100.000 new jobs a year for at least the next 10 yean if it is going to keep pace with population ’To do this, we must encourage the industry we have to expand and attract outside industry to settle here. "It costs 113,000 in machinery, (Continued on Page 3. CM. I) Hail to Joe! Banner-Waving Throng Roars Approval of Harangue at Commies On the eve at hli arrival m It waa a typical Ofiaeae a»-•embly, gay and enborant, like out out to celebrate a aaby aew ■ kiNewOeM With its ocean of red b______ rseembled a OommuMat May Day rally. Tens o< thonoanda M acboot children, in uniform, marched to Eisenhower was due to speak. WAVE BANNERS They fluttered banners such na: (Continued on Page 3, OoL 4)** Senate Feuds on Tax Repeals Bottlet Post Midnight Over Telophone, Tra^, Telegram Charges local triephone service, trie-grams aad travel faces a hot debate and a possibie filtouster today to tbe Senate. The Grand Old Man of the Michigan newspaper aemte— our own Joe Haas—la obeervlng his 8|rd birthday today. We celebrated it for him yesterday here at TTe Press. Corenna Aldrich, wbo aerrsd at the next desk to Joe ("and don’t eall me ‘Joseph’ ”), has left to keep a tryst with tbs bird that has tbe long legs, bat she interrupted the task of knltttpg tiny garmwtts kmc enough to bake Joe a luscious aU-choeo-late and AU-Am'erlean birthday cake. Janet Swenson, Mrs. Orammarlan’s successor, and JuUe ntxgerald became hoet- I after Joe hacf cut tbe first (ample) piece for himself and they distributed tbe delicacy about the department ★ ★ ★ Joe leaves July 6, for the Democratic Convention in Loe Angeles. At O, he’s the dean of Michigan newspapermen and In the country date back uay further. One of Oakland County’s most remarkable and most lovable IndlviduaU is strlcUy “on tbe ball” these days. He rrigas supreme as an authority en poUtkx. OaMand County (above rise), farming, the weather, good looking women, home coonomlca. tuberculoela. Roy BeouU. The Pontiac Frets and 14 otbsr Important elements. AU Hall! The Senate Finance (VswmNtor had hooked them onto a bill requested fay Prerident Elaeriwwet ' ng a yew’s extanstoa of foor 1 dolUn worth ef vartoue other toxce and anofiier lecreaag M the limH on file nsttonal debt firaATBjAPncATr He's n today and still a ball of fire! A row over the measure erupted Friday night. It l(ept the Setufig in session past mkfaiight and drew warnings it could upset plans lor adjournment of (jongreas beforg ths July 11 start of the Democratic National Conventton in Loe An- of a Senate vole en ratilleritoH of the security treaty wifii JapnA. Sen. JoMph S. Out (D-Pk)^- ScMto leedsrs’ ptow to brii«'' tea dtoputod tax Mi bailee «s Sen. Lynda* a Jeknesn (D-ltaP’ Bred aome ennetto bimts at eS ato be eafd believe they taew’ tisjqb bettor Wma ht dssa- Hr *----■ *"e lesM, «d bw a * the Seaale batiM W i ' i TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 18. IMP Insurance Deal Tarnishes Hero-Death of Airplane Pilot LOS ANGELES (AP) — Reri- dtnti watched in horror as a piM opened his eacape The . hat^ hut Adn’t Jump. He itsyed with the fiercely burniag craft intil it a mns(^ was called a hero's death. months on the bizarre ease. "Apparently he Just didn’t get a chance to FLAMINO COFFDr The plane was a DeHavilland That was three years Police Friday tarnished James QUw dafans to |loiy. Gibha, they said, took the plane up to crash it on share in W)“ ateiy n't 1 Iron the flight. Detectives booked Richard E Loomis, 49. on suspicion of muf dcr. Police said he collected 947, 000 in tnsuranoe after the etsuh-and refused to share it with Gtbfaa* know he was Did Gibha, going to dier "He certahdy didn't go up there commit suicide.'’ said Sgt. of plywood during World Wv U-tW were called ''flaming ad-fins" because the plywood was so ijuick to burn. When Gibto look tdf from Lockheed Air Terminal, Burhaak, July L 19S7, witnesses notioed that oaft's landing gey didn’t retract property. But police say they are sn .lis: "Laomis sabotnged plane’s hydraulic system, which oontrois the landing mechanism, in such a way as to pacclude a sale Un^." StONED PACT Detectivea have an agreei signed by Loomis and Gibbs two days before the crash, in which Loomis agreed to pay Gibbs 10 per cent of insurance proceeds if Loomis insured the plane—pur- 990,000. Lloyds of London paid him 947,000 30 days alter the crash. from the landing gear might have caused the ei%ine to oveiheat. arreck by the dead pilot's father, Kerber of flan Diego, Calif., for 910.000 as Gibbs’ share in the Whether it was plotted this way Gibbs. He also 1st Entries Received in 'Big Fish Derby By B. GUY MOATS Preen OnUosrs MHst Early reports of succesMul blaekl riy reports of mccesMUl Uaek xv first eligible pike for s fidtermen in the Pontiac uroaU official entry i/awaited. were few this morning, arith a TPa- igji^od fliis morning on Pine terford Township High School stu. to check in in The Pontiac Press’ annual "Big Fisb Derby." IT. I r catches, taken betore 0:90 . tod^ as the MeMgaa baas Capes it; r eSt., Oopesi who says he’s an ardent angler during the summer, hooked a scrappy largemouth in a weed-bed along Lake Oakland’s shore. He used a flatfish for his lure, and the bass slammed ft on the surface. McCloud said the oth«r bass the pair hooked were tossed back. tW figured they were not big enough to keep. The mintmum is 10 inches. ly, in the county's fine baas, pan-fish and pike waters would be pretty good ever the weekend. A heavy concentrafion of metropolitan area ras expected for the area, t good fish should be reported. Oipes’ entry probably will net Richard’s fish roeayured 16H inches, waig^ 2 pounds, S ounces and Is the first oflidal entry for The Press’ "Big Pish Derby.’’ The derby also includes bluegill and northern pike. Biggest fish in each division at end of fits derity on Sept. 5, wU win a*9S0 U.8. Savings Bond for the fiahmman (or fisherwoman) who lands it Weight only is oon-sidend. Only fuU fime OakI ‘ County residents are eligible. Outstate reports indicate are still on spawning beds (a condition that holds here also), and high waters oQer less than good prospects. However, conservation men say smallmouth bass are hit-tii« fairiy weU along the Lake St. Clair shore, near Strawberry, Nine-liflc and Conger Bay areas. Canadian Chill Pushes Storms Through Plains A line of thunderstorms, pushed by chill Canadian air. moved through the plain states today, but the violent storm activity that has raked the East with bail and rain hrlty was reported from western northeastward into the upper Mis-slppl Valley, but precipitation was li^t. A tornado caused minor property damage but no injuries egrly today near Grand Island, Neb., the Weather Bureau report- Behind the storm line tures dropped sharply. Readings in the 40s were recorded in such widely scattered areas as the San Francisco Bay region, northern MonUna and the Great Lakes. Mullan, Idaho, reported 40 degrees, Pdlston and Sault Ste. Marie. Mkh., each registered 42 de- bt the 90s and 70s. The Weather off Art’s Boat Liv^ by Joe Allwarden, 33014 Fsimersville Rd., FarmbigtaB. It was 34 biches long, wtoghed in at 7% pounds. . The livery reported maqy boats ' taken out, .and a bass take of ~ ' 39 fish dining the morning, of-"pclae stoe.” ---------- While conditions we(e not en-tbMy perfect for the opening, it ’The Los Angeles City Council honored Gibbs for riding the plane down instead of bailing out and leavfaig tt to crash tat the popidous San Fernando Valley. TIk Chaiiibrt' of Commerce fat Resada conducted a fund-raipbig campaign for Gibbs’ son, David, m 11. * * * , Hie chamber said Loomis offered to contribute 95,000. But, he never gave a SJ""* Press Sports Eiiilofi^ Wins News Contest (Confinued From Page One) igan journalism faculty. They are Karl F. Zeisler, Dean C. Baker ltd John V. Field. (Commenting on the entries, the three wrote; "The general gaaiity of srrit- tUs oantoat far eight to fg-years, is Imprevtag aetioeably. "It bi disappointing to find at few entries in the sports category and so few that are outstandii^. U is also disappobiting to find the quality of writing bi spot stories considerably under the level of the feature stories. Outstandtog to us, in writing as well as selection of subject mat- Entrants in the contest vied for 9545 in prize money, with the test divided taito four classes. The winner bi each ctass got 990. tec-ond place 130 and third place 915, with a 9100 sweepstakes award for the larger paper, classification and a 925 sweepstakes for the smaller Winners included: SPOT NEWS 1. Robert Hovtog. Jackson Citi-Kn Patriot, for story on lost run of the Bertbier passenger train on the Valley Line; 2. Stoddard White, Detroit News, crowds cheer first ships tai the seaway; 3. Jean Sharley, Detndt Free Press, coverage of Queen Elizabeth's to the United SUtes and Canada. SOfGLE FEATVBE 1. Lorry Bush, Ann Arbor News, oatranonters plan radio contact with life; 3. Waldron Stewart, Adrian Telegram; 3. Jerry Kabci, Detroit Timas, for feature on collapse of a root on i lyqjing hockey players. FBATURC 8BQVENCE 1. Ralph Vfatts Jr., Royal Oak Tribune, community at the c roads — redevelopment in Royal Oak Township; 2. Don Durst, Jack-son atizen Patriot, what is the truth about Coldwater State Home and Trabiiag School?; 3. Pat Yo: roch. Detrob News, feature on Four days before the crash sued after the Loomis denied making any Jaycees to Join Auto Caravan hr Convention Trek Pontiac area Jaycees will Jifoi aWg wi^ to the U.S. Junior Chamber of Connnem Convention bi 8t. Louis, Mo.f next week. Pontiac Northern Grads Pack 'Em In (Continued From Page One) biation, good judgment, some skill tai logical methods, some mathe-matical understanding and so ability well above the elementary level to read and write. OBCniGNS TO PREVAIL the disappearance of the routine jobs — mass production by masses of people — decisions will a part of every job." five acMevement as anatkei 'Oeative achievement has ways come from the nonconformists," he said. "The man who moves forward is not homo- imparting The speaker ended, this message: 'Actually, nof labor but leisure will be the great problem to the decades ahead. •^hUy eer time wUl to required' to tohke a UvIm — fIve-sIxtiM of b wUI be free sad letamre for the A number of crying infants were pKitees (nun the University of Mich- scattered throughout the bleadters to the gymnasium—nwre than is usually I ■ exercise. LITTLE EFFECT But they had little effect on Rooe’s command of attention throughout the speech. He took his U to a noisy and warm applause. Then the scarlet Hne of grad- the stage to reeelve the diplomas. As the crowd bubbled out of the building, a parking lot attendant said, "Jeez, they (graduates) sure brought enough relatives with ’em. ter, was the feature sequence ser-TW« to bigger than the Harlem Globetrotters." The Day In Birmingham Recreation Board Tells of Summer Activities _____ open June 3T far six weeks at Adams School, Eton Park. Midvale School. Pembroke Par*. Fierce and Quartan Playground hours are from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Commerce for thefr trip to the Jaycee national convention to St. Louis next week. Froth left FT. LOUn BOUND — Three Jaycees and Robert C Miller, sales manager it Jerome Motor Sales Co., pose to front of the 1990 auto- are Frank Rkhardson, Miller, Oyle R. Haskfll Lj^tonilM^&Aooi. mobOet which the agency has loaned the Pontiac and Brent Jett. r ---- and Waterford TPwnihip Juoior Chambers of Baton twirUng for girls 9 to 15 yean old wfll be offered at ~ and Eton Park. There to no charge. Pay Hikes, More Medical Study QK*d WASHINGTON (AP) - fit Republican Leader Everett Dtileaen fought a bitter bafUe Friday night against bills to lutoe The Pontiac group will be led by E. W. Watchpocket, president, Vaterford corpa by Frank Richardson, past presi^t. A-tsJk by»Vioe Ti ssklsnf Tuesday morning win highlight the convention, echcduled Monday through Saturday. Others from Pontiac who plan to attend Include Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jorgenson, Mr. and Mn. Irving Mokovitz, Mr. and Mrs. Oyle Haskill and Brent Jett. 749- miliion- dollar election-year pay raiae for more than IH motion govenunent workers. Hh amendments were defeated and '» bill posaed 63-17. Dirksen said be would ask Pres- bills. Both were passed by mar-gina more than enough to override the veto. for China Tyranny (Continued From Page One) "Welctone to Ike, world antiaggression leader,” and "Long live Slno-U.S. friendship." Mrectty to treat W the huge rostrum from which Eiseahswer spoke, MS Bpeclatty selected Qae- towered bugc three American and rhineae flags, fixed the sido of the red brick de- Seversl women fainted rush as white belroeted troops and Boy Scout;, with staves sou|jit to keep the surging, pushing crowd from moviiw too clooe to the stand. ‘ crowd I cheer tor the solid minutes it yelM, Kenn«dy, Nixon in N. D. FARGO, N. D. IB - Vice President Richard M. Nixon and Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) jump liito the hot North Dakota Senate fi^t Sunda* in a buoy weekend |o( Dakota poUticking. Dirksen Clobbered in Try to Block Spending Rises bt held from 9 to 9 pre. at Eton Park on Tueadays and Thursdays. He lott to both caaea. The increased medical research funds, be said, would blast a clear hole’’ In President Eisenhower’s budget. The Senate passed it 6L9. Dtrkaeir 394 milUona nwre than the Prest-deut had asked, and 309 miUkx Ml* than the Uouk approved. Dirksen tried to vain to send it bock to conunittee for a 3S0-mU-Uoo-dollar trimming of the search fundi for the National institutes of Health. WANTS SOME RESULTS tone down the INTt THIRD VETO Dirksen hinted .a third measure passed Friday idght by the Senate also might be vetoed. The bill authorizes future construction of water projects invoivtog a (edtral cost of stoftoly mere than m fail-Uon doUars. It authorizes 134 projects to 41 states. The bill goes back to the House, which approved It in a e toduded to a big K485,7n,-^11 for support of the Depart- and related agencies. It topped President Elaenhow-er’s requesto by 495^ million dollars. The medical research portion was 994 milliaas. whidi was from 9 a.m. Tnsaday at tbs Mtot Rifle Raags at Ckwafanok. The daaaea are open to boya and gizia ovgr nine ymn years, he tald, SauL "I want ( The pay increase bill heada Eisenhower’s desk would increase pay of 535,000 poatal wukert an averagp of 9.4 per cent and of a million other government work-eri by 7>k per cent. PanAm Pilots Are Sud(ienly Sick NEW YORK (AP)-A number of sick calls from jet pilots hit Pan American World Airways today in so apparent extension d rupted Eastern Air Lto operations s week ago. The Eastern strike began over le issue of whether federal to-fpectma may sit in jet cockpita. Pan American said 31 of its A spokesman for Pan Ameri- routes, said at 9 i ment of Health. EduoMon and ^to had been canceled but that Welfare, the Labor Department, ^ delayed about two houra today at Idlewtid while substitute From 13 to 15 bushels d apgtos re needed to make a barrel d At a meeftog June 9 thA Flan Commtoakm ogread to atudv the Area Businessinen Back Stale C. of C. (Oootinued From Pago Out) aquipnant, etc., to czeata a job gifla M fa U from t a.m. to mtm. A It fea for tt tooami nowadaya. (Xir Job to to attract d eapt- ‘ Rlflery daaaea wUI ^e hdd Gaft etosses start llaaday at gprtogdali GoH Osuna team 9 9 ioU yooia d ago. Tha foa tsr agm MMoan to 94, Every other Friday from 9:30 to 11:30 p.ffl. aquare dandng is A 950.000 buildiiv fund ' Frarddto C the proposed House. began today with ground breaking ceremonies. The balNto« wIM be eoa-strnrted Jod seutk d the Frank- Some construction will begin right away with hopes that the building will be complated by the end of the year,” said president d the Franklin (immunity Assn. Gordon McAlpine. Recreational and social groups to be aprved by the eonununlty -------- * at the 9 a.m. ground• breoktog Beverly Hills planners pected to make zoning re______ datkau at 8 p.m. Thuraday on the propoaeiiOdory luxury apartment buMhgs to be built to the vMoge. Iho apaXmanto, to be buM an g Jdfo at u-MBa read aad nod, waoid ba ea- Briggs Much Improvtd BENNINGTON. VI. IfMThe condition d WaHer P. (Spflie) Briggs, former presldeiit d the Detroit Tigers baseball team, was reported improved today. Briggs, 48, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage two weeks ago. He has been ahoi^ steady Improvement. Uncover Cuban Plot y ssmad by Ihaaa Bring . Sampeon, owner d a amall tirn!^ emnpony, wat traveling with the team, but appeared oh his own. He explained why be oupported the “The boom to population Jndicat--ed by the recent census meansi, we muat eltber create more jobs* or face more and more welfare* ' » witb Incnaacs in busi^ neas taxes to pay Nr it. « FACXD WITH CEAIXEIfGE 2 *80)011 bustoeasmen Ilka myaelf$ are faced with "We eaa sMher work to I •t tot’ll hp driven j eat d healaasajy ftto Bbm the| tout aatofua eeUseef^sfeuei." | The meeting tops sponeored bjC the Pontiac Area CSiomber d Dxn-r ------mskLA Ao ■ J ■ mdmaamit* tto with the state leaders from Keege Hudiar, WallcC Lake, Oaikston, Holly, Milford^ Lake Orion, Oxford ^ Roobeator? The otato team tocllt a wetkend? Saginai^ Warren and Monroe next e team had appomud tor FUiU earlier yeaterday. ; U.S, Set to Expose Castro Test YOUR Driving Skill 1. Brono Kearns, Pomtec Fi'eas. 3. BUI Frank, Battle (freok En-li IB ins-quirer News, aeries on MIAA foot-a «T haU reerultiiig; 3. Harvey Thytor, g Sj Detroit Times, Bruiser tells all -rtjwresfler lectures sf University d Detroit. BM PATER PWEEPRTAREg WINNER Bruno Kearns. Pontiac Pram. 8MXIL PAPER ^ gWERPSTAREg wmns Wajdrpn Stewart, Adrian Trie- Skillful Driving How to master 30 of the most crucial situations of modem traffic By NAXWILL N. HALSEY FROM START TO FINISH A green signal never gtvee the toretortot a right to creealng bo actually atartod aai tha groan. For a nretortot, eneaaed in a ton and! • knit of afaal, to inatot on hto right of wuy over a US-poond woman on foot to Mho n hig bnBy threntonlng to riap i ■Urta hto ersasfng on tho grotn ho hu • right to finish hfi 'enHtat m tti NHwarnMnli lH threvfii-walk In front of ypn. CIlR and Savt.... n ..... WASHINGTON (AP)-U. ficials today held what they believe to be abooittte prod that the Castro regime has framed a plot to embarrau the United States. Tb^ plan to wrap the ease d diester Lacayb into a bundle d evidence to be presented to (he Inter-American Peace Committee in a month or so. TV evidence It aimed af ahowing that tV revolu-tiotuuy Havana government ia up- But tv photos aren’t what Castro nukes them out to V. In one ideture allegedly d La-cayo with Roy R. Rnbottom. assistant secretary d state (or Inter-American affairs, the nun with Lacayo does net resemble Rubottom. OtVr pfcturei are ob-vkwaly mislabeled too. setting peace in tV Caribbean. notice to Lacayo from C. Stewart, State Department officer to charge of Central American aflairi, d a forthcoming appdnt- Stote th Secretary of Christian A. Herter. Western Union, however, says no such telegram was sent or paid for by any State Department d-ficial. TV State Department lays Lacayo never uw Herter or Ru- TV telegram was dated last TV telegram purports to V Jan. 9. If U.8. tovertigators (M that such a telegram was actually aent Jan. 9, th^ figure this riU show that Castro agents had bean planning tV plot for months. CORRECTION Friday's odvartiscirignt of tha Big 4 Hordwora should hova raod; MOUB ruu neuw $29w Tfb'i IfiiiwRit EUly'i laiiwiiB Mclikbti ft CUlii Uwto Ettifi Ifliiwiif lit. 1 The PonUftc Preet Lacayo b a Nicaraguan _________ oppooed to atrongman Lub Somo-za. He has bean arreated by tbe Cbbana. Prime Minister Fidel Oiatro and Prerident On Dorticos have accused tho 1L8. govemrasM d conspfrtag with Lacayo to mount a move from Qiba to unoeat tV Nicaraguan In mfdttog fab albgatioii. Oastro telegram on a Cuban TV riww ■ 110. ^ rixjw Lacayo maettog partmsnt officbh to WaaQh«tMi 2^ Pet. and $1 Jiriy] WASHINGTON (AP) - Domes-He Wtoc Ides will go up per eant. pins a 91 ooftharge for eoch one , way ticket, storting July L ^ TV 0vfl Aeronautics Board, to .renttog tv tocrcaaes Friday, said they riMuN give olritoea about 94 million doOan a year to TV 13 tnmk airltoea bad arind or tocreoaea d 919 to 13 per cent. ptf and preaant awehaigea for Jet fUghti • CAB oaNL FOR-RE-SALE This Beautiful Home in Westridge of Waterford —An Address of Distinction— 3m CAMBROOK LANE Comf^tgly radccorated inside ond (^ ... gas htot . . Andiraon windows I. BMutifulty Qiurch and . i bedrooms . . . poneled fomily room ... 