..,”v 7 rfre Weather V.a, Wetihcr BHretn ForcMit Partly cloudy tonight. Fair torntyrrow. ■ (pctaiii r*(* i) VOL. 121 NO. 1 r THE PRESS Home Edition ^ ★ PONTIAC, AIlcniGAN, SATtJRl)AVrFKPRl7\UV 2!i, lOOJC —24 PAGES V NITEIJ "p^aS^JSw^lfATIO N A u Says Navy in Waters GIANT HANGER - That’S what this steel frame will be before long. A four-story addition to First Federal Savings and I..oan Association of Oakland, 761 W. Huron St., will be suspended from it. The structure will be coming down while it’s going up the end result being a new, modern five-story building. Dims Test Ban Hopes Soviet Quits Geneva Soviet Threat Doesn't Shake Washington Officials Call Speech Nothing but 'Blast and Bluster' Propaganda WASHINGTON (/P)~-Ap-parently unimpressed, of-.ficial Washington has shrugged off the new Soviet jmissile flexing over Cuba as “blast and bluster" propaganda. The threats from Soviet Defense Minister Rodion Y. Malinovsky were regarded as blood-and-thun-der morale builders—both for at home and for Fidel Castro’s re-ginte. Ill a Moscow speech Friday, marking the eve of the 45th anniversary of the Soviet armed forces, the Red marshal warned that if Americans attack Cuba, it will mean a third world war and nuclear devastation for the United States. with slate legislative leaders on. legislation to bolster Detroit’s bid for the 1968 Olympic DISCUSS FINANCING - Gov. George Romney talks and Detroit Mayor. Jerome Cavanagji listens during conference yesterday uames. Olympics Proposal | UP Residents Asks Broad Powers ' fet Romney LANSING (UPD—Gov. George-Romney’s enthusiasm! From Our News Wires GENEVA - The Soviet Union announced that its cliiet disarmament negotiator was returning to Moscow today, lessening hopes for prompt nuclear test ban talks. ★ * ★ The Soviet' delegation spokesman gave no explanation for the departure of Soviet PJrst Deputy Foreign Minister Vassily V, Kuznetsov on the eve of the return here from Washington of Ameri- can chief delegate William C. P’oster. Family of 10 Killed in Blaze at Home MOREHOUSE, Mo. (AP) ■ family of 10 was killed in a fire at its home today-- Inaugural Sleigh Ride Periled by Snow Lag CastroCharges Seas Not Safe for Navigation Havana Press Shows Photos of Alleged Flotilla Attackers I HAVANA lyPl—Cuba accused the UnitM States today of sending a naval vessel into its waters Thursday and violating Cuban sovereignty. The charge came on the heels of Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s speech Friday night accusing the United States of making the seas off Cuba unsafe for navigation and denying that his fotces had attacked an American shrimp boat. A photograph distributed by the government news agency carried a caption saying the American .ship accused of violating Cuban " waters was the USS Oxford. The photo showed a hazy silhouette of an antenna-stud-dred merchantman, a ship that can often be seen from the Havana waterfront cruising across the horizon. ! The usual type of oratory “you. jcxpect on the 45th anniversary of| |lhe Soviet armed forces,” said! Secretary of State Dean Rusk. But Last night, the United States speechmaking, he added, isn’t go-bring the 1968 Olympic Games to Detroit could redisclosed it had told the Soviets Ing to change ‘ the combination *=* ... it might agree to ohiy seven on-!of forces in the world.” the-spot inspections :i >ear pro-j Bcliiiid the closed doors of the in state history. j vided the Russians agree to!seiiate Armed Services Commil-j As originally Stated the admini,stration’s purpose in| ------------------ . rf"^f"': 1"^'"^““"^ sgta^ ~ the establi^menl of tr state recrea^n In the test talks which have |ods for carrying out American exhibits building authority was to guarantee adequate,other persons were on hand at heen riinniiiir on and off since poHcy toward Cuba. financing for a proposed 100,000-seat Olympic stadium noon today when Gov. George . 1 ______ _________*.,.1 tf. OR I Romney and his party arrived for the governor’s second inaugural. Dead are Paul Saville, 47, his Wife Shirley, 25 and their eight GlendT’surt Sr '^8-’ E^-! ^he new development camp as S 7; Alvin’, 5 Michael, 2;!Western Delegates to the confer- Henderson 2; Zelda Mae. months. suit in the creation of one of the most powerful agencies Poster is due back tomor- ..... row for resumption of the 17-nation disarmament talks fol-report to President Kennedy on the progress of the first two weeks of talks here after the Christmas rbcess. Foster left Wednesday Diplo- i Afterward commiUcc Chair- mltT Sid Lrhad b^enTopel ^ i his return might have sparked a! spe‘‘'0"» “ said McNamara had “made it new drive to budge stiffening So- Supporters of the push for a very dear that we are pur- j Viet opposition to immediate nu-l treaty ,say scientific detection ad-| suing a policy that will result in t clear test ban talks. jvanced have allowed the West " At the same time, pictures were released showing what the Cubans 'said was a counter-revolutionary i group captured this week. 'The !• rom Our News Wires | group allegedly operated from a ESCANAHA A National small British-owned island about departure lessens these hopes. However, the Soviet spokesman said Kuznetsov’s departure does not mean a lessening of Russian interest in the Geneva parley. New Warm Trend Likely Till Monday ‘ensfinp an P«jfimaff>rl Pfl'‘‘y «'''"‘''ed for costing an esiimaiea governor's second inauKural, million. The stadium is, wanted to bolster Detroit’s! Those in charge of the inaugur-T‘hance.s of becoming hosti«> ceremonies were immediately : , , I posed with a problem, ilo the international sports, . j I Romney, his wife Lenorc and contests. ^uhor members of the parly were to ride to the State Office Building in a horse - drawn Chief of Police J. T. Kindretl . saw,, .the .limay, the one - story frante dwelling. The bodies were found in two beds, Kindred said. “By the time the fire department got to the house, the place was all in flames,’’ Kindred .said. “It don’t think those folks everjniost of its hopes for progress had a chance,” he added. 'these three-way discussions. believ^ T^rapklb ™Zt.Volfbr wfdla.. With Foster but I don t ^ 1h I Winds today are from the south- authority, with approval-from ____________ 'west to west at 10 to 18 miles He said the question of rc- per hour. The lowest tempera-taliation had come up in a dis- jure in downtown Pontiac preced-cuHsion with McNamara of the g a m. was 7. At 2 p.m. the Cuban MIG attack on an Ainer- ithennometer read 23. icah shrimp boat. | , __-------- B met privately to disc Soviet position. 22 NYC Railroad Cars Derailed in West State Although the United States offered another concession on its 'standf/ikelSovlW Onion yesterday to increase its offer of two or three on-site inspections, and broke off the three-nation talks. The United States had banked BATT’LE CREEK aiPIl-Twen-^|y;twp cars p|, a , JJ?:car New York Central Railroad train were derailed near here yesterday, * - * * State police at the Jonesville post said only nine of the 22 cars were loaded. Tlie train was bound from Michigan to Elkhart, Ind. I No one was injured. -.&offWg atWie-Soviet^s^^ . 2 Die in Bes-Gar' that any U.S. move on Cuba might! touch off another world war, Rus- PHILADELPHIA (AP) — An sell said, “I do not helieve thatjauto carrying three young cou-the Russians are 10 feet tall. Lples home from a college fra-hope we can avoid any nucleariternity parly collided with a bus war because it would kill tens of,today, killing a 16-year-oId girl millions of Americans while we I in the car and the bus driver. Six are eliminating them ” lollier per.sons were injured. three-man majority of its five-man governing board, could: - '‘Acquire, land convert stadiums, buildings, CiTwh 'lindoor'^^' Tir • The Havana press gave prominent display to pictures of the eight men, described as the attackers of a fishing flotilla Feb. sleigh. But the absence of snow put a damper on those plans. Parked cars were removed from the main street and the Romney sleigh glided over snow piled along the curbs. It was a frigid 11 degrees above zero as Romney waved to the en-1 thusiastic crowd. On the surface, today’s festivities arc the fulfillment of a | campuign promise. ■onstruci, pur-j Tlie 55-year-old automaker-| 'ha.se, maintain, repair, remodel lurned-goveriier told air airport crowd here last October that, if! efe’?ia‘rTie‘:Wi)uTrT^i?|n;^^^^^ cnooial inAiK/iirnfinn'* in! 13. The Cuban navy said the group hijacked two trawlers which were then recaptured while the eight attempted to land arms on the northern coast of Cuba. Cuban Foreign Minister Raul Roa called on British Ambassador Sir Herbert Stanley Marchant Friday night to discuss the charges. A British spokesman said he did not think that a formal pro-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) pools, skating rinks, exhibition halls, auditoriurps, community buildings, convention halls, jparks and all other facilities necessary or convenient for the conduct of special “second inauguration” this region of 300,000 population. Struck-by Cars, Man, Girl Die Mishaps Occur in Birmingham, Highland Romney, however, has a morel erious objective in mind for the iurea above the Straits of Mackiii- jUIfcl MUUVU inr nunii..'* iTi«jvi>ni I (Continued on Page 2, Col. ll |n(. where people often have com- In Today's Press Tax Program Congressmen exaipine, prepare dclelions-PAGE 6. Ask Red Ban state bill vetoed by Swainson proposed agaih -PAGE 6. ' Battle's Over Baltinfore theater permits Negroes to see mov-ies-PAGE 12. Astrology .......... 8 Bridge ;...... . 8 Church News . Comics .... Editorials Home Section Obituaries . Sports ...... Theaters 12 TV & Radio ITograms 23 Women’s Page ....... 5 'Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen' 10-11 i;t-i.5 16-18 Cold Can't Catch Catty Greta' THEME The theme 'o( Hie celebration "Pulling Michigan Together,” em-j phasizes Romney’s belief that Michigan's urgent problems are] the revitalization of its industrial and business economy, These are matters of acute eonccrii in the Upper I'erniisnla. I Many of the iron and copper; mines for which the region is fa-' mous have closed. a restatement ot his frequent call for a broad-based, citizens participation type of political parly, Romney said: “Too many of us have proclaimed loudly and proudly that we are Taft Republicans or Eisenliower Republicans or Goldwater Republicans. “Wliat me these typhenaled and modified Republicans anyway’ 1 defy this convention, or any m^eeting of two or more in-'dividuals, to reach a unanimous definition or even complete ui)r derslanding of ednservalive or liher.'il or moderate or any of illieseother artificial labels which; ham.(«'r our common purpose I Earlier, Romney had stopped I at (llrand Rapids to talk to col-Hcge Young Republicans and warn them the GOP cannot afford (o.splinter itself. .. teen-age Birmingham girl land a 46-year-old Highland Town-sliip nian were fatally Injured last iiighl when they were struck by automobiles. Oakland County Highway Toll in ’63 17 Last Year T h e victims are Ituth Red-field, 17, of 1668 S. Eton Road, and Lloyd High- len, 1330 Water-bury Road. Miss Redfield died at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, at 2:15’am. today, 2'-:! hours after she was hit by two automobiles on Woodward Avenue at Lincoln Road. Highlen was struck by a car on Highland Road in Highland Township while pushing his stalled auto to the shoulder. •Hr . He died at 2:45 a.m. today at Pontiac General Hospital, six hours after the accident. The girl was hit by a car driven by James L. Dries, 17, 217 Hillboro St., Birmingham, and thrown Into the path of a car driven by David Thornbiiry, 16. of .392 Lakeside 'St., Birmingham. Roger Fischer, 22, of Detroit, was' the driver of the car thiit hit Highlen. All three drivers were released by • police after making statements. - • ' / ; ■ , „' TUB PONTIAC P^ESS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28. 1968 AL MARJ, Libya W) - Frteh earth tremors today wrenched : this on(« happy townrnow almost deserted.' At least 265 have died. There are literally no hoipes for most of the other 12,000 people who lived herd until Thursday night Then, in a matter of seconds, two shattering earthquakes ai! but crushed the town. In the cold hours before jf^^rful. small groi ps huddled I Aside from groups of home- around campfires on the open ground, unwilling to go to sleep. “Praise be to God," they devoutly iruripured with the end of each brief tremor. Since Thursday night, tremors have been frequent. Tf"li?N GHOSTLY Authorities say only about six lasted more than a split second. but this is small comfort to the • ken furniture. Bill Asks Broad Powers general (nf Continued From* Page One) recreation pur- Fully 80 per cent of the town’s dwellings are either rub*, ble or close to it. Some 500 injured have been taken to hospitals in Benghazi and Tripoli. Several hundred more people are now housed in hastily built tentclties. other poses. —“Employ consulting engineers, architects, superintendents managers and such other construction, accounting, appraisal and fipancial experts, attorneys and other employes and agents as may be necessary in its judgment to carry out its duties and Cuba Charges U.S. ViolalesSovereignty functions under this act and to fix their compensation.” —Acquire by condemnation and other methods any property the board feels necessary for “accomplishing the objectives of the building authority.” —And “authorize by resolution or resolutions of its board to provide for the issuance of bonds for the purpose of paying part or all of the cost of the facilities to be acquired.” Restated simply, the state recreation and exhibits building authority could build virtually any structure it wanted; hire and fire as marty persons as it desired; set without question the pay for all its employes; jpapriciously condemn any and all property it desired title to; and bond itself eternally to finance its aims. TECHNICALLY The cost of the authority’s bond projects would technically be borne by annual rental fee charged for use of the various facilities that might be built or acquired. Realistically, however, t h money would come out of the usually overburdened general fund since the act provides the authority guarantees its bonds by renting the constructed facilities to the state. The chance of the state allowing one of its agencies to default on its bonds is very glim, and thus the state would be obligated to make good whatever bond Issues the authority decided it needed. Even Speaker Green is already having second thoughts about the bill he introduced on behalf of Romney’s administration. He said fiatly last night, think we should tighten it up as much as we can. “It was put together hurri^ly to try to meet these deadlines (of getting a stadium financing plan approved before the Detroit Olympic Committee has to go again before the U.S. Olympic Committee to defend its selection as the U.S. choice for the Isiteof the 1968 Games) ” It has also been reliably But riwst of the townspeople appear simply to have vanished living with nearby friends or relatives or simply huddled some* where beneath the sky. U. S. Air Force rescue teams from Wheelus Air Base, Tripoli, British Army units from Benghazi, and Libyan Army and civilian medidal teams have been wonk-ing to help as many of the stricken as they could find. Paramedics of the 58th U.S. Air Rescue Squadron based at Wheelus, the first Air Force emergency help to get here; found families clinging together in the rubble t.’ their homes or •beginning to dig out what possessions they could find in the ruins. 33 Plead Guilty After 2 Raids Thirty-three persons arrested in two raids on gambling establishments in Pontiac early this morning pleaded guilty to charges in Municipal Court. Jake Guajardo, 42, was charged with maintaining an illegal gambling house at 22 N. Merrimac St. Paul Palace, 56, was charged with maintaining and operating an illegal gambling house at 74 Baldwin Aye. (Continued From Page One) test had been delivered, however. He described the session as amicable. The eight alleged counterrevolu-timiaries were identified as Eleno Oviedo Alvarez, Juan Reyes Morales, Juan Morales Pasqual, Armando Morales Pasqual, Agustin Vizcaino Pino, Eumelio Viera Oli-and Rafael Santana Alvarez. Also shown were photographs of rifles and ammunition which the papers said were to be used to organize counterrevolutionary bands in Las Villas Province. In Washington, the State Department said the United States is waiting for an answer to its formal protest against the shrimp boat incident. The department had no other immediafo comment on the Castro speech. Officials privately said Castro’s line was not surprising afd hft probably does not intend fo try to make a great issue of the matter. For its part, the Kennedy administration reportedly, believes it has made the point that U.S. ships and planes will be protected. It considers this the most important result of the affair. As thousands cheered, Castro read extracts from Soviet Defense DGnister Rodion Malinovsky’s Moocow speech Friday in which the Soviet arms chief warned that a U.S. attack on Cuba would toudi on World War HI. “Fidel, Khrushchev, we are! with you both!” roared the crowd learned the state attorney gen-at the midnight rally-first meet- eral’s office may question some ing of the United Party of Social-!of the provisions of the proposed: Lst Revolution. i Pontiac General Hospital had more “paying” customers last TllP NA/PfltnGr At the same time, the hos- 'America’s'singing Boys.” One of th^inogt traveled choirs in the Urfted States, the group will amar at St. James Episcopal Church next Frlcjay at 8:15 p,Hi. The 26 boys who comprise the choir are veteran performers, have sung on radio, television and on the stage. They travel between presentations on a specially (designed bus, which allows next-to-normal studying conditions. STOP SOVIET BUSES — Two of four Soviet buses stopped by U.S. authorities return to East Berlin at Checkpoint Chdrlie to- day. Loaded with military personnel, the buses were en route to a Soviet war memorial in West Berlin. /y\ilitary Personnel Half Reds in Berlin BERLIN (AP)-U.S. authorities today barred four busloads of Soviet military personnel from entering West Berlin at Checkpoint Charlie on the Communist wall dividing the city. The Soviets were on their way to the Soviet War Memorial in West Berlin for a wreath-laying ceremony on Red Army Day. A U.S. spokesman said the buses were stopped at the request of British authorities, who had reached an agreement with the Soviets that military personniel going to the memorial would use the Three Killed as Plane Falls ELBSERRY, Mo. (UPI)-Four men en route to a Florida auto race died yesterday when their light plane crashed in the Mississippi River Bottomlands. Witnesses said the one-engine Guajardo was fined $75 andipiane, due to land at St. Louis, Palace was fined $1(K). FINED $15 EACH ^Loiterers arrested in both places were fined $15 each by Municipal Judge Maurice Finnegan. Members of the Pontiac police vice squad raided Guajardo at :30 a.m. and Palace at 5:45 a m. went into a tailspin and plunged to earth. Wreckage was scattered over a wide area. The four were headed for the Daytona 500 stock car race in Florida. One of the passengers was Harlan W. Terwee, 27, a champion race driver. The others were auto enthusiasts. Sandkrug Bridge checkpoint in or harass us, they cerfoinly could the British Sector. The British sector checkpoint provides the shortest and most di- DUDERSTADT, Germany m —Thirteen East Germans, including a border patrolman, escaped across the mined and barricaded Iron Cnrtain border into West Germany near here today, police reported. rect route to the memorial the Brandenburg Gate. After the four buses turned back, they drove to the Sandkrug Bridge checkpoint and were al-' lowed to pass. OTHERS MADE IT But they arrived too late for the ceremony. Several busloads of Soviet soldiers and a number of Soviet passenger cars had preceded th ‘The West German militarists are preparing themselves to wage a war of revenge and to revise the eastern borders of Germany,’" the general charged. “Therefore, the U.S.A. and her NATO allies sabotage the solution of the German question by using various pretenses. “But these dreams of midgets, who think they are giants, will be in vain. across the Sandkrug Bridge. Two Sovtet generals and the Soviet ambassador to East Germany, Pyotr A. Abrasimov, were among the participants. The official party went ahead with the ceremony after waiting in the cold for 30 minutes. Since the other buses used the Sandkrug Bridge, we are inclined to believe that someone on the Soviet side just made an error by sending the buses to Checkpoint Charlie,” an Allied official said. If they wanted to score a point Increase in Welfare Losses Reported by Pontiac General BROOKLYN (IP) - Hundreds of volunteers fanned out across this Southern Michigan area today in a search for clues in the mysterious week-long disappearance of Mrs. Joan Watkins. The massive search, in which nearly a dozen Civil Air Patrol and state police planes also took part, was mobilized from a Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy and not so cold today and tonight with a few snow flurries this afternoon. High today 20. Low tonight 15. Sunday fair with little change in temperature. High 20. Southwest to west winds at 10 to 18 miles per hour. facts reported in the hospital’s annual financial statement are caused by an upturn in area economy on one hand and an jnrecase in occupancy on the other. which the welfare agency doesn’t pay. The state pays a flat rate of $25 per day on welfare cases. The 'ounty pays 90 per cent of the t tcnipcrituie preceding I * •.m,: Wind Velocity 3 m.p St* Flint Ud. Rtplds 0 Fort Wortli t Last year the hoitpital suffered $217,452 loss from bad debts. sulThc 1961 figure was $225,672. "o“rC ;,y,V 53 I NONQUALIFIERS Bad debts are the bills owed *j'by peoftle who don’t qualify as state or county welfare cases ”iand have no means to pay. Total Dinings lO state welfare cases last year was $138,453, compared to $107,865 the year before. Billings to county welfare cases totalled $501,221 in 1962 and $438,-734 the year before. The hospital’s average cost per patient day has risen from I Pin,burgh I Portl«ntl. M Hlithdst Lowest **^«»t^eT: On* Year Ai< Hlfhest ^tenlpersture Moon temperttore Weotlier. ------ ‘ M ill Administrator Harold' E. Eu-■'5 *} ler noted in fiiing the annual I'e->j ,?;port that “the general improve-69 5«;ment in Pontiac area economy last year simply meant more people were able to pay their bills.” The economic trend, however, didn’t have the same affect on state and county welfare cases. The hospital’s loss on state welfare cases was $50,521 last year compared to $34,242 the year before. NATIONAL WEATHER — It wH! b,e warmer in the eastern half of the nation tonight with IRlie