2 cor goroge. B^uttfully londscoped. Directly odjocent td "Our Lody of the Lokes" Church and School. Situoted in the midtfle of 2 choice lots. Only $24,900.00. Opest for YoUr Inspection Appointment — Anytime , PhooG OR 3-9411 F. Wf l^ELTMAN, blhujB)'^ * * THE PONTIAC PRESS> SATURDAY. JUNE 18, 1060 THREE Red Entertoiners Finemcingjap Demonstrations? TCNCYO (AP) — ^pnrw dais M9Kt Tokyda teft-wli« demomtnulong may be partly fi-nanead by flavlet daaocn and mu* •iciaiis oondaally vUttaig Tokyo. tkiM cblet oi the ruling Uberai- today tban ia atrang aupkskMi that tba local yen earnli«i oC So> line or the IBI. U didn't go ever ao bit with the U.S. eoB tag tmiefrTTed i It la difficult to check, he added, becauae a number of government tax offidala themaelvet are left-iaU. But, Shinoda said, there ia no doubt the labor and atudent Soviet cultural troupea in Japan collect admiaaione in yen whidi are not convertible and ao left beUnd. ‘"nie amount ol theae oonaiderw able aui&B and the uae o( them la anybody’a fueea.” Shtaoda aald. add^ /|d>ay^ji^ thoagbt to be If s Jed Not Funny to Mention Air Bomb LOS ANGELES (AP) - Stanley Oartaon'a UMe jeet waan’t huny Carlaon told her to deaiat becauae 'there’a a bomb in it.” Carlaon ahortly afterward became the Zlat peraon arreatad aince laat April on a charge of making a lalae bomb report. He aa arrailyied Friday. Deapite his proteatation that "it aa a casual statement made in Jest,” Carlaon, 2T, a Greenfield. Calf,, sataimao. was bound over to fedeital court for trial. The maximum penalty is a year in JaU and a 11,000 Itae. Court 6ivK Gamble SISOWeekly Stipend NEW Y(MUC >. not 10 jnn,".u]r. « Klnttot 8 in my estimation. Oh, no. It couldn’t. There will always it ir ir ir ^ people who, against all odds, will 51 The next move Is up to Japan. manage somehow toVpoor. s 5 We have enough to eat, enqugh ' 11 clothes and enough homes. And we Dlnlnf moms are fast becoming : I have enough land to raise aU the ob^ete, as few pebple these days 8 l^fodd we need. It’S Mey wbo’re fight-—ean^ afferA to have more eating 11 ing for a pJeoe in the sun and the guesU than can bs seated in the 8 liiecessmes of life. Utchaa or'hreakfast nook. . Voice of the People - ^ RefsUng Place of Our Boys Seen by Former Resident Some yeuv ago my funUy and I Uvsd is tba Oty e( Pontiac. 0[4«in MUler. my Mil. la now atatlonid with hla family at Ram-■tain Air Baaa la Garmany. I joinad thorn lait OaoMah«r. ★ A A Oa StaaafW Day wa want la leiy la BaM-AvoU, Fiaaeo. It la *a taiy hi Ewape. I eaa Mhh«y aay It la vary I A A A The aervlce waa very touching and hnpreiolve. 1 wtoh that avery parent and wife who haa a loved one buried Uiare could have taken part. It waa a ai^t I wfllloiw remember,1 can aaaure you. I hope the parenu and wivea whoae loved one la buried there might take a little comfort in the fact that aomeona from Pontine actually uw his grave. Ramstein, GemJny •We Wo^Make It «•“*'»»• HoUina A Grudae’ m » 1 see they are aOU trying to crucify Mr. Straley. Ibe Bibla ■ays, “Do Unto ethart u you ■tayad at «a hsM and may kapl 1 want power or what? No one win ever get into Heaven bolding gnidgea. Why not mahe paaceT Nona ol ue have kmg for this world. If tfaay would aak lor a ra^ua on TV of what a baataik plaet waa, I bdUava they woold think twiet boCoiw aBowhig It to coo- *Has Anyone Had Good Results?* Mro. ■any B. WkUa S12 East Boulevard North I would like to know if there is anybody who has bad raaults from their Relax Aciaor machine. It has done nothing tor me. The ad read no dieting, but now the counselor telle me I must diet for the machine to do any good. M.H. •Why Does Teacher Ne^ Others Help?* Citben.’’ doesn’t it seem alraage that thia teacher to the Board ti Education to keep her Job? Faith strengthened our great Arctic explorer, Eliaha Kent Kane, whose expedition discovered the channel which became the American route to the North Pole. Hie ship became ice bound for 21 months and his men suffered scurvy, frozen limbs and amputations. Yet, “A trust. .. buoyed me up at the worst -sinians. They have him in tteir ■ymbol of hla love. The heart, la tha hUom ef maay laagaagea, la' the emUem of the morel and On this day in history: la UM, Iho U. 8. On«i«w deelani war «i Great Britain. in^ve mm in W.T ^ j ,,^5 ^ etora We say loo ml(|kh so loved nma"; the eommemom- -------- It weald .tiaq la of- lhe toye {M the God- £ era, and, if yo« an hichy enough to ha waited on, do not have tha common decency to thank you. laadreL. Level S6 WllUamaSt. The Ceniitry Psnoii be weB to note that there h B bhurred la the Eato- Creeadea there anise a ndHtary group called The Order of SL Unarm, which took tUa amne to take dare of Iqpers. (Bi “luU of I NUN’S VISION In 1910, Prime Minister Church- Thia special devotion began wUh ill, addressing the House of the visions of Blessed Margaret Commona, warned members that fifary Alocoque, a seventeenth cen- the Battle of Britain wu about tan French nun. (“Bleaaed” in the to start ... and arid they, should wm used to describe those who beer themselves so that men would have been "beatified” but not can- say: “This was their finest hour.’’ onised as sainU.) Margaret Mary's ---------------- I of Jesus reproach- THOUGHT TOR TODAY: Eng- ing her for ingratitude in the face Uih author W. Someraet Mainham of the many bleesings He had ghr- gald in “Of Human Bandage": en her. She Immediately gntered a “There are two good things In rrilgious order. Ufe, freedom of thought and fret- (OtpyvigM IMS) dom of action.’’___________________ Case Records of a Psychologist: that ape very much in cup* from the dead. In thia play he goes about preaching a new re-llgion of love and eternal Ufe, sym- SAOtED HEART OF JESUS boUzed by laughter. There is logic — - hoq>ital, and lamrooe, which The day known as the Sacred Businessmen and personnel in O’NeiU’s idea. Any man who Heart of Jesus always faUi on a Hrectors, pleo$$ take note of knew by his own experience that Friday, though its date varies from Mae’s shreiod erittciems of Ufe and love are waiting for him year to year. It happens this way: management. Men from brok-beyond the grave might weU spend Cbrpus ChrisU is on the Thunday en homes toill nof make the his time here in a state of after Trinity, which is a variable, hesf workers, so ba sure gour hilarious, though not frlvoloua, jay. or nwable feast because It comes personnel strategg includes the eight weeks after Easter. The 8a- domestic Ufe of gour workers. Happy Husband Is Good Worker Cnm, la H trim far a OTHEE LAZABUg a atar a aoralt. Tnatoad ci treattag Intelligent odem wives os hutterfUea who naed only a Wdg* Phrty or toop- ’It aeento to me that toe ^ ______________________________ td happy toari^ . pii« trip to keep them contented Rather, U is the one described in St. Luke's 16th chapter as “a certain beggar, fuU of sores, and desiring to be fed with the crumbe which feU from the ridi man's ta-~T------------^------------------- the Octave.) This day aad li actual butinem atrategy ao they can help buoy up their men foUta. But it U not this Lazarus the T** ^ By GEORGE W. CXANB conditkma would help IncreaH the dui^ your ooiiventhm, H la far Abyaalnians are remembering. Chrisfl (the day after aged 29, morale of the woridng force.” better to ghre them some of Is an attractive housewife. SMART MAE M«i. to pereonnei managers wouia get ,onnel manarer artotm given some contidera- She Is qaBo rflAt hi Mytog fion?” she triced, that mea trana hapnr homes have a bollw Lord except as that heart is the Dr. William Brady's Mailbag Undiluted Cow Milk Fine for Babies, as Note Shows tha yearly employes’ meeting is to be jidd at Si pleasure reiort Tha oorrespondent who gave her the thought of fracture never oo- halead of at the baby uridUuted conr'a mflk need curs to doctor or patient. worry. One of my sons never had any^ng else when he was an Infent. Now be ii 5 feet 11, weighs IS pounds and la ha healthiest member of family (Mra. W.P.) ' A n a. •>-you. low beck ache ia a common manifestation of calcum deficiency. I am 60 and I have 23 aound teeth left. At the at^ of 10 I had take haUng eoda for favor 1^ e office. "That woold Send tor mjr ’JIMta for Good Emplc^ers i ' R la vmy poor penemiri technique to throw etumbUng Modes fai the path at happy muaTlacs. To debar wtvea fimn company partiee, and to take married men DR. CRANE 'distant conventions at pleaepra ro- probabiy be a good famovMlaa, ex- their only fenmle ootnpanlaae la oept for the feet that the wives of the of folly *l_ st«#l«l0mKs naan* lahasd*^ ^ 9^^* jtol«J^glri.a«tobe I used soda iiritead of dentifrice. Never had a cavity until 49. At that age I knt two large molars. Also I used lemon Juice and aoda to ke^ fit (C.E.D.) to go with dihlr hurimnda! But a ontoer of single girls are to be lere, inriead. “My huriMmd and aavenl of tha ware are nHnaMi mai Mr rilaaaxtiMtarMtkafaatatp • aMea «Mn 6k«gr taarifen. ttopoodent waa HwawT kp Nporu of her trienda of what their 4Mifiatriclana teU ’em. eaaceenMed far. All nMlara, ex-eepLihe two yea lest ot to. Ta aad vMandn D as ^ Aivlas wad lag to do wMh caaservattoa ef the teeth, llw fol cmpleniem pepahs are to ba paid bp the o pany, hot alkin wo whw are aDos^ to attend. A star aManun, for enmpla. !* of mmiy paan of trainlhB dad aapdrlMBi. but ha canBe Mhtod bp an atoympMhrilc rilnto we^ or raenthiy “As the Duty la to ba held afitor - ------ --------- th«»M^aa((fcrglyhMthembet- Id poan Is guw. (Mrs. B. E.) AmC-Low bitdt pain in mature ■dulta M often due to comprearion 5wctm«-of vertebne, pi duosd hp ao rii^ an ; Mfste Mter*. port IHm om <«« ■< nq sow «r tv Mfend. itoi viu St late at night my huahnid a Injury, that I - I, THE PONTIAC PRKSS, SATURDAY, JUXE 18, 1960 FIVE Variety Studi Kevea* rarii>r Meet State's 'Wayne Morse' OBOBOB WBBKS LANSING (UPI) «. Eugene q' Ktyut, the Wayne Mom of Mich, lean poUtka, haa political experi-enw aa yariad aa hla pwtaaalonal Keyea. a doctor, dentiat lawyer, waged two caippaigm lor fovenwr aa a republican. He waa "I oottUn’t atomach .Republican teadendilp,’’ the SS-yeaT'.old mave. rick aaid when he filed with ftwr other Democrata aa a candidate Aug. 3 primary. *BOM-Bin>EN PAM^ “I Wt a boao-rldden party lor, 1 bape. a free ene.” After a UM defeat, Keyea waa istr1bulor mVmuMM U. ^TfSTSSiSr PE 2-2919 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Investigation is continuing taito the multiple passport activities of Franda P. Yockey, 4T, who klfled himself In city iail Friday. T. S. Atty. WlUiam P. Clancy Jr. said Yockey swallowed poiaon. He aaid the government still wants to know what Yockey waa doing with three passports. A warrant for the arrest l Yockey's last known ccunpanion has been issued, Qancy said. The man ia Alex Scharf, in w^ Oakland home Yockey was rested June 6 on charges, of pass port fraud. An airline had recovered a lost suitcase containing the pas^wrts and turned it over to the FBI. a reporter. "He was anti-Zionist. No,^ wasn’t pro-WUer." Three ago U. S. Dlst. Judge WiUlam P. Sweigert dered a pqrbhiatric examinatian for Yockey, who Clancy said had been discharged from the army in 1943 mi psychiatrict grounds. Sdiraf, wanted as a material witness, was a teacher at an Oak land synagogue. He disappeared when Yockey was arrested. His ball has been set at $5,000, Qan-cy skid. Where Yockey got the poiosn Is aw known, Clancy added. Yockey, former assistant prosecutor from Detroit left a note: ‘You will never discover who helped me, for be is to be found in yoiir own multitudinous ranks, at least outwardly.’’ Yockey’s sister, Mrs. WUlam P. Coyne, wife of a Bethesda, Md.. navy commander, denied changes that Yockey waa a neo-Fascist. •He wa«’t anti-Semitic.’’ sh Living 'Corpse' Must Pay Cost of Porcupine Burial ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (AP)-The caae qf the porcupine’s fu--ml has ended. Judge Robert Reidy ruled that an Albuquerque mortuary can collect $3,065.50 for the burial of the chaired remaina of the porcupine purported to be those of Manuel N. Armijo Jr., of Albuquerque. 4r * * Eloy IHgil, an embalmer for Garcia Mmluaiy which bipu^it toe suit, testified that the remains of toe porcupine along with an ancient Indian skuU and some calf bones, were buried with the beUef that ttiey were Armijo’s. Armijo testified ha was in an automobile wreck In wertern New Mexico, that his car burned, and he was daz^ and didn’t come to several days later By that time a coroner’s taiquest had been hdd and the porcupine hrooght to Albuquerque and buried as Armijo. Thief likes Churches, but at Unusual Time UNOOLN, III (AP) The cash- ___________eoln RiMii InMtote was foimd on t|ie steps of toe Fitat Ghrtotian Owroh. R Mill contained a number of chedta, fatat toe cash — SlYS — Lockheed Strike Bucking Trend Goes On in Spite of Peace at Convair and Douglas Aircraft LOS ANGELES (AP)-A strike of 10,000 missile-making Lockheed workers continned today, despite a trend toward labor peace in the strike-tropSled aircraft-missile industry. Two other big firms reached agreements with 46.000 other workers Friday. An agreement between CJonvair and the International Assn, of Machinists ended 10 days of picketing at all missile bi^ except Vandenberg Air Force Base-^ only U. S. base able to fire ocean-spanning Atlases in the nation’s defense. C!onvair's big San Diego and Pomona, Calif., plants were subjected to only sporadic stoKWges during the strike. The lAM concentrated on Air Fwce ^ bases where Ctonvair technicians were working on the firm's Atlas intercontinental missiles. Friday night Douglas and the lAM reache dan agreement for 20,000 workers at the firm’s plants at nearby Santa Monica and El Segundo. It ended the threat of a strike by the lAM at Santa Monica at midnight. Details of the settlements weren't disclosed pending ratification by union membership. Both are sure to bring pay raises and fringe benefit improvements. Lockheed-IAM negotiations are recessed to give company negotia-tprs a chance to study a uni counterproposal made Friday. Bobby Driscoll Bookod on Deadly Weapon Rap MALIBU. Calif. (AP)-Foraier child movie star Bobby DriaooU was booked for assault with a deadly weapon after he allegedly whacked a heckler with a pisted. Laurie Manro, 22, figned the complaint Friday and exbibtted a two-inch gaeh near hla none. DriaooU maintained Maure aod-dmtally turned hla face into the which Dilactdl admitted be toq|c from hla car after Maur David Lehton heckled him I be waa washing the car of hit girl friend. e ace 60 dttoa tai tllb world Dost " Control MA 4-4521 EM 3-029 REUPHOLSTERING Stave tag tm 60% on Bolt End Moterioli CHAIR $3050 FROM ^ ^ SATISFACTION 6UARANTIEO OR AiSOLUmT NO COST! CALL NOWH! FE S-7S67 IKY K-fiREW HAIR Try this new home freofmenf plon on a 30-DAY TRIAL MEN FRONT BEFORE AFTER WOMEN I CROWN CHILDREN EVERYONE TOTAL TEMPLES BEFORE t wm. Examinations are given __________ PHwtajr. Don’t delay. Sea your Briekson Cridtasn esnsuHant fa your asua. 8ss Uto tar a flaa aaataaallan to to. s%^H2:S“mrJi!rssf t-* *,» i. .r pk... PONTUC — Maatoy, Jaas gto^ot^^Wysea BstaL ERICKSON Toke A VACATION From Heating Worries! DIAL FE 5-8181 ORDER . . . NIWI WtHi RT.ft RHebilhoj NIW A40BILH1AT with the amazing sdditiva RT-98 it the ons fuel thaf actually cleans m It bums ... not only giving you a cleaner, wermer. mere comfortable home at a lower cost It alto sliminstes many costly furnace HIAT deliverhd In new, moffarn CMC meter equippad tracks all winter long. Ne htotaer Where Yeg Uva hmsi^ wHk aars aaraiiAmc a«-uvasT •( tourn «mai, aaw ■BST orntmtt t» rtm bm MWiaea ■—ma •( MraabT r^ Sms, bmhh. MS «Maaa. ai. a-eiat raaayi w TM MTT nm tm stX THE yONTIAC PBESS, SATURDAY. JUNE 18. 1860 Cho^n by Dad, These Gifts Newlyweds \lL^ rrorn tn0 n60rt Methodist Wed Before 250 Gueifai GpeJz-Monog/ion Vows Told Ta hontjnnaw In WuhinK-ton. D. C. are the Louis Henry Pwryt, who were matried this noon in a ceremony performed hy the Rev. Robert WytSBikl of St. Benedict Catii-oUc Church. ♦ ★ W Some !50 guests were present for the marriage of the former Mary Ellen Brengle, daughter of Rex W. Bren^e and the late Mrs. Btengle of Voorh^ road and Louis H. . Perry, son of Louis G. Perry . of Kalamano and the late Mn. Perry. The new Mrs. Perry chose a gown of white embroidered nylon over taffeta with fingertip veO of silk illusion held by a petal cap of pearis. ♦ ★ ♦ A cascade of white carnations, pink rose buds and green Ivy completed her accessories. Attending the bride were Mrs. Vem Hartman, matron of honor, and Lori Malson of St. pair Shores, bridesmaid, both sWing white njdon sheer over hdfeta dresses with bell sleeves ' ^ featuring semi-full skirts. ★ ♦ ★ • Marlon Ganoid of Kalama-«» was best man and Gordon Omnd of Davison was usher, •'following a family lunchemi the church parlors, the cou-}ile was to leave on the honey-Shoon, for which the bride was }s wear a black and white suit ' Upon returning, they will ]^e in Spartan Village at Michigan State University. ^ ^The bride attended Michigan Mate and the bridegroom was ^uted from the university, I he was a member M a Sigma'1^. gloomfield Club leathers Mondoy 8ard of directors (rf the id Hills branch of the National Farm and Assn, will meet Mon-le home M Mrs. Willis son on Vau^ian road, Mloomfleld HiUs. .‘140011000 hostesses will be Mrs. Leslie H. Green and Mrs. the Deborah Circle of Oakland Paric Methodist WSCS Wednesday aftcnxKn for daetkm -at Country Ckb followed the marriage at A)mm Jean Monaghan to Ai«as Qsnld Costs Jr. thU sfisMoon in St. Ha|o of tbs HUIs Omich. Vows were is- uren Mrs. Albert votional chairman ; Mra. Bert Weddle, waya and meana; Mra. Joe Wagley. telephone; Mra. A. R, Phillips, flower fund; sad , Hie Weddles will emertain the group July 14 for a picak; at their Oxley drive home. City Insurance Women Install New Ofiicers Mrs. Selmer Engelvetaon ia the newly installed president of the Insurance Women erf Pontiac. Assisting her wUI be Mrs. LaVeme Stuart, vice president; Mrs. GecMTge O'Brien, re-cordiito secretary; Mra. Harold Harman, corresponding •ecretary; and Ernestine Ncu- Stack in tbe* preaenea of aome 330 gueste. Attar flawers ware pink roeea. The Philip John Monaghans of Oranbroofc road, Bloomfield Hills, are parents of the bride. The bridegroom is tbe son of Dr. Angus Gerald Goets of Lewiston road, Groaae Pointe Farms, and tbe late Mrs. Goets. A * * Blush pink silk organza with Chantilly lace fashioned the bridal gown worn with dhow-, length veil attached to a crown of Chantilly lace. Miniature pink roses wltii pink lillies-of-the-v alley comprised the Steve and Scott Clauser, sons of the Keith Clmtsers of Dover road, are full of anticipation for Sunday. They've planned d real day for their dad, and with mom's help, it will be a memor- able occasion for Mr. Clauser and aU the’ other area dads whose families have planned a special Father's Day salute. Mrs. Lester Dies, parliamentarian, acted as inkling officer for the regular- meeting and luncheon tft the group at the Hotel Waldron Wednesday. * * * The new president appointed these committee diakmen: Mrs. Harry Hall, education; Mrs. Garland Hale, publicity; Joan Morang, membership; Mrs. John Keinert, ways and means; Mrs. Eari R. Arthur, safety; and Mrs. Thomas Wood, telephone. * * A Tentative plans for an August outing were discussed. The next meeting is scheduled for July 20 at the Hotel Waldron. Junior Musicians Play iWomens Section li^ed at fCirk-in-the-Hills Reception at Forest Lake MxBttry Cluh followed the Fri-ng weddh« of Nancy e and Burton Chariea at Klrk4n-the- Hills. •iDr. Harold C. DeWlndt per-r the double-ring cere- ]bnnelue forget-ntonots. Mrs. Homer Harrison of Dearborn was her sister’s ma-■tton of honor in a French blue idlk chiffon sheath with draped liodke and cummerbund. She 4|rore a matching satin rose .Nvith .wMnuie veil and carried wn arm bouquet of spring gar- 1 In identical gowns were the Ibridegroom’s sister Julie of 'Birmingham; and cousins of khe bride Mra. Douglas Drury wf Lapeer, Patricia Gay Bell CS Dearborn and Marcee Mer-!ilU of Bkwmfield Hills. Also attending the bride ‘ were Irene Scbfele of Graase ^olnto. Mrs. Barry Panmns of airmingham and Mrs. George 2>ovas of Poatiac. All carried wm boMiuets of blue garden ^Bowers. ;; Arthur Eriokson stood as best «ian tor his farottier. They are Die am of the Burton C. Eriek-ws of Berwyn road. Binning-■dnm. Seating some 300 goesU were the bridegroom's oous-4ns David Romig of Warren jwA James Romig of Fcrndale. Myron Pardee of Lake-wood, Ohio, uncle of the