temperature change elsewhere. A few snow flurries are forecast for the lower Lakes area, the Ohio Valley and from ^le northern Plateau southeastward'through the central Plaink. Losses on county welfare patients were $73,854 last year compared to $62,956 in 1961. INCREASED LOSSES Thus, the grand total of bad debts and welfare losses last year was $341,827 — some $18, ‘ above the 1961 total. These bad debts and welfare osses are a major cause of in-jreased costs to patients. The paying customers eventually foot the bill. The “loss” on welfare patients is the part of their bills $24 in 1951 to $46.68 last year. One of Pontiac General’s annual problems is the large percentage of welfare patients it handles compared to other hos- ministrators. • The amount received to cover county welfare patients last year was $427,367 — about 56 per cent of the $758,000 doled out by thq county to welfare patients last year. The remaining 44 per cent went to county welfare patients in other hospitals in Oakland. But They Prefer AF I NASA Entices Experts WASHINGTON (AP)-The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has tried and failed to lure away two of the Air Force’s key space experts, an informed source said today. The source id9ntificd the targets of the unsuccessful raid as Col. Charles E. (Chuck) Yeager, commandant of the Aerospace Research Pilot -School at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., and Maj. Robert M. White, also of Edwards, X15 'pilot who holds the world altitude record for aircraft. side the Mercury man-in-space project who has qualified as an astronaut by flying a vehicle at an altitude of M miles or more. He took the rocket-powered X15 research plane to a record altitude of 314,750 feet-59.61 miles-last July 17. Yeager, who 15 years ago became the first man to fly faster jhan the speed of sound, heads the program in which the Air Force is training its own group of astronauts to fly the X20 or Dyna-So»r orbital space plane,sNASA’s two-man Gemini spacecrafl and military space vehicles of the future. \ White is one of two men out- The other X15 pilot to attain astronaut altitude is NASA research flier Joseph A. Walker, who took the craft to 51 miles last Jan. 17. A representative of NASA was said to have offered Yeager the job of directing the training of astronauts for the Gemini and Ap(>llo programs—the same type of work he now does for the Air Force. White was invited to accOmpt^ny Yeager into NASA, the informant said. He added that both men rejected the offers—and the hefty pay boosts that went with it—to remain with the Air Force program. have done much better.' In another phase of Red Army Day, the commander of Soviet forces in East Germany accused the Western powers of planning to drag the world into a thermonuclear war. Gen. Ivan I. Yakubov$ki said in an article in the East German Communist party newspaper Neues Deutschland that Allied plans call for using West Germans as the main attacking forces. Birmingham Area News Columbus Boys^ at St. James on BIRMINGHAM-Have voices- First Methodfet of Bk- will travel. Thai is the story of mlngham and Bloomfield Hills the Columbus, Ohio, boys choir. Country Club. Surviving are her husband; one daughter. Sister Mary Kathrlne of Monastery of St. Therese of the Child Jesus, her mother, Mrs. 0. K. Cook of Winona, Ind.; a sister and a brother. Memorial tributes may be made to the Michigan Cancer Founda-tion._____________............. Their March 1 program will include a one-act opera “The Apothecary” by Haydn. Tickets are available at the church office or Grinnell’s, Bir-Ingham. To Mrs. Carolyn Levin, there are no bad children or good children, only growing children Who need help. She Is being honored tomorrow b^^ the City and Country school of Bloomfield Hills for her 15 years of service as a nursery school teacher. Although not retiring completely, Mrs. Levin has decided to limit her school actlvltes to occasional visits. The reception will be at the school. A former Birmingham resident, James L. Juhl, has resigned as city manager of Durand to accept a similar position at Red Bank-White Oak, Tenn. Juhl worked in the engineering department and manager’s office while employed by the city. Mrs. Bart Cotter Service for Mrs. Bart (Mazel) Cotter, 57, of 1915 Rathmore Road, Bloomfield Hills, will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Ck). Entombment will be in Wood-lawn Mausoleum. Mrs. Cotter was a member of Three Pontiac men, charged with selling heroin worth about $75,000 to addicts are expected to appear in Federal District Court, Detroit, for examination in late March. Armando Lemus, 43, of 412 Elm St.; Manuel Paramo, 34, of 700 Fourth St., and Epfanlo Flores, 42, of 51 Feneley Court, were arrested Thursday evening by federal agents, aided by Pontiac police vice squad members and Detroit and state police detectives. The trio was apprehend,ed at 6:45 p.m. outside the Pure Food Restaurant, 253 S. Saginaw St., after a Federal Bureau of Nar- • cotlcs agent, posing as a heroin -user, had made a “buy.” Hundreds in State Search Hunt Missing Housewife Bundled up against 10-above- Find No Clues on Missing Men Mrs. Watkins, 28, mother of a 10-month-old girl, Laura, has been missing since she went to a laundromat last Sunday to wash diapers. No trace had been found of Mrs. Watkins in six days of searching that followed. The Rev. William Harbey of Brooklyn Presbyterian Church said a prayer for the searchers’ access at Brooklyn Elementary School. TROY, Pa. (AP)-Two businessmen have vanished from this northeastern Pennsylvania town of ,500 and police are admittedly hard pressed for clues. The two—Loron Leonard, manager of the Troy Equipment Co., and Jerome Blaine, 45, partner in a leather goods firm and father of ten-disappeared earlier in the week within 24 hours of each other. Police, however, said Friday night they do not believe the disappearances are connected. i..eonard managed the Equipment Company, a farm machinery outlet, where he was one of three employes. He was last seen Monday afternoon when he left work for his home In Athens, about 35 miles north of Troy. INSURANCE RECEIPT Blaine, a partner in the Penn-L Leather Goods Co., disappeared Tuesday afternoon. Police said he left his Office say ing he was going to Elmira, N.Y., just over the state line. His wife later received an air insurance receipt from the Elmira Airport. Officer Ted York of the Troy police said he had been told Blaine’s brother, whom he described only as living somewhere in New York State, had heard from the missing man. Lt. James Myers of the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department, in v^nteers a btielmg before they set out. BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (AP) -Presidential Press Secretary Pierre Salinger arrived Friday night for a 10-day vacation. He said the brother apparently received a call from Kiansas City sometime after Tuesday night. York said there was no apparent connection between the two missing men, in cither their business or social lives. In fad, York said, police had been unable to ascertain whether the two even knew each other. zero cold, the searchers set out in organized groups to scan every possible foot of open ground both within the town and in swamplands beyond. Salinger on Vacation To Examine Trio on Dope Sale Charge They were arraigned yesterday before Federal Judge Theodore Levin. Lemus and Paramo were released on $1,000 bond. Flores is in the Wayne County jail, failing to post a $10,000 cash bond. Lt. William K. Hanger, who led the Pontiac police in the arrest plot, said a sale of 84 grams, worth nearly $3,800, was negotiated Thursday. Federal agents previously had made sevferal smailer buys totaling about 20 grams, according to Hanger. Each gram sells for about ^5, according to federal authorities. The confiscated drug could have been converted into about $75,000 worth of “fixes” for addicts if it was diluted. The three men offered no resistance when they were approached by more than a dozen law enforcement officers. The deal originally was to have been made at Paramo’s barber shop, Saginaw at Raeburn streets, but it was later decided to negotiate the exchange at the restaurant. Mayor Wagner Ready to Ste^ Into NY Strike NEW YORK OR-Mayor Rob-ert F. Waper announced today he is ready to suggest terms of a settlement of this city’s 78-day newspaper blackout if fur-.||ier. nfodia^ .U.„uiwuccessful. Wagner said he would review the possibility of further mediation sessions with publishers and striking printers tomorrow afternoon in City Hall. He said any settlement he proposed “would not be arbitration. It would not be final and binding.” SMILES AT 107 — Mrs. Josephine j^erner, celebrating hir 107th birthday today, reads with ,a smile a card sent her at a Uniondale, ,N.Y., home for the aged where she has lived eight years. . 1> \ THE PONTIAC PRESSa SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1963 THREE Dutch Youth Claims April 15 Tentative Date r Opening of S«gwo)r TOyer Reckless Washington Eat, HU Pi. He Was Expell^ AMSTERDAM, Nfetherlands (fl letters were sent back to the -A l?-year-old Dutch student says he was sent home from Michigan because his sponsors disliked letters he wrote to a Dutch newspaper criticizing life in the United States. Among the things that Maarten Abein wrote was that “more than 30 per cent of U. S. teenagers do not know that Christ was born in Bethlehem.” United States gnd brought to the attention of Mrs. Rachel Andrcsen of Ann Arbor, Mich., president of the ^outh f% Understanding Committee; Tha^ committee and the Michigan Council of Churches were his sponsors during his stay with families at Royal Oak and Huntington Woods, Mich., he said. MONTREAL (JR -A tentative April 15 opening for the St. Lalw-rence Seaway was announced yesterday. The sepway authority said the date may be revised, depending oh weather conditions. Washington, a Concord truck driv- New Hampshire produces most and shepherded it through Gon-, celebrated his 33rd birthday of the miqa found in the U.S. gress. He Went Lifter Bit Too'Far Some parts of the seaway system are to open earlier. The Welland Canal, between Lake Ontario and Lahe Erie, is to open April 1 and the Sault Ste. Marie Canal three days' later. GREENVILLE, N. C. (A>) ~ When a patrolman charged Claxton G. Stancil Jr., 26, of Greenville, with reckless driving, Stancil became so angry he tore the ticket to bits and threw it on the ground. • , ” ^ Officer R. E. Tayloe then handed Stancil another ticket, this one charging him with being a litterbug. Judge Charles Whedbee of City Recorder’s Court heard the two. charges Thursday. He found Stancil innocent of the reckless driving charge, but fined him |2S for being.a litterbug. Qne of bis three letters published by^ a JeeM^^ of the Amsterdam newspaper Algemeen Handelsblad afco said Americans believe that “lavatories are not usable without a radio set.” Commenting on his return to Holland, the newspaper called the episode “a particularly painful story without humor” and questioned the wisdom of sending the boy home. Abein said translations of tbe Put Clamps on Kissomefer at Miami U. The youth, who returned here last Saturday,^ ,qupted-Mrs,~An-| dresen as having said his letters' were not liked and that he should, go home. He said she asked him' the sources of the statistics he us^ in his letters and he said he | ‘told her the truth—I had read them in Life magazine.” Abeln’s letters called the U.S. level of education “absurdly low” and said middle class Americans spend 99 per cent, of their time working, iooking at teievision and sleeping. He called American television' advertising a ‘‘horror,” with two commercial breaks totaling three' minutes in every quarter hour. if All New Models on Display if New 1962 Chief Models $395 New 1962 Eagle Models $495 Used 1962 Models .. $295 up Bill Coller & Open 8 A.M. to 7 P. M. - 1 Mile E. of Lopeer on M-2T MIAMI, Fla. yPi-The University of Miami clamped down yesterday on the kissometer, a gadget designed by electrical engineering students to measure the power of a kiss. There will be no kissing on campus, officials ruled, and students may test the machine only with handshakes. Three students—Tatiana Prl-lutchi, a bouncy 18-year-old brunette, John Woods, 21, and ' Don Barachak, 21—made the machine a project to be exhibited at a university engineers exposition. The kissometer is rigged with flashing lights and ringing bells. The lowest quality kiss flashes a sign that says, “dead fish.’" better smooch will register “wow” and the hottest smacker brings a “wow” and rings a bell. After the exposition opens, officials said, visitors may enter the kissing booth and test the machine if desired. “It all depends on what’s inside,” said 'Tatiana. “If you fell all tingly inside, your kiss will show it.” The man and woman inside the booth hold an electronically charged probe in their hands. It sends a minute amount of current through their bodies. When their lips meet, the circuit is completed. SPRING TERM BEGINS MARCH 11 (Day, Evening Divisions) “It Pays to Attend Pontiac Busiit^gf Institute*^ Miss Tarker, Mrs. Adair, or 5 Ohapln will be glad to answer any niiestloiis you may have. The phone number Is FKderal S-70!J8. A copy of the school calaloK will lx> sent to you r- list of subjects offered In both the day school and In the « nlng division; Business linglish and T.«tlor Writing I and II Business Math I, II, and III Si»e«‘dwritlnK Shorthand Gregg Shorthand nictation Studies W WESTINGHOUSE STEREO ^136” *77®® WITH AM-FM RADIO 4 - (ptsd oulomatlo changsr. Matlar control panol, auto. Intormix, 2 ontonnoi. Storoo FM multi, plox roody. SIIQ76 HERE'S ONE OF THE TOP BRANDS US4“ COLOR TV Brilliant 21" color plc-turoi. • Brlghtor black and white picturai, too. Eoiy 2-knob tuning. Ultra •lim NO MONEY DOWN Westinghouse 23” TV SWIVELS FOR BEST VlfwiNO! Slim dacorolor styUd. Sound-out-froft spsakor. Push-pull sound; Consolatta •nsambl* coirnpUla. 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I " * ’ • ', ;";’ \ 'Sr-- ' v Voice of the Pe^eJ eas^t.3*s!sgr Skiing Fast Becoming Favorite Winter Sport This cold winter weather, along with our heavy snowfall, has caused many complaints; yet on the other side of the coin it has meant jingle hdls to many cash registers. Times have changed, and snow business is big business. ir ★ ★ . The winter boom is, of course, in outdoor sports, namely skiing. Today it| Is the fastest growing sport and will attraet four-million enthusiasts this season, three times as many as in 1952-53. Last yean, skiers spent an estimated $323 million on equipment, transportation, food and lodging. One reason for the growth is success with the artificial snow-making machine, which makes skiing available In many areas which see little natural snow. Some 50 resorts have been developed in New York State and nearly as many right here Ini Michigan. ★ ★ ★ The Homestead at Hot Springs, Va., which may or may not get nature’s own snow on its Blue Ridge trails, can now guarantee skiing whatever the weather. The same is true for many of the resorts right here in Oakland Coun-ty. ★ ★ ★ tlon, the 1,300 passengers will have the run of the ship. Accommodations are first class or cabin class (the fare for the lattef, $185 a person). No tourist class quarters will be used. ★ The schedule calls for a day and a half at sea each way and two days docked at Nassau where the passengers will use the ship as a floating hotel. There was a time when passage for a Ciaribbean crutee had to be booked no later than Dec. 1. This is now changed, and the Qlteen Elimbeth will accept passengers right up to sailing time. ★ ★ ★ Competition among the shipping lines sailing the southern waters is the reason that the Elizabeth, like the SS United States and the France, is fighting to get, and hold, this Caribbean business. Like everything else, a change is taking place, and these once-mlghty ocean liners have Joined the shorter, but apparently profitable cruise craze. r ■ Kentucky Cmarmmn Fk^s United Natwns, We support an Afro-Asian resolution Instructing Portugal Jo cease using force to put down rebellion in Its colony, Anmla. We voted in support of another Afro-Asian resolution ordering Belgians out of Katanga—where they had been freely invited. if ir ir Ftaally, we threw the ftdl weight of Aiherlcan Inflnence rad material assistance behind a fnU-blown and nnblnshhig United Nattoni military attack on Katanga—the one stable pro-Western, antt-Commttnlst Island in a sea of pro-CommunIst anarchy-for the admitted purpose of cmshing Katanga and the dubious control of that Artificial creation and political fiction we call the Belgian Congo. ★ ★ ★ , u These precedents represent an ill-advised and short-sighted opportunism which threatens to convert the United Nations into k” international monster, that may turn upon its master. Kentucky I Against Registerinsr Missiles, Cuba AW Firearms Concern Beader The Man About Town Treads History The sport is even becoming popular in Washington, D.C., now boasting several ski centers which would have been a rarity a few years ago. Our own immediate area with its hundreds of lakes has long been Finds Paul ‘Bunion’ Tale of Forbear’s Foot Travel Once more we start the Lenten season — the 40 days that commemorate Jesus’ days of trial in the wilderness. He used this time for spiritual training, to prepare him-seU for the mission that lay ahead. He was hungry and He was tempted. “And the devil said unto him, if thou be the son of God, command this stone that it be made bread.” And Jesus answered him saying, “It is written, That man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word of God.” For us too Lent should be a time of study and reflection on the word of God that we may do well the work that has been set out for us. The small trials that we may set upon ourselves can remind us that Lent is a period of preparation for sharing in the power that comes from faith in Chrlijt. I wish to commend the Oakland County Sheriff’s Dept, and the other law enforcementjigen-, cies on a Job well-done in covering the recent shooting incident in Bloomfield Township. Our Pontiac Press furnished all the details and the Sheriff’s Department and other agencies again proved they are capable of doing the job efficiently. ★ ★ ★ However, the proposed legislation to register all rifles and shotguns to a panic button pro-cedura. Sportsmen, hunters and rifle clnb members, affiliated with the National Rifle Association, are not in favor. The elected representatives of the people are committing political snicide sponsoring registration of rifles and shotguns. It’s ridiculous to expect us to believe tjjat the missile bases in Turkey and Italy are obsolete. I think more cards were played under the table than over in that Cuban situation last fall. The trouble is some oi our cards got lost and Khrushchev won’t let us look for them. We want to see if it was the one that said Cuba would not be a threat to us. Concerned Gives Suggestions for Highway Safety Fast cars and good roads are taking their tollt Maybe the age for obtaining a driver’s license should be raised to 20, and somewhere between 50 and 60 years of age the driving privilege should be taken away. By HOWARD HELDENBRAND So you think that hoofing 50 miles is a ’The Constitution of our United States guarantees the right of the people to keep and bear arms and this right shall not be infringed. R. Waggoner, Secretory Pontiac Rifle and Pistol Club Another thing I can’t understand Is why they allow cars on the road capable of going over SO miles an hour. Half our problems would be solved Jf cars were designed for a 50 mile an hour speed limit. dise. Now it is a mecca for winter ^nd mouth disease-walkin’ a fur piece Days of All Faiths: ‘Let’s Widen Scope sports, and the additional business and then talking ever further about it—listen Is a handsome largess.' War Babies Mature-Population Boom Seen to what Mrs. Walter C. Schlie of 13 Victory Dr., uncovered while Gaiety Precedes Ash Wednesday for YMCA Elders’ And anyone caught driving while drunk should lose his license forever. William Saltzman Now that we have the YMCA addition, it would be nice if delving into her family genealogy. Her great-great-grandfather Quite frequently we hear the expression “poptilation boom” and its relation td business. Certainly the two go hand in hand. It is interesting to note that we consider ourselves undergoing somewhat of a population explosion, not really a boom; yet government statistics show that actually the birth rate is down. a century ago took up bomesteadiag near Whittemore (Mich.). He used to pack a bag, to be slung over his shoulder, with butter at one end and eggs at the other (here’s one case where making ends meet wouldn’t be hard). By DR, HOWARD V. HAI^R^^ Mardi Gras is by far the best T- L ~ known. It has for many years Feb. 26 — Mardi Gras, Car- ^ tourist attraction, but or-nival, Shrove ’Tuesday — is the jginally it was started, without day before Ash Wednesday. Its thought of commercial advan-date moves around from year to by a group of local young year, because Ash Wednesday ^j,o had been educat^ in depends Easter^ Easter pg^is and had seen and enjoyed o. celebration there. Well, the pioneer would start at midnight, trudge 25 miles to Tawas City, dispose of the dairy products, load up with other food stapies-^and retrace his steps ... all within 24 hours. In making flour for family use, the wheat was threshed with a flail and run through a homemade fanning mill. Afterward, it was ‘movable feast.” Nevertheless, whatever its date, this Tuesday before Ash Wednesday is «a legal holiday in Alabama, Florida, and several parishes (countries) in Louisiana. Mardi Gras means “fat Tues-day” in French. Carnival means " farewell to meat” in Latin. These tivo terms have entered New Orleans was not, however, the first American city to lindulge in the pageantry, the iparading, and the general fun of ...... — . . jjj Mobile, itheir pilgrimage to personal ad-wantage. They wandered about, carrying their palms and cashing in on their prestige by soliciting money from the stay-at-homes they impressed. These itinerant panhandlers were called palmers, too, and it was not a term of respect or endearment. (Copyright 1963) someone would organize a little more entertainment for older adults. It would be swell if meals could be served once a week, perhaps on the week-end. If a committee could do this and charge a fairly good price, it seems that it could be self-supporting and perhaps net a profit to turn back into t^e YMCA. Citizen ‘Return Meters to Saginaw Street’ People would rather have the meters on Saginaw Street and pay a nickel, than walk several blocks to the lots and park free. Let’s have the meters put back for those that would rather pay than walk. M. M. Washington Notebook: •PEOPLE NAMED PALMER If your name is Palmer, you Why? The answer Is simple. Our bagged, loaded in an oxjlrawn wagon and ^ taken to a grist mill in T. C. Time for the national birth rate is low because women of child-bearing age are hot too plentiful. The young women who should be having babies right now were for the most part bom in the ’30s, which were depression years. History tells us that depression ber of children that periods of good business do. Hence, the number of prospective mothers is down, and consequently this affects the birth rate. ★ ★ ★ However, the boom is Just around the comer; the bumper crop of war babies during the ’40s will soon begin having their own babies at a tremendous rate. round trip averaged about four days. Well, there’s one thing about it. You didn’t have to keep an eye out for speed traps in those days. , our common speech. To almost probably know where the name any American either one denotes icomes frdm, but' maybe your a big, noisy occasion of revelry, rfriends don’t, and we are quite accustomed to , There are two aspects to Its calling any unusually gay party ,origin, one that you can be proud a Mardi Gras or a Carnival. and another that you might Sen. Goldwater States ‘Platform’ ’Two of our staffers Nat Lemmerman ______________........-...,. Bill DeBats are complacently contemplating the shrinking bulk from their dieting selves. But what they are not so complacently contemplating is the vanishing cause of their vanishing flesh. Seems someone has been making off with their thinner—and our dieters threaten to exact the proverbial pound of flesh from the Metrecal Marauders when they are caught with the goods—either on or in person. Public entertainments at all limes of the year ’ are often built up by promotion using these names. It is probably somewhat schoolmarm-ish to object, but the literal fact is ” that‘Mnrdt Gras’ aiid Camfval refer to the day before Lent begins, and nothing else. Or we might yield a little and admit that Carnival could take in the whole season leading up to Lent, instead of just one day. In any case, it’s a lost cause. •want to ignore. On the good side, the name was often given in the Middle Ages to persons who bad made a pilgrimage to the Itoly Land, which was a pious and com-do. Such a person was called a palmer because he always brought back a branch of one of Judea’s palm trees, as a souvenir of his trip and as proof to others that he had really been in the sacred country. But the other side is that many WASHINGTON (NEA) - Sen. Barry M. Goldwater’s contribution to capital comedy is his speech accepting the Alfalfa Club’s nomination for the presi-dency-^which none of Its nominees has ever attained. Here are excerpts; "Thi.s is one of the most exciting things- thaPA hap- People will express themselves people turned their palms and the way they want to. yielded to an impulse that fit the mood of the day. She made a paper cutout of a pair of rosy flps and pasted the “kiss” to the President’s cheek. When Sigma Delta Chi honored columnist David Lawrence by making htm a “Fellow” of the national journalistic society,’ Although the display of curiosity reputedly New birth rate records are In the ended fatally for a cat, it didn’t deter Offing and by the late ’60s we can expect five million babies a year, as against four million right now. Diaper service operators, take note. Gerald (Jerry) White of 30 Salmer St., from wondering who belongs to the Grand Prlx with the Oakland County license he saw in a shopping center parking lot north of Dallas shortly after noon last Sunday. The main point is that in countries and cultures in which Lent really means something, people cut loose on an increasing scale 6f gaiety right up to the time when the solemn, quiet season ckses in on them. Lent is a time The Almanac By United Press International Today *is Saturday, Feb. 23, the Liner Queen Elizabeth So far as Is knoWn, no reward is offered f6r information leading to the identity cf the Now Sdilin^ CftribbOSlIl knowing might be helpful of fasting; therefore they use up 54lh day of 1962 with 311 to fol-all their fats on “fat Tuesday” low; and they say “farewell to meat.” The moon Is approaching Its In anticipation of 40 long gloomy new phase, days ahead, they have one last The morning star is Venus, round of frolic and feasting. The evening stars arc Mars Wednesday ail will be still and and Jupiter, somber. p e n e d to me since Walter lleuther made me an honorary ^ auto worker The White House is now ready and waiting for me since Jackie remodeled it with 18th century decor , . . They call me a conservative, and in the sense that the word means, ‘to consetye,’ it fits. The two things I am trying hardest to conserve are gold and water ... My plat-, form for this campaign will be just five words, ‘Elect Goldwater! Elect Goldwater! Ditto.”’ TTaniiiiigwii McKelWay delivered the eulogy in which he said; “Newsmen arc Invited to follow members of the News Directorate on a demonstration of walking ability tonight between 5:30 and 6:30. “Beginning at coridor 7, E. Wing, various members of the staff will depart for such far-flung areas as North Parking and South Parking, and the bus ramps ■ " ourse. (Mder and “When David Lawrence was born on Christmas Day, 1888, he sat up In his crib and declared, ‘There ain’t no Santa Claus, And If the liberals continue to support this myth, the country is headed for socialism and ruin.’ Whereupon he demanded his typifwriter and yelled ‘Copy!’ more senile members will strut at a hardy pace to the Mall parking area. Full packs (brief cases, bumbershoots and empty lunch bags) will be carried.” “He has been doing that ever since." In getting my friend’s mind back on his job. On this day in history; rp. „ .1 Ih 1870, Mississippi was read- Of course, Tuesday has its seri-ous side and it is not to be mini- A SERIOUS SIDE A completely different function has been assumed by some of the world’s largest ocean liners. The Queen Elisabeth, for years a super liner operating between New York and Southampton is now embarking on a Caribbean cruise. ■; ★ ★ ★ This marks the first time the V great lln«r has varied her “shut-; tie” between England and the’ U. S. Of ooufse^ 0»e resaon for the switch is the burgeoning Caribbean winter cruise trade. In keeping with cruise ship tradi- Verbal Orchids to— . j T .u i f II In 1942, as President Franklin ' t D- Roosevelt delivered one of his fun, the devout find time to go to confession and be cleansed. “fireside chats’’ to the nation, a John C. Jaeckel of 301 Osmun St.; 84th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. James J. Tunny of 35 Oak Hill St.; 60th wedding anniversary. Miss Elizabeth Ferguson of Union Lake; 80th birthday. Charles Bassett of Novi; 82nd birthday. Mrs. Apolene Benes of 1200 N. Telegraph Road; 81st.birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond I. St. John of Rochester: 53rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Vinnia Hogle of 82 Seiieca St.; 94th birthday. , , . r .u i„. *1... Japanese submarine fired 25 shriven, before they go Into the „ear 40 days of special discipline. This is why the day b e f 0 r e Ash why the day _ .. ------------ Wednesday also has the serious In 1964, the first mass Inocn-name Shrove Tuesday. latlons of school children with Hat «U< t™. thi. .n. cm. 1 I" lorn ol naklng «ic!i conies- ) P'*™"**-sion, it is hard to see any re- / In 1959, the AFL-CIO voted an llgion In the day’s activities. / organizing drive to combat Team- Brooks Hays of Arkansas, probably the best story teller in Washington, recites one of his favorites about the man and woman seated next to each other at a Washington dinner., “You’re Mrs. Post?” asks the man . . . “Yes,” she replies. . . . “Mrs. Emily Post?” . . . “Yes.” ... ‘*Ypu’re the author of the book on etiquette?” . . . “Yies.” .!. “Well, madam, you’re eating my salad.” Photographic portraits of President Kennedy hang in govem- White House correspondents, overjoyed that the 50-miIe hike with presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger in pursuit of physical fitness was called off, presented Pierre with a half jero-boam of cognac and a message reading “Retired Walkers’ vlvalklt.” Tuesday is a time of license and merrymaking, and It undoubtedly has its roots in the ancient Roman Saturnalia, about (vhich (he less said the better. sters Union President James Hqf-fa. A thought for the day — English author Samuel Johnson said; “Curiosity is one Of the permanent and certain chiq-acteristlcs Salinger’s change of heart In his' origtoally scheduled trek up the towpafli averted plans of his friends to be at the trail when he started oat. The recording of President Kennedy’s remarks to the White House Correspondents Association dinner, shortly after he had delivered his blast at Roger Blough for raising steel prices, probably will be an all-time classic among Washington newsmen. Here arc snatches of the President’s satire on his own broadcast to the nation after the steel crisis; “The sudden and arbitrary action of the officers of this organization in increasing the price of this dinner by $2.50 is a wholly unjustified defiance of the public interest ... If this action is not reversed . . .it will have serious impact on the economy of the nation ... In this hour when newsmen are awakened in the middle of the night by the FBI and glVen a front page story, it Is hard to accept the ruthless decision made by a tiny handful of executives whose only interest is the pursuit of pleasure.” And so on. In America the Ne^ Orleans of a vigorous mind.” ment offices all over Washington. You can’t tell one from the other. But on St. ’Valentine’s Day there was one with a difference. In an Agriculture Department office an enthusiastic secretary They were prepared to present him with a huge St. Bernard dog carrying a beautiful girl on his back and a bottle of cognac in a soft leather carrying case slung from his neck. Pentagon officials also got into the physical fitness act by posting this announcement to th (i press: iRtiott of «n loo»l r ."axv" •oWa'? Th« PnnUM Pr«im Is dtUverod by oorrlor lot M c«nU » woek; .whorl mollod In Okktknd, Ooniiot, Wylnr-nton, MoOonib, L&paor «nd Woah-tonow CountiV U U $18.00 • yoor; III odvitnce. Pooiage .hot .bo^ Michigan. Mombor o I I 1 ,1 ' THE PONTIAC PllKSS. SAT^RDA^^ FKllbu AltV 2ti, T0(>;{ m ■ ^ f ^ yf ' '< ' "' ^ FIVE TVen; Citizens Celebrate 25th Anniversary Hans Henseler, Birmingham, made the stir oil on the wall to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the New Citizens League. Admiring it are Janice Antona, West Ann Arbor Street, sponsor of the group, and Mrs. Herbert Langton, North East Boulevard, a member. Miss Antona always has a new citizenship class in progress. To Give Fashion Show The ItaHan-American Club of Pontiac Women’s Auxiliary will present its annual spring fashion show and card party Monday at the club hall on North Tilden Avenue at 8 p.m. ★ ★ ★ Club members who will model fashions from the RB Shops include Mrs. Albert DeSantis, Mrs. Carl Grassi, Mrs. Joseph Polling, Mrs. Ralph Mazza and Mrs. Paul Spada-fore. Youngsters who will model clothes from the Tel-Huron Children’s Shop are Francene Rotunda; Joseph Spadafore, Mary Calabrese, Randy Grassi and Cynthia Ranzilla. ♦ ★ ★ Mrs. Sam ^ Calabrese is chairman. Assisting her are Mrs. Joseph Pollina, Mrs. Sam Rotunda, Mrs. Paul Felice, Mrs. Grassi and Mrs. Spadafore. ★ ★ * Tickets will be available at the door. Say brook Unit Serves Lunch to Fellowship Members of the Saybrook Group served luncheon Friday to the Women’s Fellowship of First Congregational Church. ^ ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Thomas Smith, senior head supervisor at the Oakland County Youth Home, told of her work with delinquent, dependent and neglected area children. * ★ ★ Speaking on the facilities and needs of the home, she suggested services which women’s groups could provide to enrich the program. Devotions based on the 8th Psalm were given by Mrs. E. C. Russell. More than 250 members iand guests celebrated, the 25th anniversary of the Wash-ingtonrLincoln party; sponsored by the New dtizens’ League and fanice Antona’s ne\y citizenship classes* The party was held in the Pontiac Central High, School cafeteria. ★' *■ ★ Rev. Paul Cross gave the invocation and City Manager Robert Stierer greeted guests. A telegram from Congressman William S. Broomfield was read. Judge H. Ru.ssel Holland, who attended the first party, Dondero. Three members of the first party in 1938 were present: Mrs. John Bank, Mrs. Theodore Gianapoulos and John Davies. QUARTET PERFORMS Music was provided by the Baritones, a barbershop quartet. Members of the current citizenship, class participating in the program were Frank Walker, Pamela Brown, Marcello Tamayo, Verna Paine and Victor Browp, „ * ★ * Others were Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Lindberg, Mr. and Mrs. Werner Hohlstein, Heather Stewart, Kay Holloway and Nick Keisoglov. ★ ★ ★ Concluding the list were Deja Hoogenstryd, the Basil Westgates, the Andrew Hepburns, Christ Schick and Flora Grimaldi, Mrs. Theodore Wiersema led the group in patriotic songs accompanied by Mrs. Joseph Bennett at the piano. Since the first party, Miss Antona has, helped more than 3,000 individuals obtain their U.S, citizenship through classes she holds regularly. Old and new members of the ^elv Citizens League joined Friday evening in a 25th anniversary celebration at Pontiac Central High School. Mrs. John Banh, Northfield Street (second from left), One of the club's Michigan Weather Jolts Briton By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Women’s Editor How do you interview a speaker when he has laryngitis and is conserving his voice for his lecture? ★ ★ ★ ' You don’t. And it’s frustrating. Beverley Nichols, gardener, author, composer and lec- Whlte-Schneider Rites s Performed in Texas Nancy Jane Schneider exchanged vows and rings with Philip Alan White before Rev. Marvin Koch Feb. 16 in the Immanuel Lutheran Church, Copperas Cove, Tex. A reception in the home of the Herbert .Schneiders in that city followed the nuptials. The bridegroom’s parents are the Gerald E. Whites of Salmer Street. The bride’s gown of white Chantilly lace and tulle over satin, extended into a chapel train. Her tiered veil of French illusion fell from a pearl - and - sequin coronet. A champagne orchid centered her bouquet of white feathered carnations. Wearing gold satin brocade were Mrs. John Post of Midland, her sister's honor matron, and Dianna Dowden of San Marcos, Tex., who was bridesmaid. They carried white feathered carnations. ★ ★ ★ Bobby Jack Lowther was best man. John Post and Bill Wittenberg, both of Midland, ushered. Ray Cassens served as groomsman. ★ * ★ The couple has returned to Michigan and is living in Mt. Pleasant where Mr. White is a student at Central Michigan University. His bride attended Southwest Texas State .(iollegc. Looking forward to modeling fashions at the llalian-American Club's ILomeiCs Auxiliary spring style .show and card parly Monday^ night are Mai > Frances Calabrese. Dick Avenue, and Joseph Spada-■ fore, Voorheis Road. The .show is at the llalian-American Chib, blorih Tilden Avenue at B p.m. NEW WAY . . . c'lfan.s niy nips ami c’arp«*ls I have tiled over and over acioiii to restore tlie color and lustre of my rugs Iry vcicuutii cleoniny --but ' it •did not satisfy me . . . New Way's, deep cleaning does the job right. Just Phone .. FE 2-7132 Professional, experienced craftsmen and now modern cleaning equipment removes the deeply Imbedded grit and dirt that shortens the life of your rugs—you'll be satisfied. They pick-up and deliver. very rensoniiblc, too! . * NEW WAY ★ m e; ami CARPET CLEANERS 12 WLSNEIt STlIKKT-rONTIAC turer, spoke Thursday and Friday at the Birmingham Town Hall. He isn’t apt to think kindly of Michigan weather after this visit. The wind actually blew him down in the street in front of his hotel, injuring his knee and hand. ‘GHOSTS’ IN GARDEN Nichols lives in a house south of London, constructed of bricks made by the author Daniel Dafoe. lie has a garden roughly an acre and a half in size where, he says, the ghosts of famous English personages linger. FJIaboraling on the theme of ‘ Laughter in an English Garden,” Nichols talked about well-known individuals who have visited it. One was Antony Armstrong-Jones who once photographed the garden. Speaking of the present WaU Unit Does Work for Hospital Members of the Anna Gordon Unit of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union completed lap robes for patients in the U.S. Veterans Hospital, Grand ^Rapids, at “their Thursday-meetingr--™ Mrs. Frank Deaver intor-duced plans for a library. Mrs. Nellie Monroe, former federation president, gave devotions and Mrs. Peter Niemi spoke on the organization of the WCTU. The distriet institute meeting will be April 24 at First Baptist Church with registration at 9:45 a.m. and a cooperative luncheon at noon. , cult of flower arranging and the rigid set of rules surrounding it, Nichols says he is tired of ‘‘biggerness and betterness.” He cherishes small arrangements. Some women attack flower arranging as if they were building a war memorial or erecting an Arc de TriomphCi the Englishman stated. There’s nothing wrong with a few daffodils arranged in a tumbler. “Flowers nowadays are just a unit in the design, not just a flower.” MUST LOVE FLOWERS “A good arrangement comes with love of flowers, not strict rules of floral experts.” In conclusion, Mr. Nichols spoke briefly on a subject dear to him, and one he has been studying for several years. Its scientific name is radiesthesia or radionics. Those who believe in this believe that everybody and everything emits radiation from birth until death and even afterward in such things as trees. (This is not be confused with atomic radiation.) This radiation can and is being measured, assessed and photographed. Less formally, this has to do with having a green thumb or what the Engli.sh term “green fingers.” A green thumb means having the magic property to make ..piamrflourish'and' grow. • The term goes back to the roots of the English language and beyond. It is found in every language. Nichols went on to say that 10-15 per cent of every audience will h^ve this magic gift or radiance. ,He* gave his listeners directfons for testing themselves. A celebrity luncheon at Kingsley Inn followed the lecture. MRS. PHILIP AL I\ WHIU FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY by HOWARD L. DELI Tour N0lghborhood PhormocUt A DRUG’S EFFECTIVENESS CAN BE CHANGED WITH AGE Th» passaga of timo con offact tho>e drugs stored owoy in your medteina chest. Soma drugs deleriorola with age; soma get stronger; others weaker. In any cose, using outdated medicine can be harardoui, SL_ Baldwin Pharmacy 219 Baldwin <^1 FE 4-2620 s \ ()l]R EASI ER PORTRAIT COUPON Rvituliriil 8x10 Ervncli (»rcy Poiirail and this coupon If c«ii|Mui in iiM'd by April .30, 1063 your naintt >vill lx; riilercd in rontret for 16x20 lifoMizst color portrait, roiii-plrlr with fraiiir. (Tis lx< nolified May 1!)). IM)KTRArr_ TliiN tloiipoii and Q,^(* lTi ..iv<. II Jovoly lUIO iMii'lruil. (Iiir |i«r I'mii'ily. IN» »t>IM>iillinriii McrrHNiry. /\(Iu1im, bli){litl> lii|{lH'r, Cliilflmi imukI hr Hn otii- VARDEN STUDIO 2.t K. Lawrence Si. I E 4-1701 (lullter members, receives a cor.sage from Mrs. Victor Brown, Clarkslon (right), a new member. John-II. Davies, Cbteman Street, and Mrs. Theodore Cian-opoulos. South Johnson Street, look on. Church Unit to Hear Talk The Rev. Edward A. Roth will speak to the Episedtial Churchwomen of Christ Church Cranbrook on “College Work in Michigan” at their luncheon meeting March 5. ★ ★ ★ The church’s work in the diocese will be the theme of the talks. . ★ * ★ Mr. Roth was graduated from the Episcopal Theological Seminary in Cambridge, Mass. He was assistant chaplain at Harvard University and then chaplain at the University of Michigan. Since July 1963, he has been rector of All Saints Episcopal Church in East Lansing. Club Planning Ball The Kaleri Club will spop-•sor a “George Washington Ball” this evening in the Cedar Room of the Knights of Columbus Hall on South Saginaw Street. Tickets will be available at the door. Demonstrates Resuscitation Lt. Donald Kratt of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department demonstrated the technique of mouth-to-mouth ressucitation before the Fashion Your Figure Club Thursday evening in Adah Shelly Library. Former Pontiac resident, Mrs. Russell Gortner from Hacienda Heights, Calif., was a guest. Engagemient Announced * 'file engagement of Nancy Jane Radke to Seaman James E. VanScoyoc is announced by her mother, Mrs. Marjorie ,1. Radke of Crescent Lake Road. Her fiance who is stationed with the U.S. Navy at Norfolk, Va. is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Van Scoyoc of Pontiac Lake Road. An April 6 wedding is planned. Ifhcnevp Wherever llowevcr Yoli Trav<‘l GALL r.S J|[/Aa EE 8-4018 ’ NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY'” Don't make a SLIP-UP on your INCOME TAX •5 your tax roturn. Why laku ihu riik af coilly orrori and um-barroiilng oudili, yuoii laloi whan you can bo SUREI Slock llnltm Mini 732 W. HURON ST„ PONTIfC __________' OWN TOHITE I """ f 1 SIX flUDlflt / / . r • y ' ■ . I .