bride-wroom; Homer mrrison of Oearboni and Georgb Dovas, Xometti McQdktogh of Btt-toM Alan Brown of . *! A wrist corsage o( white or-iehtds * ' — woe's from Michigan State Uniwr-sity, with postgraduate studies at Wayne State University. Her sorority is'Phi Mu. * A A Her hurtiand, an alumnus of University of MicUgan, ia attending University of Cincinnati Medical Sch^. His fraternity is Alpha Tau. A ★ ★ Among the out of town guests were Dr. Robert A. Grove and Mrs. A. j. Sambrook of Scher-erville, Ind.; Burton R. Erickson of Warren, Pa.; and Mrs. Myron Pardee of Lakewood, Ohio. “An evening of music’’ was presented by members of tbe Pontiac Junior Musicians Gub Wednesday evening at First Methodist Church on Saginaw street. Piano solos were plhyed by Barbara Jean Pratt, Lisa Banes, Mark Davis, L^n Marie Rippberger, Pamela Pillow, Douglas Banes, Elizabeth Crocker, Debl Davis, Gary Lundholm, Heather Sue Lockhart, Linda Emsley, Brian Sallee, Daniel Armrfd, □able FIndtey, GUbert .Steph- Robert F. Turner Wed LOIS MABIE CATUN B4r. and BIrs. Chester J. Cat-lin of MUford announce the enpgement of their daughter Lois Marie to Janies Oarenoe Weber, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence John Weber of Monti-ceilo avenue. Reception at the Cliftonia Hotel. Passaic, N. J.. followed afternoon nuptials of Rosalie TVresa Pennise and Pfc. Robert Fletcher Turner, in St. Anthony Church, Passaic. ♦ ★ ♦ Parents are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Pennise of Passaic, and the Erion Clayton Turners of South Eastway drive. Attendants at the June 4 ceremony were Gloria Marconi of Passaic and the bride’s brother William, best man. ■k t 1r The bridegroom, a graduate of General Motors Institute, Flint, Is on military leave from Pontiac Motor where he Is an industrial engineer. ★ ♦ ★ .After a tour of the Midwest, tile newlyweds are at home in □ Paso, Tex., where Pte. Turner is stationed. MBS. B. C. EKICKSON JR. fon styled with draped panel. For traveling to northern Michigan, the new Mrs. Erickson donned a white scarf-print sUk dress, white Breton hat in rough straw and patent accessories. After July first the newlywada will be at home on Wert Long Lake road, Btoomfield Hitts. The bride was graduated Sigma Beta Officers Installed Officers for Psi Chapter of S%ms BeU Nathmsl 8010111/ were installed at Thunday's banqurt at the Elks Itonpfe. Serviag with Mrs. William Winters, incoming president will ^ Mrs. Raymond Meg-gjitt, vice president; Mrs. James DeFlorio. reoordbig seq-ratary; Mrs. Joe Q. Beneon, oerretoonding eeGreiaiy; Mrs. Wayne Booth, treasurer, Mrs. Mck MeVay, e^r; and Mrs. Ezio Bteogni, charity chairman. Mn Robert Koch, Mrt. Or-val Russell and Mha Norman Aacr were pledged to meni-beitodp at tito aOalr. *'Girl of Ae YearJ^ of Psi Chapter of Sigma Beta Sorority, Jdrt. Charles Foamier, seated, of Scott Lake road was also outgoing praeident at the group's annual banquet Thursday evening Temple. With her. from left, are fflrt. Thomas Thornberry of fFest, Run-dell street, Mrs. Ezio Bisdgni of Adelaide ttreet and Mrs. Wdlinn Winters of Ottawa drive. Iiig acoeesories and straw hat Hicy wiU live to GtOM Pfltoto-The bride, a graduate of Bkiomfiald Country ^ _. . —g|. temted Univerdtty of Detratt Law SdMWl. IBs to AlpiuTtotta HT.' For her dangMar’a wedding^ iter fainbud is an alumnus of University of Bflchigan and at- Pstricta Monaghsn wss her lister's maid of honor, with bridesmaids JacqueUne Cocb- , rane of Falls Church, Vs., Katiileen Powell, Mery Power and Anne Monaghan, all of Bkxmfleld IfiUs; Rosalie Lake, Lalee Angelos; and Christine Afdiangeli of Birmingbam. I%|k flowers were embroidered on the bodices of their short blush pink organdy dresses worn with brief head vrtto attached to crowns of , pink roses. They held colonial arrangements of pink roses. X k k Daniel Childs came from Belmont, Maas., to serve as best man. Ushering were Peter Connolly, John Strob Jr.. Walter Fisher and William Fisher II. all of Grosse Pointe. Peter Monaghan Jr. and Philip Monaghan Jr. of Bloomfield Hitts, Michael Basford of Birmingham and Edward Spence of Saginqw and Louis FUher of Jacksonville, N. C., completed the usher list. k k k For motoring to Sea Island. Ga.. Where the couple will spend a tew days before going to Nassau for a week, the new Mrs. Goetz donned a suit of Italian beige silk with match- lact with tittM-BBiiter ton«% stoma^ i/o«B vtU. |«4N,M< Almd Jetan . Mougghan, daughter of the Philip John Monaghans of BhomfieU mUspledgid vows taiaf ig Angus Gtavli Goets Jr., tmist J)r. AngfU Gerald Goeti of Crdise Pointe Farms, and the late Mrt. Goets. MRS. ANGUS G. GOETZ JR. 100 Attend Wisner's Luncheon for Teachers Some 100 members attended the Honored Teachers Luncheon given ^ tbe Wianar PTA Thursday. ★ * A Mrs. Cameron Clark, president, paid tribute to the fol- ison, Kenneth Smith and Lynn Lundholm. Peggy Cheryl Jones played violin numbers and readings were presented by Ann Lato-zas and Gary Lun^Im. Mark Davis and LIm Banes were heard in vocal numbers, and several trios and duets were Parents and friends were guesU of the group sponsored by Mrs. Oscar Schmidt, teacher. Out-of-town guests attended from> Birmingham, Rochester and Detroit. PATBICU A. BONAN Patricia Abigail Ronan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben A. Ronan of East Iroquois road, has received her bachelor of arts degree in history from Stanford University, In Palo Alto, Calif. Miss Ronan will return to the university this, fall for her master’s k'v Anger. Vicki" WU.wi. jDbne .Shane. SheH Coil y. Mai-jhr> Howerth. Carol Howerfh, lEUcott Jones, Naomi Jones, Mar-I Myn Miha.v, Karen Porkiai hml I Diane Godboid also ^rticipated in the program. Wedding Bells Ring Out in Cedar Rapids, lowp I ! Meet for Dinner Members of the Alden Group of First Congregational Church met Wednesday evening tor a cooperative dinner at the Sylvan Lake home of Mrs. Ward Sherman on Oieltingham road. •Beverly Frances Bogart exchanged a-eddliM vows with Wallace Barry Turner this afternoon in Concordia Lufiieran Church, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, The Rev. Walter D. Marth read the 'aervice assisted by the Rev. Edgar A Brammer of OoHege HfU Luthoan Church, Cedar Falls. Iowa. Reception in the church parlors tolkiwed the ceremony. Parents af the eauple are the HareM M. Horsm M Cedar Bap-Ms sad the Chartes W. IWnwn sf Otd Orchard drive. Baterferd TewaaMp. Lace appliqu?!!. re-embroidcird with pearls and iridescent sequins, bordered the scoop neckline of the bouffant bridal gown of white silk organza^ styled with chapel train. The tong sleeves were hand-Upwed to wrist-points. * * ♦ An organza floral caplet held the' fliM«rtip veil of illusion. White roses and atephanolis comprised, the cascade bouquet. I Haaar BHitran Mrs.* Lcsaaid Atoxander af Oatashurg, " JO ANN WILHU..M An August wedding is plaimod by Jo Ann Wilhelm and Rogei Boyd Ulrich, son of Mr. and Mrs. WUUam Richard Ulrich of Chicago. lii. The bride-elect is the daughter of the Joseph Arthur Wilhelms of' Pontiac Drive, Sylvan Lake. kots. WALLACE B, TURNER Dear Abby Says; He Doesn’t Care No L/s^ Waiting for Him By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; I went with this guy for a month and I really liked him. Suddenly he stored calling me and dat- Then I ran cidentally and he told me he was giving up giris for two yean. He said by that time be would havq a car and a* Job and could have a girl friend. We are both 16 and I am willing to wait for Mm. Do you think I should after this treatment? WILUNG TO WAIT DEAR WILLING: Don't wait If be really cared (or you he'd walk, take the bus or Mich a ride. And he wouldn't teil you that he had to ''have a Job" in order to have a girt. * ★ * DEAR ABBY; I am asking you to please tell im what the relationship is (if any) in this case. My daughter died, leaving a husband and three chilr dren. About a year later he remarried. but he kept light on calling me his "motheivin-law." The woman he married has a living mother, so how can he have two mothers-in-iaw? He certainly can't still be my son-in-law when he is married to a woman who has her own mother and is no relation to me. I hope you can Rochester Church deene of Rites set me strai^t as tMs has caused a lot of discussion. WHO AM I? DEAR WHO: When your daughter passed away, the "inlaw" relationship between you and '^r son-in-law technically terminated. And when he married again he acquired a legal mother-in-law in the mother of Ms wife. You are simply his cMI-dren's grandmother. (But donl worry — that will be close enoi«h if,he ever needs yOu.) banquets af white caiaatlaas. Jeny Turner of as best mv> for Ms brother. Cummiiia was groomsman for couMn. Gueatt were seated fayj Keith Fox of Fargo. N.D., William Often of Cleveland. To begin the honeymoon motor trip to Wisconsin and Michigan, the new Mn. Turner pinned a brown cymbidium orchid to bar beige sheath Jacket dress. Cal- Jufdith Anne Nash WeeJs The Rev. Edgar A. Lucas officiated at the marriage of Judith Anne Nash to David Dana Nelson this morning in St. Philip Episcopal Church, Rochester. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Nash of Bloomfield Hills were hosts at a reception in the undercroft of tlie church following the ceremony. ' A * * Receiving with them were the Peter Nelsons of Hyannis, Ma,ss., parents of the bridegroom. The bride appeared la atreet- tered V-aeridlae ■Mrt. White sweetheart rases reefed oe her white prayer baek. A shoulder-length veil of .nlk illusion was secured by a satin and pearl headband. Cynthia Nash was her sister's only attendant. Her dress of white silk organza was worn over Mue Utfeto, with matching blue carried a nosegay ol Is It Good or Bad? Your Hands Tell a Story mMes a day, gardes, take care of the heeaewerk, and ottea the isaadry. Still they look lovely acrooo the bridge table or at dhwer. However, no part of a woman's ensemble of attractiveness shows neglect more quickly than hands. Therefore constant care preventative measures are MRS. DAVID D. NELSON The bride la a gradaate The following suggestions win pay big dividends. Do not use strong soaps on your hands buf mild ones only and do not put your hands in very hot water. Use rabher glaves. Today yoa can get lighter, soa-skM aMa. When yaa da Bot give year heads Sudden periodic spuria of handi cafB will not keep your hands ^ (ii^ very beat, will Hod that i year haads are roogher lhaa I they ahoaM be. Most important of all, use a hand lotion before going to sleep' at night and following every hand washing or water dunking. Many women use a lotion once i day but not many do so every time! they wash their hands. This can make a big difference. I If you wish to keep your hands flexible, you may want to do some exercises. Try this. Place your thumbs on the edge of the taMe. Spread your fingers on t orated can and bicydet led by the Oakland Cbunty Shertffi department paraded frem Five Points OommuBity Church to area ncighbothoDds this mornlag. It was the annual Vacation Bible Sebooi parade apons(»«d by the church young people. Bonnie Plum- mer, from left, David Tousdale and Nancy Weber are all ready to ride. The achool will open at 9 a. m. Monday and nn through June M. Oaaaes are scheduled for boys and giils.froin S to IS yean of age. ho: — Vacation Bible school at Christian Temple will feature the theme "Pioneering With Christ” this year. The youngsters above appear eager to get the wagons roUlng, as Ronald Dunlap, 319 N. Saginaw St., gives, the traditional wagon master's starting signal. Registering Susan Owen Midland Dr., and Sue Ann Covington. 28 How^ It, ia Be^'a mother Mrs. Rontan DunUp, a department superintendent. The children wiU meet from 6:15 to 8:45 p. m. Monday IhiOUlh duhe 30. Vacation Bible Schools Provide ‘Good' Time for Young People Hundrede of boys and giris are lookii« fonvard to Vacation Bible Icbools opening for two-week aeW' «io« in Pontiac area churchea Monday. Some churchea will bold elataea daring July and August. aasses In crafts, ortwori^ games, Bible stories, movies end music are aimed at teaching youngsters sound Christian relationships. Pastors hope to reach children who do not attend church or Sunday School. FIRST BOCUL BRETHREN ClaBsea will be held Monday thrtMii^ July 1 from 9 a.m. until noon, daily except Saturday, at Flrat Social Brethren Church, 3ll Baldwin Ave. HeadiiM the ataff of Vacation Bible School workers are Clyde Daubs, Dorothy Hull ^ld Shirley —CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH G. W. Gihwn, Minl$t0r FE 4-0239 J47 N. Saglnonr Biblo School .9:45 A.M. Morning Worahipk ...11:00X11 Youth Sprviga .8:00 P.M. Evoning Sorvioa 7:00 P M. Proyor Moeting and Biblo Study Wodnoad^ 7:30 P.M. ST. JOHN UnniEEAN ‘God'a Children Pray” will be' the theme of die Vacation Bible School at St. John Lutheran Church, Hill atreet and Cherry court, dasees start Monday and m through July 1. Mrs. Murray Sdilutditer will be superlntendeiit for the two-week perM. Assisting wiU be Mrs. Harry Santals. Carol Wargelln. Mrs Bruce Weyant, Mre. Roger Pomeroy. Mrs. Wesley TatUff, Xrs. Oren Clausen and Mrs. 'George Robert Boggs, Mrs. Robert La-aelle, Becky Laselle, Judy Bos, Nancy NichoUe, Carol NichoUe, Mrs. Ted Panaretoa, Mrs. Abram Campbdl and Mrs. Edward Gtay- 8TLTAN LAKE The Sylvan Lake Church Chriet, Orchard Lake avenue at Middle Beh road hu sdieduled an eight'day Vacation Bible Bdiool from 9 to 11 a.m. dally atar^' Monday. “Teadiings of Jesus' he theme. Oassea are arranged for all PREgBYTERlAN Dally Vacation School will open Monday morning at 9:30 to continue for eight days at First Presbyterian Church. Mra. Lowell Armstrong. Mrs. Richard Marsh. Mrs. Jeny White.' GrayUel, Mrs. Kenneth BaitNura and Lee Patter-_ ^ will work with the pregchool and kindergarten children. Otbtr leaden and teadicn Include Mn. Lerter Cariaon, Mn. EUis, Mrs. Forest Wood, 8u- FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Oichaid Lake Avenue Rev. Harold Marshall, Pastor Harry Nicho/s, Prtldant • Sunday Service 7:30 p.m. Rev. Mey RandrfI of Detroit Saturday — Strawberry Social 8 p m. Wed., June 22—Silver Tea—Rev. mHGELISTIC TMERHACIE JIN WatklM usa M. «. W. Oaa. Co. im, IH MOtt Sundoy $d>ool 10 o.ra. Gossea lor all agoal Pieocbing 11 a.m. 4 7:30 p.m. Youth at 6:30 pa. e Radio — CXLW 7:30 aa., 800 kc In Detroit A. / Baughay, Paa. DeW/ff_Beughey, Aaat. Poa. Cdumbia Avtnue BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday School...........................;9:45 A. M. Morning Worship............................11 A. M. B. T. U..................................6:30 P. M. Evgning SptvIcp........................ 7:30 P. M. REV. M. F. BOYD JR., PASTOR Cooperating with Southern lapHtt Cortvention _ 9,000,000 Membora — A program will be preaented by le children at 7:30 p.m. on June 29 in the church auditorium. Re-freabmenta will follow In Fellowship Hall. Marvin minister, will be in charge. CRB8CENT HILLS Cruemt HUM Baptlat Church will hold its annual Vacation Bible School at John Monteith School Monday to June 24 with dasses from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Classes are slated for all grades. Teacben will he Mn. John Fink. Mrs. John Drumm, Mn. Norman Schmuck, Mrs. Carl Meng and Mn. Cari MaU. CENTRAL METHODIST The Church” will be the theme of the Bible School Monday through July 1 at Central Methodist Church. Mrs. Frederick J. Poole, genenl superintendent, will be assisted by leaden, Mrs. Donald Tryon, in the nursery; Mn. James Hon, kindergarten; Mn. George Yan-sen, primary; Mn. Harold Sibley. Junior; and Mn. Cbartes Steeber. secretary. CHRIST LirrHERAN Classes will begin Monday at Christ Lutheran Church, 5987 Williams Lake Rd. and continue until July 1. Daily sesskme will be hdd from 9 to noon. The program entitled "Missionaries for Christ” will cover beginnings of the Christian church and mission field. Department heads are Mn. John MacKay, Mn Martin Gustafaon, Mrs. Victor Wayrymen and Mn. John Goshen. Mn. Robert Dika win serve as secretary ofong with some 25 teachers. AUBURN HEIGHTS U. P. Signaling for Christ” is theme of the Vacation Bible School at the United Preabyterlan in Auburn Heights. On June 34 boys and girls of the school will present a prognm for parents and Iriendi undo- the direction of Mn. Iva Bestow, gen- FIR8T CHRISTIAN Mn. Leslie Walter, Mn. John Graham and Mn. Reid Graham •erve as cochairmen of the Vaeatian Bible School at First Christian Church. Planned for boys and girls from kindergarten through junior high age group, daseet will start Monday at 9 a.m. The achool will cloae June 24. LAKE COMMUNITY According to Christian Koch, Vacation Bible Sebooi will open at 9 a.m. Monday and run through July 1 at Orduud Lake Community Church, Preabytertan. Mn. Robert Fagan is director. Other department heads are Mn. Harvey Bridenstine, Mn. Keith Kelly, Mn. Ed Penney, Mn. Lon Brienden and Mn. Harold Heilet. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST Mn. G. M. Kenting will be in charge of the Vacation Bible Schod to be held for nine days starting Monday at the Seventh-Advandst Church, US Mt. Claeses from .9 to noon win be open to youth from four to 12 yean Emmanuel Baptist Church I 645 S- TtlearoEh Rood _ I Sunday Services I DR. TOM MALONE I 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. I Baptismal 1 REV. BILL FITZWATER I Speoiier ■ 10:00 A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL J 1 m-w p. M. 1 Sptciol Music ■ Rodio Srotion WPON 1 10:15 AM. Eoch Sundoy 1 Sttadmr School Attendance Um Sunday 1314^ . DR. TOM MALONE. Putlor Othen assistiiv in the daily program are Mn. Richard C. Edens, Mrsr-Dwayne L. Pyles, Mn. Joseph F. Heitsdi, Mn. Walter J. Pluns, Mrs. Eva L Dooa, Mn. Harry E. Gruber and Mn. Connd E. Myhre. Also working with the boyt and girls will be Mn. Howard W. Evilsizer and Mn. Lowell B. Freeman. GRACE LUTHERAN Bible itudy, handicraft, movies and musie win bt featured at the vacation Bible Schod Monday through July 1 at Grace Lutheran Church, 114 S. Geneaee Rd. will Ite hdd daily 9 a.m. until noon for bo^ and glrla between four and 14 yean of age. Mn. Ralph Miller is superintendent and Mn. Ralph Rotsel, her assistant. Women ot the cburdi will teach and help the following departnnent leaden, Mn. Kenneth GUboe, Mn. Richard Studoneyer, and Mrs. Richard Panona. OAKLAND AVE, U. P. Daily Bible School win begin at a m. Monday at the Oakland Av-dnie United Presbyterian Church. 'Taaeea are planned for eople ages three to 13 In______ Departmental superintendento hi-chide Mn. R. G. Crttea, Mn. Rab-ett Miner, Mrs. llieodoro R. . Audrey Umkemsn, Mrs. Brade, Mrs. LeRoy Koch Christ Church, Missions to Hold Outdoor Service CHURCH OF CHRIST CHILDREN - Arriving at the PontijBc Church of Chriet to regiater for Vacation Daily Bible School are Maraba Carpenter of 874.Rofatawood St., left, and sister Jeannie, Cathy Jones of 91 N. Anderson St.. Joey Osr-penter of 874 Robinwood St and Dwi|d>t Cow of 382 LoweU St. The vacation schod wiU begin Monday and continue through June 24. For the fourth year, Christ Church Oan brook and Ita three win join tor an Outdoor Festival service at 9:30 a.m. Sunday. The service will be at the Cran-brook SdMd Oval. The aermon wiU be given by the ' Rev. Robert Oe Wilt, rector of Christ Church, who recently was eleetod suttraiDui bishop of the Michigan Diocase. * * * The missions include Epiacopal Church of the Advent. Natidty Epleoopal and St. Stephen. Chdra, aoolytee and ushers of an lour ooo- As expressed by the clergy aod veotry at toe dwrehea, Iba as- The pre-three nursery wffl open at 9 a.m.^ln the Crmbrook Hoiae 'iaing room. Nursery, pre-kindergarten and ktadergarten groigw wtti ait In reserved seats tor the opening of the festival servloa, then fa with lhair Chriitian Tempi#. SOS Auboio Ave. Dr. Lola P.MartoB. Eaafor- -JUnr. A Luther Shemald. Amtstant A Spadol Waleoaa Awaits You ti« M lias aal.