■ ■ " THE I’ONTlArf PHESS. SATURDAY. l^'EH^tUAltY aa. 1888 Congress Diagnosing item in the over-all administration tax plan, which envisages reducing rates enough, .to cut the Knives Bared for Tax Plan government li billion a year eventually, but recouping ^.3 billion through struc-I tural tax changes that would tax , . some income more heavily than WASHINGTON (AP)-President recoup soine of the revenue that Kennedy's Ux program is still undergoing congressional diagnosis and is yet to be wheeled into the operating room. But already one critkud item has beenjnark«l for major airgery. And with it may go some of the propcMWd tax reductions. This it«n is the proposal to put a floor under personal deductions like interest, local taxes and char-‘ itable contributions. It would al- would be lost by cutting tax rates. On the contrary, several members have predicted this will be amcmg the first to go alien the cdtnmittee starts writing a bill in PUBLIC TESTIMONY The tax-writing group begins taking public testimony on this proposal Monday. The witness list reflects the opposition of Philan-________________ ______________ .................... fhropic groups, who already have ,he rate reduction should be low deductions only to the extent been writing members that the g^aled down accordingly their total exceeds 5 per cent of provision would dry up contribu-income. tions. Real estate and building in- teresls, concerned “ Of the 13-3 billion recovery, a full $2.3 billion would be provided by the S per cent deduction floor. Seeretopyof ttte ’Ereasury Douglas Dillon has told the Ways and Means Committee the government cannot safely undergo a net tax reduction greater than $10,3 billion and that if the floor on per^ sonal deductions is not approved, anfs Modern Prayer for Youngsters LONDON UPl -Anne Hopkin-son, mother of six and a wife of a director of the Industrial Christian Fellow^ip, wants new prayers which wlU reflect the world of 1963. j No member of the House Ways a hdTIiiia sidertag the tax package, has publicly spoken up for this provision, I advanced by the administration to of a change that would diminish of opposition. Yet the deductions floor is a big She says the Bible stories of men and women who grew their own food mean little to children today, and she offers this as an example of her idea for new prayers; gineers is reflected in a study present tax incentives to home* showing the number j^ jobholdffl owning, are another potent source in this field nationally jumped 4 per cent -r from 519,000 to 853, inthel950’s. State Bill Failed Before Red Ban ^{Proposed LANSING (iPi - A new attempt to outlaw the Communist party in Michigan has been launched in the State Legislature. The anti-Red bill was one of a flood of measures dropped into the legislative hopper y^rday as the deadline for filing of bills approached. Under the schedule adopted for this session, Wednesday is the fitiat day for introduction of bilis in either the House or ; Senate. | More than 700 measures ah ready have been introduced, and pie of minor measures and handle the introduction of bills, including vehicles aimed at raising money to clear the way for eonstruetloB of a $2S-miliion Olyinpio Games stadium in Detroit. The anti-Communist measure closely paralleled a bill last session by the then-Gov. John Swainson. It would bar the Communist party and its successors from ap-! pearing on the ballot in Michi-' [an. The bill says the object of the Sponsors of the bill are Rep. Richard A. H. J. Giaowskl, D-Detroit, and Rep. Frederic Mar-shaU, RrAllen. Marshall sponsored the bill that Swainscm veto^ last year. ' w ★ ★ . Under its provisions, the attorney general is authorized to determine whether any political party has as its objective the overthrow Of the government of the lUnited States or this state by force or violence. Other bills introduced iu the House ranged from one creating CARDIFF, Wales (AP)-Harold Wilson, newly elected chief of the British Labor Party, said Friday night the West must be prepared to make concessions if It is to achieve a new deal on West Ber-lin, —------------------------ The tinned soup and processed meat; “Thank God for my plastic boat, “The telly and my nylon coat.” “Telly” Js television. be filed next week. The Senate was in weekend recess yesterday. But the House met for more than two hours to debate a cou- or violence th« government of the United States and therefore “shall not be entitled to be rec* oginized as a political party under the laws of this state.” ing number of high school dropouts to a measure that would provide for the continuation of the State Legislature in the event of nuclear attack. British Leader Asks Yielding for Berlin Deal The 46-year-old party leader cited two possibilities — recognition of East Germany or formal Western approval of the country’s existing eastern frontier along the Oder-Neisse River line. 'Speaking to JOO students in this lieved such concessions would help obtain a stable future for West Berlin. Western access to the city must go beyond paper guarantees, he said. , I- SAVE g BULK MTES nOFESSHHUL PRY CLEMIK er^’l ONLY ■ 50 Each I Additional Pound 25e FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY • No Double Loada • No Double Charge YOU SAVE IN MANY WAYS: • No Waiting • No Watching • No Sorting • No Guosting • No Mistakes WE DO ALL THE WORK! W* sort clotha^ sepgrolely dean wliilei, delicate fabrics, etc. Experienced prafesslonals who know fabrics presf^t and dry cleae aoch eorment with extra core. All gormenls ore returned on hongers. ready for home finishing. FR1HER i SON CLEANERS OPEN DAILY 7 A.M. TO 6 P.M. 941 Joslyn at Mansfield FE 2-6424 OPEN SUNDAY NOON to T P.M. ^ OPEN SUN Msca T?I7T7] COUPON specials SUNDAY ONLY! Fabruory 24th With Coupons ■ ai Mi oi.« a • > ANACIN lat TANLETS RASY UAGIC JI cTz 50® 11 ^”^7 68* UMIT1 KR OUSTOMn , *1 r 6-oz. 1 LAVORtS »i . i RIMSE AWAY • 44* 11 48* I imiTlHHJUWOMM LaTA"i! SAVE Ale Compare b iS I_ "mEDNAPHROTat DIXIE HWY.. PONTIAC FM-AM TABLE RADIO Th* omoilnu high fklalitv psrformone* of fhU sot moi» b hMid t»bo bollovod. Unquotrionobly ono of tho moit lor Mtionolly poiforming FM/AM toblo modole. Toni control vari-i able from deep bass to sparkling troblo. 49» Other Panasonic FMMM radios from 29.95 WE SERVICE ALL MAltilS TV. BAPtO and HI-FI Sss Our CompUts Lint of ISM Radio, TV and Hi-Fi Noodt JOHNSON RADIO & TV 45 East Walton Near Baldwin OPEN EVENINGS 'til 7:30 P.M. FE 8-4569 SrUNLESS STEEL nrara sias Wo purchaiod fhoto sinks at an auction. - Doublo comportmont 32x21. Torrifio While They Last Michigan Fluorescent Light Co. 393 Orchard Lake Rd., Pontiac FE 4-8462 Plumbing Dept. SHOPPER STOPPERS BUY NOW and SAVE Outstanding Values for Early-in-the-Week Shoppers! ItiOSPAY OIVLY! I Hoffman's Own STEAKetfe PAHIES lb. Sorry, 10-lb. -Limit Per Customer HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 526 N. Perry FE 2-1100 SHOP IN YOUR CARAT DIXIE DAIRY 49 N. TELEGRAPH ROAD MIDWAY TEL-HURON and PONTIAC MALL NOW ... a breath of Spring! Our Own GARDEN SALAD COHAGE CHEESE lb. : C Freshly Baked Bread 6 Loim ^1 ”” UST 4 DAYS! Pre-Season DRAPERY CLEARING Offer Expire* Feb. 28th mi WEST HURON MJsSSSk FE 4*1536 CUANEl^S $AT.-SUN.-M0N. Only CLOSE-OUT NEW 1962 MODEL i’ abd Gids' Schwinn BIKES -Bicyel* Rullt for 2" TNI ALL-NEW SCHWINN Choose from 10 Layaway o.k. Discontinuod models 50 OTHER BIKES IN STOCK! TOM’S HARDWARE as Orahanl Lak. Ava. FE 5-2424 DatVTON PLAINS STONE ONLY ...m SUNDAY ONLY • ROUND STEAK....-^AU* • SlULDIN STEAK ..... • 48* • T-DDNE STEAK___ •65* • CUDE STEAKS....•Sr • K'RUMPRDAST.. •69* BA2LEY MARKET 4348 Dixie Highway-Drayton Plains HOOVER SWEEPER Authorized Hoover Service S1ti4j.on ^ FEDRUARY SERVICE SPECIAL • Same day service • All makes • Work guaranteed Free Pick Up and Delivery in , Oakkind County COMPLETE STOCK OP REBUILT CLEANERS PARTS AND SERVICE ON ALLJ' BRAND SWEEPERS • Bags •Hossp *86113 • Cords • Brushe^ • Switches ) Attachment. BARNES A HARGRAVE Hardware A 742 W. HURON ST. PARK FREE FE 5-9101 See it demonstrated! at HUDSON’S DISCOUNT 1467 BALDWIN AT WALTON ., lAToodixaislaes- with BASE 89c Vz Pint $1.49 Pint $2.59 Guart INK $|S9 $|D9 Nqw DuPont Lucite Wall Paint Reg. 7.45 • 22 Lovely Colors • No Umit—-P--lavelv HtW ColoK Complete Selections I SLl^FH ® ^ Color_^ Super Kem-tone R.g.6.59 Price* Good Until Saturday, March 2 1467 Baldwin at Walton ‘ Open Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. All Other Weekdays ,9 A.M. to 6 P,M. Sunday 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. FE 4-0242, \ x7- 'f, lIlE PONTIAC TRESS. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2.% 19G3 sm SEVEN Panel Portrays 'The Christ' The new stained glass windows and the renovated east vestibule at First Presbyterian Church will be dedicated at worship services Sunday With R^v, Galen E. Her-shey preaching on *‘Be a Good Church Member.” The panel of three stained glass windows made by Charles Com nick & Son of Boston were given to the chjirch by Frank W. Mowbray in nfemory of his wife, Anna. The emblem of the windows feature worship, Christian education and youth. Below is the text, “Surely the Lord Is in This Place.” Young David plays the harp >ith the text, “Come Before His Presence With Singing.” Samuel stands listening to the call of Christ. T h e desending rays of light suggest the Divine Presence. Beneath is the text, The central window is de- voted to Christ in an attitude of welcome and teaching with young David at the right, and young Samuel at the left. ChrTst is represented in robes of ruby red and white, ancient color symbols of Divine love and pur< Ity, 'Speak, for. Thy Servant Hear-eth.” The grapevine motif symbol-llzes the unity and fruitfulness Of the church through Christ’s words, “I Am the Vipe, Ye Are the Branches.” The vestibule includes p a n-eling thronghont, a lighted bulletin board and litwature rack. Donald Robertson was the contractor. Xhurch Items Duty Free The special offering will be received for Alma College Library and Michigan Synod Develop-WASHINGTON UPl-Revisions in ^ent. U. S. customs regulations, at thei Dr. Oscar Brown, superinten- behest of religious groups, allows altars, pulpits, baptismal fonts, communion tables and other fejigious items to be imported duty free if they are destined for use of a church-associated organization. dent of^axile Hospital in northern Pakistan, will be missionary speaker at the Couples Club din-n e r--afr-4sW p^. “^iMnesd^^ Hosts will be Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lazelle, the William Hild-erleys and Lester Martindales. Blissfiefd Minister, Pancake Baldwin Speaker Rev. Clare Tbsch of will preach at the 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. worship Services tomorrow in the Baldwin Evangelical United Brethren Church. He will also speak at the 7:30 evening meetings Monday through Friday. On Wednesday there will be the Union Ash Wednesday service at 7:30 p.m. with the First General Baptist nad Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Churches cooperating in the service. The Senior High Youth Fellowship is sponsoring a chili supper from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday, Supper af All Saints Catholic countries and conununi-ties it is a great festival of rejoicing, preceding the penitential Party-time fun for bored chil-dren carM harby tetting i^ cut out fancy-shap^ sandwiches from bread slices using cutters. Under the chairmanship of J. Frederick Cockle and Robert C. TTlcker, men of All Saints Episcopal Church will don caps and aprons to prepare and serve the Shrove Tuesday Pancake in Stevens Hall, West Pike and Williams Streets. The public is invited and tickets may be purchased at the door, Mr. Tricker said. Shrove Tuesday is celebrated the day before Ash Wednesday, which is the beginning of the It is the carnival of the Italians, the Pancake Tuesday of the English, and the Mardi Gras of the French, In the- city of. New Orleans it has been celebrated since 1827 by a wonderful street pageant, brilliant masque balls, and other activities. One-Time Student Pays Ancient Debt Virginia Epilcdpalians Reject Law Change Past Deputy Warden in Ionia Guest Speaker Yhe Aquinas Academy of Saint llie /vquiliasf /luaucuijr ug uami. Mary’s College will present its third “Essai” of the 1962-1963 school year on the subject of “Penology" on Sunday, at 7:30 p.m. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (fl-A man who borrowed $25 f r o m the Methodist S.tiyijient Fund back in 1897 wrote recently that he’d like jto pay u^), with interest. Although the debt’ previously * had been canceled because the man was reported dead, a fund officer replied that it would be pleased to be paid, but wouldn’t expect the full 65 years of interest. ‘ ARLINGTON, Va. W>~Virginia Episcopalians have rejected a proposed change in canon law that would have permitted women to serve on the vestry of their churches. In the Virginia Diocese, 68 parishes voted against the change, 27 for it,' and sev^n parishes reported members equally divided. A payment of $.37.50 was suggested. Leap-Frog IZ lAiles for Washington Tribute It was so called from the old custom of confessing on that day, but at the present time, in most Guest for the evening will be William H. Bannan of Plymouth. Mr. Brannan is a graduate of Western University and a past deputy warden of the Michigan Reformatory in Ionia. Back came a check for $75 with this note from the 85-year-; old one-time student: “lam very happy to be able to double the amount you expressed in your letter to be due. God has wonderfully blessed my wife and me.” ; WASHINGTON (AP)-A group of 14 Johns Hopkins University students leap-frogged 17 miles Friday as their tribute to George Washington. They drove from Baltimore to Mt. Vernon, the first president’s home, and then leap-frogged the 17 miles to the Washington Monument. 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' FREE SHOCKS WITH WHEEL ALIGNMENT Caitar, Cambar and Toe-In.$9.95 2 FRONT SHOCKS Doubla Atflan-Quallty HarcuU* ($2,00 Installation Each) Spaclal Factary OHar for Llmltad Tima Only-*"»»*^**a tha Harculpi Ooubla Attlon Haavy-Duly Shock Abtgrbar. Ouaroniaad far 20,000 Mila* or On* Yaor. FE 8-0424 Avoid Wfliiino Tim* FE 8*0424 r C a-W*IA1 j.^11,,, /appointment INSTAHT CREDIT--H0 MONEY DOWN OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. Market Tire Co. 77 WIST HURON AT CASS AVI. 1144 WIEST MAPLE WALLED LAKE MA 4-9042 IliHwt Prieei e. Flih, eM Fbeeleae Tbtel r EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATUKDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1083 Scoop Shovel trushesTwo ypSiLANTI Wi -r- Fifteen children were left fatherless yesterday when two construction workers were crushed to death by a gigantic scoop shovel ® t h a t dropped into a trwch in which the men were working. Dead on arrival at Beyer Memorial Hospital here were Bruce K. Calloway, 37, father of 10 children, and Robert Adams, 37, father of five children. Two other men, Robert Nicker-so and Douglas N. Higgins, both 19, were injured critically when the hoist brake on a crane working above the trench gave way, dropping the shovel into the 14-foot trench, state police said. All four men were from nearby Manchester and were em- JACOBY ON BRIDGE Old Merchant Ships Eyed to Fire Polaris BEN CASEY -By Neal Adams NOflTH AO V 10 7 8 ♦ 1093 ♦ AQJ107 WEST EAST AAQ103 AJ76 VJ88 VK9843 ♦ AJ8 4784 AP54 *80 SOUTH (D) AK985 ¥AQ ♦ KQ82 AK32 North and South vulnerable South West North Eart 1 N.T. Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass Pass Openiiut lead-^A 7 he did. In that case South could take five clubs, two hearts, one diamond and one spade, but South would not know where the ace of^ diamonds and king of hearts were and West must keep him in the dark. South led a , club to dummy’s ten, played the ten of diamonds and rose with the king. West played his five aS if he had not a care in the world. Now South ran off dummy’s clubs and played a second diamond, whereupon West was ready to Like five tricks and South had lost the hand. WASHINGTON (AP)-By using converted merchant ships instead ,of submarines, the Navy believes 'NATO could build Polaris missile ! ships at about half the cost and a year sooner. I ★ The United States has swung around to the idea of surface ships as a base for the missiles, as an alternative to the expensive Polaris submarines, in order to speed creation of a NATO force. President Kennedy’s special representative, Livingston M. Mer-Ichant, arrived at NA'TO’s Paris headquarters Friday to plug the plan. RopftEy,yiouRSMn0t WH M>r9C.THFS^AAE.«HB Mir 9C.THF 6) WON'T saABLR ID USB HERl-BFTWPB.SHEW ’ fWRTIAUy WRAtyzEP^ THE BERRYS lOKAM COACH/ TAKE VOJR by Manchester ployed at the 1 tionCo. there. By OSWALD JACOBY When you are defending it pays wil/‘SIe to justify" his Slight Decline in Car Output DCTROlT lAPr-Ward’s re- ♦?5«’^K76^4KJt* *48 fS WKQ884 4KJ3 A984 Hungarians Vote Today on One-Party Ticket BUDAPEST (AP) - Some 6.8 to The list of 340 lor Selection in Ms Budap OUR . build 146,271 cars i and one club trick * Astrological Forecast .rES‘;..«.r ALl-EY OOP By V. T. 1 CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner MORTY MEEKLE By Dick Cavalli OUT OUR WAY I SAID YOU WERE always WRONG DONAIiI) DUCK By Walt Disney 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATUIU^AY, FEBRUARY 23, 1903 NINE Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS. RAYMOND BBHEYDT The Rosary wljl be recited for Mrs, Raymond (Lillian) Beheydt, 52, of 1890 Ernest Court, at 8 p,m, Sunday in D. E. Pursley Funeral Rome. «« Service will be 9:30 a.m. Monday in St. Michael Catholic Church with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Beheydt died early this morning following a four-month illness. She was a member of St. Michael Church. Surviving are her husband; her father, Victor Lewandowski; a son, Harlan, in Maryland; four grandchildren; a brother, Jack, of Pontiac; and four sisters, Mrs. Frank Busic of Hadley, Mrs. Romaine Lemmon, Mrs. Victor Landon and .Mrs. Dale Hassen-shl, all of Lake Orion. Maurice E. Young of Waterford Township; a grandchild; tw great-grandchildren; a sister; and a brother. MRS. aARENCE L. WILDER Service for Mrs. Clarence L. (Myrtle E.) Wilder, 72, of 148 Draper Ave., will be 2:30 p.m. Monday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Wilder died unexpectedly yesterday. Surviving besides her husband are twin sons, William B. of Detroit and Russell Wilder of Royal Oak; and one sister. MRS. JOHN BRICK Service for former Pontiac resi Went Mrs. John (Elizabeth) Brick of West Branch will be 10 a. m. Monday at St, Joseph Catholic Church in West Branch. Mrs. Brick died Friday evening following a prolonged illness. She was 76.' ‘ ' Burial Will be in West Branch, by Stemol Funeral Home. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. (iehevieve Largent of Pontiac, and Gladys Brick and Mrs. Ethyl Schmitt, of West Branch; one son in Midland; 14 grandchildren, and 11 great-grandchildren. KILE CARROLL WALLED LAKE Service for Kile Carroll, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Carroll, 159 Penhill St., was held 3 p.m. today at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. The 1-month-old baby died Friday after a brief illness. Burial was in Wixom Cernetery. Surviving at home are the parents; two brothers, David and Daniel, and one sister, Kimberly; and grandparents Mr. anj Mrs. Rodney Rose of Wixom and Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Carroll of South Lyon. FORREST HOSNER Forrest Hosner of 3434 Frem- died yesterday. His body is at Coats Funeral Home. Mr. Hosner leaves his wife, Aline; a son, Gerald; two daughters, Mrs. Bruce Hally of Anaheim, Calif., and Mrs. Fred France of Lake Orion; seven grandchildren; two sisters; and five brothers. MRS. OHANNES HOVSEPIAN Service for Mrs. 0 h a n n e s (Hirpsime) Hovsepian, 57, of 22 Dakota Drive, will be 11 a.m. Monday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Hovsepian, a member of St. Sarkis Armenian Church and the Armenian Red Cross, died yesterday following a short illness. Surviving are three sons, Archie, Arthur, and Richard Hovsepian, all of Pontiac; one daughter, Mrs. Esther Grigorian of Birmingham; and one sister. MRS. THOMAS WALKER Service for Mrs. Thomas (Carrie K.) Walker of 3014 Seebaldt St., Waterford Township, will be <■3 p.m. Monday in Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Drayton Plains Cemetery. Mrs. Walker, 87, died yesterday after a long illness. She was a member of Drayton Plains United Presbyterian Church. Surviving arc a daughter Mrs. one sifter, Mrs. Victor Lake of Davison; 35 grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. EMMA R. MURPHY LAPEER — Service for Emma R. Murphy, 76, of 233 Lincoln , will be 10 a.m. Monday at the Church of the Immaculate Conteption, with burial in Lor-etto Cemetery, Lapeer. A Rosary will be said tomorrow t 8 p.m. at Balrd-Newton Funeral Home. Miss Murphy died .Thursday after a long illness. She was principal of E. E' Irwin Elementary School and taught 42 years in Lapeer schools before retiring in 1959. Surviving is one nephew. MRS. MARGARET ELLERBY WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for former resident Mrs. Margaret Ellerby of 734 Weatherspoon Drive, Koko- bes St., Waterford Township, » ■ P"*., -..............f'**'” Funeral day W THanrey-Hailey Home. Burial will be in Pine Lake Cemetery. Mrs. Ellerby died yesterday. She was 83. She was a member of Calvary Presbyterian Church in Detroit. Surviving are two daughters, two sisters and four grandchildren. PETER GIATEU ALMONT — Service for Peter Giuteu, 76, of North Street, will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in Muir Bros. Funerai Home^with burial in Ferguson Cemetery. Mr. Giateu, a janitor, died yesterday after a bi'lef illness. WILLIAM J. MARK LAPEER — Service for William J. Marr, 60, of 414 Sequoia Drive, Davison, will be 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Baird-Newton Funeral Home with burial in Stiles Cemetery. Mr. Marr died suddenly Fri- He was a former Pontiac Motor Division employe. Surviving are five sons, Alvin of Plymouth, Richard and Ronald of Lansing, Wilfred of Clare and Norman of Lapeer; five daughters, Mrs. Joseph Bigelow of Fenton, Mrs. George Pingel, Mrs. Irwin Pingel and Mrs. William Truax, all of Lapeer, and Mrs. Shirley Johnson of Lansing; Waterford Township Board members Monday night will consider fr, requested appropriation of $20,634.25 as its share of the 1963-64 township recreation department budget. The school board, which in previous years has supported the recreation program on a 50-50 basis with the township board, approved the $20,634.25 outlay Thursday subject to approval by the othering governing unit. A total budget of $53,460 is proposed by the recereation department, acep^ing^^^to director Robert Lawyer. Income from fees is expected to provide $12,-191.50. NORMAN L. TAYLOR UNION'LAKE - Service for Norman L. Taylor, 80, of 1581 Petrolia St., will be 1:30 p. Monday at Maranatha Baptist Church. Burial will be in Oak Grove Cemetery, Milford. His body is at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mr. Taylor, a member of Maranatha Baptist Church, died yesterday following a two-year illness. He was a meat cutter ior a retail store and a retiree of the General Motors Truck and Coach Division. Surviving besides his wife, Adeline P., are five sons, Norman, William and Donald Taylor, all of Union Lake, Robert Taylor of Pontiac, and Philip Taylor of Columbus, Ohio; one daughter, Mrs. Alfred Nlcholls of Waterford Township; and 15 grandchildren. In other busbiess the board will considet‘ ai recommendation from the planning commission that 14-lot subdivision on M59 across from Central Methodist Church be approved. ' The planning , commission has alsq, submitted a recopimendation lor hiring a junior planner to as-sist planning director Robert Dieball. A part time junior planner was employed last summer. Also slated for board attention is a prostest by coin laundry owners that water and sewer rates are too high. Dems Organize Independently DETROIT (UPI) -- Three Detroit attorneys have set themselves the task of dispelling the image of “the Democratic party as being in labor’s pocket.’’ ■ ’The three men have organized a group called the Michigan Association of Independent Democrats (MAID). The organizers are George J. Fulkerson, Birmingham, Leonard E. Beilinson, Bloomfield Hills, and Martin M. Doctoroff, Royal Oak. Fulkerson was an unsuccessful candidate for Congress in Oakland County’s 18th District. Bel-lingson and Doctoroff are partners in a Detroit law firm with him. They emphasized their organization was not formed because of the rift in Democratic ranks during the recent convention at Grand Rapids where former Gov. John B. Swainson and labor combined to oust John J. Collins as state chairman. Newspaper AdYertising — Standards i Advertising published in newspapers is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are properly described and willingly sold to customers at the advertised price. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards, or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. 6 Rec Money period^ of devotion in Christian! churches known as Lent will ohen Wednesday (Ash Wednesday) when traditional rites will be observed. Many area pastors are announcing programs for the Lenten season today. Others will be reported next week, ST. ANDREW’S EPISCOPAL The Brotherhood of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church is sponsoring a pancake supper for men and boys from 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday. Following the affair three motion pictures will be shown, a cartoon and two sports events. Ash Wednesday services include the celebration of Holy Communion at 6:45 and 10 a.m., and again at 7:30 p.m. Holy Ck)mmunion will be ob- Viet Cong Defect to SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - National and local leaders of the Railway Clerks Union say strike, against the Southern Pacific Railroad may begin “in a matter pf days.’’ There will be little advance warning of such a walkout but commuters would be guaranteed *a ride back home if the strike comes during a weekday, chairman James Weaver of the union’s San Francisco unit said yesterday. XOnSmtlTlOn AlOpiC SAIGON, Viet Nam (AP)-Sev-enty-nine Communist guerrillas defected to the government side last week, American authorities reported t^ay. ’This was roughly double the usual weekly enemy defection rate. Officials called it a very encouraging sign. During the same week, U.S. spokesman said, 463 Viet Cong were killed, wounds or captured, slight increase over the usual rate. Gen. Emmett O’Donnell, commander of the U.S. Air Force in the Pacific, arrived here today to review the air war situation. His three-day inspection tour comes at a time when top American officials here and in Washington are taking a long look at the role of American combat pilots in South Viet Nam. Reliably informed sources say withdrawal of American Air Force combat personnel is under consideration in Washington, to head off charges that the United States is fighting an undeclared war here. The pilots involved are flying Vietnamese-marked planes on combat sorties until enough Vietnamese pilots are trained to take over the load. Space Probe Balloon Desiroyed by Blasts PALESTINE, Tex, (UPI)--A series of blasts ruined an $8,000 giant unmanned space exploration balloon yesterday and scientists said it will be at least an-othcr week before ppother one can be obtained. The blast happened while the balloon was being inflated with helium gas for a trip above the earth’s atmosphere to study Mars. No one was injured. For once the weather was right for the launching and the 80-by-60-foot balloon was about half filled with helium when a tear developed. Princeton University scientists were trying to determine if it could be patched after it ripped wide open with a series of sharp, popping sounds that sounded like mortar fire. Area Churches Observe Lent A most solemn and intensive served each Wednesday at 10, i.m. during Lent and a service of based on the book, “Scripture and the Faith,” at 7:30 p.m. in the rector’s study. CROSS OF CHRIST Cross of Christ Luthern Church will observe the Lent season with midweek vespers beginning at Ash Wednesday. Walnut crosses will be given to all families attending the services. Rail Walkout May Develop Within Days The Vespers will include ser-monettes by Rev. Delanye H. Pauling on the theme “The Cross of Christ” and special music by the church choirs. Cross of Christ Luthern is located at the corner of Franklin and Square Lake Roads just of Telegraph Hpad. ST. PAUL LUTHERAN St. Paul Lutheran Church will open its Lenten season with a vesper service at 7:30 on Ash Wednesday. Special services will be held each Wednesday evening during the season with Pastor Maurice Shackell preaching from the gen-eral theme, “Passion Sketches From the Pen of St. John.’ 'The show of unity between the national and local leaders was in marked contrast to last week’s split when national leaders shifted negotiations from San Francisco to Chicago while bay area leaders called for an immediate strike. But in h news conference yesterday, National Vice President William McGovern agreed that ‘definitely, we’re all together now.” He added that his views were shared by National Union President George Harrison. Weaver said Harrison would set the actual strike date. Negotiations to prevent a strike that could idle Southern Pacific’s 8,000 miles of lines and 50,000 employes in seven western states broke off Thursday in Chicago. News in Brief Pancake Supper, All Saints Episcopal, Williams and Pike, 5 to 8 p.m. Adults $1.00, children 50c. Lodge Calendar Friendship night, Pontiac Chapter No. 228 OES, Monday, Feb. 25th, at 8 p.m. at Roosevelt Temple, 22 State St. Edith M. Coons. cation, trustees and finance will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday and the Voter’s Assembly, the governing b^y of the church, will meet^f^Sp.m" ST. MAJIY’S-IN-THE-HILLS Lent will be observed in St. Mary’s - in - the - Hills Episcopal Church with the celebration of Holy Communion and Penitential Office at 1() a.m. and 8 p.m. Ash Wednesday. A pancake supper will be served on Shrove Tuesday between 5:““ and 7 p.m. to which the puf)lic is invited. A series of five cooperative dinners will be held on Thursday evenings during Lent With the first dil March 7. The lime is 6:30 p.m. There will be‘ informal discussions under the leadership of Rev. Wilbur Schu-tze, rector. BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR Holy Communion will be celebrated at 7:30 p.m. Ash Wednesday in Beautiful Saviour Lutheran Church, North Adams at Westview. Pastor Donald G. Zill will present a series of sermons on the general topic, “Questions Jesus Asked” at the “Go to park Gethsemane” will be the subject of the first vesper. An evangelism service is scheduled tomorrow morning with Pastor Shackell preaching ‘What You Can Do to Bring Others to Christ.” The boards of Christian edu- each Wednesday evening during Lent. The Brotherhood of Beautiful Saviour will hold an Ash Wednesday breakfast at 6:15 a.m. Rev. Ray Fenner of Birmingham Ck)n-gregational Church will be the speaker. In the regular Sunday morning worship hour Pastor Zill will a series of sermons on of Planned Debate A Democratic candidate f o Senate last fall and a former Republican delegate to the Constitutional Convention will debate the proposed new state constitution tomorrow in Pontiac. Leland H. Smith, a Highland Park Jjinior College political science professor who sought election as Oakland County’s state senator, will debate Richard D. Kuhn at the 2:30 p.m. meeting of the Pontiac Democratic Club at the Fisher Body Local Union Hall on Baldwin Avenue, The meeting will be open to the public. Smith, of Oak Park, opposes adoption of the proposed con-sitution. Kuhn, an attorney and qwner of a Pontiac auto wash, supports the document. 'The Democratic Club will hold its annual election of officers at the meeting. PONTIAC UNITY A series of Lenten truth discussions will.begin at Pontiac Unity CSiurch, 8 N. Genesee Ave. at 12:30 p.m. oh Ash Wednesday and continue each Wednesday through Lent. ' Conducting the series will be Ray H. Wilkinson of 13 Roshhlre Ct. Subjects will be taken froirt the lessons developed by International Council of Religous Education, Everett A. Dell, minster, said. GRACE LUTHERAN Mrs. Victoria Johnson of Detroit will use Leonardo De Vinci’s portrait of “The Last Supper” as the background for her address at Grace Lutheran Church oh Ash Wednesday. She will speak following the 10 a.m. Lenten brunch sponsored by the Oakland County Chapiter of the Valparaiso University Guild. Serving on the arrangements conunittee are Mrs. Ralph Rot-sel, Mrs. H. V. Hodges, Mrs-Julius Koprince, Mrs. Martin Rummel, Mrs. William Dick, Mrs. P. F. Stohlmann and Mrs. Richhrd Stuckmeyer. BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 39 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 Words That Center in the Passion.” Holy Communion will be observed on the first and third Sundays of the month. FOR LOW CAR LOANS 6MTC Employees rEDIBU CBEDIT UmOH 939 Woodward Avo. 338-4001 Sporks-Grtffin FOraZRAtHOME “Thoughtful Service** Glenn II. CrifilB St. Phone FE 8-1(841 SAVE FOR A SUNNY DAY 49iraMJwMmBr (Up 10 2,000 Dotlon) PONTIAC CO-OP HDiaAL CRIDIT UNION 1S6 W. Huron Diefenbaker Off to London ..OTTAWA John G. Diefenbaker, accompan-] ied by a trade delegation, left by; plane last night for A three-day visit to London and talks withi British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. Diefenbaker is to attend a working suppier with Macmillan tonight. On Monday he will receive the Freedom of the City of London award. The Canadian group includes 'Trade Minister Wallace McCut-cheon, Defense Minister Gordon; Churchill, Sen. Allister M. Grosart and Trade Department officials. | Mrs. Diefenbaker also is making. Hie trip. | ^ I If any newspaper reader encounters non-compliance with these standards, we ask that you inform the Advertising Department of The Pontiac Press, and also call the BUSINESS ETHieS BOARD of llie Poiiliac Area Chamber of Commerce MY LOOKING GLASS ft reply, I had a bad night, couldn't Bleep, roll tosaed: I felt mlBerable. The phone rang, I "Wrong numberl" My wife called, I enarled i eliuffled to tlie bathroom, plugged my Bhn\ vouUet and It wouldn't function, ginneed : '1 the Boowl Uiat met my gate eeemei i hungry primate on the prowl. I onme I 10 horrible I laughed. With Uio J. L. VOOEHBKB ■ facial ohanga I w«» again a human being with ...... friends and human compaoelon. The thought flashed through my mind, all etrangers ever gee Is rsflected personality. If I'm angry I’m an Old Orouch, With my shaver : hand 1 apologised to my wife. She smiled sweetly as she laid, "That cord la broken,” handed me a new one. I Inserted the plug, the Inutrument purred My looking glnss taught ii hpw many Old Orouehes, who. as others see’ them wouldn't i yoi^ll change'Uie mlrro^ or your personality. VOORHEES - SIPLE i UNERAL HOME 868 North Perry Street Phone FO 2-8878 Resolve. Jt . . . And to help fill the elomcnlnl liunian need for spiritual thought in limes of stress . . . . . . form the practice of reading each day's chapter of Jullcn C. Hyer’s memorable newspaper series, entitled “Ilis "Last 40 Days.” I fere l.s a special pre-Easter series of shori, lyrical interpretations of Sorip-turc's most absorbing and stirring events in tlio Life of Clirlst. Read it daily ... and keep for repeat readings down through the yeara, or to send to your boy in the Armed Services. "ttii Xa^t Look for It Daily on the Editorial Page of The Pontiac Press Starling Wednesday, February 27lh thru the Lcnlcii Season ' i \ \ A 'I / M * .u ■ lu TEN T«. f.,, ^ '(..(../ir THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. FEBKUAllY ! CHRISTIAN , SCIENCE SUBJECT for SUNDAY "MIND" Sunday Services and Sunday School 11.00 AM. Wednesday Evening Services 8 P.M. Reading Room 14 W. Huron S». Open Daily V AM. to5 P.M. h\day^,9 P.M. First Church of Christ Scientist Lowrence and Williams Sfreefs PONTIAC ' Kvass, a homemade European | ibeer, is made by pouring warm I water on rye and barley and allowing it to ferment. CHURCH OF TH€ GOOD SAMARITAN -.780 Hillcretf Dr., Woterford 7 P,M. SERVICE , FRANCIS HIGGINS, oi Livonia, tpapkar For Information Call FE j-9824 CHURCH OF CHRIST . 87 LAFAYETTE (Between Cass ond Oakland) Our Purpose ]s Obey God and Serve Only Him. Come, Be Wiib I s ‘WORSHIP LORD'S DAY 10:30 A M. LORD'S DAY Evening 7:0‘0 P.M. . WEDNESDAY EVENING 7:00 P.M. tfluotb NORTH EAST COMM. U.B. / versity Skating Center should Rev. Clyde F Galow,, a mis- be at the church at 6 p. m. The FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sunday School.... 10:00 A.M. Sunday Worship .. 11:00 A.M. Sunday Evening . . 7:30 P.M. Wed. Prayer.......7:30 P.M. Saturday Service ...7:30 P.M. Bev. Tommy Guest, Pastor FE 2-0384 _ NORTH EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN Mt. Clemens at Feafherstone , 9:45 A.M. —Church School 11:00 A.M.—Worship service Rev. Clyde F. Gniow, Missionpry lo Sierra Leone Africa, Speoker ot 11 a m. Coltee Hour at 11 a m. L. S. Scheifele, pastor FL 8-1744 AEOSTOUC CHURCH OF CHRIST 485 CENTRAL Saturday Young People........ 7;30p.m. Sunday School and Worship...10:00 o.m. Sunday Evening Services..... 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday Services... 7:30 p.m. Church Phone.................FE 5-8361 Pastor's Phone............... 852-2382 FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 AIRPORT^OAD Sunday School...10:00 A.M. WHITE SHEEP GO TO SUNDAY SCHOOL-black sheep stay home. Worship Service .... 11:00 A.M. Evening Service .... 7:30 P.M. MISSIONARY .."ALLIANCE CHURCH 220 N. Cass Lake Road SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 6 P.M. WORSHIP I I A.M. EVENING SERVICE 7 P.M. "The Seven Fold Blessing" "The Heart Searching Word of God" REV. G. J. BERSCHt, Pastor EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212 Baldwin Ave. Phone FE 2-0728 Pl-V, Core Fov.ll will pr, WORSHIP- 1 1 AM. (Ill d Vf.SPFR-7 KV. ; SUNDAY-SCHOOL nl 9 4,S A M. YOUTH HOUR ol 5 45 P.M. REVIVAL SERVICES-Monda y Ihfu f rldriy 7 30 P M. •Rev. C. Eojch, Preachmg Re. M. R. tvo-ey. M„v.ier- --““■j CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST CRESCENT LAKE ROAD Near HATCHtttV ROAD Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Worship 11 A M. 6:30 P.M. Baptist Fellowship Large Forking Lot Nursery During All Services ■,.I..*.*..... sionary u n d e r assignment to Sierra Leone, West Africa, Will speak in the North East C6mmu-nity Evangelical United Brethren Church, 620 Mt. Clemens St. at 11 a.m. tomorrow. Rev. Mr. Galow first went to Sierra Leone as a missionary in 1954. During his recent term of service he was field representative of the mission as well as the preacher in villages, schools and camps. A graduate of North Central College and Evangelical Theological Seminary, he has taken courses of orientation to West Africa at London University. The jGalows have a son Phillip. Rev. L. S. Schlefele, pastor, said members and friends of the church are invited. TRINITY BAPTIST Junior Usher uniforms will be dedicated at the 11 a.m. service tomorrow in Trinity B a p t i s Church. The Adult Choir will sing under the direction of Mrs. Anna Mae Murray. Pastor Joseph W. Moore will preach on “The Danger of Drifting.” Church School is at 9:15 The Combined choirs and congregation will worship with the New Zion Baptist Church in Flint at 3:30 p.m. The occasion is the observance of the anniversary of New Zion Church. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL Soloist Doris Bennett will sing —-1 “God is My Shepherd” by Dvorak 'tomorrow morning in First Con-I gregational Church. The Chancel ! Choir will sing the anthem, “In Thee 0 Lord Have I Trusted” by I Handel. i Rev. Malcolm H. Burton will preach on “Seven Aims in Mod-|ern Religion.” : Women of the church will observe Ash Wedne.sday as a day jof meditation with a program 'from 9:30 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. The five speakers during the day include Mrs. Dale Moats, Mrs. Erwin Greer, Mrs. Fred Conner, Mrs. Arthur Selden and Mrs. Robert Sanford. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST The Pontiac Junior Academy will hold its February Home and School meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Riverside Seventh-Day Adventist Church with Mrs. Richard Edens in charge. Leaders of the summer youth camp programs are taking a life saving course at the YMCA. Pastor John P. Erhard, Richard Edens and Dr. Raymond Mayor will complete the course in six weeks. AUBURN HEIGHTS U. P. “ “Time for Lent” will be the theme of Rev, F. William Palm-er’s sermon tomorrow in the United Presbyterian Church of Auburn Heights. family affair is scheduled from 7 to 9 p. m. Cub Scout Pack No. 23 under the direction of C. 0. Babb will hold its annual Blue and Gold Banquet in the church basement Tuesday eventhg. Each den mother will arrange with her cubs for a cooperative dinner. Following the banquet awards will be presented, CEOTRAL CHRISTIAN Fallen From Grace” will be the subject of Rev. Gerald W. Gibson’s sermon in Central Christian Church at 11 a.m. tor morrow. His evening theme will be “Seek Ye the Kingdom.” Central Christian observed its 27th anniversary this week. The Dorcas Guild ^iety celebrated its 26th birthday with ladies’ groups from E1 i z a b e t h Late Church of Christ, and from The Heart of the Hills Church of Christ in Rochester guests for the program in Friendship Hall. Mrs. Henry McAdams of the Rochester church was speaker. Mrs. George Collison and Mrs. William Bradley headed the program. ASCENSION •Die Senior Luther League of Church School are asked to be Drayton Avenue Presbyterian Church of Femdale Tuesday. John Miller and Carroll Appel are alternates. Pastor Auchard and Christian Kock, assistant in Christian education, will also attend. FIRST METHODIST Chester Arnold will give a toast to sons at the annual Father and Son Banquet in First Methodist Church at 6:30 Friday evening. His son Danny will respond with a toast to fathers. “The • Scoutmaster,” a Hollywood Production starring Clifton Webb, will he shown. Fathers have invited mothers and daughters to Join them during the showing of the three^eel film. The Women’s Society for Christian Service will serve dinner at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. Mrs, Charles Ashworth of Cass eommualty Center will speak on “The Church’s Role in the City.” The Sacrament of Holy Baptism will be observed and new members received at 11 a.m. tomorrow. At 2:30 p.m. Sunday the nominating committee appointed at the quarterly conference will meet at the church. All teachers and officers of the gather in Ford Auditorium in Detroit at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday to attend the 5th Baptist Jubilee Advance Rally. Dr. Roy McClain of Atlanta, Ga. will preach. A Church School Class for the mentally retarded for,children through age 13 will begin Sunday morning. This is sponsored by the new Pontiac Area Council Churches. The class will be helc from 10:30 to 12:30 at Central Methodist Church, M-69 just off of CaSs fSake road. OAKLAND AVE.U.P. Rev. Theodore R. Allebach will preach on “How to Have Ppwer in Your Life” at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Church Plans Dinner The building fund committee is sponsoring a dinner starting ■ at 2 p.m, tomorrow In the New Jerusalem Baptist Church, 128 W. Pike St. Rev. Booker Humei l»stor, said the public is invited. the Lutheran Church of the Ascension will meet at the church at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon before distributing pamphlets around neighboring areas. The leaflets will tell about the Lenten schedule and plans for Vacation Bible School. The young people will return to the church to hear Gabrielle Swartz, a foreign exchange student attending Waterford Kettering High School, tell of her home in Germany. The Junior Luther League under the leadership of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Koski will meet at the church at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow for a toboggan party. After the fun on the hjll the group will return to the church for refreshments. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Harold Wood will direct the choir in “Glory to God” by Heller. Pastor Mires Stine will preach at both the 8:45 and 11 a.m. .services. present when Mrs. Harriet L. Palmer, conference director of children’s work, discusses the Church School at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. The nominating committee of the Woman’s Society will get together in the Avondale home of Mrs. Norman Legge at 8:30 a.m. Thursday. BETHANY BAPTIST The final session of “School of World Outlook^’ is set for Wednesday following the cooperative 6:30 dinner. Lina Banusing, of the Philippines will appear in native dress and speak of her country. Charles Hazel will also speak. Thousands of Baptists will During the service Mrs. Gray Graham will tell members some of the goals for the Sunday School for the year. Mothers, Pals and Pioneer Girls will be guests at the Pioneer Girl’s encampment and tea from 3:30 to 5 p.m. tomorrow. Girls receiving an achievement award Will be Sue Boaz, Julie Tangen, Amy Girst, Diane Upton, Melanie Houck, Linda Thompson, Becky Lynch, Diana McKenzie, Vickie Koch, Melba Goines, Connie Miller and Mary Stewart. Others will be Jeanette Shearer, Amy Hampton, Terry Hubble, Patricia Perry, Teri McCracken, Diane Walters, Carol Todd, Sarah Slade, Anita Wheller, Martha Stimson, Janice Biggs, Debra McKenzie, Bonnie Helvey, ;:;i Carolyn Wayne, Bonnita Wil-I|i|: liams, Mary Vose, Kathy Matte-son and Sherry Shelton. j Youth groups will meet at 5:45. S BETHANY baptist church W. Huron ot Mark Worihip Strvic# - 8.40 and 11.00 o.m. Sermon. "THE FREEDOM OF THE PEW" 4)r. Emil Kent*, Pastor 9.45 A.M.Churvh School Classes tor All Ages 6.3Q P.M. Evening Devotions 7-8.00 P.M. Adult and Youth Groups Weetnodoy 6.30 P.M. School of World Ogllook and Dinner Meeting “An American Baptist Coaventiaa Church" ' BETHEL TABERNACLE First Pentecost Church 6f Pontloe ’Sun. School 10 AM. Worship II A.M. ,, EVANGELISTIC SERVICE ’ Sun., Tues. and Thurs.—7.30 P.M, Rev. and Mrs. E. Crouch • 1348 Baldwin Ave. Fe’s-8256 VVilliams Lake Church of the Nazarene . 2840 Airport Raad Paul Coleman Minister 10 A.M.-^ SUNDAY SCHOOL II A.M.-WORSHIP HOUR '7 PM.-WORSHIP HOUR CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP „„ mLTA=tEMELE=^2Q24,.P^ ROAD • _ (Formerly Sf. Luke'* Methodiil Church) Sunday, Feb. 24-7.30 P.M.—Charles Youngs, Speaker Feb. 28 — Silver Tea March 3 — Rev. Enisle Beezley United Gospel Singing Convention First Social Brethren Church 316 Baldwin Ave. SUNDAY, FEB. 24 - 2:30 to 4:30 P.M. Featuringt Kingdom Heirs, Kankakee, III. Marcee Aires — Pontiac Joy Bell of Stone Baptist Church Auburn Heights Rice Sister — Clarkston Ladles' Trio — Evangelistic Temple ‘ 1 st Social Brethren Quartet ERNA McKinney, Sec.______ ■ JOHN HANCOCj^, Pres. FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 East Blvd. FE 4-1811 Pastor, WM.K. BURGESS SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. WORSHIP11 A.M. "HUMAN GUILT AND GOD'S GRACE" EVENING SERVICE ... 