-u:a ts tl:U i S-JS PJL-TSS t:tt PJl-«NWSUMIo SwvtM Epilcopol MisslDfl S«t fp >^fl ifi CloHcsIon- Ragdar Sunday servtois for the ftritoopal Church hi ‘ ■tort at 1:88 tomomw mm _ with ecrvlces held la the eke- Methodist Ministers Attend Conference Pontiac pastors attending the 119th seiaion of the Detroit An-| nual Conference of the Methodist Church being held at First Methodist Oiurch in Ann Arbor include Dr. Milton H. Bank, minister, and associate ministers, the Rev. John H. Hall and the Rev. Daniel J. Wallace, all of Central Methodist Church; and the Rev. James W. Deeg of Oakland Park Methodist. Others are the Rev Paul T. Hart, minister, end aseodate minuter, the Rev. Harry J. Lord, both of First Methodist Church; the Rev. C. Warren Wllion of AMert-gate Methodist; the Rev. Wilbur Courier of (fovert Methodist. ♦ ♦ w Also taking part in the confer-,«nce art ft*LBev. William. AJKur-aal ot St. Luke Methodist and the Rev, James A. MeOung of 9t. Paul Methodist Hess to Bring Youth Challenge Miisionaiy to Show Piduros of Now Guinea Mliiioni The Rev. B. N, Hess, a member of the Nyack Mieaionary Oil-lege faculty, will bring a message of challenge to young people at the 7 p.m. service Sinday in the Alllanoe Church, M58 at North Cass Lake road. During the Sunday School hour at 9:45 a.m. and worship service at 11. the Rev. E. H. Mlefceleen, mliiloiiary to New Guinea, will preach and tell of hit experienees. * . It * Pictures of pioneer raisrione in New Guinea will highlight the Alliance Youth Fellowship at 5:4S p.m. A Ladtos’ Trto trma toe Nyaek CeUege wiU prsoeat a pngnm ef favorfto kyiMs end senga at The trio is composed of Hetty KMneman whoee father is president of the Alliance Church in Holland, CarrM Bailey, daughter ef the Rev. Nathan Bailey, newly elected preaident of tb# church In the United States and Carol Osrey of Ohio, ★ ★ * The Rev. George J. Bereehe etid the public if invited. 'A Father's Faith' Sermon Subject at U.P. Church The Rev. F. William Palmer 10 preach on "A Father'a Faith” at the 11:15 moraiiH kervio# tomorrow at the United Preeldle-rian Church in Auburn HeiglM. The atrmon k baeed (i Ihc Biblioal etory of the father «ho •ought out JeeuB to heM hk dying bn. A nursery wfll be provided it this hour. , ^The Pert High Youth GrUb sponsor a pfeza party at the dnneh :at 7:30 p.m. Tlieaday to waeeme Ihigh school graduates of iM into the group. Trurtees of the church will also meet ,at 7:30 Ttieeday evening and the cub pack seesion Will begin at T p.m. Thursday. Womcm Nam«cl Pastor The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. Lawiwnc# StfMt Su&ddy SchL 9;4S a.m. Toong Pewit's Legion 6 p.m. Mom'g Woiship 11 emi. Efangeliitie Iftg. 7:30 p.BL Wednefdey hvjn and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. OAPTAU And MBS. i WIUUM REAVER Goosi JfiiaiemBiagtag » Tnte la the Weed Areoehiag God Meet! With Ui—Tou Too, Ait InTittd The edteol kmrd haa made it Mribk to have n room for wor- activltiea. The Rev. C Geoffe ~ dUMd and AU Saints Epiioo-Church k aartrthH frith the pan « «. ihe Church of the Naiarene here hat ordained its flirt woman pnrter, the Rev. Mrs. Rika Nagaee, widow of a maia who helped atari ' chtfch here and who died in from A-bomb radfatiort COMPARATIVE BIBLE VERSES Ring Jaatea EcMtarn Trdntiotien *rm oNt a wrnm aWM MW at M y conwetfng the tnte meeatog ef die kwy arpstf ' * (be iransJetiea (okas on « aew weeniag. Cetl Rev. G. W. Gheon — If 4-4)239 Seminary Total Doubits WASHINGTON, D..C. ..iIf.-A.. . port shows Roman Calhimeg now have 381 eeminaries in the United Statee training men for the priert-bood. The number has Increased per cent rtnoc WrtM War II. Ur^ Urban ChurdiM OMiions READING, Pa. m-^U the urban church k to survive, it mart gto-‘ members regudkn el nee jodel status, says toe Rev. Walter Kloebdl, eaeretaty of ID-bad CkuKh PkmtaB •( tot Ma- At I ere, be erttietzed the light of pastor* and . ^ , tfcms to the ■abuihs, leav^ their ----------------------------to toe Churchgotrs NtMltd BEREA, Ky. tto-A suniey by Berea OeDate hen todicatos that 1# FWntoh Te pbputatkn. toe THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 18, 1960 NINE Things Await Man Who Makes Himself Happy Uma, wya tbt RL Rar. II«r. J. D. Oonvair, • praniiMiit Ctthi^ lALDWm AND PAIRMOUNT Sunday ^ool 10 AM. Worship Hour 11 A M. Pilgrim TouUi Hour S;1S P.M. Goipol Hour 7:00 P.M. M. Cf Stndffht, ffwtor He writci In the March CathoUe Digeat: "Uatnarried prieiti can work nore etficientiy for Ckxl, for the church and tor the aouls of The boUeet roomcnt ^urch aervioe la the when God’a people — atremthenad by prudUat and m go out o< the church door into the world TO BE the church. We don’t GO to church; we ARE the ch. (Oumon Emeat South-oott, Chriatian Herald). THE AUIANCE CHURCH M-59 AND CASS LAKE RD. Junt 19 9.-45 ajn. Rev. E. H. Mkkelaon, 5:45 p.m. New Gulnoa MaalOnary, Nowtiuiflea. . Miialenary Picturet II«)e.«. Mr. MickeiNn, 7^P*"- CeroleenTilo pre^ao. Nyack Miationary Colleoe D.V.B.S.-Oun« 20 - 30—9:30 - 11:30 A. M. Rev. lenehe, Patter ||. W. Lartpher, Aatittant Congregation Elects Jacobs, President Oiariee Jacoba waa choaen to B'nai larael at a meeting of mem-bera. Melvin Goldman waa elected first vice president, Morria Blet-atein, second vice president, and Fred Nledeiaon, thM vice preaf-dent. Jade Samburd was named nancial secretary, Edward Bht-meno, treasMrer, Ralph Merhovitt, I man Blumeno, Benjamin Manaon, iFamU Allen, C3iarles EUander and Sol Newbouae membm of the Permanent board members in-dude Meyer Simon, David E. Ut-Morris Kampner, Morria Blumeno, Joseph Jacobson and Laz- Cathedral Asks OAKLAND PARK METHODIST CHURCH tfaaleaJm tmd GJenwood Sunday Sarvice 10:00 A. M. { Sundoy Sch^t 11:15 Youth Ftllowship 6:30 mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmir' Gargoyle Ideas PubUUu 8jmu eoonnna this truth. He said, **Ba la not happy who does not think hbnaelf ao.” And Schiller wisely dedares, “The will of a man is his happiness.” In other werds, It’s up to you and to me whether are are hiu>py> ★ ★ ★ ' I saw a good example of this kind of person on a televlaion )[abow. The star had aa a guest an old man who waa himself a natural-bom entertainer. He kept the studio audlenee roaring with laughter at his salty remarka. He waa so full of fun he Just overflowed. The master of ceremonies asked, “How come you’re so happy?” The eld man replied, “Well, new, sen—it’s Just as plain as the neee aa your faee. Tea see, it’s this way. Every memlng when 1 wake op, I have two cbeieee-ehall I be happy or unhappy.’' He paused and winked. “I Just decide to be happy Recently a physician told me of a patient who let mieery thoughts gM the better of her, and abe was full of unhappl-neee. She complained that she “Itched all the time.” ’Hie doctor tried many remedies, but none seemed to help. finally, this happened: “One day when I went to see her,” the doctor explained, “I was In an extra gay and happy mood. I had been at a meeting where a number of good stortee had been told and I got to telUng them to her. She laughed at the first one. Encouraged, I told her another, and still another. Presently she was In gales of laughter, even holding her tides. All of a sudden I turned to her and asked, ‘Are you itching?’ “(hiught off guard the replied, ‘Come to think of It, no .. no, I am not.’ Church In Washington Says Amattur Sculptors Can Do tho Modeling WASHINGTON, D. C. - Th< Very Rev. Francis R. Sayre Jr. Dean of the Washington (Episcopal) Gathedral, announcet an op- model gargoylee tor dw Gothic egterior of th« (pthedral. paifoyfes, ohimaens and gro- igpouU that throw the water firom roof gutters atop the Cathedral's wall. , Apostolic Church of Christ 458 CENTRAL Yeung People Seturdoy ... Sunday Schoot4Wenhip ^ . 7i30 P.M. rlOiOO P.M. . 7.30 P. M. Servicee Tuee. A Thun.... 7i30 P.M. Church Phone FE 5-8361 UL 2-5142 Bishop L A. Ponal The Oetbedral’e gargoyle proj-eet is not a contest and tf> prises ere cUtnd. Nor ie there any guarantee diat any design subnttlsd wU be carved. Waterford Community Church Worship Servioaa ... .8:30,11 A. M. Sunday Schobl...............9:45 A.M. Evanlna Senrlca.........7 P. M. Hour of Power...Wad 7:'50 P. M. Welcome to a Friendly Churdi! "It accepted.’’ Dean Sayre said portunity offered to a layman to peraomuiy partlelpata in the eoa-rtmctlon ot a greet cathedral, They win be carved into the atone labrie ot tbe Cathedral to remain Arough ^ agea.’’ Skctchea of the btocka to be carved, ghowing exact dlmentioiu and other technical detaiit may be obtained on reqneat from the Qerk of tbe Works, Washington Cathedral, Washington Id, D. C. Men's Chorus to Sing Sunday for Fathers Day FIRST METHODIST UT. Hut, Farter Booth lagiDaw at Judapo MORNING WORSHIP 10:00 A-M. ••Whet Was The Father LUcer Ray. Paul Hart, PreachiBE 11:80 AJI.—CHURCH SCHOOL YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 8:16 P.M-Wadneaday BlMe Study and Prayer’EslUrirahlp 7:M PM. Sunday In Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. William Cot-fing is director. Blood, (Siaries Bradriwr, George Brocher, Guy caiwefl, Charles Qwighead and R. G. Crites. Also included are Fred Froede, John GemmeU. Gerald Griffith, Walter HUl, Robert Hebert, ' PhCHRISTIAN.SCIENCEi SUBJKT FOR SUIDAT "IS THE UNIVERSE INaUDING AAAN EVOLVED BY ATOMIC FORCE?" n^Sflu. sSvtowdPM ywdoytedPM FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and WiSioM Sbeeto HOW ClRISflAI SOEICC HEALS RADIO STATION CKLW—800 XC SUNDAY 9:45 A. M. TV Every Sunday. Cherewt 7, 9:30 A.M. The Men's Chorus will sing at Father’s Day service at 10 a.m. The group eonslslB ot The Rev. ■ * R. ---------------- ^ Maddox, George Marten, Carl Matheny and GoedM Metser. Others will be Reljdi Orincae, Confident Living The Outlook's Up to You; Practice Joy Every Day Local Moimons lo Hear Leaders 'Dm other nli^t befoca going to aloop, X waa readlnc in tha Book of ProTMbe. In Chapter If, Vena IB, 1 words: “He ttsat la of a merry heart hath a ooottnual Ibast' \It simply means, of oourse, that Ufa will be full of good thlnga for the paraon who learns to keep bla heart merry and happy. But that is tbe catch. Just how doea one do that—what with all the problems and difficulties that come along. One thing ie sure— no one can propilse you Immunity from trouhlee, but you can have victory over them. And one secret of auch victory is Ute merry Bat, yen aiay wail ash, hew ean ene have aneh a haart? My anawar ia that yOa Boottnual fsast" I Two leading leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ at Latter-day SatnU (Mixmon) will addren a twoday conference of tbe Church’s Detroit Stake today and The visiting officials are Eider Joaeph FMdliig Smith, president of tbe Ooondl of Tweh RALE end Elder Walter Danaie, a her of the Church Welfare Onn- Meetiigs wffl be for leaden of the local ccosnaatkioa tonhdit. Sunday's genera] session, open to the public, will be held at 10:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. in the Detroit Stake Center, 425 N. Woodward Ave. Stake Presid«it George W. Rom-n^, 1830 E. Valley Rd.. Bloomfield Hilb, will conduct the meet- 1 told Imr, “WeU, forget that Itching - lt‘s aU In yonr mini. Why don’t yen pvnctioe hellevlng that by the help of Almighty Ood yen nra not going to be an Itehm any longer.’ She foDewed t|rie wise advice and get welL’’ Certainly she got over it, for there was no physical basis to her trouble. This doctor told me that by reconditioning the mind of hla patient the idiyslcal symptoms of Inner frustration gave way to sound health and energy. ★ ★ ★ An old friend has peritaps tha beat system for developing the happlnem habit. Every morning ho qiends ten mlnutee 'making hlmaelf happy.” ^ually, be practices what he ealla “thought conditioning.’” He does several quick physical exercises. He breathes deeply, then reads a few verse* from the Bible, finally be “rune his mind over his personal world,”: praying for people who have some special need. He forglvea anyone who has "done him wrong,” ae he puta it “Then I spend a couple of minutes Just loving Ood and thanking Him for everything.” (Copyright. IM#) Crescent Hills Pastor to Participate iOf Baptism A'service of Holy Baptism will be observed at the 8:40 morning service Sunday in Bethany Baptist CSiUich. Tbe Rev. Robert L. Adams of Crescent Hills Baptist Church will participate in baptising candidates from his church, a mission of Bethany. be supplied by the Rev. John Barker, director of evangelism and church extension of the Michigan Baptist Convention, and Percy M. Walley, miniater ot education at tha Bethany Cburcb. A reception ot new members is scheduled for the U o’clock worship hour. Guests at the aervice the Arem* and Pentiac Cbiqiters of the Order of Eastern Star and the Rooaevrit, Pontiac and Brotherhood Masonic Lodges. Assisting at the early service will be Mlchad Rosa, and at 11 a.m. Charies Sckels wiU be thej pastor’s youth assistant. Delbert, srill siiqt at the 8:40 service and the choir will present “Send Forth Thy Spirit” by Schuetky at the later service. arp missing today is not organization; it is not fadUtlea, and it is not communication. The great need in the world today ia for Spirtt-fDled men who really produce the fruit of the Spirit (Billy Graham). Rtv., Mrs. J. W. AAooro to Bo Honorod Sunday Aroa Conforonco Sot for Tonight, Tomorrow at DotroH Stako Contor Tbe Rev. and Mrs- Joseph W. Moon of Trinity Baptist Cbureh win be bsitored with a “Bon Voy-aga” party at 1 pm. Studay ia p Halt The Moons wfB leave tMa week for Rio de Janeiro to attend the World Baptist AlU- ________ ___Ith is iaowa as ana af lbs ehateb’s tardneat Us- es doetrtae. Be baa beew a member at tbe Oseneil ot Twelve and isa son Tile oidy reward of virtne te vtt-le; the only way to haws a friend Is be one. - The pastor will preach on “The Tragedy of Not Growing Up” at the 11 a.m. worship hour Sunday. Baptist Training Un-on is sla’ed for 6 p.m. At T p.m. the missionary department wUl show a religious movie. Pontiac Evangelistic Center 13 South Paddock Sunday School ........10 A.M. Morning Wofrf^lp ....II A.M. EvfNng Worship ...7:30 P.M. Williamf Lake ^f(^ oi tha Rasaiane Ratehery fitosid 10 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. WORSHIP HOUR 7 P.M. WORSHIP HOUR St Joaq* r. gasHh. the i presideat af tbe ebueb. Elder Danaie ia a director of gie famed Church Welfare Wan. All conferences held in 1990 will focus emphaaiB on youth development as pari of a special churchwide parents and youth program launched early this year by church president David 0. McKay. St. fames Baptist Slates Special Services Sunday Mis. Mary Anthony, Ootee' Brown, Mrs. Carrie Henderson and! Mis. Lucille Peck will be in charge of the Junior church at 10:30 a. Sunday at St. James Baptist Church. CHURCH of GOD E. Pike at TsiiA-sr TwrtlimfM Wad. 1:31 PJf ■ U. F^PottrtM OasBMl CaU n s-ssss ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH (inducting the Sunday Sdiool will be Mable J. Lewis. Preaching the annual anniversary sermon at be the Rev. V. L. Lewis, The Pastor’s AM Ctab and Senter Usiwr Boot* wU be to eittige ot tbe S:M p-m. snrviee w4fli Mrs. Reeie BfeKUght, Giviiv brief remark! will be : V. WMto, Reedie Anthony, Johnnie J. Williams and Otis Hinson. Afternoon preachers will be The Rev. J. A. Parker of Newman AME Church and The Rev. 8. M. Edwards of Liberty Baptist Church. Taking part in the preaentation of gifts WiU be Mrs. Sadie Bettis, Mrs. EUa M. Tbompaoo and T ' Brown. Tbe planning committee consists of Mrs. Commetta Davla, Mn. Rubte White, Ei«ent Bettis, Thomas RusseU Jr., Walter Hende^ aon and Mrs. Peek. Crescent Candidates to Be Baptized Sunday Tbe Bfan After God’a Own Heart” wiU be the sermon topic of the Rev. Robert L. Adama at the morning service in Oescent Hills Baptist Church Sunday. Candidates for baptism at Bethany Buttist Church from Oseoant Hills congregation will be Mr. and Mn. J. L. Fink, George Wilson and Karen Rosa. Morning Worship 8 A.M. and 10 A M. Church School for 3 to 4 Yasr Olds. Rtv. Waldo Hunt. Ractor LUTHERAN CHURCHES St. Mark Wm. C. Croft, Potior Sundoy School ... ?;45 AM. Church Strvict Cedar Crest Farnsworth ^ Unig^^ Rd. Howard £. Clayeombo. Pattot Sunday School 9:45 A M. Grace I Corner Oeneaat and Otondala Richard S. Siuctmtyar, Pastor ChiHCh Swviot ... 9:00 AM. Sunday Schools.. 9K)0 Ail. Church Stnrica ... II.90 A.M. Sun^ School . . 1190 AM. St. Stephen Guy’ B. Smith, Pastor Sunday School .... 9:15AM. (^urcb Strviot ... 10:30 AM. St. Trinity Lidiign^i Ralph C. Clous, Poifor Sunday School .... 945 AM. First Strviet . 8:30 AM. SMond Strriea . 11:00 A M. St. foul Josto at 1 SM Gtorgo Mabdsr, Pastor Sunday School ... 990 A M. Morning Strvict .. 10:45 A.M. Bloomfield TOWNSHIP Square Lake and Tdagrapli Wm. C. Graft, Poster Church Strviot ... 10:00 AM. Sunday Schorl . . . 1190 A M. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Ookland ond Soginow Pontiac, Michigon Rev. H. H. SavagCf Pastor Rtv. W. B. Hakoo. Aat-f. Potter 9:45 A. M.—SUNDAY SCHOOL Clotsat far AH Agoa 10:45 A. M.—MORNING WORSHIP "Dad; Bo Cortful of Your Spttch" Dr. H. H. Sovagt Evening Sarvica—7;CX) P.M. Gtorgt Ktnntdy, Rttum Miitiontfy from Btlgium Congo Rtv. Wm. E. Haktt wm preach an "Radiant Uvtag.” Dr. (3iapman will be guest speak-er at the annual Ohio Baptist Ministers* Conference at Denison University where he wiU make three addraaaea Monday. Tbe Bethany pastor will leave for New Toik City to take a pIsM for Rio de Janeiro where he win represent his church at the During the two Sundays Dr. hapman is in finiU, tbe pu^t ST. MARY'S-IN«r. H. Sidney Barnett, president of the congregation, and Mrs. Charies Gersten, Sisterhood president, are assisting with arrangements. Other newly elected officers Include Eh-. Samuel Chalets, first vice president; Marvfai Barnett, Church of God Cites Progress Giving at Record Lavetj 40 Extension Projects, 6^ Church iAanriisted ANDERSON, Ind.-Record progress in 78 years of general educational, missionary, publiihing and is reflected in a Kaha and Arthor W-KoMla were aamed to the gov- Other board' members' aiW Jacobson. Thomas Horwitz, Irving Gordon, Sol Eller, Herman Oickstein, Dr. Jack E. Beike, and Jacob A. Meybr. ' W 1 Plans are underway for the installation of the new pipe organ in September. Rev, B, T. White Speaking at Both Worship Hours The Rev. Bertram T. White, a member of the Bishop’s staff of the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan, will be guest preacher at both the 9 and 11 a m. services Sunday in St. Mary-in-the-Hills Church, 2512! Joslyn Rd. | ’The Rev. W’ilbur R. Schutze, rector of the parish, will conduct the worship hours. ’Die Rev. Mr. White it in charge of stewardship training in fiie diocese. He was formerly vicar of St. George Episcopal Church, Milford. A graduate of Alma College and Virginia Theological Seminary, he once served as Mr. Schutze's| lay reader while a student at Alma. A "couples’ cookout" will be held| at 4 p.m. Sunday for all couples of the church and tbair friends, as well as the children. Chairman of the gruip is Wallace Crane. Out-of-Town Guests Speaking Sunday Harlan Burton of Springfield, Ohio will speak at the 10 ajn. service Sunday at the Church of God, 296 W. South Bivd. ’The choir will provide special musk. Elder W. K. Lane of Detroit will be guest speaker at 3:30 Sunday afternoon. Directing musk will be minister, Connie Keene, and Mrs. Dolores Hardiman. Assisting. will be Robert Rosborough of Flint. Another special service is scheduled for 8 p.m,. tomorrow. Fiirt Congregaticmal Qiurch • Mfll E Mt Ofmans Maicoim K. Burton. Mfnfstor Morning Wonhlp Sorvkt 10.30 P.M. "Who TiguUeili UtT The Per. Mt. BattPO, Praeddag 10:30 AM, Cbuw*» School played as a nsember at the park atatf. During the week he will work on a nearby government project Sundays and evenings will be devoted to a religlouB ministry that bi-dudea leading worship, preaching, study groups and conducting Sunday School. - * * * Five stwmta win staff the ministry at Zkm Park. Dhccting the work is a student from McCormick Theohigical Seminary in Chicago who waa an intern kst year. Basldea the Koehs, a ysirag Fint airiftian Clnirch Dfsefpfes 61 Cbrtit Surukiy .&Aool 9:00 A. M. Church Stwvlco .. 10 A. M. report hy Church of God general offloes here to almost 3,200 gregathms in the United S and abroad. Tlie church’s'.executive council said the past year saw the _ total gi^ to regidar budget causes when an increased number of congregatkxri^ raised fL230,372 tor work of the church. ★ ★ * Currently observing its SOth anniversary, the missionary board reported a special anniversary fund oi 8100,000, in addition to the regular taidget, it being raised tor projects in Africa. Korea and Japan. Its operating budget last year was 8437,000. Forty eeopnrallve extenstoa evaageliaiB ReJeeto he 91 s' iM ftra Cbaaihui prevftleee OoUege are aa tMa year's toam. Local programs In the National parka are self nistaining. the Rev. Edward D. Auchard said. ’Twei^ y(^ people from the Orchard Lake Churdi who will represent the church at camps and conferences, sponsored by United Presbyterian Church. wUI be recognized and commissioned tomorrow morning by toe pastor. ’There are laid to be some 46 Gutenberg BiMes left in the worid today. Of these, 14 are in the United States. ■stod by the Board el ClMreli Sixty-three new church loans were made, totaling 1423,900, bringing the outstanding church loans to neatly two mfllion dollars. In addition the board hdped congre-i^cttate hiuul toana First Social Brethren Church 916 Baldwin, FB 9-0994 7J0P.M. .I0.-00A.M. Sat. Eve. Servica Sunday School . Sunday Morning Worship ........IIK)0A.M. Sunday Evening Worahip ......... 7:30 P M. Tuas. Young Paople 7:30 P.M. Thurtday Prayar ... 7:30P.M. REV. TOMMY GUEST, Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11 A. M. "ThgPgrfgctFothur" R«v. Thomas I>unn, AsElEtont Pastor ^XKikina EVENING WORSHIP 7 P.M. "The Rich jfoung Ruler" Assistgnt Pastor Speaking VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL June 20 — June 29 ~ - 6j004K»P. M. CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whiltemore Street • Sunday 7:30 P. M. Gueat Speaker ___Wedneadqy Silver Tea - In the fMd of edoeathm, Andet^ sou CoDege noted an overall cn-roUmenf of over 1,300 students from 38 atatea and 15 foreign countries. Warner Padfle CoU« at Portland, Ore., took ad4tiaiial steps towards fuQ academic Sunday Schools Vital BUCKHILL FALLS, Pa. (*-’Nothing is more important on earth’’ than strengthening the Sunday schools, the Rev. Dr. Nets Ferre, told a church ga" ■- here. If parents would throw their full sup^ behind the Sunday Sebods, he said, it could end juvenile delinquency in this country. . Evangelical United Brethren Churqh 312 BaUwIn Ave. Phone FS 2-0738 We/coma to Fatbor s Day SarviCas Worship - 1:15 and 11:00 AM. S*rmon by Ktv. Charlw Kolb of BoB^ Iterbor Sunday School — 0:45 AM. — Classw tor AQ Ttie “Y” Hour at Lakeside from 9 to 7 PM. Minuter—KtV. M. R. XVIRITT Even in the hapidest of Uvea, tome failure ia inevitable. It ia not In^^itsrif indispensable to sue-cess, hut recognition (f it, kccept-of it to a reality, is Binstock, Tbe Road To Successful Living). LEACH ROAD COMMUNITY CHURCH 1 MUi nut of Aafeoa BoltMs. t Bloek Worto of Anbnra M. aundoy SdMOl WS;M. Wortap II A. U. TModny Nlabt BIMj BM«r. t:M F. It “// You Naad Spiritual BncouragomonI . . . Coma" "Wofarford Yownship's Amaricon Baptiat Church” CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST Craaoant Laka Rood naor Hotchary Rood 11 A. hi. Bunday Bcliool Nursery During AH Barvteas Worahip 10 A. M. Large Parking Lot “T“ DONELSON BAPTIST CHURCH Eltioboth Lako Rd. at TUdoa OR >jm Sunday School . 10 AM. Morning Worship .. 11:00 AM. Juaiar and Rectaaan' CtauicR . „ — Youth Service ..............................!=!•£•*!• Evening Church Service ....■..............JJM P^ Midi^ SwTlce.....................7:00 PM. Wednesday B LaLONB a. a. aapi—ARTBUR BWALO FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN «S KORtB ROeiLAWN Sunday School iO A.m. — Moming MessAga 11 am. By Jamat DtVault. Spacisl Mutical Instrumantal Trio Christian Workar* Matting 7 p.m. Wad. Prayar and Bibla Study 7:30 p.m. UNITY 70 Chambtrtoin FE 5-2773 Diana Saaman, Mtnisior Opaa OiUy It la S S:90 Sunday Sebool 11:00 Morning Worship amst Bpeakw, Mn. RlaDelM JoU "wm That a$ Made WtMsf Wedneaday, 9 PM. "Tbe Retara to Jcraealeai" Oueet Speaker, Mar)orte BatlUf National Lutheran Council Churches ASCENSION WATERFORD Wm. LaFoutttatn, PotftH' SUNDAY SCHOOL 9KX) A.M. service ............10:00 AM. CHRIST of the LAKES WHITE LAKE TWP. MaeUBs at Beauaont aebeei 6593 CUsabeth Laka Rd. Iran C. Rosa. Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL . .9:15 A.M. CHURCH SERVICE lOdO A M. SYLVAN LAKE Ueetlas at OM Plaa taka aekoal Middle Belt at Long'Laka Rd. Pastor Clark McPhall SUNDAY SCHOOL .9:00 AM. SERVICES 8:00 and 10:15 A M. CHRIST WATERFORD TWP. Airport at WUUanu Lake Rd. Arvtd B. Andorsoa, Pastor_ WORSHIP, 8 A.M. and 11 A.M. SUNDAV'SCHOOL . .9:30 A M. BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR N. Adams ltd. Batmen Long and Square Laka Roads. Donald G. ZIU, Pastor Sunday School ..9:30 AM. A4ominq Wonhlp .. 11 dX) A.M. ST. JOHN'S PONTrAC n Bin Bt. at Cherry St. SUNDAY SCHOOL . .9ri5 A M. CHURCH SERVICE IIKiOA.M. "SEARCHING THE SCRIPTURES" wHh Roosevelt Wolb; Minister CHURCH CALENDAR tvc. Wanlilp aad a UMt Study Tuaaday....... •.« r. ». '.3JUESTIONS THAT NEVER SHOULD HAVE BEEN ASKED ” The anforlty at the Sawrlcaa people art a readtaa peeple. They read trary-thlnc frooi fUlhj mafaalaaa la datile Uteratnn, erarythlof trsm harrar eooile Paoka U ateddartaa (aaalp, enrythlM traaa kMary to aataotlfia aiath^tleal aquatlou. Bat la tha taaa of aU tfala. ta« raM tka BMt. SpparaoUy thay do aat raalta lla la>-------- akadlaot. Ia apM CHURCHES of CHRIST ^ Liston to , the "HSartd el Truth' Each Snpdoy CKLW TV 830 AM WXYZ 530 P.M. SYLVAN LAK^ Uld they ----------- houn. tor Utev am la hare to five ll k ft* arlU k«t ana- — “■ lONOlUBCB xxiaT. r ^ an thair road tha--------------------------- wa would Bot ka lau ta ntaralas to UTBtBD TO THB liUKTa. JudaT :1. fraaiithalr alada an------- 1 aartbty thoaebta. aS u iMa aaMaa m TBxqratonoB; muT CBunoa BBOoin i lomt PAiTB oMCi . zira nui- Uwortaa. tka spaatiaaa wa ihaB BMe School 935 AM. Momin^Wonhip 1035 AM. 'Two kLi in rtw TompIV' Evwting^WOrship 6 P.M. Thd Fsito One* Delivored "The Roaurrdetion" Vacation Bibio Stoool. June 20 - 29th. 9 to 11 a m. PONTIAC . W^HF.LSUStar* FE 2-62«9 Bibla Study 9:50 p.m. Worship J O:SO Evening Worahip 6 p.m. Wed. Bibie S^'J730 P M. LAKE ORION «. *> ualett Mlamae 1080-ftommlngway Rd. off Clarkston Rd. Bibit Study 9.35 a.m. tuts. 7:|0.p.m. Wortoip 10.35 am. ‘6.-d0p.m. by tha Maw TiiUwaet wkatTha aiiwreb la, hew U Ma tt aaa* ka Saaad. TBnUB.T. AM BBMII IB tUxm IM I OMB fa TO JOIM TRB CBuhCH. Soeh MaeOMa ta aat_ aaaataaaallr thaat who thaa taaak an ■ataaaattoa aa , Oad 1 Pat. 4:11. Tka Blkla taMto that tae la ta _— Iton*to BaT!Itora?u ra'taS® ***“ **• ‘•“rasBa Church of Christ 210 Hughes St., Pontiac, Michigan Worldwide Mob Action THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE 18. I960 VnXlAM TALMAN TV Actor, 7 Others Freed in Morals Case N, HflXS Calif. )(AP) ictor ViUlam llibnan The glgntlc riot! which forced cencelUtion of Preei-dent Eioenhower'i viiit ca within two month! of violent dem-omtntioiis that led to the fan of Syngman Rhee in the Republic of Korea and Premier Adnan Menderei in Turkey. The new goveruaenta la bath of lewd conduct and vagrancy charges wMch followed a raid on a West Hollywood apartment where, offlcert said, th^ were diqiortlng in the nude. ★ * ★ A municipal oOurt Ji missed the misdemeanor chargM Friday, "in the interests o( justice." Judge Adolph Alexander said the prosecution failed to prove tts daim that the defendants violated the penal code. Stcrt* 14th in Growth WASHINGTON (AP) -Attbough Michigan’s population increased 22.3 per cent from 1950 to 1900, it still ranked only 14th in growth among the states. Michigan's 1960 population w«s listtd u 7,293,294 compared with 6,371,766 in 1960. Red Cold War Weapon? tA&yim CHm Ttaaraa/ TRENTON, N. J. (UPD - Gov. Robert B. Meyaer branded as “hearsfiy" yesterday a report that I Sen. John F. Kennedy has been Demooatic National Oonvcntton votes on the first ballot if ha Rotterdam. Holland, has a pop- Fulfills L’rfe Ambition— 'OnO'Strowborr/ Cako BATESVIU£. Ark. IT-Straw-berry farmer L. E. Gardson reai- ELEVEN He had a one atrawfcesyy shsrt-_ike. The strawben)^ which weighed one-fourth poiid.' was grown in his backyard. Easter Island in the South Pa- IMtsi Pnas li The growing role < taaeous reaettoa to dictatorial But free world leaders are convinced that Communist agitators, in every case where it suited them have sparked and fanned nationalist emotions, employing “students" as the core of troubleipak- M(rt> scenes in the last two years have s|R«ad from to Cuba, from Algeria to South Africa and, Indonesia. With the summit breakdown, word to intensify the challenge to law and order is believed Vice NUan In May INI gs« a taste sf what PresUenl Bhsnhswef might have bean subjected to hi Japan, la the Petwvlan capital of Unu, MM “stndenis" 41 to San Marino to lay a wreath at'the tomb of Nixon stood up to the courageously; but be vms outwardly angry and said: "It is not pleasant to be covered by spit from head to foot" « Mob bloodshed reached a peak la the middle East aattoa of Iraq on July l4. 1S«. King Pah-la his pal-Abdfl Hah to Oee la the dtegulse of a woman. Another impending "popular uprising” in nearby Lebanon M Eisenhower to send in U,S. .Marbles and troops to Beirut two daya later on the appeal of Presi-d«it Camille Chamoun. Premier Gamal Abdel Nasser has hysterically summoned the ’student" mobs into the streets of Cairo again and again—during the takeover of the Sues Canal .-md In tho^"hate" campaign against Israel and the "imperialists” Algeria, South Africa, West Beiwal aU have leH the aager of mohs sad the teehalqae reached a aew reftnemcat laCaha Five days later in Caracas, the vice (Mvsident and Mrs. Nixon itere caught in a hostile crowd of 30,000. Nixon called qff plans violent anti-United States rioting in the capital of U Pv-♦ ★ -A The downhdl of the SS-yearold Rhee 4n Kona and Menderei In Turkey came exactly a month apart—Rhee resigned on April S May 26. American backing of pretests against election fraud contributed to the displacement of Korea’ "strong man” Turkish army action. on the heels of riots in Istanbul, caught American officials by surprise. Last November Panamanian students invaded the Canal Zone and attempted to hoist their national nag there. Bolivian stu-denu in March 1^ spearheaded Appointed Director of Compensation Unit LANSING (AP) - William R Hart, deputy auditor general, was appeteted director of the Workmen’s Compensation Department by Gov. Williams today. Hart, an attorney ‘and former mayor of Saginaw, replaces Zolton A. Ferency, who resigned to run for Wayne County prosecutor on the Democratic ticket. Hart has lerved in hk present Job since July 1957. A Saginaw native, he has served as codhcil-man, mayor and supervisor in the city and formerly was a trustee of the Michigan Veterans Trust Fund. He it married and the father of four children. Pontiac Theaters Then, Poor Guy, Back to Normal Father Is Boss for One Day By JOY AP Newsfeatares Writer Sunday, dad gets a breather. But Monday the social scientists will be back on the firing range, busily melting down fresh surveys and scraps of leftover aymbolism for blasting away at beleaguered American fatherhood. Figurehead . . . bli line image .. . henpecked onlooker . . . animated meal ticket. AAA These are aome of the. _ lethal shots lobbed into what .many of the experts consider a crumbling institution. For several years now aiitlmh pologists and aocidioglsta, paychia-trista and psychologists. For the theories all but outnumber the theorists. Pop would have lead fbur Uvea, to make such multiple mess of fatherhood. There is some excuse for the old man’s confusion when this sort of thing is conceivable: AAA reads about an eminent anthropologist. Dr. Otto von Meik« of the Univerrity of Pittsburgh, who is bewailing the changing role of father from Victorian ' lom and master to that of an "on- . looker at a mother-child coalitionr Panic-stricken at the thought of | b«^ a ings, disorientation and ego dissatisfactions the experts daim, but there are more dads around today than ever before. A A A And there’s no doubt about how, oe rates with his family. After all, he’s getting a tie or a pipe or a pair of new slippers tomorrow morning, isn't he? ^ EAGLE Sat., Mon.: "The Sinking of the Bismarck,” Kenneth More, Dana Wynter. Tues.: "The Naked and the Dead," AMo Ray, Raymond Mat-' aey, color. OAKLAND Sat.: "The Fugitive Kimf," Marlon Brkndo, Anna Magaai, Joanne Woodward. STRAND Sat.: - “The Greatest a»ow Earth,", (iluudtan Hedton, Betty 'Huttoit, James Stewart, color. The United States needs about :32 miUlon commercial Christmas ^trees each season. TONIGHT BOX OmCE OPENS 7dX) P. M. SHOW STARTS AT 8i30 P. M. APMISSION —80c 3 TERRIFIC FEATURES! FREES CI6ARS TO Fissr IM FATHERSr FREE! RORT CAIMHIN , SENSATIONAL! Aanl Su SRMIRAinURIliM masomr SHOCKING! SOBDID! I Mate M ___w aa I LUPIN0*STBILM6*M00RE mmn nruB TOna-TMXTEIte mtATUfMCOUm I mmWfi SIJMIAY-AN OUTSTAMDIlVG PRaGRAM NOMMATED FOR THE ACJU)EMY AWARD! NOPLE RAGING ... PASSIONS EXPLODING ! BLlSTfRING FURY ond NAKED POWER! ; SMWOTMAMS JQUtm father seizes a diaper and ad- | vancet upon the coaUtkm's smaller half. T0NI6HT . You'H Be PRaly^ With Fear! ItLl K SKY 2150 OPDYKE RD. FE 4-4611 r. HmH Bloeh s(IIm 9 Psydiewiilysis and Peyekelsgy. aaye: lsi« eetabished pM- tern of family Hfe In ugOeh Mher garat Mead. Is dlstreewd be-raasB American men nre ■wi bnagr tending bnbten they have Df. Doris MUmmi'iif the New York State CUUege of Medicine: "Some fetbers have abdicated al-moct completely." Geofllwy Gerer, English anfiiro-poiugist: "In few eocietiet ie the role of father more vestigial than in the United States.” RusaeU Lynes, aodal critic, defined fatben: *T7» new servant claap." 3 UNIT SHOW! A FACE . . . A MAN . . . A MOTION PICTURE AS PROUD AND VIOLENT AS TOM LEA'S BOLD AND POWERFUL NOVEL . . Owl Show "DESERT HELL" in COLOR _ TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, 3ATURDAY, JUNE 18, 19W Cryd, No, Sho kt So Goes Divorce Action LOS ANGXLjra (AP) -VmU-— “e contesting for Stephanie Zimbalist, 3T, sued a «ask m> tar aeparate aance, alleging cruelty and deser- 's salt for dlvarct Friday charged cruelty, adted for joint custody of their daughter, Stephanie, 3, and for ^itable divislan of community property. Yale university, founded in IM, school. It was changed to Yale col< lege in 17U after BUui Yale. Saginaw Supervisors Get $5 Pay Increase SAGINAW (UPIl-The Board of Supervisors is going get a 35 pay boost. Board me bers win now receive $15 per d THRU MONDAY EXCLUSIVE! FIRST SHOWING PnenMbrWARNBR BROa^'i'l anthony Perkins jane'ibnda That exciting new star you’re going to be mighty-fbndof ALSO FIRST PONTIAC SHOWINBI DENNY MlllER as lie NEW Tamn Shadow Hovers Over Con-Con Rep. Saliode's Fate Points - Out Stringont Petition Requirements LANSING (AP) The fate of Bep. Geoife W. SaUades lieutenant gover^ candidacy cast am omin^ shadow today over the drive for a November ballot test PONTIAC EXCUUHVE — James Cagney as Admiral Halsey outlines naval battle maneuvers to his subordinates in a crucial devdc^ment during Worid War II. “The Gallant Hours,” a United Artist rrieaae, starts June 23 at the Commerce Drive-In. It is the first Pontiac area showing and the first exclusive showing in a Michigan drive-in theater! ' Summer Lessong at YMCA Offers Tots Swimming A aumniertime “Tiny Tots Shim-ming Program" will be offered at the Pontiac YMCA. ★ ★ The program, open to children age 5-7, win with baaic swimming iMUa. PET DOtlOl ByA.W.Mallsf,D.V.M. ‘Those youngsters who are more advanced or who advance in the program wtU have an opportunity to learn aome of the more advanced swimming and diving ......LaMotte said. COST B $!• Parents may register their children at the T building, 131 " Oemens St. Cast is $!• for eight The program will begin Monday, My 11, lor boys, and the following day for gtris. Clasoes for boys will meet Mondays and Fridays, and for girls Tuesdays and Thursdays Class times and additional information are available at the ‘Y‘. Bleeping slckaess Is a oommoa dIsense nf horsra. Are fltere pre-casttpas that can be taken agalast it? Answer: Sleeping sickness (equine encephalo-myelitis) ^ a serious, usually fatal malady of horses. The disease is seasonal, occurring between June and November, except in the extreme south where warmer weather’ vails the year around. Lehman to Be at Convention Is Dumped as Delegate but He's Going to LA 'as a Democrat' Sleeping sickness is caused by a virus that is transmitted to horses by mosquitos, lice and ticks. (Control of these pests will minimize the danger of infectiqn. Preventive vaccine is availkbie, but as there are different strains of this illness occuning in different locales, re-vaccination may be necessary when the horse is moved from one stete to another. ★ A Call your veterinarian immediately if the horse shows signs Of incoordination or sleef^ness. According to latest resMTch, it is doubtful that sleeping sickness is carried from horses to humans. to Dr. MoHer In earn of this paper. He John L; LaMotte, 'r aqnatte With Just under three weeks to go, groups poahi(« for a consti-tutkmal convention vote had gathered barely over 150,000 signa- This left them halfway to the goal of 300,000 originally set last December by the Michigan League of Women Voters in launching the enterprise — to provide a comfortable margin of la^ty. 8tate AFL-CIO Piestdent An-gnst Sohelie. In cm of his deepest apiltt wMi Ctov. Wintoms, NEW YORK (AP)-Former Sen. Herbert H. Lehman, dumped by the New York SUte .DenM^tk CTommlttee as a delegate to the national oonventioa, says he'll be n Los Angeles "as a Democrat and as a member of the National tt|c Advi^ Council." Lehman lashed out at Michael [. Prendergaat, Ms chief antagonist, who easUy won re-election state Democratic chairman and then declared all-out war against the insurgent group led by Lehman and Mrs. Franklin D. r«me jpemocrat|t "The action of the state committee is Just another reflection of the short-sightedness and rogance of the bostes. Obviously they mere afraid for me to have any vMce in the dedskaw of the New York delegation and the na- The collapse of SsUade'i candidacy in the face of a threatened chaUeiq[e to his petitions under scored the stringency of election code requirements fw getting the constitutional cimvention issue before voters. Ts qualify, the ( Skelton Would Like TV a Little More Colorful By BABL WIL0ON LAS V10A8 •— Red the Rebel Skelfam, barefbot but In white elaeka and shirt, lolled back caplUllattcally to tie «ooI suite and wetly chewed, without erar Ufhttoi, »«tMte tut cost about 80c. Half a dea^ aiher elgars that ha WILSON to hte, shirt podiet. “If I weta ta get away fram CMS**— saddenly annoaneed CBS’ great TV aa-medlai^’T’d he Just aa happy.* "You mean It? You might bolt to NBC?” | I asked him. _ •‘They’re so far behind In color,” patient- 1 ly explained Red, Uftlng hU gaxe from his | toe and glancing off toward a |1 alot machine installed In his suite. WILSON "They fight In the office, morning, noon and nlSbt,” he went (m quickly. “TV’s in Its Infancy, and NBC's tbs only ooa doing anything for its advancement” ★ ★ A TVe got a straight contract that has three more yean to go," be added, wearily - Wtlng hard into the unlit cigar. Red is constanUy trytog to Improve—which explains why his night club act Is abdut the country's grsatest entertainment, and his TV show consistently a winner. Red’s always salting the SKILTON with so ■tick which frequently her-rlfles them, hat evtdeatty "I never meet the guys,” Red saya “They tarn to the script Then,” he grinned, *I lease It ap.” Red’s junbahly the only comedian who has a complete try-out i^rformance of his show the day before It’s actually agalant She LWV-erigtaetod e«n-stltattonal eonvenHen ptan. Although be haen't yet said, 11 is widely assumed SdioUe would not hesitate to challenge the constitutional petitions if they ap-stitutional petitions if they i peered vulnerable to attack. Fudging on aome of the technicalities of election code requirements for nominating petitions, ^ state lawmakers privately admit, i done, is not unusual. Overzealous sup- AAA porters will cut technical corners »you play back the recording and take out a lot of dead aometimes without a candidate s laughed, “you put in aome new dehd atuff.” knowledge. | • Skalton la alwaya at his fanofeat in Las Vegas where he ean kid this mad village, noted, ameng ether things, for ald-eonditioned Cadlllaea and then the alr-eondlUen-Ing of almost everything hat the daoert “When a guy goes broke gambling,” Red says, “he doesn’t shoot himself—he goes back to his room and turns oh the alr-conditloning.” AAA l"‘ A,. A Knowing the inherent vulnerability of petitions to attack, season^ candidates for safety's sake almost Invariably file ISO or 300 per cent of rec^red number of Petition signature collectors for constitutional reform now are operating under a summons to put forth a special effort this week-untrack the floundering effort. Community Theaters ■to.; ■’HelSr*SopM* or*n. AnthaiT Quina: “Clrcui SUn. BramMe ______Jarbtra Ruih. .. sto.; "The Ttoflar." VInesto Juditti Xralya: VaT* Roekat Tnatl,” nm Mosstr !. Sim.; ■*rh»%TlM rwitaliM/' ... “Sira. 5S& Reds claims he doesn’t fly much becauM of his back. “I got a yellow streak up It,” ha aays. He says, also, that whan ha arrtvaa to Las Vagaa aach trip, he stays asrake far days without any alacp. "I won’t give up and to bed,” he aaya, "even though I’m so sleepy, I’m afraid to blink.’