7:00 P.M. The Erichson Sisters, special Music We Welcome You and Yaurs la EVANGELICAL MISSIONARY CHURCH 2800 Wotkins Lk. Rd. Ona Mila N.W. of Tha Moll Sunday School -10 A.M. - CpI. Al. Eberla, Supf. ,,. Preoching and Worship ot 11 A.M. and 7.30 P.M. p.m. with the Pioneer’s topic; :|:j e Rodio-so^CKLW Sun. 7.30 A,M.-Tune ini “Hit the Books,” and “My Part ^ a. J. Boughey, Pas. - Dewm Baughay, Asst Pas. in My Family,” the theme of the •• Builder’s program. Mrs. Gerald Schultz and Mrs. Gerald Shafer will sing a duet and the Youth En.semble will present selections at the 7 p.m. worship hour. Come Home fo Speak During Lenten Season n FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 NORTH ROSELAWN SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11 A M. Evangelistic Service — Rev. James De Vault 7:00 P.M. Prayer Meeting and Bible Study Thurs. 7:30 P.M, Five young men who have '■ * , grown up in Central Methodist ‘ ' Church and gone into the min- Soulh Saginaw at Judson MORNING WORSHIP 8:30 and 11 A.M. "THE FOREGLEAMS OF LENl" - Rev, Corl G. Adorns CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. MYF-6:15- P.M. • Wed. 6:30 p.m. -• Lpnien Dinner w .................. ORCHARD LAKE COMMUNITY Pastor Edward D. Auchard of Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian will lead ________ ____ „ the Protestant service in Oakland jistry will return to their home County Tuberculosis Sanitorium church to preach during Lent, at 1 p.m. tomorrow. A quartet | yyj|| jjg guest preachers at from the Chancel Choir will offer I the School of Christian Living musical selections. held on six consecutive Wednes- The Senior High Fellowship ex-ijigy evenings beginning Ash tends a general invitation to'Wednesday, members and friends of the I ★ ★ A church to attend a series of films jtey ^|„hert F. DavfsT aSod-' portraying the life of Paul on six ^tg minister of Aldersgate Meth-successive Sunday evenings. oji^t church in Detroit, will The series will begin at 8:15 preach on "The Cleansing Power tomorrow evening. A discussion of the Cross” following the 6:30 Youth fellowship groups both will follow. [dinner in F’ellowship Hall. A junior and senior highs will meet .. . nursery will be provided for chiK ...................... will allend in all ch|-cr r-o1lw ''''5; Those needing transportation skating party Monday evening for the monthly roller skating lanj the regular weekly dinner party Monday evening in Uni- Thursday evening. ■ He will be followed the next week by Rev. Thomas R. Bank of the Highland Methodist Church who will preach on “Called to Be Saints.’ On March 20 the a cappella choir of Baldwin-Wallace College in Berea, Ohio will present a Choral Concert- of Lenten music. On the two succeeding Wednesday evenings Rev. Howard F. Short of Milford Methodist Church will preach and Rev. Harold N. Nessel of Central Methodist Church in Flint will give a poetic interpretation of the disciple, Thomas. V_.trIIIIUI /VldllCJUIOI j:|: i 3882 Highland Rd. milton if. bank iji:, APOSTOLIC FAITH ! Douglas Smith was designated elder-commissioner to the Pres- H. H. Johnion, Aisoclole Pastor . Pastor 1... TABERNACLE bytery of Detroit held in the MORNING WORSHIP 9:15 and 10:45 A.M. . | 93 Parkdale CHRIST LUTHERAN Sunday School 10 A.M. CHURCH "Tantalizing Temptation" Rev. Johnson Preaching ^ ( Sun. Worship 11:15 A.M. Airport and Williams Lake Rds. Sun. Evening 7:30 P.M. Sundoy School .... 9:30 A.M. Broadcast Live on WPGN 11,00 A.M. for All Ages CHURCH SCHOOL 9:15 and 10:45 A.M. | Tues. Bible Study .... 7:30 P.M. WORSHIP SERVICE Thurs. Y6ung PeoHe . 7.-30 P.M. 11 A.M. FIRST METHODIST Elder Ernest Wcirdell, Pastor NURSERY PROVIDED AT 11 AA1. CARL G. ADAMS, Minister K .IHHM A- Hnll Min. of Vl.sitntinn ' t: 1 FE 4-4695 Wayne K Peterson, Pastor CALVARY BAPTIST 3750 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD Henry Wrobbel, Pastor FE 5-3553 10:00 Sunday School * We Have a Class for You 11:00 Morning Worship Rev. Oscar Van Impe, Missionary-Evangelist 5:30 Teenagers 7:00 Evening Service Rev. Oscar Van Impe Wednesday Prayer Meeting —7:30 Two Nurseries to Serve You 1ST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH ■ ‘576 Orctiard Lake Avo. Bev. Mnrshall, Pastor SERVICE SUN. 7:30 P.M. First Presbyterian Church HURON AT WAYNE REV. GALEN E. HERSHEY, PASTOR REV. PAUL D. CROSS, ASST. PASTOR ALBERT A. RIDDERING, Christian Education- Director Worship Service . . . 9:30and It:00A.M. Church School .... 9:30 and 11:00 A.M. The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET ......'Surida7Sctioot'9;45 o,m:-Yottrig''feoptTYs'tTrgion Morning Worship 11 a m. ^ Evangelistic Meeting 7;00'p m Wednesday Prayer ond Praise Meeting 7.00 p.m. LIEUT, and MRS. GARY B. CROWELL : ' Coml Music-Singiiifi-True to the Word Prearhinp God Meets With US - You, Too, Are Invited Choir Presents Music at Providence Church A mu.sical pre gram will be presented at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in Providence Missionary Baptist Church by the Senior Choir under the direction of Mrs. Thomas Bessant, program chairman, Mrs. Worthy Key® is president of the choir. ★ ★ ★ The organ committee headed by Mrs. Johnny Cox will spon-musicale in the church at 7:30 p!m. Rev. Claude Goodwin said the public is invited. WHAT DO YOU WANT OUT OF LIFE? WHAT ARE YOU DOING ABOUT IT? DO YOU TRUST GOD? "Com«" All li Wdlcoma lo Our MaoHng o( Advoncomenl Progrom. Spuclol Moullno 3i30 P.M. Ctiairman Sl» J()hiiiilr» Smilh. EASl SIDE CHURCH OF GOD I 343 Irwin St., Pontiac, Michigan Sundoy School 9:45 A.M. Morning SorvIco 11:30 A.M. Evening Service 7:30 P.M. Thurs. Prayer Meeting 7:30 P.M. House lo House Proyer Bond Toes, of Each Week 7,30 P.M. Coll lor appoinliiiom. Teacher; Elder Clyde P. Hordimon Phone 338-1794 332-0529 Poslors: Rev. Mollhew Moses Scott ond Rev. H. C. Shdnl^lo PONTIAC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180 N. PERRY ST, FE 2-6269 Listen to the "Herald of Truth" Each Sunday—C|JLW—11 A.M. BIBLE STUDY.,....... 9:50 A.M. Classes for all ages MORNING WORSHIP 10:50 A.M. "FEAR" EVENING SERVICE .... 6 P.M. "BURDENS" , Bible Classes for Everyone Wed. Night 7:30 P.M. LADIES' BIBLE CLASS ______ Thursday 10 A.M ' / --■.'Acv,' FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH COR. OAKLAND AND SAGINAW STREETS Rev. Robert H. Shelton, Pastor 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL (Classes for All Ages) 10:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE (Message Broadcast Over CKLW at II ;00) 5:45 P.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP GROUPS 7:00 P.M. EVENINGj EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 9:30 P.M. Listm to Gospel Echos Programs WPON WEDNESDAY, 7:30 P.M. MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, PEBRUARY 28, 10r>8 __—---------------------—,------ - Pleven Music afrBray Temple ^ The Senior Choir of Bray Temple C. M. B:- Church, 320 Rock- LUTHERAN CHURCHES MISSOURI StNOD Cross of Christ St. will present Mrs. Phyllis S. Harris as soloist and the I^e Chorus of St, John Methodist Church in a jtnusical program at 4 p.m. tomorrow. Rev. R. H. Mels paptor. . , ih at Squora lake Rd. Bloomfield Township I;:;. j R»r. Drliiyuf II. VmiHnit, I'tiiUor Servkesof J;:i WoriWp of 8i30 and I liOO A.M. ^ Church School 9i4$ AAA. I St. Stephen | Sashobaw at Kempf . jl-:; Guy B. Smitkp Pa»lpr Sunday School. ..... 9> 15 A.M. :|;ji Church Services Ig BiOO ond I0i30 AAA. vj; St. Trinity | Auburn at' Jeule §:| (EostSide) ;:|j Aefpft C. Ctaiu, Banior I Sunday School..... 9.45 A.M. f. grtnt Swvlce........8,30 A M.'^ Se^ Service....... 11.00 AAA. 44 St: Paul . Jostyn at Third (North Side) Ren Mtturiet Shacbetl I PEACE I SmvIom Md at Wohnrlord Townihtp High k-j Scho^ Highland- Road ot CrMcmt Lake -rj; K;., Road. Sunday Sthool 9 AAA I-tJ fe Wbrthlp Service 10i30A.M. Richard H.Feucht, Pastor Grace Ki Corner Genesjoe ond Glondale t|:; (West Side) Richard C. Sluckmeyer, Pastor Church Service.........9i00 A.M. t!;l Sunday School........9i00 A.M. Church Service.......11.00 A.M. Sunday School.........11.00 AAA. S '7ha Lutheran Hour" over WKMH 9 AAA. Every Sunday WESLEYAN METHODIST 67 N. Lynn St. SUNDAY SCHOOL......10.00 A.M. WORSHIP............ 11.00 A.M. W.Y.P.S............. 6i45P.M. EVENING SERVICE ....... 7.30 P,M, WED. PRAYER AND BIBLE :. 7.30 pIm. Rev.J, De iVnff Evangelist Billy Walker of Southgate will hold a series of FAITH IN GOD I The^FOUNDATION of YOUR PEACE Your Individual Hoppiriess Depends U^n What You 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL ■COME BRING A FRIEND . 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP EVERYONE WELCOME 7:00-P.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE MID-WEEK WED. 7 i30 (THREE SERVICES) DEAF SERVICE SUN. 11:00 A.M. 'mm eoD meetings in Sunny Vale Chapel, 5311 Pontiac Lake Road, Waterford Township Sunday through March 3. Services will begin at 11 a m. and 7 p.m. tomOrrov^ and at 7:30 each evening during the week. Although only 24 years ot age the evangelist has preached at many crusades and rallies. Raised in a parsonage, Rev. Mr. Walker said he felt the call to become an evangelist at an early age. He received his preparation for the ministry at Wayne State University. At the age of 18, Rev. Walker was a winner in Oie lHlchlgan Peace Oratorical Contest. Later he won the Wayne State University Oratorical Contest. He is conference manager of Hiawatha Youth Camp on Piatt Lake in the j Upper Peninsula. Jim McCoy of the Five Points Community Church will direct the choir and lead the singing. Rev. V. L. Martin said the public is invited to all meetings of the crusade. PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH 8 N. Genesee (Corner W. Hurpn) 335-2773 EVEREnE A. DELL, Minister 11 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP LENTEN TRUTH DISCUSSION EACH WED.-12.30 PRAYER FOR THE SICK! Tj___ r^EPTY M SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. CHURCH 11:00 A.M. EVENING SERVICE 7:30 P.M. Indenomlnotlonol PASTOR REV. RALPH HART and ALIENE HART 1300 E. Seven Mile Rd., Detroit For Bus Service—Coll MA 4-1109 Porvu CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH • 347 N. Saginaw St. The Central Chrijllan Church does not exist merely to add to the denominations already In existence In the religious world. Believing the Bible to be the Word of God and His final and complete authority. Wo plead for o non-denominotlonol message with Bible language, Bible Doctrine, Bible worship, and Bible fellowship. Our message Is a plea for the restoration of primitive Christianity os it existed In the first century, devoid of human Ideas and Innovations. Wo ask lor Scrlpturql proof for every doctrine of faith preached ond practiced in the church. In the Book of Acts there ore given six model conversions, covering about every kind and condition of people —prominent men, good men, bod men, educated men, uneducated men. These are found In Acts 2, 8, 9, 10 and 16. Summarizing the answers given In those chapters, we are told they do the following things. 1 — Believe In Christ with the whole heart 2— Repent of their sins towatd Christ 3— Openly confess their faith in Christ 4— Are burled with Christ In Baptism 5— Continue steadfastly In the Faith WE INVITE ALL WHO LOVE GOD'S WORD AND HIS SON TO FELLOWSHIP WITH US Sumy Vale Eyangelist Billy Walker Speaking at Services Sf. James Church Plans Program Mrs. William White will be mistress of ceremonies at the. building fund program at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon in St. -i- BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rd. North of West Long Lake Rd. Sunday School . . . 10 a.m. Evening Worship. . 6,00 p.n|i. Morning Worship .. 11 a.m. Prayer Meet., Wed. 7,30 p.m. RfV. HAROLD W- GIESEKE, PASTOR PHONE 647 3463 COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. — FE 5-9960 Sunday School........ 9,45 A.M. Morning Worship ..... 11,00 A.M. - Training Union........... 6,30 P.M. Evening Worship ... .... 7,30 P.M. Midweek Service (Wed.): 7,45 P.M. Be our Guest and You'll be Blest End your search lor a friendly Church E. CLAY POLK Pastor (Alllllaled with the Southern Baptist. Convention) CLARENCE B- JACKSON, Minister of Education CARROLL HUBB^, Music Director MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL .............. Rev. Lyle Petersen, Missionary to Japan '■ Speaking at Both Services Mhrnincj Worship hour EVENING SERVICE .. 7:30 PJYl. Public Cordially Invited sionary Baptist Church, 345 Bag- ley St. The welcoming address will be given by Otis Hinson and Odle Wright will lead devotions. Mrs. Walter Richardson will present a reading. Milton Henry, guest speaker, will be introduced by Rev. Jacob Washington. Music will be provided by the St. James Male Chorus and the Golden Notes, a vocal group. NEW MINISTER — Coming to the Sylvan Lake Church of Christ, Inverness at Orchard Lake Road, as the new minister is Robert B. Murray Jr. Here he is shown with his wife and daughter, Nancy (left) and Robin, The Murrays make their home at 72 Delaware Drive. CHURCH of CHRIST 210 HUGHES ST. FE 5-1156 Roosevelt WeUs, Evaagelist Sunday Bible Study for all ages, 9,45 o.i ■ Sunday VVorihip Periods T I a.m. and 7 p.m. Tuesday Weekly Bible Study 8 p.m. Tti, Church lhol"Sp«ok, 01 Ih, Church of Aloneuienl Offers Concert Church Attendance Up OSLO, Norway m — Church attendance in Norway has risen an average of 14.2 per cent in the past five years, a survey shows. During the same period, population increased only 4.4 per cent. CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12 Warren St. Speaker 7,30 P.M. Horace John Droke Sllvsr Tea, Wednesday 7.30 P>4. The second annual Choir Music Night of the Church of the Atonement will be held at 7:30 Wednesday evening in the sanctuary of the church at 3636 Clintonvillej Road, Waterford Township. | The program will be under the direction of Mrs. Charles Seavey with Mrs. Donald C. Andrews at the organ. Harold McKinney will sing “Suddenly There’s a Valley.” and Howard Bertram will present “He Whispered Peace Be Still.” Other soloists will be Mrs. James Andrews singing “There Is a Balm” and Mrs. Allen Crisman who will offer “Take My Hand, Precious Lord.” Selections by the Adult Choir will consist of “Ave Berum Cor- pus” by Mozart, “Our God Is Great,” “It’s a Grand Night for Singing” and “No Man Is an Island.” Numbers of the Junior Choir will sing a solo. Stephen Andrews and John Williams will play a trumpet duet accompanied by Anita Freeland at the piano. also tell of her work at the 11 a.m. worship hour. Besides serving in hospitals In Pasrur and Jhelum, she was responsible for a traveling dispensary among people of the rural areas. CHURCH SCHOOL 9,45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. First Christian Church "disciples orCHRTsr Rev. Jack H. C. Clork, Pastor 858 W. Huron St. All Saints Episcopal^Church Williams St. at W. Pike Sf. ■rtaMiiiir,iiiiimi,iiiiMiu The REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector The REV. WM. E, I Alsociote The REV. ALEXANDER 1 Vicor 8:00 A.M. — Holy Conyriunion 9:30 and 1 M5 A.M. — Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rector. Church School 7:00 P.M. — Episcopal Young Churchmen Rose Kneal Room Monday Feb. 25 — St. Mythias the Apojtle 7 A.M. — Holy Communion Wed., Feb. 27 — Ash Wednesday 7 A./vl. Hoh/ dommunion 10 A.M. — Holy Communion 7 P.M. — Evening Prayer, Penetentionol Office and Address by the Rev. Wm. E. Lyle ,, Thurs., Feb. 28—10 A M. — Holy Communion CHURCH of the RESURRECTION meet In Clarkston Elementary School, 6595 Wqldron Rd. THE REV. ALEXANDER T.4*5TEWARt, Vicar' 9:30 Holy Communion and SerfHonI' 1ST GENERAL MPTISTCNURCH of Drayton Plains llnglon Rd. (Off Hatchery Rd.) Rev. R. L. Gregory SUNDAY SCHOOL . . 10 a.m. WORSHIP.........11 o.m. EVENING WORSHIP 7,30 p.m. United Presbyterian Churches OAKLAND AVENUE Oakland at Cadillac Tkrodor* R. AUehach, Pastor Audrey lAmkemnn, Youth Director Morning Worship .... 10,00 A.M. Sundpy School .... . ., 11,20 A.M. Youth Meetings... 5,45 P.M. Evening Worship..... 7,00 P.M. Wednesday Prayer_ 7,00 P.M. AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Primary Street F. IFiti, Palmer, Pastor 9,30 A.M.—Sunday School 11,00 A.M.-Morning Worship 6 P.M.—Youth Fellowship DRAYTON Drayton Plains, Michigan IT'.J. Treuwissenjr., Pastor Bible School....... 9,45 A.ti. Morning Worship .... 11,00 A.M, Youth Groups........... 6,30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Study Hour....... 7,30 P.M. Numbers of the Junior Chair will include “My Task,” “Almighty Army of the Young,” “Happy Wanderer” and “My Own America.” Miss Marie Cash, a registered nurse and missionary to Pakistan, will speak aand show pictures at the 9:30 Bible School tomorrow morning. She will Brotherhood Banquet at Macedonia Church Guy Nunn, radio newscaster, author and Rhodes scholar, will . bTWe WrakWror WBft5ther=^ h 0 0 d Banquet sponsored by Macedonia Baptist Church In First Federal Savings & Loan Building at 7 p.m. today. He has servpd .as a iqj^r epp- Society Sponsors Tea The Women’s Missionary Society of the South Side Church of God will hold a silver tea from 3:30 to 6 Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Lewis Harris* of 37 Henry Clay Ave. Mrs. J^ Allen Parker of Newman AME Church will be the speaker. Proceeds will benefit Warner Pacific College. nomlst with the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D. C. and -ixaminer^wlth the National Labor Relations Board. The author of “White Shad-ivs,” Mr. Nunn has contributed many articles to national magazines. Church is spopsorlng a post valentine tea at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon , in the Macedonia Church, 510 Alton St. Inez Winston is chairman of the tea and Janie Cooper, choir president. Rcorganlmd CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of Latter Day Saints 19 Front Sf. SUNNY VALE CHAPEL HEAR BILLY WALKER , NIGHTLY Evangelist Walker 7:30 P,f\A. Pastor V. L. Martin If you hove heard Billy Walker before, you'll want to hear him again... OR hear him for the first time... Sunday, Feb. 24 thru Sun., March 3 Miss Cash studied at Moody Bible Institute and Central Normal College in Missouri. She received her R.N. degree from the Methodist Episcopal Hospital ’Training School for Nurses In Indianapolis. FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE ST. SUNDAY SCHOOL .... 9:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP. 1 hOO A.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP.. 6:00 P.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7:00 P.M. OUR PASTOR SAYSi "Very Few Big Jobs Are Held By Men Who Honk Their Horns In a Traffic Jam" CHURCH of GOD East Pike at Anderson -Parionagn Pbon« FE 2-8609 Sunday School 10,00 A.M. Young People! VYed., 7.00 P.M. Rev. Eitel D. Moore |WATERFORD COMMUNITY OT^CHl I Airport Rd. and Olympic Parkway Robert D. Winne, Pastor * Sunday School - 9:45 A.M. * Worship Service - 11:00 A.M. Mrs. Helen Constcince—outstanding missionary speaker from Colombia, South America * Youth Groups - 6:00 P.M. ’FiRS't METHOdlSt-eH^RCH™- * Evening Service - 7:00 P.M. Mrs. Helen Constance 50J MT CLEMENS STREET Rnv. L.url Koernor, Poslor COMING - "The Tony Fontane Story"— Sunday Night —March 10th SUNDAY SCHOOL . . JO A.M.. . . . WORSHIP SERVICES 11 A.M. and 7:00 P.M. Welcome to a Friendly Church' ■ EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 645 S. Telegraph Rd. (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) A Fundamental, Independent, Bible Believing Baptht Church THE BIBLE HOUR ... 10 A.M. Departmentalized Sunday School for All Ages... with NO Liferature but the Bible. HEAR DR. MALONE teach the word of God verse by verso In the largo Auditorium Bible Class, broadcast on WPON 10,15-10,45 A.M. - Rev. Leland Lloyd, Supf. Auditorium Class TWO GREAT SERVICES DR. BOB JONES, SR. Both Services Baptism Every Sunday Night. Orchestra Sundoy Night Services. Dr. Tom Molone Poster HEAR PONTIACS LARGEST CHOIR plus Musical Extras NURSERY AT ALL SEI^VIGES \ _ ------------ — --------- BUS TRANSPORTATION CALL FE 2-8328 MUSIC TO BLESS THE HEART 10 A M.-Hope Bible Trio 11 A M,-rChoir and Orchestra Arrongemorrt "Tho Your Sins Be os Scorlet" 7 P.M.-Goipel Aires Trief ,v ■vV ...V f!* U tWELYE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1963 Approves Bids for UP LANSING - Bids for campL pound development at Tahqua-iqgnon Falls State Park, Chippe-County, and for a new elec-trQuilly-controlled security door at Marquette branch prison have been approved by the State Build-In^ Division. Physically Unfit Best at 'Virus Tennis' . By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPlI - This year my family has managed to make the long winter days and nights seem longer by ' playing a little game that we call “virus ten- ENTER THE NIGHTMARE ZONE OF THE INCREDIBLE! FACES OF LONG-BURIED BEAUTIES... UNIMAGINABLE HORROR... The fun bet gan several weeks ago when ray older daughter brought home a WEST matched set of viruses that she had picked up in school. “Catch, mother," she called, tossing one to my wife, who, lobbed it on to me. I gave it a backhand spin that my younger daughter took on the first bounce and returned with a forehand drive to her sister. Almost before we knew it, we were playing regularly. At first, we were unable to keep more than one virus in the air at one time. ★ ★ ★ But as the winter propessed, we were batting around several differet^ viruses simultaneously. As our form improved, we switched from “singles" to ‘Rubles.” That Is, rather ' than have Just one player in bed with a virus, we had two. The youngest member of the household, being only a year old, was too small to play, so we let him be the “virus boy.” This is the equivalent of a “ball boy” in lawn tennis. ★ ★ ★ He would chase the viruses Baltimore Quiet Theater Integrates said as she blinked against the afternoon sun. She moved up a place in line at the box office. But I’m glad,” she added thoughtfully. Miss Upshur is secretary of the Civic Interest Group, a local civil rights organization responsible for the demonstrations. She was arrested in the picketing last Friday but was released the next day. * ★ ★ By Tuesday she said she had heard the niorale of the girls in City Jail was dropping. So she got herself arrested that night. She said she wanted to be in jail to cheer them up. Another student, Curtis Smothers, 19, said, “We’re glad the theater is integrated.” But we had 2,000 more customers for City Jail if they hadn't opened the theater,” he said. THEY BLOW THE BIG HOUSE APART! BCN STUART H'WHM ROD SAMMY SIBl-DAVIS,IR. BALTIMORE (AP)-“The mqv-ie wasn’t very, good, but it really [doesn’t matter,” a Negro coed 'said as she came out of the Nqrthwood Theater. The theater—scene of six days of mass demonstrations and mass arrests—quietly opened its doors to Negroes Friday. Twenty-three well-dressed Morgan State College students bought tickets to see “In Search of the Castaways” and walked unimpeded through the carpeted lobby. MANY ARRESTED Only two days before 74 students had been arrested as they tried to do the same thing, as were 339 before them. They had protested the theater’s exclusion of Nepoes. Thursday, after A13 students _,ad been charged with trespassing or disorderly conduct and 343 of them had languished in Baltimore City Jail, the theater manager dapitulated. He apeed to end segregation, and the demonstrators agreed to end the demonstrations. The 343 were released from jail as their cumulative $200,000 bail was dropped. The charges stand. PEACEPUI> NOW One of the students who Maritime Union official the movie Friday was Sandra^yesterday that crewmen of, Upshur, 18, president of the Mor-|j,^g gan freshman cla.ss^She had been sometimes complained arrested twice in the demonstra-l •^ sure^ peaceful now,’’shei«“^ Michael J, McNcrney,, NMU business agent at Port Arthur, | said the crew also complained ^ about poor fire fighting equipment aboard the vessel. McNerney said in an interview that the crewmen were told to Crew Listed Complaints on Lost Ship BEAUMONT, Tex. (UPI) - that the rest of us had missed and bring them back to us. I understand the game has enjoyed wide popularity, but in case it hasn’t caught on yet in your area, here’s the way it is played: One player is called the “server.” He tosses a virus into the air and peoples it by means by a cough or sneeze toward the second player, who is called the "i;eceiver.” ★ w ★ To be a valid serve, the virus must land in. the receiver’s upper respiratory tract. 'When, that happens on the first seinre, it is called an “ace.” If it misses, it Is called a “fault," and the server must serve again. Scoring systems vaiYf but in general the following rules are used: One point for a ninny nose, two points for an earache, three points for a sore throat and four points for a temperature of 100 degrees or more. Bonus points are given if the receiver is (1) bed-ridden for at least 24 hours, and/or (2) calls a doctor. Players who take flu shots before the season opens have a 50-point handicap. My older daughter is the leading scorer in our house, but she has an advantage over the rest of us. She plays a lot at school. RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil |(AP) —All necessary defensive steps have been taken in Brazil’s “lobster war” with France and p^ple can remain calm," Brazil's Calm in Lobster War the Navy Ministry said today, despite an approaching French warship. Admiral Pedro Paulo Suzano, razil’s navy-minister, charted strategy with other efficialk at a top secret Navy Ministry meeting Friday. He said later Brazil’s navy is standing ready to carry out its duty “whatever it might be.” ★ ★ ★ , The Navy Ministry issued statement saying, “Our people can remain calm. All the steps already taken and those which will become necessary in tbe future will be marked by consideration and equilibrium.” The French warship is'sailing toward Brazil to protect six French lobstdr boats which Brazil ordered away from fishing grounds off Brazil’s northeast coast. Pope Leaves Vatican for Student Seminary VATICAN CITY (AP)-Pope John XXiri left Vatican City today and spent an hour and a half visiting the Major Roman Seminary of St. John in Lateran. It is a visit he has made each year on the feast day of the Madonna of Faith to whom the pontiff is especially devoted. He attended the seminary in his days as a student priest in Rome.^ lOYS Md GIRUI EMM SATURPItV ud SUNDAY AFYEMOON THE 3 STOOGES in “SPOOKS” ROOFTOPS OF NEW YORK 'A HOUR COLOR CARTOONS • BARABAS • I WMkdffVf 7>00, 9i00 R.M. OPEN 1:00 P.M. ^2^KEECO Closed-Circuit Video to Help. Teoch Prisopers JACKSON (R - A closed-circuit television system to aid the prison Inmate educational program at Southern Michigan! Prison is expected to be In opera- tiori this spring. ..| Prison officials annourtced yesterday- completion of Installation of the system, costing |l3;il00 and financed by a grant from the McGregor Foundation. strand 3 Houtb of Laughtor Etyojr ' Your Sunday Dinner ut the WEST SIDE Restaurant 226 S. Telegraph ■Imu .9oiith of Voorhei* CARRY ON TEACHER DOCTOR IN LOVE Nonum BUT NaiHiiK 1$ RjHiiiAiR »--------IMAIL ORDERS NOWl|----------------» "BrUluuil, exciting, ipetSacular and totally abaorUngP’-^iUMWt macaiinii METRO GOLDWYN MAYERS'S " ' "" CTINIER RESERVED SEATS AT BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL MX pf MCI OPIHU 10 A. M. OAIU MICHIGAN PREMIERE WEDNESDAY EVENING MARCH 6rii TBCHNICOIXIR* TICKETS NOW ON SALE! EVRNINOS; Rnn. ■t «:S0 p.m. 8*t. At 4:4S p.m. M*lii Meet. I«.M. B»l MATINEES: Wed. Meo. SI.7S. Bale. MUSIC RALE. THEATRE I I 8AO M»dl>on Ave., Detroit Ed. Mleh. | ly order j Ene. Debtek Dm ■ aty............ Zone ,,.. Stole 5 ■ Pleooe enclose oUmpef oell- . ■ oddreoned envelop^. ■ Tickets Now on Sale at SEARS NALL DET. 26. MICH. Pontiac Theaters Sat.-Mon.: “Confessions of an .............. , draft a list of their complaints, ROD SAMMY Gazzo, (.Qpjgg oyg^ to the .ship's ^ master and chief engineer for! the ship’s record, and to give the _________ “Rear Window,” S‘®'rf^’|union another copy. The Great War, Silvana Man-^ uary. The Navy and Coast Guard Sat.-Thu.: “Jumbo,” Doris sent up seven planes today and Day, Jimmy Durante, color. broadened its search for the missing tanker to the Graveyard [Banks off the North Carolina The planes searched an area from the Dry Tortugas west of the Florida Keys to North Carolina’s outer banks in hopes of finding more debris from the Too Cold for Daily Walk j POOLE, England (UPI) -Mrs. Edith MacGregor expressed irritation yesterday that on her birthday it was too cold for her usual half-mile daily walk. .She was 102. "ONE OF THE DOZEN BEST PICTURES OF 1962!" Philip K. Scheuer, LA. Timers "Rousing... dazzling ... glorious treat" Hollywood Roporler NOW DORIS DAY IN THE FIRST BIGMUSICALHITOF'631 "Among the ALL-TIME great screen muskalsl" VarMy ”ONE OF THE YEAR’S TEN BEST!” “frn/* Sehiar, Philo. Bullatin WfS ■METRO'GOLDWYN-MAVERSlKJOEPASTERMK..oo..™.. STARRING ' . _ , DORISfSTEPHEN|JIMMV|MBBIHa Week days Jumbo at 7:00-9:39 Shorts at 9:05 Only SATURDAY ahd SUNDAY SCHEDULE Shorts at 1:10-3:52-6:31-9:13 Jumbo at 1:44-4:26-7:05-9:57 .EDEAN JAGGER. r.SI0NEY SHELDON f.rRICHARD RODGERS and LORENZ,HART-“-^;“CHARLES WALTERS 'aROGER EDENS..»r-J0E PASTERNAK and MARTIN MELCHER , ★★ ■»ANAVI»IOH‘,.o mETWOCOI.OI» BBBHI ' QUAKER OATS PREMIUM FREE TICKETS Will B» Honorad At Any Tim* During Hi* Showing at “Jumbo” Whon Accompunlod by a Paying Adultl "IV'V- ■■ji >'< ;yi THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURiUy, FEBRUARY 23, 1963 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. THIRTEEN UPSTAIRS VIEW—Walking down the Hagues wide stairway, the backyard comes into full view and summer or winter it is a lovely sight. Mrs. Hague had her husband build a planter box under the windows, then she filled it with cement and topped it with small pebbles. This way the plants can be watered without fear of staining the woodwork. The colorful curtains are hung on brass rod.s. CHEERY KITCHEN—Restored louvred doors swing into one of the cheeriest kitchens in the county. Red and white print wallpaper is set off by white woodwork. Those old wrought iron brackets on the right of the picture came off the old scrapped D & C boats and hold antique decantors filled with greenery. Even the porch off the kitchen reflects individuality with its'big red table and unusual accessories. If you have plenty of ambition, it’s fun to dig through layers of paint or varnish to see What kind of wood lies beneath and how you can “bring it back.” Take a lesson 1 the Robert Hagues of Birmingham. It’s a family project when some old treasure is brought in for restoration, and the results are rewarding. This is part of the story of how and what you can do with practically nothing. riiotn by Edward R. Nobl« HOUSE OF IDEAS - This little Dutch Colonial house is so full of wonderful ideas, it’s hard to know where to begin describing what has been done. The Robert Hagues needed a garage and a family room, so they combined the two into the Dutch-like little building at the right of the picture. Vicki, 10, and the family pet, Clementine, are shown romping toward Press photographer Edward Noble, whose idea it was to frame the house. Take eight medium-sized pictures-from the dime store, put a wide border of quilted material under the glass, cut out magazine pictures of old automobiles and mount. Get | brass cafe curtain rings and fasten them in the top of the frame for hanging. Four above, and four below over a den-studio couch. Easy! Cheap! Delightful! Horae of Ideas By REBA HpINTZELMAN Pontiac Press Home Editor REAL ANTIQUES—When the Hagues fir.st acquired this old spool bedroom set there was something like 10 coats of paint on it. Toddy it stand as an example of the strength found in most furniture of years gone by. "If you don't like it, change it! " That’S the theory the Robert Hagues have worked with, and their neat Dutch Colonial home at 58 Manor Drive, Birmingham, is a glowing example of what can be done if you want to do it. Always one to browse in antique and second-hand stores, Mrs. Hague one day .spotted a picture in the Pontiac Press of a workman starting to hack away at an old D & C passenger boat that had outgrown its usefulness. Four were being scrapped. The ambitious little woman could hardly wait to get into her station wagon and head for the Detroit boat pier to see what unusual “loot” she could find. She had a field day. There were mirrors, old lamps and marble built-ins (and -ons). The salvagers were more than glad to sell them for practically nothing. After one car full, Mrs. Hague and her husband went back four times to cart treasure;; home. The result of long, hard work on these Items has paid off in a unique and charmingly furnished house. Old leather seats lined the' walls of the upper lounge of each boat. Tlie Hagues' chose one section, sawed it in half and came up with two lovi' .seats. These were refinishc'd and upholstered, and the pair turned out ' 'just like professional ’’ Haunting other aioai.., tlw iiaguc.s. uiluiiyud' a pate, of old wall lamps from Detroit’s Majestic Building when it Was being wrecked. The luster of the brass lamps had long since disappeared, but the couple soon brought this back. Today the fixtures hold a place of honor on either side of the bathroom mirror. » Every piece of furniture in the house has been refinIshed or restored by the,Hagues and, becau.se of the hard work that has gone into each item, their simple treasures are all the more important to their family living. BATHROOM IDEAS - The graceful brass lamps and solid brass appointments in the bathroom were salvaged from Detroit’s old Majestic Building when it was being torn down. The tiny sink In the dowstairs lavatory was a product of the scrapped D & C boat. Mrs. Hague’s unusual curtain arrangement draws compliments from guests visiting the house. PLEASANT DINING — Opened up. this the Chandelier over the table has tiny flame-old table seats H comfortably. Sunlight dapees like bulbs. An old wliite pitcher holds greenery through the frothy white cafe curtain!!, ^aM on an antique dresser with the mirror removed. A BOY’S BEST PAL — “Clementine” seems to be everywhere at one time. Here she is shown with her master, 3-year-old Jon Hague. The desk was formerly in a stateroom of one of the D & C boats scrapped five years ago. , ROOM FOR PONDERING — Once thq two , were scrapped. ’The Hagues’ rescued the ^Ir love seats on jeithcr side of the white/brick of seats, then did all the upholstering. The fireplace were resting places for passengers slab of white marble on the table also came aboard one of the old D & C boats before they from the boats. ’ h I FOrH'IKPiN TOE-PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY j|B> W8 , Life of metal snow i^ovels cant te extended by coating them with | rust-preventing aluminum coating- , Phone FE 5-9888 CUSTOM BUILT FINISHED I DEOROOM NOME c SMS«>i ,5*,£S* »i“» , UlOwiMn MvitaM ModM Op«n Sat. and tm, 1 to 6 2680 S. Telegraph Bd. .MotSqwmUlollairi RED BARN SUBDIVISION FOUR NEW MODELS |u«t Wott of M-24 Bohind Albm't Country Cousin qoM U Nmii *ttl 8;as P.M. Dsllj CARLISLE BUILDING CO. Non-Skid^ UNIT STEPS For a Stop in Beauty CHECICTNBSEFEATURESi o ttrenf ReMoreed easting isAvaM Messy Instailatiaa Mammfaetmndhy COMCRETESTEPCO. 6497HlohlandRd.(M-59) Phono 673-0775 Open 'til 500 Saturday J62 Statistics A 1 -%-story house, with three bedrooms and one bath on the main level and upstairs expansion room for two more bedrooins and second fiill bath. Basic Aiouse contains 1,316 square feet in over>alI dimension^ of 60 feet 4 inches wide by 27 feet 9 inches deep. Upstairs expansion adds 804 square feat., ROOM TO GROW IN — This l-V4-story model has three bedrooms on the main floor plus an 804-square-foot upstairs expansion which adds two more bedrooms. For all its Hideaway Furniture Should Be Comfy First floor plan It costs about $3 to $5 per square foot to finish off a basement area, compared with |8 to $15 for equivalent spade above the ground level of a house. A recreation room, workshop laundry area finished with gypsum wallboard and fiberboard ceiling tiled generally enhances the over-all value of the home. No matter how lavish or ultra young folks like for playful fun | The table has the do-it-yourself modem a house’s design, some- 'and friends, or for study and easy i type of legs which are sold by whei-e inside there is likely to be relaxation; features that are [dealers everywhere. Two chaira quiet! cozy retreat that symbolizes the very essence of a home, privacy, warmth and comfort. ‘i' Not formal in style, but an at- precious to all “growing-uppers” are pictured, but you may add and grown-ups alike. as many more as you like. For serving snacks and drinks ®®®y project because or for playing checkers and cards pattern is full size. You need ... ».. here is a‘set that fills the bill. trace the parts on plywo^, mosphere of complete freedom Sitting close to the floor is not then saw them out and finally j and Relaxation is the aim in dec-[only casual, but comfortable as P®t them together. ^ | orating the hideaway, with fUrni- well. Besides that, the trend « ture chosen for sitting in, not for low down furniture, looking at. I amateur can nodertake Just such furniture is pictui^' ,^,3 project with success. Bott here with television stars Sandy, diairs and table are made FLOOR PLANS — A 38-foot dormer across the rear allows the upstairs rooms to be exceptionally large and to have full height, flat ceilings. The upstairs expansion adds 804 square feet to the basic house size of 1,316 square feet. Note the abundance of closets, and the large counter tops in bathrooms and kitchen. jDe^her and Robert Diamond j ^nghlons are This IS the sort of thing that j 3 g^andard size and may be Live in Beautiful BEVERLY ISLAND only*2M90 Including WA1ER FRONT LOT OR Wl WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT Beverly Island OAKLAND CONSTROCnON CO. ■oMb 0|NB t to I f JL 334-0212 purchased from dealer. It's aiHouse to Grow In for a Problem Budget A list of required materials with | jeasy-to-understand directions and illustrations are included with each pattern. The cost is slight when you do your own building. To obtain the full size low-down table and chairs pattern No. 252, send $1 by currency, check or money order to: Steve _ gjjj that’s just about every-Or if you wish you may make,Ellington, Pontiac Press Pattern Specifically, architect Rudolph You’d never know it by glancing at it from the street, or even by inspecting it closely inside and out, but our house today is intended for folks with a problem budg- them too, the pattern tells you!Dept., p.o. Box 2383, Van Nuys, how and what materials to use.lCalif. HOWTO BUILD, BUY OR SELL YOUR HOME Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week i3 included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for $1, a booklet called YOUR HOME -- How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 15 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan. Enclosed is 50 cents for baby blueprint ( design J-62 □ j Enclosed is $1 for YOUR HOME booklet. □ 1 Name Street aty ... LOT OWNERS NO DOWN PAYMENT INSTANT FINANCING AU AmtHea It wild about thorn. Wo Invito you to comporo quality and (orleo. You owo It to yeuriolf and family. Caddio givos you moro now oxclutivo footuto* than you will find In any ethor now homo for your morioy. THE GRANADA Imoglno Thii Booutlful Ronch Homo, 38'k66', 1,484 Sq. Ft. with Ovortliod Doublo Oorago 26' Doop on Your Lot. 1 ■ 'gy s; 1 JioinligKNahan D— J LEa. dWWBjBlllliI^I fern . CD_J 1 aarage t ] 1 Llvlnfl Room 23aaf |>-0 Serving All Your Plumbing Neodi lor Over 50 Yean EAMES & BROWN, INC. 55 East Pike Street’, Pontiac PONTIAG Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS ’ South Cats FE 3-7129 Open Week-Ends 2 to 7 [ Colonial & Tii-Lovol; Homes in BEAUTIFUL FOX RAY 1 at an 6xcitlng n« at brlnt life to your decorcting §)-metrong CRESTmont CmlRwrt is iR oitrittilvi i ^ MiboMN wrfNi Met MihM MSiNiiii M epMi Met. CMiiimI eSI M M in«MriiiwtMifocfiiif. Coef Only. SI7» • M'eU' reea PARK FlUlf CORWIN LUMBER ond COAL CO. 117 S. Cass FE 2-8185 LIMITED number of BOOTHS Available AT WATERFORD JR. CHAMBER OP COMMERCE 9th ANNUAL HOME& SPORTS SHOW TO BE HELD FRI.-SAT.-SUN. March March March 22nd 23rd 24th FREE 0 ENTERTAINMENT 0 PRIZES • PARKING CHOICE INDOOR-OUTDOOR SPACE CAI BUILDING Williams Lake Rd. Billboards — Newspapers Radio Publicity CALL... • Ted McCullough Jr. 082-2211 • John Redenbaugh FE 5-8406 Your Dream Home Con Become o Reality in JAYNO HEIGHTS UKIFRONT COLONIAL MODEL OPEN SUN. 12 TO 6 Selected by Oakland County'i better builders. Four new modela now under construction. Pick your lot at pre-development prices. A newly developed portion of this fine subdivision is now open for Inspection. 40 large 6n-the-lake homesites on Schoolhouse, Loon, Silver and Wormer Lakes are now reedy. 75 interior Iota with lake privileges are also being developed. City water and gas — paved roads. Schools, churches and shopping areas close by. Restricted to better homes. Homesites from $3,995.00 — Terms. BUY NOW AT LOW WINTER PRICES J.yno n«lahti I* looatMl off Walton Blvd., Mi mlto w«al of SIlTtr Lada I your draam homo- SILVER LAKE OONSTRU6TION CO. GUARAHHED CUSTCM CONSTRI Since 1945 0 & M hat tpociallxed In Better Bulldlnfl for Pontiac area homoowners. Our craftimen ara famous for expert ceAstruction and detail ftnlthlng of every type baiemant and family room with your plans or ours. UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY ON FHA COMPLETE RUILDINfi SERVICE e ADDITIONS a ALUMINUM SIDING a FINISHED ATTICS a KITCHENS a BRflliWAYS a BATHROOMS f CONCRETE WORK, MASONRY ® DORMERS a PORCHES # STORM, SCREEN DOORS and WINDOW^ G&M CCNS1RUCTICH CCMPAHY 22S6 Dixie Highwayy Pontiac FE 2-1211 OPERATOR ON DUTY 24 HOURS DAILY, J "’'■'.tv-'/ ■ f.. » , jr'Vr • THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1963 ./ ' flFTEElS; The United States’ inch differed from that of, Canada until 1950. / S«« Our Models! $12,000 Olid $19,000 FRCRICR'S RROS. "Better Custom Homes" '' FE 2-2951 ATTENTION GM Employees 100W BTU BM DELOO GAS FURNACE *169 PLUS SALES TAX O'BBIEN HEATING 371 Voorheis Rd. Days n 5-2432 Nights and Sundays FE 2-2919 WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL LOT OWNERS SEE THE NEW SWIFT HOMES NEW THRIFTLINE l>v*lv CtlMII NEW 16 YEAR FINANCING INCLUDES BASIC HOME ERECTED PLUS FINISHING MATERIALS NO MONEY DOWN NO PAYMENT FOR 90 DAYS Townsend-Swift Homes, Inc. 2810 LAPEER RD. LAKE ORION FE 8-9636 DCXiBLE OR TWIN BEDS PATTERN 303 BEDROOM—It’s furnished with products of the home.i workshop. Pattern 303 shows every step in making sturdy twin or double beds with or withqut the foot board shown here. The practical pair of bed-size stands are made with Pattern 302. The lamps, of two by four wood blocks, are made with Pattern 287. These patterns are 35 cents each or tlie three for $1. Write to The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., Bedford Hills, New York. *‘INDIANWOOD” on Schoolhous* Lak* CholM «f Many Ham on AS Uta-Frem $19,900 BLOG. CO. Englishman Can Say: 'I Told Them ... I Did' CARLISLE, England Ml-Arthur Thompson repeatedly warned hi«] fellow members on the Carlisle Town Council that unless a handrail was fitted to a bridge crossing a stream in the town someone would fall in the water. But the council took no action— until Thompson’s warning proved right. Someone did fall in the stream one dark night—Thomp-the wet council member. “I have never had to go so far as this to prove a point,’’ said son himself. HisMand EifaHaa ir" *13,968 BERT SMOKIER Bnildws Model Phone OR 3-4*11 ' Located' Airport Road Between M 5* And PonlUo Lnka Rda. I Close friends in Peru preface handshakes with the abrazo, a hug alternating with hearty backslapping. i ROSS HOMES Custom Homo Buildors Call About Our HOUSE TRADE-IN ^UN 1941 S. T.ldSr.pli FI 4-0591 LOCAL MODEL-Historic Waterford Hill on Dixie Higl|way is about to become alive with new building projects. According to Robert Brody, president of Brody & Sons, homes may be built immediately on any of the 80 hillside, wooded and lake- side lots. Shown above is one of the models open for public inspection. The ‘‘Hilltop’’ house has 2,170 square feet and is priced at $27,500. TRU-KRAFT HOMES iDM OpiH I Twin lokm [ Build on Your Ut or Our* OR 4.0343 BIG if? HOME Only *50 DOWN! '$890 •Idinp, copper plamblng, etc. We do ell the bud work-you edd end nve youcNlC bl( imponanc’ ON YOUR LOT. wnwiatw»ioHM«& lYtiUbie. Dorothy Snydor Lavonder, Roaltor 7001 Highlond Road Phono: EM 3-3303 Milford, Mich. FHA Ready to Back Up AN Kinds of Remodeling If you’re planning major home remodeling, such as adding a second bathroom in 1963, it might be a good idea to take a new look at the FHA’s program for home improvement loans. Under the Title I section, for Instance, FHA will insure loans up to $3,500 with five years to 'repay. Other sections provide for insuring loans up to $10,000 with up to 20 years to repay, giving home owners a wide choice of financing. Room for IV Limits Litter Do you suffel’ from TV hangover? It’s a common housewives’ complaint when the set is located in the living room or a large halfway surrounds spring-fed LimlUd Tim* Only Aluminum Patio *199"" Aluminum Co. FE 8-9478 Homes on a Hill At a Press luncheon this week, reporters were introduced to one of the lafgest real estate developments in the area. Every house is architecturally designed to fit the contour of the owner’s lot. The new community, known as Waterford Hill Manor, NEED MONEY? HOME OWNERS First and second mortgages available for paying off bills or any other worthwhile purpose, including home improvement and small business loans *2,000 .,*5,000 Take Up to Ford Mortgage Co.iit(.nn recreation room. ★ ★ The morning after an afternoon and evening of television viewing, the man of the house has left for the office and the children have gone off to school. The poor housewife has to clean up a large area full of pencils, notebooks, games, apple peels, peanut shells, i c e cream dishes and cigarette ashes, as well as straightening out sofa cushions and scrubbing murks off the walls. The solution? A separate TV room or alcove where litter and damage can be confined to a small area. That’s the advice of Eleanor Kandel, a home specialist for the iFlexalum division of Bridgeport Brass Ck). I Mrs. Kandel also points out that ;lighting conditions for'TV view- Van Normand Lake, and all residents will have lake privileges. ★ ★ ★ Priced from $3,750, each lot affords a view of the spruce-covered, towering hill which has made this a landmark in Michigan. Curve^ roads wind throughout the community. Purchasers of lots on the hill who wish to build a home Immediately may select from several Brody & Sons home plans, ranging from $25,000 to $35,000. In addition, the firm also will custom build a home to the specifications of the owner. Total evaluation of Waterford Hill Manor, when completed, will be nearly $3 million. A proposed-community center for all residents will provide facilities for social activities, and nursery' school. ing are often poor in large nf n 200- with too much glare from fix-! llie land itself is part of a 2^ tures or insufficient daytime light-tract originally purchased ! from the Harris Rogers’by a ra-If you don’t have a separate dio station which had planned to room available for the TV set, | erect a broadcasting tower atop fit will pay to .set off a portion of the hill. These plans were later la larger room with bookcases or shelved when it was discovered room dividers to make that the tower would Interfere with “morning after’’ feeling a thingjair lanes leading to Pontiac Mu-of the past. |niclpal Airport. Within minutes of the community are several schools and churches and three large shopping centers. Transportation is nearby, ★ ★ ★ These lots are an ideal investment,” Brody pointed oiit, ‘‘since the area is within minutes of the proposed ChrysJer Expressway, making it easily accessible from Detroit and all surrounding communities.” SEE VISTA VILLA Sanialionol N»w Homa Baigalng Crescent Lake Road North of M-59 DIXIE GARAGES DEAL DIRECT SAVE m to $100 No Money Down UP TO 20 YRS. TO PAY SEE MODELS ON DISPLAY EXPERT CEMENT WORK mxiE Garage Construction. Inc. 5744 Highland Rd. (M-59) tetween Creioent Lake end A)ir|»ort Rda* Cull for Frtu Ettlmute OR 4-0371 /■ Open Dally and Son. P.M. EOllEMIZATIOI ATTICS—REC. ROOMS—ADDITIONS PORCHES—BREEZEWATS INSULATION-ALUM. SIDING SIDING &Ai£ BUY NOW AT winter PRICES! We ore overstocked and MUST SELL 50,000 sq. ft. of material ... $0 NOW is your chance! Quality Aluminum s SIDIN6 5 to 6 room house, 1,000 sq. ft. for... AU PRICES , PROPORTIOHATELY PRICED TO SIZE or YOUR HOME Your Choice OF COLORS ComRletely Initalled— No Hidden Extfas— All Labor and Materials |Ce77FE 4-4507 CALL NOW Oparatori on Duty 24 Hour* Including Sunday ESTIMATES Right in Your Own Home NO OBLIGATION ____________ _ u i/^nr **.""