! AAA , THE WEEKEND WINDOP ... 'DON’T PRINT THAT!”: Paulette Goddard, birthday-partying at The Roundtable said: "I don’t feel any older, but 1 must be—even women are beginning to like me” ... It’s Tony BandaU’s kidding line: “Actors say agento are a necessary evil. I disagree—they’re an unnecessary evil!" . . . ' TV fQm companies arc paying up to $5,000 for authentic western stagecoaches . .. Zta Zsa Caber’s pooch Is expecting, and she has promised pups to two down friends . . . Among the Hfdlywood stars scouting anxiously for accommodations In Rome during the Olympics Is Bing Craeby. TODAYV BEST LAUGH: Hank Grant lays the true gen-telman Is a bald-headed guy who removes bit hat In an elevator. . . . That’s earl, brother. (Cepyrigbt, INO) Lehman, also former New Yoik governor, has been a delegate at large to every national convention since 1928, except when be was in Europe tai 1941 Mrs. Roosevrit, also rejected a driegate, haa indicated no desire to be a delegate to tbe July 11 conventitm. - SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY - THE UNFORGEHABLE PERSONAL STORIES BEHIND a. THEeREATESTiEA-HUIITOFALLTIMEI - PLUS - _____ 2ND HIT! Japies Gamer "DARBY^ RANGERS' JL r.) THE PONTIAC FHJasS. SATURDAY, JUNE 18. I960 THIRTEEN ROW! TmAT l&iowQjucm ^tteMW IkvvMn tATimOAT sm« II]NDAT-4m»W rUE r«rklai Indians Need Reservations Unlucky On«s Sutti* for AAocfom T«tpt§ at Pttockay Powwow They*ll Know Monday Nia^t HOLLYWOOD (UPI) —, It’i _»w pott MMoa in VidcovUle, wbere evoyone is guessing the ten ol Monday night’s Enuny mamk tions had a new meaning tolay at i Petoakey where the first AMtate Pageant if end- 3 SHOWS TODAY at 2-5 ond 8 P.M. • VT^^^^**^i»mSlNTATION Al ELEOTRIFYINa ... BREATH-TAKIH8 ADVENTURE AND DLORIOUS ROMANCEt LOUIS DC. ROCMEMONTS 'WiniJiUEt In Oorgeout EASTMAN COLOR . iSsoouciD M ^ faneanaja dNaiiiiiiQE mgaa ing a twtHiay stand. ★ ★ Tlie term means hotel and mhtel Bceommodationa for swarma ol visiting tribesmen from eight states who have joined their Michigan brothers for the pageant which htghii^U the Uth annual councU meeting of the Northern Michigan Ottawa Assn. Petoskey. named after Ottawa eUertata Pe-Ta-Se-Oah (the ria- SEATS RESERVED FOR ALL PERFORMANCES SR ORDER TOUR TICRETS TODAY! AA priest IstL ist ORCH. MEZr UL& Ms«i!WEONESOAYs»3s.si. fIJS sijs SIJO MtH: SAT. S. SUN. I pm. SI.7S SI.7S SIJO Ertli MON. Hits SAT. liM 12 AS f2AI ll.ll SUNDAY St S ssJ 1 pm. S2AI S2AS SI.H' . MAN. ORDERS FUEO PROMPTLY I DETROIT-WO 14701 .—.J For those who nnisted out on regular acoommodatlans, asaodn-tion President Robert Dominic had on the Infield ol the Emmet (bounty Fairgrounds nee track. They bear no reaembinnee to the teepees which brighten the peweant midway. But, says Dominic, they provide kbelter for sleeping and cooking. ★ R ★ One major drawing card on the Mincil business agenda was a report on the Ottawa and Chippewa land claims suit against the federal government for 15 million dollars on lands ceded In treaUei long ago. OthMwtae, the pageaat la the ezMMt ef what Ufa r ketare the A parade la Videoville Guesses on Emmies steel Union Leader Asks Shorter Week week waa necesaary to { automation from harm the ecnoony by rpdtscing joba oae-abot pro> rankad near the top d the prediction Bats. There were fewor nom-by hall than the amall anny of - - • Moat difficult race to figure is the best dramatic show. Three entries are running neck and one-shot "Moon and ind two series, "The ind “Playhouse ■eweety-eeroa asmlneea an vying In ts rategertas for gaMca’ •tatnettes tMa year. Objections by viewers and critics to the muldplicity of awards and the IWgthy, confused show, led the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences to throw performances and progranu whether series or specials — a handful ol cstegories. BERNSTEIN NOD LDUELY Cloaest tiling to a sure bet in the competition is the award lor outstanding achievement in the field ot music, where Leonard Bernstein and the New York Phil-hannanie have huge immben of Rooney Promises to Pay Back Alimony SANTA MONICA, CWlf. (AP)-Mickey Rooney has promised to pay up 033,000 back alimony to Ms fourth ex-wlfc, actress •™-‘— Davis, within four weeks. Rooney told the court Friday he owes his own firm, Flyman Enterprises, $157,02 and is paying ott a |»,000‘ U.S. tax lien at the rate of 12,400 a month. He said his 1959 income tsx was $425,000 but that he has earned only $95,- far pageant evente. Dominic indicated eome of hii so far this year, people dug deep into thin podeet-' ' books to buy material which In- U. of M. Math ProfosSOr dian wonnen turned into authentic . t-L-costumes lor the event. The peg- Tokf PO$t Ot Harvard cent also hopes to realise a profit from the sale of handicraft attracteePby the tacle: It takes over from chamber commarce-sponeored pageants which the association daims made a mockery of tribal customs. Jasper National Park — 4,200 miles in the heart of the Canadian Roddes—is named for Jasper Hawes, a young fur trapper from Missouri. Little is known of Hawes except he had yellow hair, a winning personality and loved nature. CAMBRIDGE. Mass. (UPI) A Michigan mathematician who has renMdeled several high school will become the James Bryant Oonam protesaor ot education and mathematics at Harvard University. Edwin E. Moise, 41, now professor of mathematics at the UM-veraity of Michigan, will assume his duties July 1. Since 1958 he has participated in the secondary school mathematics program of the College Entrance Examination Board. He is preparing a geometry texttwok for high schools. •r Art Oarwiy's speelaL ~Vlp-” Danay Lee J. Cobb, who got his start in TV, is favored over Alec Guineas and Laurence Olivier in the best single performrnce category. Aad to prave that aa Osear wtaner can aluo roUert aa Emmy. lagiM Beigmaa Is the Irsat-nnwer aver Julie Harris and Theresa Wright for beat Slagle perfonnaaee by aa actress. She starred in “The Turn of the Screw.” TOP SERIES ACTRBBSEB Contending for top series actress are Donna Rm, a sensa-tk»al favorite, and Jane Wyatt and Lravtta Young. A lawyer (Perry Maaon), a cowboy (Paladta) sad a detective (EWot Ness) are compettag tor best actor, bat Rayensad (lawyer) Burr, according to Insiders, should come home In front of Richard Boone aod ST.. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - The and buying power. Hoaxer, country needs a 32-hour, tour-day j praised automatkm as “a r worjt week. United Steelwortccrs President David J. McDonald said. The shorter work week should cany no kws in pay. he McDonald told, the 22nd annual boon to mankind.'’ He said the USW would pn for a s)»rteiied work wedi in next contract negotlatlona unl< Congrem enacts legtalatlon achieve it. LEE J. OOBB Started In Vide# TBUT DU TO TIB GHMTIST Miss Television" — Dinah Shore — is expecting to run away with another Emmy this year as the outstanding performer in a variety or musical series, over Fred.,Astaire and Harry Bela-fonte. WWW Frorit runner among top children's programming fs “Huclde-beny Hound,” who is squared off against “Captain Kangaroo." ‘Lassie,”'“Quick Draw McGraw" And “Watch Mr. Witard.” INGRID BERGMAN Top Sln.rle Actress? FINE FOOD for LOW PRICES ^ Fried .Chicken..............*1.35 rrendh Frtea. Cote Stew, Bread and Batter % Lb. Hamburger . French Frlea . SPAGHETTI WITH CLARKl MEAT SAUCE t . 55^ $100 s 4B8 SmTMT P ciiARK’S BBSTACRANT A DBIVB-IN Mootcahn at Baldwin R 4-7883 -TONTIS AT TtM uA SlAS- SMgr,ft.w.t.Ti loSsmliUiVUtUliiim Explosive/ TIIIIACUEHT AWARD WIHRIRS... ni DUliniR PRIZIAOTHOR ... AID ROW THI KRIIH IS STRDCR IT INHTHini •"•ri JAMIS STEWART - LEE REMICK - REN GAZZARA - ARTHUR O'CONNELL - KATHRYN GRANT “THE AEATOHY OF A MURDEE” NOMINATED FOR SEVEN ACADEMY AWARDS!! I itasMiKr . »STAIlEION-«JI]RVSkVAlH^ n«s luos SUNNY iilNtth-msToneFMir NOW! I TOMORtOW IS tATNBl DATr ---^TREAT DAD------- AND THt WHOLI FAMILY TO "TNI GVATIST SHOW ON lARTH" sx^UN. - SUNDAY SCHEDULE « SHORT SUDJECTS1:00 — 3:00 — 5:00--7:00 — 9:00 'TOBY TYUR" 1:16^3:19 —5:22 —7:2S —9:28 MONDAY SHOWS START AT 7KX) ond 9:03 HURON THEATRE Phone FE 4-7091 iKvnioNiicniiEFnEiiEnaii in brlBtaat TBCHNICOU With the greateat stars earth! 1 PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JUNE 1% IMP Big Mike Now 3 Shots Ahead of Nearest Foe. Sanders in 2nd Place; 36 Holes Slated Today at Denver DENVER (UPI) - The vivon went oat for the finol two rounds in the U. S. Open golf championship today with a great chance to break the scoring record but slim hopes of catching rimaway Mika Smchak. w ★ * Big Mike gave them one hew maik yesterday when he added a four under par 33-34^ to his opening 68 for a 135 which rubbed out the former half-way mark of 138 held jointly by Sam Shead, Ben Hogan, Didc Mayer and Billy Joe Doug Sanders, the man I Miami with the "telephone booth backswtng," and put him Into _ tkm to erase Ben Hogan’s record winning total of 276 set Cslifomia’s Riviera Course in 1M8. ★ ★ ★ It looked as if Mike, the brswny-amied former Duke football star, would have to undego a complete ooUapoc at Cbmy Hills Country CSub to blow that lead as the low 50 and ties who survived the cut went oat for today’s two closing hat as Om M-degree weather. Mg handplajrlBghiiweffeo — and H appaieotty was goiag ts taho a lot of par-huadag ts catch htan. Sandars appeared tolte his lone competitor—for Mike held a fat five stroke edge on a trio bached at 180. They were Dow Finsterwald. former winner Jack Fleck and little Jerry Barber. h a h Six ahoU back at 141 came Slammin’ Sammy Snead, Awsle Bruce Cramptoo, pending champion Billy Ossper, veteran Ted KroU, and Don Cherry, a professional as a Mnger but an amateur as a golfer. Snead, four times aeoaod in this one and at 48 hoping finally to cradc the ice, moved to on the field with his 33-3868 over the par 71 course — but still lost tuSopBbak. I par 141 was Ben And at e to catch that fMOi. He had a 78 «Meh also dldat gala aa laeh sa With Hogan at 143 were U. 8. amateur chamidon Jade Nicklaus, South African Gary Player who holds tbs Britiah Open title, and former U. a champion "Moose’ From then bock it didn’t look like they had much chance. And the "names” trailing along included tournament favorite Amdd Palmer, and Paul Harney at 143; Don Whitt, George Boyer and Ken Venturi at 144; Doug Ford, Frank Stranahan and Henry Ransom at 145; Chick Harbert and Wally Bur kemo at 148 and Jim Tumesa Cary Middleooft at 14T. ★ ★ A It took a score of 147 to qualify for those two last-ditch rounds which will end with the crowning tonight of a new champion — big Mike’s palm was itching to take that 314,440 first prize.____ Hrrj BwVar . Jack nwk t-OoB Cbarrr SiVM CniaptM BID CuBw Jr. Trt Soro* .. Player . : meuaiu 80UCHAK BOWIES — Mike Soudiak, the leader by three strokes after two rounds, uses body Englidi to coax a 10-foot birdie putt into the cup in FYiday’s iday. He bad a 67, bettered an opedng day 68. iHawkins a 'Toddler When Ted Hit 1st bert at 148 wet* the on^ Mlc^ gsHsn left as the Nathmal Open ftnaki Start today. Gfruefa KocMs of Royal Oak had 158. Buijf of Qroase Pofnta Woods 156 and EMon Briggs, Saginaw, la la drop. jPatl ...... gsr-aJm BaOaa Laelstr Jr. . 'Van'jrT*!..! Chkk Hartoait ... jaokM Bradlty Byl _ On April 23. 1339. Ted WllUama Mbit his first major league home Urun. And Wynn Hawkins was a .. toddler of 3 in East Palestiiie, Friday night, 31 years later. i rookie with the Oeveland bkHaiis, I who gave up Wfflams” 500lh home The shot'throusJi the Inist at ---- " Qeveland’s Municipal Stadium put the Big Guy, already in a class by himself among today’s Stan, vdth the dite of baseball’s alltiroe shiggers-Babe Ruth. Jimmy Foxx and Mel Ott, the only others to hit 500. It was Williams’ eighth of the .isaon and cracked a third-inning tie for a 3-1 Boston victory f sUpped Cleveland to third pi in the American League race. Baltimore retained a IH game . 7S-TS- « c .. 7S-7S-MS .. TS-Tl—Ml .. 74-7S- “ .. TS-TJ- -. 71-n— m . 7V71— " . 7WI7— . 71-71— Dykes Ready to Admit Birds Are OK Kaiine on Bench in Detroit Loss Star Tiger Outfielder Is Shelved by Dykei for Weak Hitting DETROIT (AP) - A1 Kaiine, the highest paid player on the Detroit Tiger rooter, is riding the bench because of a .228 batting average and one hit in his last 25 tries. Manager Jimmie Dykes pulled the 340.000«-year out of the lineup last night for the opening game of the Baltimore series. Dykes hinted that the 25-year-old center fielder might ait out the entire lour ames. «I can’t qmivel wMh the man- o( the helping the dttTWwane Ukes to sM an the bewh. bat If H-U ‘ It’s OK with me.” This is the first time the ex-bonus baby has been benched for not hitting since May 1958. Fortner nuuuger Jack Tlghe had Kalins sit out one game when his nverage dipped to .214. Kaiine is a notorioosly slow starto-, but this is the slowest start in his seven full M the Tiger ootfleld befare ho was M They Argue, He Quite WBS n. is just as mysIMed shoot Finsterwald Loses Caddie "I don’t have any answers,” he said. ’’And I don’t have any exes, either.” I feri all right ” is Ksline’s stock iwer to questions about eariy injuries, and whettier they stiU bother him. “I’m paid to hit — not to complain," he sqld last night. Doctoring Your Golf By DR. CART MIDDLECOFF PATIENTS COBIPLAINT: *1 never get n chip up DIAGNOSIS: Compttentlng » simple problem. IWRATMENF: A lot of golfers seem to like to take K deeply lofted club, a pitching wedge or a 8-lron. for atanple eblp shots from level lies just off the green. Many >.^ oOiers have a favorite cIliBPbw ml toy to fit aU chip shots to that favorite club. .mpKrently the first group likes to be qwetaen-lar. even at the cost of effectiveness. They like to pitch the ball most of the way to the pin and see it ■top quickly. Tlie second group — w^ I’m not sure udiat they have In mind sometimes. The simple and effective way to play a chip shot, which we lUustoate today. Is to take a club with enough loft to pitch the ball safely on to the front of the green, and let It bounce and roll the west of the way. Generally speaking, it’s eaeter to get the right distanee with a pitch aAl reD abet than with a diet that Is nearly all pitch er nearly all roO. Ronember: fit the dub to the shot, not the shot to the eiab. Baltimore Rally Nets 3*1 Victory Over Lary, Tigers Stephens" Pinch Homer in 7tb Pulls Orioles Post Bengols DETROIT IB-’The BaHimore Orioles, a mixture of retreads and ftizz-faced youngsters, have just about convinced JJmmie Dykes tlMy're more than a llaah-in-the-in. "You’re no* going to get me to say it isn't a good ball chib,” the Detroit manager said last night after the amazing Orioles trtaimed the Tigers 3-1. ’’They did every-thhig a good club ta siq^posed to ^ Mr IWataJaa NCAA WINNER — Oregon star Dyrd Burieson (259) hita the tapetowintbeflntheatoftbe NCAA 1500 meter run la Oslitorala. The time of 3:50.4 was the best for the meet sad for his own career. Barrie Almond «f Houdon was 2nd and Milford Dahl, UCLA, thhd. At far left la Dick Pond of Western Michigan. i appshitod MATO The Orides had to come from >ehlnd to win it, but this they have done all season long. It was the 18th time Paul Riduurds’ team has rallied from behind, h V V The Tiger’s Frank Lary Baltimore’s Jerry Walker staged a stirring duel for six famings, Lary yielding just throe singles, Walker only four hits. The Tigers DENVER (AP) - A Portland, Ore., sports telecaster caddied the last three holes for Dow Finsterwald In the second round of the National Open Golf Tournament Friday the regular caddie quit after an argument over clubs with the 1958 PGA champion. A A A Charlie La Franchise took over at the 15th green when the argument between rmsterwald and his caddie, 40-year-old Tony Alto-mgre, came to a head. According to newsmen following the FlnsterwaW-Ben Hogan-Bruce CramptSu threesome. Finsterwald asked Altomare what club be should use on his second shot to the difficult 470-yard 14th hole. AHomare, who said later he fob sick to his stomach in the 98de-gree heat, snapped: "Why should I? You’ve asked me twice Finsterwald went shead the club he originally picked but the shot was short and missed the green and the caddie said: "I told you It wasn’t enough." By the time Flnaterwild got to the IStfa green, there had been more words between the two and Finsterwald told Altomare Mild quit if he wanted. "I’m sorry thip happened," the caddie later. "I like this chib but I’m afraid this could cost me my job here. I’d like to go back and caddie for Mm.” nuDAic^i non amis Pa. jU>. jrag^aijil^yw*ws 0>-NSTWNU.' LEAODK Finsterwald, who took the < second round lead with a 69 for a 36-hole total of 148, said thought Altomare was a good caddie. He didn’t say whether he’d be with him for Saturday’s final two rounds. ________isssrt'& —^*rs*— 1*1 Tit* Tltli '• 'aWM W ^ VoiXfi^alHBr ________ Waw Tat* S-U at CM *(WaJd«S&r S-I) at Mm ---*—U «.W OatraS, I, 1:1S not. at OmMS. t. ISOS ^ MATIOKAL UCAOUB Was urn Fat. M . » » J4S — a ss Jis 4 . M a JM t ta a JM s S.4S4 It .4SS W - as S' (bvtaa' "irf _____,._aaa S4). l;a poi. ______ 'aPmvMkw a }:&*». lead by beating Detroit 3-1. The New York Yankees, now all alone in second place, dt^atod the Chicago White Sox 4-3. Washk«tDa beat Kansas City 3-1. WUUsros’ milestone homer followed ■ ski^ by Willie Tsi^ tH HawMhs (44) and gave the IsM ^nce Red Sox their first dedrion over Oeveluid this setoon. Frank Sidllvan (86), winning two in ■ row for the first timd. sent the IiKfimtt to their third straight loss with a toui>hltter. That ffrst Williams h bwA in 1939 It, too. was a two-run blast, off Bud Thomas trf the old Philadelphia A’s. Oetls Boyer hit a two-run homer in the second hrning, then doubled and scored the clincher on .winning jUtcher Art Ditmar’s single in the seventh for the Yankees, who have won eight of 10. TWs was their fourth in a row over the White Sox, who managed seven Mta but only one oorned run off Oitmar (83). Billy Pieree (M) was the loser. Mlchey Mantle slMi homered for the Yankees —wh(T whooped It up wl' lers after both home runs tai sn-thst pfaibsU scarebosTd St Oomiskey Park. AAA Rookie Dan Dobbek drove in two of the Senators’ three His single capped s two-run fourth agatost loser Ray Herbert and homered in the ninth off Don*Laraen. Bill Fischer (1-2) was the winner with 5 2-3 innings of toui4iit, shutout relief. Dykes 4 t a nsedtscre oinb Ta*f at £-88% 9 sr ....... M Jii More Shutouts in Softball Loop • III AV gf. tossph Rfvor wmr MMs In pre-Otyiopte trials and toe Na-llwal Oanee cfcampfsosktps. Outfielder Mike Stanley yester-day became the second Grand Rapids boy signed by the Ttoers wttlto a week. He inked a Class A contract fta- CHARLES TOWN. W Va. (AP) —Two Jockeys were injured and a horse had to be destroyed as _ .... a result of a spill Friday at the in }|J Charles Town race track. MS 14.S4— BaUkiwm’i ________________ts. the Orioles in tint ptace, a gwne bad a hall In front of New York. The setback dropped fiw ’Hgers four games off the pace, hi fifth plaoe. -------- SSSl Aowm «t SSS JakM a a t f i B«kwW • 4 11 omimS 4 s s i * onkva* it 4 s t aMMB M 4 f S 4 rnrnias 4s 4 s i laklDM » 4 1 ts Lot S tto iiOSt SMSpnta a sat kSojpd Ik t k a S rCkrWw ' ‘ ‘ WalUr a less ----------- 3*iri.srst.srt D — Ted WHltams, au easMks Boston gresd dfgqilays ttM baseball bt hit last’ lUd. lUped on the dresskig room wan are tbe Bight at Oevdaod for his SBOlh hense ran in the nemee of 41m okiy otttcr pleyeri to rMdt tlmt An Uftier |M 11m bafi eiM gavb It le flgiiu. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JUNE IS, I960 FIFTEEN Major league Averages I//igo Relaxes^ Patterson Still Works Ajytw;^ C^«r. MItT t^«r. Ctaeli Cvnf, M moclio. rinit&h' Mm. 34 ii i« M BwatBk. DM. H n 27 (V 4 1 ^ |ii| I MiWrMi. ^ 44 44 3 3 t IM sfissn*^ MartM. DM. bmbn. 1M. CMUt. K.r 11.“ Si.. 17 M ii S 4 I i 44 «1 17 « 1 I 1 II 14 14 7 3 1 3... S 8 S 8 i S 8 S M S f 4 siS 77 41 33 n 3 3 3J1 33 44 13 44 3 4 3il IS S3 31 41 3 4 3J4 F:ft«Mfr4._>4ii. ii « j u » ; I a 33 1 4 . 41 „ - _____________ 4i n u 14 Mtama. Cto. M M a ** rJoUina. Dm. 71 44 n SSmT SC4N. CU. . 4.M ____I 4J4 a 3 4 4.a T« M «• a 4 4 4.** S7a 44 44 1 SS.l_ a 41 a a 4 3 4.m 44 a a u 1 4 sa MM 4 3 4 3 4.U 11 1 3 4.M _________ nuto. a a i Nuihiui, ca a a L j 34 81 a 31 3 a n a a 4 n a 31 a 3 tf 89 It tt a » » li 18 I it 8 8 S I S g il a 3 , a a u a 3 I a a 37 a 3 4 a 41 a a ! a 74 44 a I 4pMu>. KU. ifoulu. L.A. AiKicrMn. CU. MUCH. PtU. ti Looks Like a Long 'Suit\ WASHINGTON . XHm Mth LAkt Md^nU. Jtym HrK Ifa 1. 1:33 p.m.; t^U tk OMttrptrt vi (MfTi Orm. MfM* Vark No. I. 4 p.m. -plkMt Laaiktr n. roauae BuImm Ib AT aeAimnTa-aiuc atar Ortra-Ia t. Lansdaa‘4 Baat Uctrp (XAUtaaii ..'13 p.m.: ana Ifo. 313 va. amith an lAmarlean). 7 pjp.: aw«a •• ‘“'Mp-a aportlBf OMOa r fifORTRSn»--r«aUac Umin lintainauaauil), 3 :tac HarcliaBta va. Boa-Ba > « . » ■ »~(tta« Poam Ta 3:33 PJB. Otrr OF BtfUC-Arnold Palmer pUchee but of deep rough during FH^’a second round of the NaOanel Open. He got a par 4 aad ssent epi to a 31 Now What, Mr.Veeck? Yanks Have Theii Own' Scoieboaid Fireworks CHICAGO (AP)-SparUe, Sparkle little star; White Sox ecore-board where you are? With 36 cenu worth of Fourth of July sparklers the proud New York Yankees answered the Chicago White Sox’ $300,060 expiod-hig reboard Friday night. •a ♦ * The dignified Yankees, led by Manager Casey Stengel, comics and put on their o run thow avith e display of sparklers in pounding out a 4-2 victoiy over the White Sox. lit lest enough. The guyv in the buUpcn dkt a better JdV wrhen Mantle htt his biH then they have more cigarettes out fliere.’’ Veek, who had ordered a double set of explortves in hli soare-board after watching the Yankee moneter go off. Hoivever, he managed to say the TankCM used "the cheapest form of firo-works you can buy.” * a * Retorted Stogel: ."U they'd a had a homer after that. Veeck Everytiroe a White Sox player MB._______. M.'tp MVI te.*Arfk Af fttetewnrlrw Aihdl that LONG MOMENTS TO FIGIIT TIME - teraon meets heavyweight champion Ingemar Floyd Patterson stares through a window M his Johansson in New York Monday for the title, training headquarters in Nevrton, Conn. Pat- Law Wins Na 10 at Los Angeles By The Asssciated Press Left-hander Harvey Haddix finally gave iMttsbu^ a third complete-game pitcher, and the Pirates added another starter in southpaw Vinegar Bend Mizell, but the big guys in their run for the National League pennant still are Vern Law and Bob Friend. it -k ■k The two right-handers have put away exactly half of the Bucs’ 36 victories (while losing only five), and they’ve accounted for in a four-game streak that has produced a four-game lead. Law, backed by Bill Virdon’i first bomevivn of the season, uc-came'Ui^jbrst to win 10 in the majors, cooling off Lot Angeles’ home run bats Friday night for a 2-1 vifctoiy over the Dodgers. Second-place San Francisco, Trith Maiuiger Bill Rigney rumored oh the way out. ended its tostng string at four with a 7-3 victory over last-place Philadelphia. Milwaukee, five games back in third, cheeked St. Louis 3-2 in 12 innings. THe Cincinnati Reds tost their sixth In a rqw—their longest slump of the year—ts Chicago’s Cubs took a M decision. Law, who has lost two, blaitked Jayhawks Qualify Eight Men Kansas NCAA Traid(Clioi(£ BE^lKELEY, Calif. lii-Kansas' great Jayhawkera, fiaet and powerful, appeared ready today to starm b their second straight NCAA track and field crown. But Southern California’s Tro-MB, 20 ttmes the NCAA champs ere In a positkm to make It a contest right down to the finish. Kansas qualified eight men into today’s finds with an inspresaive (Uaiday of over-all strength Friday. Oregon was next Tiith 7 qualiflers, followed by UCLA 6, Michigan 5, and Occidental 4. U8C piaowl Wily three mew- the broad leaping 24 fort, 2^ inebes. Myers qualified in the 4(XMBeler dash in 46.7 ea gaa State's WUUe Atteibmy out in the semifinals with 46.3. John Boslt of Western Michigan also faltered hi the aemis of die Stale, Harvard, OaKferaia, Msr- the Trojans had stars Trait-ing In the adQgs lor three evente. Then was no qualifying necessary for the pole vault, high jump or hopHdiip^md-Jump. U8C is strong in aU three. Big BUI Alley and Charlie Tid- in WIIK.U lie Mm im «v- oui nucy ana t.nanie no- -n,- n.n. M/.m4.i, haniam was afrakL Of weU led Kansas’ fine di.piay , j the chsmo smUed. ^Ti^l defenriin. in tL Ihniuih Wednesday Trt Mea^- Tidwel, defending champ in the 100 meters, rron his heat srith 10.4 and captured his semifinal heat in the 200 meters around a :urve with :21.2. Alley buried his javelhi SM feet, t tacbes lur an NCAA record, surpassing the S67Vi uncorked here In IBH by John Fromm of PucMc Lutberuu. The only other NCAA mark shattered was by USCs young gi«it, DaUas Long, who tossed the 16-pound shot 61-9, erasing the 60H heave of Manhattan’s Ken Bantum in 1956. Oregon’s classy young contingent was led hy sophomore Dyrol Biirl-esoo and all-around star Dave Ed- brook and Sally is scheduled to tee oft in the first threesome at 6:30 a.m. Eighteen holes Trill be played each day. S:H.l la the lAlB meter r Olymp4c8. Dkk Cochran of Missouri uncorked a neat discus throw of US-3^ — best ever at Cal's Edmutk Field. Two sprinters ttueatened to give Tidwell a battle. Tom Robinson of Michigan and Paul Winder of Morgan State tied for the beat times hi both the 100 and dashes. Each had a beat of ; IB J the century and ;20.6 te the 300. But Tidwen didn’t psiah hknaeif in itlier event. TWO other Ifichigun boyt and Dave Myers of Oeolral MidiigaB reuefapd the ftoala. Dick Oepte Sally Sharp Set to Defend WDGA Honors Monday SaUy Sharp of Forest Lake, ready to go now that school Is over, begins defense of her Wnn-en't District Golf Association 54-hole medal play tttfe Monday at Meadowbrook Country Club. as a btedifgaileu teacher i the Dodgers on four hits ninth. Then he got Duke Snider to hit Into a game-ending double play after Junior Gilliam had doubled and scored on Charlie Neal’s single. Neal had hall of the Dodgers’ hits, extending his hit streak to 13 games while adding his 23rd RBI in that span. Law gave up just one walk and struck out five, ending the Dodgers’ home run streak at 17 games. Stan Williamt was a towr for the first time in seven decisions, six this season. He gave up Vir-don’a clinching home run te the sixth, after the Pirates bad col-lif of their six hits—singles by Dick GrMt. Bob Skinner arid Roberto tirrt-tening run. k Willie Mays and Orlando Cepe-da clubbed homers for the Giants and drove te five runs betrreen them. Mays’ triple and Cepeda’s aacrifice fly got things sUkted in a decisive three - run fourth against tostng lefty Chris Short (3-2). Southpaw Mike McCormick (6-2) won It, toslDg a shutout on FVank Herrera’# iwo-ruB homer in theisevenfii and then needing relief help te the ninth. Billy Loes saved It. retiring Tony Thytor on a popim and then fanning pinch hitter Clay Dahymple — getting both Trith the ■ ‘ ‘ Al Spangler, a defensive second-liner, tripled and scored on Felix Mantilla’s single as the Braves ended the Cardinals’ streak at four. The Cards, arho had mm six oi jeven. managed only two hits, one BUI White's fourth-inning homer, off southpaw George Brunet before tying H 2-aU with an unearned run in the ninth. Bob Buhl (6-3) won it te tea first reappearance. Joe Adcock homcred for the Braves __ . Louis starter Ronnie Kline. Bob Duliba (4-3) was the loser. hits a home run. Preakient BUI Veeck's expensive board goes into action. Friday night the Sox hit H3 home runs, but the Yankees came nn with a pair. Oetis Boyer crartied one with al man on in the second inning and the Yankee! Trent into action. They lighted their sparklers and led by Stengel—irith a sparkler in each band-they dano^ a jig in their dugout as fite awed of 43,320 roared approval. * * * When Mickey Mantle hanv mered his 13th homer In the eighth inning, the buUpen, led by catcher Yogi Berra, stole the show, by getting a set of sparklers aflame. Then the players tossed them into the air. k k k "Veeck shouldn't get too mad,’ said Stengel, “although js-e caused a little excitement we need an experienced man for our firearms, are couldn’t get Tvorth of fireworks. And that TTOukl be dangerous caase It might have cost us ^ gaoM.’’ The Yankee players w«ro Trild over the idea which came from Bob Fishrt, publicity director of the baU club. Bob WUl’s home run and, a two- It ♦wn-nin «ingfa» tw .llm H»- gan gave it to the Cub* as they broke a 34 tie in the fifth. Don Elston (4-3), who blanked the Reds on tw® hi(p for 4 2-3 innings, Hr«t rmmH n.)Hn«l'^ VictOiy SlthOUgh first - round pairings ^ Anderson was the pitch^of record. Don Newcombe (3-5) was the loser. aitd starting timet; l;M UMi stny Sbars. Portil L4kr: Mn. K«1U> LcClAlr. Bartoi BUI*: Itri. 8. O. lUi^rdt. Oo«4al4. 3;17 I4n r. L. TbompMa. Jr.. OsUsae XUto: Mtl Victor nrOfS, %t; liri. John Ham*. BAoeh Orarc. Mn Kokort Oankic, BKhaa... Mr*. J. O. UrsM. KBonvood; IOm Osmtr, as 1:31 Mn^alSiwd Mtna. Owntry Ctab at Detroit: Mn. O. O. MaerwitM, OoHBttr dab tf OMr«it: 3171. Braai aukcM. tadlABVaae. Mn. iamuai 04wa S8S «-Tr-L.»MSihrn..' Zikf. Mn. n. T. SABtVrd, wood; Mn. J. A. Oaddi. OatrUT^OaS — 1%: teySi; ^icSSi itif- Edstrom, one of ttie natten’s top Olyinpic hopes ta the decathton. qaaUlted for the ttaale el tea m-< high hurdlet with 14 flat, just a tenth of a aecond be-UCLA’a Am Johnaon te the day’s fastort hundlrti heat Jim la the kid brother <4 Rafer Jotaaon. the decathlon Ktag at the mints a stronc favorite to arte Ha Comeback Win Makes Gophers. NCAA Favorite OMAHA (AP)-Minoesota today aecond NCAA Worid Series chara-pibratilp after eorafog behind te snsatfonal fashion to whip Southern eaUforate 13-11 to U tentega and ran Hi record to 34 ta ‘ The Big 1%n bosebalt champL ns were down 74 after two to-ntagp against the Wert Coast Tro- the seventh, five te tet eighth and then tied ta the atetti on by the Trojan third baw Mtenessta can wind tq> tbd Series Sunday if defending champi-an Oklahoma State can be beaten te a a Orta ibahertaa Six Better Par in Women's Test Knights Take Lead With 4-1 Triumph The Knights of Columbus took a half-game lead in the Oass A Qty League baiebaU race Friday nVit .with a 4-1 triumph over winless Oxi ford at Wisner Field. Jerry Taylor hurfed three-hit ball for the defending city chamiUons and struck out 13 Oxford batters. Hal Trott made two of the Knights’ four hits oft two Oxford pitchers and a three-run outburst in the 3rd inning iced the decision. Ken Biron was the starting and losing moundtman for Oxford, which stUl is looking for victory No. 1. The Jets traU leai teg K.C, hy half a game. ROGKTtW. lU. (AP) - Second round (day got umtefway Saturday in the 17,500 Cbsmopoiitan Women’s Open Golf tournament conq^ Maoktorm Forest Preserve Course with six of the competitors boasting scores of par. or better (or the first 18 holes. k k k Leading the field ware three oung TTOmen iriw posted 70s, two under par, tor the first round Friday. The tournament has draam 37 profesrional and ll' amateur golfers. Top prim is $1,313 for the 54-hole medal play tournament that ends Sunday. The tluac leaden two Betsy Rawls of Spartanburg. S. C, irtio had 3S-3S, Marlene Bauer Hagge, Pittsburgh, wHh 3144 and Bontee; Randolph of Naples, Fla.. 36-34. Par is 37-35—72 for the S,10O.ya«F layout. k k k Marilyn Smith of French Ltok. Ind., gnd Barbara Romadc of Sacramento bad 71s and Mary. Lena Faulk, ThomasviUe. Ga.,' had 72. Misk Faulk Tvaa the m” champten. The 1959 champion was Kathy (fornelius of Lakeland, Fla., who'^ turned in a 74, the sanne acore posted by Joyce Saks of Water-toW. Wii. RODEO lT«nr Suday at S FJi THROUGH TfM SUMMBI • lAREIACK IRONCO • SADDLE MONCO • CALF ROFING L« lULLDOGGING RRAHMA lULL RIDING Abe Feeterinf: WIM Hone Scramble RODEO'S MOST DANGEROUS EVENT ir “SCUrrr * Um Mala ^ "BOXO" tkf CItwB SUN DANCE ENTBBPRISES 5S00 E. Hrghlon« c«n«K. The living room was , like it. moat of them built since *n»aU to start with. Add two ex-. the war. There's a Bving room, children, a Christmas tree, two bednwms and a kitchen with • bicyde and a large asaoctment space lor a table and lour chairs, ot toys. Result is chaos. put np tor sale — provided the is room for the family to spread ANN’S BOOM — Raggedy Ann is atiU a beloved toy. She istes-a spcdal-.place on Aim's bed. The scalloped headboard~bn the bed is feminine looking. Spread, curtains and shutters are >. There are flowers on the bed sUrt, in the little wire badtet On Ok wan and in the wallpaper design (not viaiUe). > out. tot In the Estates for the seR-er. Hmy dM; and now their enlarged lot measurm ISO by about ISS feet. Fine for a honeymoon house, but bulging at the seams after the second child arrives. That In brief is the story of the James Wilkinsons’ houw and why it grew to the sise H is now. Mrs. WUIdnson says that the Fartuaately far the WUUa-apna. there was a vacant let nest to their home In Elisabeth owaer to aeU. So they leaked at new homea.. Fiaaily the adjolnhig lat'wna The living room became a bedroom for John, now five years old and anticipating kindergarten. From the old kitchen they niade a lavatory and a front wlway. The new part of the house includes living room, dining ell and kitchen. Now there In addition to John there is four-ymroid Ann. And a yellow Persian cat named Frisky. SPECIAL PAPER In the front hallway the linoleum on the floor resembles bricks. The wall directly ow»-site the front door is papered in a scenic ixxd top paper. By using this paper on only one wall Mrs. Wilkhuon was able to hove Just the design she wanted and not feel extravagant. The ether walls are painted aqua. There It leti of storage furaiture to pataited ptaik. (toe On one wall in the orchid pink' lavatory there is a mosaic wall Ann’s bed has a scalloped metal headboard. The white quilted spread hangs over a chintz flowered skirt. At the windows there are white shutters and white ruffled curtains. In this room a window was moved from the wall behind the bed and placed beside the one on the outside wall. On to the new section of the house ... In the dining area one wall is white brick white the other walls ait painted white. There is a door opening onto the back patio. Carp^g is blue. with * bliw CTishions and back bolaters oi green and blue checks. Between these sMat is a comer table made of walnut with tile inserts. A matching coffee table stands in front of the picture window. Alw near this pietbre window is a tall rocker with aqua cushions. Chirtaini are natural color material striped with blue and green. the; walnut buffet. A traveling hangs over the table. TbearigtaafhMM ros the livtng and dining areas. AcroM from it next to the firepiaoe h a tangerine atriped PhyUis Wilkinaon did the paintings that V"! on walls. They include landscapes and one cat picture that won the heart of your cat-loving home editor. The cats are done in browns, tans and white on an aqua background. Beige Haoleum with pink, yeltow aad aqua dots to used la the kitchen. CabiMto are aeettan to red brick. The WiUdnaoni worked with fteir architect and their builder. They are still working on the rock garden and the yard. From what we saw. they’ra having tun doing it In the wall which divides are seen throughout the house. I tiny white shutters and white ‘ curtaitu dress the windows. John’s room at the front of the house has cmiier windows. His carpet is gray. The wallpaper has a sddier design. There’s a desk under the windows, big enough to serve John all through high school. Next to it is a po|e lamp that can't be knocked down. la bunt-Ui storage comMahig The fireplace is made of white bribks. White tiles with an occasional green figwed one fwm the top of the raised hearth. A ■ sUdnad piailk ia used tor the louvered cupboards. t There are two. modem sofas The dining room fum!tu>e is walnut. (%air seats are tangerine. There arc white knoba on OMinter tops are pink mar-beli^ plastic. Curtains are white. Instead of the usual breakfast table with benches, the Wllkin-aona hws a white pedeetal tM>le with an L-shaped bench. The beaches* ^nr up to give omr storage space — for empty pop bottles, to name just one item. Block Undtrpinnings Make your own economical picnic table with concrete blocks and a 4-loot-square plywood top, suggests Better Home li Gardens maR-asine. Usa Most-long Zxld^^nks for benches. Far permanence; ser blocks with mortar, cleat top oa bedspread la goM. Good MlcU- rs! In the hallway leading to the other bedrooms there is a mural . on the wall. . The master bedroom has pink walls and a white rug. Curtains are sandalwood. The bed head-board is painted pink. Bed skirt, pillow covers and the upholstered chair have a hariequin chintz design. The quilted spread ii aqua. YOUNG JOHN — Flvb-year-dd John i desk as a place to run his toy tank rigjit now. But it will serve him through his growing-up years. Mother has oovered his desk chair with deep blue corduroy-to match the curtains. All the furnishings in this boy's room can "take it." la Ana’s room there is deep blue carpeting. Painted walls are light blue. Throe sriro baskets Oiled With plak flewen earl^ American dream ■' ■''■()> Tf m\ .'P-i Tir»J ('oloiiial sPAaous SUBURBAN LIVING LOTUS LAKE PRIVILEGES fyS0 S4. SIMCW cIbmN Work SovlHf iCiftko^ fooaiy koom Soporofo Dining ko0k X Atfncl^dl Qnrng Moi SKM \\-spnzi,i:^ like the itoBs, it slorea WALL V- TWa «a|i tatwett-k w tte Uvii« room Painted white. . atti vkroth&w INkn booka to'odli and ends .^ OR 3 0*^11 KICaiTERV THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY; JUNE : A SWIMMING PARTY SWIMtUEEN IWt i)|h. b Iw iWi duw dayt fiar bMrilM KfaliM S«bl QmM rMl CW IW iwdf fw MliMlI Bhmim «f *• altMit ft SwIm QMMi*t mEwhi Fb«enl( rMWtiwrtiw, mb frick bBmy poal fa «iiBf bi ni*ni^ wJy t» b bBOrf «b ymu ifaB hMi Ul«. (faiWM Mbr, Mayfato iMbfi mIe aiw weaBd iIh pa«L A Twfaty «l fai^ A* ta k «a k far A* «Mi iwar. Tm MB llftnlb j«M Ml MBBli Ml bgkllB Mi«f iMMfaM rMUb lfah«. BmI «l O. TMT fiiBiyfaMitiilMMityMiiw«l»]rB>hyMM to far- R&G Builders, Inc. Tmt PtatiK>IUdkMl« Swte Qimi Rochttltr, MkhiMii liSU More to Spray Painting Than Pushing the Button naoMinber whai inMcOckfa h a witowitelMd «nty CM wM Mil to bt protMtad Uto ’pMBUr M eU rrapapcn. Chaek flto manafaeturer'f In- to piMiuritod cMd Pnv a imt' 1 Moct 0< t)W «ani MwukTbe Mudnn to atlr tba paint. If you bear a rtodtaw aoMd. don't worry, tboto obiect-oftan a maibla-uaed to Ttia spray can b a new and handy tool tor you, providad ^ou lean when and bow to use K. Goat for the same product packed in cm or Jar la Ulfitt. On the other band. ywH om toe prodact rtidd doam to the last drop. And if your time is valuable, tain Inflamahla sabstaacea in any room where there’s a flame at any aoet. Doat anoke. Seme products must be grayed oa. Fast diylai lacquer b ~ — ^>ray CM b mowed b even sweeps from the right-hand edge of surface- Spray cm b 0 wan lor even flew ot paint. • opriv L M easSy, toe spray can provides both product adl tael at FhoiM OL If No Answor Coll I OL 2.7531 OL 1^74 SMMaaManMMMMMMasaoMMmaMOtotorarMOl LOTS of LOTS WITH LAKI ntIVUJCtS $10 r—------------- R. Z. SdmaMw 'other smaU Iteaw In hollows ot a e Inside and eulside cl toe c “IT’S GREAT TO LIVE IN FABULOUS LOTUS UKE ESTATES” Where EYery Day Is a Holiday--' COME OUT THIS WEEKEND and SEE THESE TWO FANTASTIC VALUES! Ovtr 1,000 Squort FmI of Living Artol The Famous and Fabidoas SPACX qVEEIV You haven't seen a value like this in ages! This amazing Spoce Queen has building experts from all over Michigan scratching their heads and sharpening their pencils, AND NO WONDER! Prietd of Only 30 YEAR FHA TERHS • 3 Bedrooms • Full Bosement • 75^x150' Lot TH/S EXCITING NEW HOME GIVES • Beoch Privileges • Storm Sewers • 2-Car Attached Garage YOU: • 2V Kitchen • Full Insulation • Perimeter Heoting only 490 DOWN Priced from ^14,990 30 YEAR FHA TERMS The Trenmdons 01ATE41J Featuring: Moia Madal and Salai Offka, 6214 WifiiaaM Loka Rd.. 2 Moelu Wato af Airwait Rd. Phoiia OR i-0001«0paa Daily Ma 9 P.M. • i, 4 ar 5 Matlar-Stead RadraawM • m Rerito • Hawa 520 Sw. Ft. TIM RacraaHoa Aiaa • 16' Farm Styla KMcliaa wMi Ampla Diaiafl Araa • FaH laMlation • TS'kISO* Estata-Siia Lat • Storm • Farad Dri • Goa Haat t CarpaHiifl Sales By: Datol'Cy p ino. t0450 W. MINI MILI RO. OAK PARK, MICH. JO 6-9834 A • . ^ UMbImwU NMbBtoCU.... BuiU By: f | C«Ho ConflnioHon Co. V gun. and emit bor- Palntlnf large aurfacca - waUa I nm toe price way up. In mch a caaa atlck to i Any aavlnga you might derive In tha way ot tone and mmey eoly with proper uae ol the re permuted to drift aD I ab. paint, bequera, aelvenb i lubricanb muat be carefully Before you paint, try toe epray M. Uee v piece of cardboard to ee what ahape pattern you get, heavy the coating b at a glv- TO Biovr Wo* from taft to right. Move le can acroae the surface, d«'t im toe button. The eecood stroke should overlap the first by about a . Hold toe CM at right angbs. If you tilt it you’U notice the petot getting thicker at aome poinb and Obviously, surfaces behind. Screen Patio for Privacy If you wMt patio privacy without enclosing the entire bade yard, the patb abould be designed as a separate unit. The way to do it b to encircle the patio with privacy-creating rest of the * * Most ol toe pndueb ueed in The room ehould be wril wea> Oatod, but net drafly. Should you be oonceraed about Chock tho labri carefully to eee where th^ may be need, on what sort af Area they arc effective. ♦ ♦ ♦ When you’ve ftabhed using any button a few tonea Thb wOl ebu: it of dogged material. Then cap the cm and ■tore U fiway. out of a cfaild’a SNACK STACB-Wasted corner ot bmlly room will reelly if tt’e ontflttod wtth a nerlwilt bar araa ekacutod in weot coast hemlock to mstch MCHuer IHOd OB bST tO protect the wood white dlspleying Us tusdoui champagno eoloo ing. Under<»unter toahing often lob of storage m«ce: ■ • ------- is dU- PONTIAC Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPER tfANITROL •AS FURNACE OTTO JL TBZOS Ca 3101 ORCHARD UKI RD. FI 2-027S (Ives, end Sbb., CaN-MA «.<247) If the pmio is muggied dose to only two. Sdid board styling bn’t neoaaaaiy to Inmra privacy. In tMd. aometoing light and airy ta de^ is often pm m ofteetbo. fbr evompte. a tavovMa typa I aoneMto to mado af 1st tech AHhmgh tote derign to deoMedb pack-o-hoo. too neigkhaee wwM neod X-ray vtalsa to aao torMgh. The screening toonld be taB, about 7 or I feet, but if tlfay’n wito toe bottom runner a foot of a waDed-hi attoct ftnmedlatriy trick tom win keep toe ecreenaon Set them.a foot or eo baefcteom the edge of the patio and, b the open tooce, plant a variety ot shrubbery, dueten d ground^iug- hamboo ahoots in the comers. Then, add shrabbefy m the sutride of the eerMae to blend then tat# the yar^s over-aH A wood shade that captures cedar’s natural coloring or driftwood stain are the beat finishes to (or a patio endoture such as thb. on Various Surfacot For the natural finish wood furniture or benches, brushing on a coat of presmatlve or varnbh each year proteeb toe wood and keeps down splintering. Intrtcate, scroUed-wire plan M arooaol spmy. Ths mny covers fast, but don’t use one where the reridnal mbt cm stab SPACE NEEDED? Solve Your Problems with a "FAIRWAY" Dormer U» Ui lend You e Fedeiel Civfl OefeiiM Approved—Rodieoctive FALL-OUT SHELTIR Tht Inexpensive Way to Add More Rooms to Your Home! OOMPLETE BUILDINB 8ERVIDE • ADDITIONS • FAMILY ROOMS • KITCHENS D'GARAGES • BATHROOMS • SIDING PRO BTIMATIS-410 ORU6AH0II NO MONEY DOWN-M MONTIB TO My OFNERARYI-S SRNOAT lO-S DARA B1HLDHVG 919 Joelyn, Fontloc FE 3-7908 PEDY-BILT GARAGES CUSTOM BUILT SpDciol Pricoo Now in Effoctl 0 Block o Brick 0 Fi IV^aCAR GARAGE M siMNC — emwT Fboee $54900 2-CAR GARAGE CemjHeN $99500 COMFLETE MOpERHIZATtON PROGRAM nwOTMlro FioTrERMr^^^ Pedy-Bflt Gaiage Co. CALL OR 3-5619 lUILDERS OP PINE OARAGES 7722 Attsltrt, WettifonI IP NO ANSWER call PE 5-5475 THUl PniffTT Ar. PRBSS. SATTTlmAY. JUNE 18. 1960 ONE COLOR ynnsTEBif TWlfeNTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JUNE jg, 1960 UKEWOOD VILLAGE Hpiim SilM M MNS m m 44tts ikad T«a Itofrtsiwr I Mix me No. 3 am of pimopplt Joice with the Joloi of two Poor into ioe cube tny. FVeew and lue in i^od tot. Add a tprig 15(r Moves In! 3 Btdroom - Full Bottmunt Aluminum Siding City Woftr ond Snwur MODEL OPEN SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 12:00 NOON TIL 8 fM, Mod«l at 4Hi St., 3 Blockt lost of Jotlyn WILSON BEALTY EM 3-65M NeedaNewRooR Just Paint It On ___________ will ftot you » ntw mf out o( ■ CM of pMat Knowg ta Fuil Gaid, acie alkyd libcrad aurfacar can tetuaUy reaurtaoe in cue coat any ooinwaihiin or tarpa»ar roof-.or any maaonry, brick of concrete COMPACT CAPS: «Mi t«« ttairt and another two np. thia efficient Chpe God providea maximum Mace lor mintoHim only in onnatofy bomea. One of the popular ways of cool- j ing a houae heated with hot wn-j tor it by meaw of chiUed water I to a central cooling ____Ji converto the water into cool, ^conditioaed air. Young Family Can Build This Cost-Cutting Cape" GARAGES FREE COAT Ot FAINT WMi Evary Garaga Wa Da M Typaa af ^ DEAL DIRECT Save *60 to *100 Na SalaaoMa'a Camaiiaaiaa fa Fay NoMaaayl ■p DAVID L. 1 Ihe baaic caHnttali frilla — are emphatized in thia at> tractive Chpe Cod. It watdeOgned by Architect Ru- operating on moderate hudgato Dfwi!$l|M i$ . . ^ J FM « As Low At , NO PAYMENTS TIL OCTORER family with one or possibly two Compact overall planning ena-small children. The hail-ato^ up- (des conatniction of thia home on MODERNIZATION • Anka • Raeiaatlan Raaai • Forgliaa • ARRMom SEE OUR MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY! OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. DIXIE BUILDERS I 5744 HIGHUND RD. (M-59 Ratwaaa CraMaat Uke end Airport Rda. four ehildm. iha handyman fa- % tiler could liniah the upOaira roomi himaeU — further cutting B>17 Stotistio Thia ancient and economical "IH itory houae has 8*1 aguare feet of Uving apace on the first floor and S3* upatain. Thart are a total of four bedrooms, living room and dining room “L,” and a big Mtchen-family room oom-Unatioa. Each floor has a full bath. Exterior dimenaions, exdud-Ing porches, are 41’5” in width by M’S" in depth. ptoto baihfiin, B-IT la tea Hsusa al the Wash tsHea yea* paint la fortiflsd with i they dry. * ♦ * Teats have ibown that there U no sign of deterloratien tor t to Thte product ia available locally. 10 years. Even a blow torch did .Alt oreak down the dried surface. Fence posts should not ba more than eight feet apart to give rigidity to the fence. Western red cedar posts 4x4 inchea square are ideal. FLOOB PLANS; Despite modest exterior dimensions, all rooms s site. Traffic flow is highly efficient. OMoot buUdli« plot The depth is 34’ 5". Lhd^ area of tha tint floor to Ml aq. ft, with another I unusual and imaginative de- home to avoid one of the piwhtoma usually found in m atoty Iwumo. specifying a larger rear dor the arciiitoct has GOING GOING 11,550 TOTAL THE ROSEDALE 1.049 SQVAU rm flu AmCHED GAUGE Mainftnanca Fret Aluminum Horn# wiHi Naw DuPont Bakad-On Lucitt >82 ‘79 FHA MOVES YOU IN PER MONTH Includts Principol, Infarotf, Taxot, Inturonca ’440 ’86 MOVES YOU IN PER MONTH Includa* Principol, Intofott, Taxot, Inturancf ^ Judah Lake Estates DLORAH BUILDING CG. FE 2-9122 Nartkaf WaltoaiK foslya M. 3622 JOSLYN MsMOpm n AM. to 7 P. M. Oa% full, flat ceiling! rather than tha partially slaated ceilinga associated with iVt story homes. This same devica also Distressed Look Often Desirable Do you have any A lower roof ridge results in more attractive exterior appear-nee from the street Storage space, contained under the roof akaig the front of the houae, has more headroom than moat undemve storage. It’s also concentrated conveniently in one lace. ’The open kitchen-family room includes both an unusually efficient food preparation center and gen- But there’s another kind of ’’dls-waaed" furniture. It’s a term used in the furniture industry. A The U-sbaped kiteben plan i stops tor the buay bonaewife, and so does the handy location of three distinct diatog or snack areas— family room, dlnliig room and the big outdooe4ivtag parch at flw M ag direetiaaa. The Mg tayar paeiMto diwet access to all areas aad aaatinr dam la the faaUly fsaas hotii tpm aa Om eavered toao- the taaally ng main bath is located dose enough to the foyer to double as a powder room when the ' a ipate.-.lor C'ss money... than you think! •wsRESTAL Probably anyone with children newer a heariy "yao" to be found in a walnut table top. is one that has been deliberately treated to give it an antique look. tare makeea haatca to aid. Is Bst to ^ eanfaaad wtth bnlto-tiaa aatiqnea aoM to aawary bar- Ji/aaam"Jktmdm4 MONTHS TO FAY ON FHA TERMS! Call Vi for a Free Ettimate! EAMES & BROWN. INC. 55 Inal Fikn SlTMt -FI 3.7195 Distressed walnut finishes are found most frequently in tradi-i~|TtoiHt erprevtncial furniture pieces in the medium to high price range. Aluminum which has become nil or blackened can be brightened by rubbing with a cloth that has been dipped in lemon >doe. entertaining. Another full bath to provided upatain between tlw two Tha unbroken roof line of B-17 tonda to make it look lower than it actually to, giving it the ground-hugglng (/uality usually found only in one-story homes. The attractive' t gable both ibelters the en-tranca and shades the large living Red Points the Way Red tissue paper can be used to wrap very small articles that It be lost or thrown away with the packing material after a Bend to Tlie Pontiac Proas. Pontiac, Mich. Bneloaod ia 10 ainta in oetn. Please and me a oopr of tba study plan of Hw Houae of The Wadt Dedgn B-17. No stamps acoepiad. Plaaaa do not uae sticky tape oo coins. NAME .............. .. .. (PIMM mail STRUT ................... CITY .................... STA’TX................... The BIG .......... ..........._ . Over 1,2(K) Sq. Ft. of Living Area 1 BEDROOM TRI-LIVIL *12390 .s. NadsI OpM Daily aad laaday i-l MODEL AT Ml R POURTH Orr lOELTN Modd Open Daily and Sunday 1 • 9 IfARREN STOUT, inu.. ' 77 N. Soflinnw St. FI 5-OMO. It's summer time, time to give your homo e new look. See 6ur complete mlection of beautifully ttylad, attractively-pricod Virdarv Fixtures. Diieusi your lighting end decora^ neads with our Fret Lighting Advisory Sarvlca. No charga or obligation. Public Welcome: Stop in Anytime From 8 A M. to 5 P.M. Tuesdoy Thru Friday— Mondoy 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. KHP YOUR HOME SAFI—Malta Sere Ai Wktog Is Data by a Ueantad OtcHcal Catoracter. Eleicfric Heofing Specialisfs Standord Electric Co. 175 South Soginow Street FE 2-9261 FREE PARKING ADJACENT TO MAIN BUIUNNO THg PONTIAC PEESS. SATURDAY. JUNE 18, 1960 TWKNTYONK Comfort and Modern Can Be One and Same Thing It may be hard to convince the____________ ttdtea of die tact — puttcuiariy fact of where the latest stylM are In-volved — but you ibouldn’t beve towy for the prtvilece of befog ' If you have to be a coniortiaii-M,- BO aenbat or ’a" %artan ‘ damaging to your peace of thaa nwwcBlar atrata. Iher theVtliv ihouM be aoft - not — with emphaala on “no-materiala, which have a U bai^ worthwhile. TUa iwbea tohamea aa wdl aa ooatumet. and it la rebreabing to note diet many of the lateat trenda In reaidential deaign downplay "rigueur" an a lymbd of modern erditenoe in favor of aofter living. Hera are aome ciuea from the Skxithetn Pine Aiaodation on how comfort and the modem setting can be combined at low cost to the The amount of elbow room ban her four walls, the average housewife travda 7.8 miles in a fifteen hour day. The domestic situation being what it is, It's unlikely that she, wiU ever return to an eight hour day. But the distance she has to cover can be greatly reduced if the Utcben i$ placed at the center rather than the house pear, and is combined with a fam-ly room ao that she can keep an on the kids. She can cover aborter mileage more com- fartaMy. too, if the builder brings ^ natu ■ - - - - ^ t natural resiliency of wood to bear in a raised piatforra atn dure under the floors. TmJAL nnaUPTt From rar eaampla, Ike dal rad ef a briek ehtawey, «w grid af a sett glitter at eapper lamps aad ippltaym hi year Mviag ream, eaa craaie a elaae iiiiawmlsa coariod To Increaap It, the South-Pine Aaaodation auggeats trussed rafters for the roof struc- ber devices require support only at tbe outer house walls, the room partitions do not carry tbe roof load. Partitions can be eliminated in many instances or-elae replaced by space conaerving storage di-viders. More living area is available throughout the house and great deal of money la saved. Appit B«rry Foam •ASiMINT MOOIL IN DICKIR HIIGNTS 955SST $1X990 KAHNIft CONST. CO. Desserts for outdoor barbecue meals are definitely on the easy side. Such as Apple Foam, tor instance: Take 3 clips of canned apple tauce, fold into it H pint cream, whipped sdff. and 1 cup of berries. This gives enough for 8 servings. Write Messages on Door Panels The inside of bedroom doors « .e used as handy “meamge c If covered with a piaaUc-aurtaoad paneUng. A sheet of Ugh!- Inch to tbe c Uae either a greaae pend wax crayon to write on plaatle-surtaced hannward. Erase the wtMng with a doth. The writing has a baked melamine plastic sur- Pre-Bchool tote can draw on the door, while dder children cen MOTfX. POOL — One of Pontiac’s largest motels, the Savoy Motel on South Telegraph,'now has a Aidmining pool for Its guests. Mr. and Mrs. Findlay Owwe of White Qoud, Midiigan are shown using the new pool. The weather must have been warmer and sunnier that day! I Nans at« often varnished In taelwlft four Urnee flw « factory. This makes them bold | the onttnaiy imtrsatad nail. ________ for the brother or ter who shares the room. Mom al-use the message patKl to leave notes for tbe children when] she leaves the house. Use Hardboard Frame on ChikFs Doorway To “pep up' the looks of Wear clean canvas gloves when Scraps of Hardboard Become Useful Objects Prevents staining from perspira- SEE US £ for YoHr . GAS PERMIT! W« Con Get If for You ded a recrwtlon room ' hardboard, can add highlighta to the JUST RECEIVED A MIUIUSIIMEITI Come in New end Select Yoor Heating Unit —Seve! WHOLESALE TO ALL! NO DOWN PAYMENT FIRST PAYMENT OCTOBER, 1960 Both OHS and OIL I—GAS—1 r—OIL—1 <208 NO MOMEY <252 M0R,4UN Is I by Cat TBSB riMOUs lains —- GENERAL ELECTRIC COLEMAN, ARMSTRONG, MOR-SUN, MONOGRAM GOODWILL Aitomtie Heatiis 3401 Weg» Hsirwi K 8-0484 wm by utUizlng leftover pieces. SVir hataace. a piece of the plaa-tiowurfaced hardboard makea a goad-lookli« bulletin board. Wax baa pan-from pieces of hardboard left over from a paneUng Job. AvaflaUe at lumber dealera, the plastic-eur-faced hardboard comet in plain colon, woodgrains and marble patterns. The paneling never needs peneling. Uae a doth to wipe the crayon. Pictures and school lit can be attadied with ' parent tape. The buUetin board can be turned _ito a dart board by adding a drde and numerala. Uae either Time to Have Heater Qeaned paint for the marldnga. A leftever piem ef hardboard else may beaaadtatapaaaU Like all medianical equipment, the beating |dant deserves a periodic check-up to maintain top notch efficiency. The decorative hardboard also can be med to make e framed cover to fit over the laundry tubs ___serve as an extra surface area for sorting laundry or for bobby work. Use IxMncb under- off many thousanda of t should be checked carefully tor continued accurate regulation. The motor deserves proper lubrication. too. heating equipment is good insurance for continued clean, smooth-ruiming operation and trouble-free other longitudinal strip down the ceiiter tor rigidity. Attractive covers q)so can be made for poets, beams, exposed »eye aorea.” Uae a suitable frame-jiohi to brace plastlc-Burtaced hardboard when making covers'el SUdii« doon up to U” high for storage cabfaieto also can be made Forever is Too Long li« will 'last ftcever” and that the sldti« “never nceda painttiig'' have been deptorad by the very people who awke theee petata, enamds and lacquers. They point the weather by gan«iiig and waxing than aluminum lidiiig. It is true that the finishes used for these sidings will give long serv^ lee; however, “forever" is a long, long time. Southern Pine is often referred to as the ‘golden wood” because of Its natural lunshfety color. GermejuMPONFALLj \9 An annual tune-up tor the h The hsmehslder who tal tUs preoanttM. wU b* sere U The beating system can be winter. The burner need not be out of _ a few minutea. to the sprtat or emrly am Then the animal chsek-up c combined with a thorough cleaning of beOer aad nuke pipe and ehedi of tbe condition of the a combination package deal whk* includes a thorough vacuum dean-tog of bsilsr, flues, cotnfa chamber, and base of the ddmney: cleaning and lubricating the dl burner as well as checking controls. circulating pump; and also labor neceasary to maintain the burner for the coming heating African Violet More Popular, Easy to Grow child’s room, frame the doorway] with a border of decorative hard-l board paneling ta a cdor or pattern different from that on the] adjacent walls. The border, about four Indies wide, may be Applied along tbe ' I of the door frame. In older » It might be put over the iroodworfc to avoid a refinlah-ing Job. Decals can be applied to plastic-surfaced hardboard without marring the washable finish. For porch or terrace tUa swing will give endless pleasure. Here, it is suspended from a sturdy base. Longer chains will be needed if It awings from a porch ceiling. Pattern 806, which gives actual-aiae cutting guides for swing and dfrecthm for base, is 36 cents. Thia pat-ton atoo la one of four patterns in Packet 73 which tnchidea a bench, table and chair lor fL "Workshop Pattern Servioa The Pontiac Preas Bedford HUls, New York SWF EXTEBIOR PAINT We have the all-new SWP A 100 Latex Exterior House Pointl The newest, hnest Exterior House Paint on the mopket tedayl Come in now! KEM-GLO — KEM-TONE — BEAUTY-LOK CORWIN LUMBER I COAL 80. 117S.CoM FE243IS UNIT STEP ALSO CUSTOM RAIUNO For a Step in Beauty CHKK TfffSE FEATURES: e OM-Piece CsMlrecMM e PifMiet r e nu SpecHkifiM e StTMi lalelirnACMllh| A *--8-0 ^-- # AYilf mBUf MIMmta The pertorationa in Peg-Board yre one Inch apart. Froo EltiMatOC-Wo OoBvOr Anfurhortl Setar rtoed ladaeea Sllppiag UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE CONCRETE STEP COMPART 6497 HighlaiiS Rd. (M-S9) os 3-77IS S DO-IT-YOURSELF and as cultivated Nants go- But today, ] flwir popidarlty to American bomea Is probably water flian that of anyy tanilly away I atomic test ban negotiations that .now "we feel we cannot go ahead Wth eartlvmoving jobs without written permission from Khrush- east ST. LOUIS, m.'i«tiagers , —...-TT*-Battaato ar- t 11 Paatlae Preia. ALUMINUM wnmowMAB To work eatUag dat * aiaaaibUas alumtaum acraaaa * atara oath. Only thoM with prior axaartaaaa ' Bead apply. Morthara Ludkar Ca. laid Ceoliy Late Rd._ A PART T________ a fret 1 la Id p.m.. aeat I tad bava a ear: you ■n.7 n able ta gnalify tar a mthat wUI aatbla yua ta aara a va* aad attO ntala year raiuJar job. Per latormaUaa call Mr Allen. OR HaU a to a p.m BARBER WARTED. MURPMS. UM tl. Parry. PE tdtot. CARPBRTBR. ROUOB. MOST have 4 ym. tip. ta r^eottal. Union man aaly. PE a-atot. DtSSATlariEO EMPLOTED MEM wllltog to iUrt at MU. OR »-aM». ORITER FOR BBTABUBREO FIRE FlOlHERa errr op portiIc Balary MU-l33a Mlatataa raaaitamMit, balaM « aquiTBltta eradlta aad have been a raaldaat at the city at PoatUc tor ODO yoar hamadtataly praead-Inc tha appUeatlaa. Awlv Paraao-ael oapartmaat. nSootb Park Street. ApplIoaUons moat be ra-luraad ta tha Paraaaaat Dapan-laant by Ptiday Juaa St. Udl. la p.M.)__________________ HIOH SCHOOL ORADUATB ARD collaia vaeatlaBtst Beaded at oaca. Mo exporlaoca aaeaatary, at1 s. Saataaw. a a.m. IP TOO RATE Bap S TO 1 T iveoa tcoa ot 11 to 41 high ■chool or aoUaga grMusta. vtUlag ta Start at I4M a uMath. Par IntaraaMng proteaitonal a-laa career with oppertuatty for ad-raeamaat, phoaa FB J-Ttol far a appotatmaat.________________ IP TWTl RAO AT UUBT~S jalaa axfwnaiiea, ean work fo-1450 par month ta tha Aacldaat PB l-IMl, lot an appotatmaat Kampsen. RF..\LTOR-BUILDER MULTIPLE LUTIRO SBRTICB Real Estate Salesmen latarsatad m mtktng aen-MW Tor ap- MEN —Age 40 and Over WHO Ci\N SELL Owtwrtanltv ter aaeurtty and fl-"•««««> htaapaadaoea ta UW aad by aa year old AAA-1 aaaafac-‘“'■♦f of more than laa taaraa- repeat and maU ardari. laanr-ance program. Tour markat - taduatr^ at an If J 'rouad baataata I'ot affaebod by aaaaooal eoadl- fissh.^asss’o.rxr.s^ri'r. know ol Ibla ad. Por dotatla. wrIU A. C. Rtchaida. Dtpl. lAA. ~ ~ ~ao mi. aarolaad 2. FOREMAN tor ataal fabricattag abep. anat ba nm alasa ahsp tayoat b»b • • aad hart good peat partanaaaca peiiaaead uaad car aalaaaaa. Ca-man toll Ipaqca Raabter. Kd S PART THIB Naadad at aaaa - a awa far PART TOii WtAir ESTATE aalaaatan to abew aaa a( IBs rileaat bsaaa ta area, moat be neat aad eaurtdbaa. n Hatl. lUDE mCLP WARTXZL MOST . ELTiul^wa?^- ' lord. Now at CAt todg.. Moa. ' Otaona. Traveraa City, Michigan REAL BBTATBSALBSMAR.PBBPBR exnertanea but win train a- R. J. (DICK) VALUE! ” PB4-Utl 245 Oakhad Ava.__Ogm iUt- SfROLB EXPBRIBRCBD llAR tcaersl farm work by BMath.-rarl^O^t. MM Oattaa Band. "salesmen tdra oar own Mck-asam awalima. Reger's Salsa a aamai burn, eau PE 5-g2M.____ TOOL LATHft HANDS TOOL ROOM MACHINISTS Oyd wagaa ta flrat alaas aaa. Erwrtenead ta carbide taralaa and abta ta triad am Apply Poattaa UNUSUAL WANTED BIOS C=~“^ >60PER VvfmCv TtPRTART ■0 giSOg^we^^t n6tagimm!c _____mL job. place to five food used caf, see C tied NOWI ...a