**'**"“^ STERUNG ENCLOSURE Paying for a Mortgage fe Easier Than Paying Rent Our open end conventional Mortgages include in their monthly payment: Interest, Principal, Taxes and Insurance. Each time you make a payment your equity in your property increases in value. Each monthly payment is a sound investment in your family’s future. If you have been dreaming of ovYning your own home . . . come in and talk with one of our friendly, courteous representatives. yWe Offer a True OPEN-END MORTGAGE • You may pay up the mortgage at any time without advance notice and without penalty. • Your mortgage can be increased at any later date to the original amount borrowed for additional improvements or for any other satisfactory reason. • You may pay interest and principal in advance at your convenience. • Terms on our conventional open end mortgage up to 30 years. • You may pay any additional amount at any time without notice or penalty. I," /• SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESR, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1908 9th Straight Easy for PCH; PNH One Game from l-L Title Chiefs'Waltz' Past Midland for 70^34 Win Sain's 17 Paces Attack as Starters Let Up; . Reseryei Splurge By JERE CRAIG There was a victory dance at Pontiac Central High School last night. It was a pretty safe bet there would be one and the Chiefs didn’t disappoint their followers by “waltzl^” to a 70-34 victory over Saginaw Valley Conference foe Midland. To carry the metaphor one step further, it could be termed a “waltz in three-tpiarters time” for PCH as that is about an coach Art VanRyan let the starting quintet play. Unfortunately, he didn’t receive three-quarters oL Class A ball from the first five as they seemed intent on sitting out most of the dance. Still, the Chiefs racked up their ninth consecutive win in a streak that began in Midland last month. RESERVES ROLL With the score 50-30 in the opening minutes of the final period, the Chief,reserves took over; and it was a “ball’’ for them. Team captain Ray Sain who put out extra effort all night, joined A1 Galbraith, Bill Morgan, Art Williams and Mel DeWalt to tally 20 points in a little over five minutes playing time against the Midland second unit. DeWalt, one of the team’s leading scorers, saw limited duty due to a bout with the flu bug earlier this week. Sain’s effort brought him 17 pobits, tops in the contest. The Chernies came to Pontiac with a 2-9 league record and did little to justify anting better. They showed occasional bursts of scoring punch, particularly in 0-2 junior center Dan Jaster, but committed to many mistakes to , stay,in the game very long. The PCH quintet loafed on offense the first quarter, and took it easy on defense the .second session to build only a 28-18 halftime margin. The sOore was 3^2^ in the third quarter when Gerald Henry, Sain, Lester Hardiman, and Jesse Hodge hit successive field goals to put the game out of reach. Other SVC scores last night Waterford Defeated as Readier Returns Waterfonl High Scohol fouttd|the other Inter-Lakes League out last night that Bob Readier games, Farmington took a 73-60 with one good arm is not enough decision from Berkley and Pan- to cure i£s basketball ills. Tha.^,Sklppers Ipst a 66-61 verdict to Walled Lake as Readier returned to action with his injured right wrist in a cast. In Pistons Slide Past Syracuse Detroit Gains Game in Battle With SF DETROIT Ml - The Detroit Pistons are tightening their grip on the third and last playoff berth in the western division of the National Basketball Association. The Pistons overpowered the Syracuse Nationals 126-117 here last night. With New York beating San Francisco, their margin over the tiac Northern whipped Southfield 69-54. Tbie Waterford-VIkings clash was close all die way. The Skippers led 3046 at halftime but Walled Lake rallied in the third period fo go ahead 4544 at the end of the session. Jim Broome led the Vikings surge, scoring 15 of his 20 markers in the second half. He was particularly accurate from - the outside. Another asset was the rebounding of center Doug Walters in the final half. SUM LEAD* With a minute remaining to play in game, Walled Lake held a 62-00 advantage. Accurate foul shooting enabled the Vikings to Hkdd to thisHJlim margin and clinch their fifth loop win in nine outings. Waterford lost its seventh. Walters hit 21 points for the winners while guard Paul Moran’s 24 for. the Skippers was tops in the contest. Readier tallied 12 by relying strictly on HIGH STEPPING-Gerald Henry (40) of PCH steps high to elude his defender, Midland’s Tim Chanter (53), on this break under the basket last night in the Saginaw Valley'Conference game won by the Chiefs, 70-34. Kettering Trips Romeo boosted to 1)4 games. Meanwhile the pretenders to the NBA throne — Los Angeles —humbled the kings from Boston. The Lakers beat the Celtics 113-105 in a game witnessed by 15,106 persons, the largest basketball crowd in Los Angeles history. In the remaining game of the night, St. Louis clinched at least tie for second place in the Western division by overrunning Chicago, 115-98. With a nine-point outburst late in the second quarter, the Pistons leaped ahead to stay, except for a few seconds in the third period. Rochester Is Loser at Lapeer Waterford Kettering whipped sav^ Arthur Hill take Flint South- Romeo last night 7240 and then western, 6044,, and the Saginaw the Captains wished the Bulldogs Valley Championship as Craig lu^k in their game next week at DUl scored 26 points; Flint Cen- Lapeer, tral remained one game behind -k * -k PCH in the race for second place Ry beating Rochester 65-43, La- with an 8047 win over Bay City stayed one game ahead of Central; and Lovell Humes tal-Kettering in the Tri-County IM 32 times as Saginaw whipped League Flint Northern, 80-^. Juter i 2-1 12 OnlDrsIth Tucker .0 1-2*1 Morean Bob Bogert broke his own 1 school scoring,record of 30 by scoring 31 on 10 field, goals and 11 for 11 from the free throw line. SCORE »y QCARTERK , » 1* K S7—70 ij Hriiari3‘'p'tfiw.s'-in'the^"^^^ B half and teammate Rick Pankey, 1 scored all of his 15 points in the '* first two periods. Kettering led 38-28 at halftime and 50-45 after three periods. Lancers Fall in Tournameht Emmanuel Christian moves into the losers bracket of the Grossc Pointe University School tournament after losing to the hosts 53-49 last night. GPUS led 29-23 at halftime and Emmanuel dosed the gap to two points with one minute to play, but the stall forced the losers to foul in the final seconds. Ralph Wingate led all scorers with 25 points, followed by Ron Jackson with 12, Georgie Perrin had 23, John Golanty 14 and A1 Hartwick 10 for the winners. Christian meets Country Day today, a loser to Park school of Indianapolis last night.' Rick Johnson had 15 and Butch Periaho 14 for Romeo. With Ron Starking and Mike Powell combining for 42 points and 44 rebounds, Lapeer was never in trouble, after a 26-23 halL time lead. Starking had 22 points and Powell had 20. Starking also had 24 rebounds. Tom Knust and Ed Wright had 11 each for Rochester which went down to its 11th loss in 14 games. Johnton 2? Coach Downs Flu Bug But Lamphere Loses Lamphere coach A1 Kish won his bout with the flu bug but the Rams weren’t as lucky ... against Clintondale last night, 49-45. ' Clintondale held a 28-10 advan-toge at the half but Lamphere mttled back and was closing the gap as time ran out. Bill Simms and Phi] Bartolone had 18 and 17 foi: the losing causa and pin(ondale’s Bob Hicki scored 18. Imlay City Too Much for Oxford The Pistons were clinging to 106-105 advantage with four minutes left in the final period when Bob Ferry chucked in two free throws. Bailey Howell provided a cushion with a basket and Ferry expanded the lead in closing moments with three more quick baskets. Howell led all scorers with 31 points. Ferry had 21. Lee Shaffer paced Syracuse with 29. North Branch stayed on the heels of Imlay City in the South Central League as the two secured! decisive victories over Millington' and Oxford. ' Ortonville Drops 72-59 Encounter Pontiac Northern has at least a share of the Iritw-Lakes League crown secured today after a 69-54 win at Southfield last night. The Blue Jays have only the memories of a well-played first half to console them after the Farmington’s Falcons led all the way against Berkley to retain their chances for a share of the loop crown with PNH. The winners had a 34-22 half-me margin that grew to 54-34 after three quarters. Dale Pit-cock’s 15 points were tdt>s among four twin figure performers for the Falcons. Garry Ross had 15 and Dick Kakkurl scored 14 for the Bears. Waterford .......... IB 11 14 1 Grosse Pointe Hands Dondero Lopsided Loss Any Royal Oak Dondero hopes for pulling a major upset against unbeaten Grosse Pointe were dashed in the first half last night as the Blue Devils raced to a 62-35 victory. ★ ★ ★ Dondero trailed, 40-12, at halftime thanks mainly to a strong:the Huskies hustle. Both teams Northern Wins by 15 Points at Southfield Four Hulk IBS Tally Twin Figures To Aid Drive for Crown By DICK BUCK Half a titlo is better than none. Half a basketball game often n’t. Farmington kept alive its chances for the other piece of the I-L championship with a 73-60 victory over Berkley. PNH Is atop the league standings alone with an 8-1 record. They’re IW over-aU. Farming-ton, which handed the Hnskles that only loop loss, is 7-2. Either a Northern win or Falcon defeat next week would pat the city quintet on the throne by itself. The Huskies will meet Berkley while Farmington goes against Walled Lake. Four Pontiac Northern players iroduced double-figure scoring. 3ary Hayward, who also had a busy night rebounding, was the game’s top scorer with 18 points. Mike Burklow followed with 16. Wayne Daniels notched one less and Roger Hayward was one below Daniels. Southfield’s Harry Glass netted 16 and teammate Jim Larsen scored 11. BLASTED OPEN Northern blasted the game wide open in the third quarter after a stern lockerroom lecture during halftime by coach Dick Hall. The Huskies held a 32-28 at the intermission. That wUs deceiving. Southfield had outplayed them in almost every category but just couldn’t find the basket as often. An especially glaring vwakness of PNH in the first 16 minutes was rebounding. The Blue Jays had a decided edge here, 28-18. They had finished the first quarter in front, 1312 but sagged to 30-21 deficit in the s e c o n d quarter before coming back the period waned. Hall’s halftime message made Once a leading contender in the..............—............... WWW Genesee league, Ortonville defensive performance by the started the third quarter slowly. Oxford received a 22 nolnt per- winners. The Knights could sink Nortoern’s lead had swelled to 12 fo?maiJce fror^ High’s only 22 per cent of their shots. points by the time the period but was no match for Imlay basketball team. Kettorinf ( FO F a B Nyberg I 44 8 Wtllftc* i-3 3 Hook I 0-r 0 C»rter SCORE BV 44CARTERB J ........... 18 13 17 . .. ring ....... IB IB U 39—73 (W) FO FT 1 HUrklng lU 3-4 Bat'tch' .,1 3-8 Jarvis 10-0 McKenna 1 1-3 30 WrlBlit ..4 3-8 7 Bwulmda 4 0-0 4 teplcy 1 8-7 0 Konley ..3 *0-3 4 wader ,.I S4 Tech Skaters Win, 3‘1 DENVER l/P) - Michigan Tech scored two goals in the final period to surprise first-place Denver University 3-1 in a Western Collegiate Hockey Association match last night. SIZING UP — Central’s Lester Hardiman (50) and Midland’s Dan Jaster size up each other during first half action last night at the PCH gym. Jaster saw Hardiman tally 11 times for the winners but he offset this with 12 points for the Chernies’ cause. Benton Harbor 86. Holland 81 ILIvonla-Benlley 87, Plymouth 38 Belleville 78, Bedford Union 84 Ukevlcw 77, Warrim-Llncoln 4T Bey City Handy 48, Alpena 48 Xapeer 88, Rocheetor 43 Btrmln^am Brother Rice 73, Detroit Unden 78, Lake Fenton I Cranbrook 70. Cleve- Memphit 40, 8, Michigan School for Deaf 38 iffeld HIIIh 84, Clarkaton 60 Brighton 88, Clarenoevllle 38 Capao 80, Armada 40 Caro 81, Ca«a City 47 Center Line 63. Bouth Ijike 87 Mount Clenieni Clintondale 8 Baet tanelag 71 Lanlng Everett 44 -glkton-Pigeon-Bay Port 80, Bad Axe -gaft Detroit 80, Haiti Park 47 Flint CTntral |6, Bay City Central 87 Farmington 71, Berkley 60 Ferndale 80, Mount Clement 88 Fenton 68, Montrote 31 Grand Rapida Bouth SB. Grand Rapida Catholic 70 ' Oroaae Pointe Unlveralty 83, Fontlae New Haven 40, Anc...... i North Branch 87. Millington 40 i North Farmington 00, Birmingham Clrovea 81 iNortlivllle 80, Milford 83 1- l‘Onllao Northern 80. Bouthflnld 84 Fort Huron 80, Royal Oak Kimball 3B ' Pontiac St. MIohael 81. Highland Pali Bt. Benedict 48 . / Pontica Northern 80, Southfield 64 River Rouge 78, Dearborn Lowrey 64 Saginaw Ar“-..........— »»-* "• Grand Blanc oo, c/wueao oq Midland Park 74, Monroe 83 Holly 84, weit Bio mfleld 80 Uniai city 88, Oxford 44 , Kkatir ll. lniter Roblehaud 80 dlant^dlla .ilnd.l Park 83, Counlr: K^iton 3, Akkon-Ptirgrove 0 (forlelti taka Orton 71, Oak Park 89 Flint South- Flint Northern 88 oree Lake Shore 88. Utica ar-H, Marlette 83 rford Kettering 73, Romeo 80 ----en FlUgerald 63. Avondale 34 Wevne St. Mary 84, Farmington Our Tal ■■ Wnterforr WKrrtn fl9, P d Luke 01 rOLLROE Calvin 70, Atm* 70 MIohlRtn Toch 0i. Moorhead > B Normal 03, Central Mich- City, 6544 as Tom Hall hit 18 and Dale Goodrich 13. ( It was no contest from the start as InUay took a 19-6 first period lead and 40-22 halftime advantage. Nine Imlay players got into double figures as the Spartans' hit 29 field goala to 16 for Oxford. North Branch also had nine scorers in downing Millington 57-40 led by Bob Butterfield’s 16 and Lynn DeGrow’s 14. Millington, which has now lost I straight games, was led by Frank Lee with 14. North Branch led 17-13 and 33-17 by halftime. Imlay Is 5-1 In the league and North Branch is 4-1. IMLAX CITY < » OXFORD <441 TF FO FT TF IS ?or..;-. • • ■ ■ 8 MarlowB Cork._ j I VomVlwt IVl ; ■ BCORE BY QUARTERS White Bucks to Sponsor Archery Shoot Sunday I Sunday at Arroway the White Buck Archery Association Is sponsoring a Ben Pearson warmup tournament. Itogistration will take place from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m. The public is invited to take part in the shoot which will Include Chlcapgo and Flint rounds. Medals will be awarded for t^e high actpal, high handicap, am-atuer high sepre, freestyle itin-ner and instinctive Phamp-- The shoot is a prelude to the big Ben Pearson tournament at the State Fairgrounds in Detroit next month. \ Behind 34-28 at halftime, the closest Ortonville managed to get was four points. Top scorer for the night Ortonville’s John Myers who hit 29, including 10 points in the third quarter.' Ron Little and Dennis Bobb IS 22 and 20 for the winners, who were outscored from the field, but hit on 22 for 29 at the free throw lln^ I 3-3 ^3 Button 6 O-I 10 Ooroux 11-83 Rtch’ion 4 0-0 8 ClevBhtnd 0 0 ‘ " WIllB 0 0 Grosse Pointe, meanwhile, hit 40 per cent from the floor in posting its 16th win of the season and clinching the Border Cities League championship. The Blue Devils are the state’s points I ended. The trend continued. The Huskies built to a 67-46 bulge In the last session before tapering off in the closing minutes. The Blue Jays were held to just two fipld 'goals,, s^oi^ rat^ tifak A''team In ihd quarter and managed only nine weekly AP poll. Dondero’s Ed Ross led all scorers with 14 points. Hey Guys, Take Note MARION, N. C. MV-Kay Wll-kon, a 17-year-old, 5-foot-ll senior from 'fiiylorsviUe, scored IM points Friday night in a girls basketball game between Marion and Taylorsville High Schools. Taylorsville won 131-32. in the entire second half. Northern’s revitalized rebounding had' a lot to do with that. ★ it it SontliflaM (84) 3 0t6 8 Smln’akt 3 3-1 8 .....ow 7 2-3 IS BlMa 7 3-3 18 DaFIorlo 0 O-I 0 Btavent 4 0-0 8 00-10 Eary 1 0-0 3 Cotialdln* 1 0-13 Total! 33 6-16 80 TottUs Dryden Routs Almont; Capac Wins Easily What Capac Is to the top of the Southern Thumb League, Almont Is to the bottom. Capac has won them^elli and Almont has lost them all. The 89-49 victory for Capac over Armada made it 48 straight for the Chiefs in regular sea,son games; but this wasn’t the big news in the Thumb. Dryden hit a new high for tlie season by whipping rival Almont, 80-51, for the second time this In other games, New Haven won in overtime 40-39 over Anchor Bay and Memphis defeated Brown City, 40-.15. Capac, the state’s No. 1 class C team, had 10 players in the scoring column , with Dan Petz collecting 22, all In the first half and iten Adopski getting 11, All In the first half. Adam-ski fouled oi|t In the first half. The 49 points scored by Armada was the most number against Capac this season and Rod Craven led the losers with 14 points. After one period Capac led 31-7 and made it 59-23 at halftime, hitting on 57 per cent of its shots for the night. DRYDEN SCORERS Ron Hebert led the Drydeh attack with 29 points with Dick Powers getting 12 and Paul Grondln 18. John Huff led Almont with 21 and he also did ah excellent job on the boards despite the loss. It took 10 players to score Anchor Bay’s 38 points but two free throws by Gmrge Hernandez in the final minute of the overtime'wdn it for New Hav- 18 halftime game. Kelly Dryer had 11 to lead New Haven. Mike Santo’s 15 led Memphis to its victory which was told in the third quarter when Brown City managed only two points. It was 22-21 at halftime but 33-23 after three periods. ../%TF Btanlloul 7 O-o 14 Raolkl * ' ‘ Varaonara I 0-0 3 Jolmaon Adamakt 1 3-4 li Ora van Bmitn 3 0-1 4 Thom--"" Stfhieuar 0 1-3 13 Laiko Thompion 1 3-ji t Ckllandar 3 0-0 ( / or*" Ko’ahl 3 ( Xo’ahl 3 ( Dennis Fblan forced the overtime by hitting with 10 seconds to playiifbr Anchor Boy. Regulation ploy ended 36-36 ofter on If BknoroSt ToUU 3ri(i44 80 ToUl SaaratBy Qnarvara Ha ‘i B B IfcS ' 1818-n II .'I THg PONTIAC PRESS, SATURmY, FEBRUARY 23. 1903 MY, FEI " SI^WENTEEN SLIPPING THROUGH — Pontiac Central’s Ray Sain (44) slips past Midland’s Bill Grosskopf (15) on this third quarter drive for the basket last night. Sain’s drives and jump shots were a constant worry to the Chernies as he tallied 17 points in the game. Central won, 70-34. EMI's Runnerup Slot Captured by Seaholm Birmingham Seaholm clinched second place in the Eastern Michigan League and Ferndale had to scrap to save its unbeaten record in the loop’s featured contests last night. Seaholm used six straight points by 6-4 John Slater to pull away from bothersome Roseville In the final two minutes of play for a 57-52 win. the visitors’ chief threats with 17|LEAD CHANGED and 14, respectively. j John Augusten of the Barons Baptist Team Tallies 114 in 'Y' Loop Trinity Baptist pounded St. Paul Methodist Friday, 114-53, to feature action in the YMCA-Church Basketball League’s senior division. Other league games had Macedonia stay one game behind Trinity in the title chase by beating last place Oakland Park Methodist 62-53. An Ail Star team of coaches and referees was defeated by Central Methodist, 43-40. Central’s game with First Baptist will be made up next Tuesday at the Central Elementary School’s gym. The Maples led all the way but saw the Roseville quintet cut a five-point halftime deficit down to one several times in the last half. Slater had 16 in the game while Ron Jacobson hit ' winners. W-0 in 3-Way Tie as Holly Beats West Bloomfield Stewart Stars as Barons Top Ctarkston, 64-60 Northville, Brighton Post T r i u p hs;. Race Going to Wire By DICK POINTON Bloomfield Hills met a threat from (llarkston last night and fore a gym full of screaming fans took home an important 64-60 Wayne-Oakland victory. The win put the Barons into a three-way tie in the torrid W-0 race with Holly and West Bloomfield, all 10-3. Holly and Northville have been the only W-0 opponents to defeat West Bloomfield. It was the second Holly triumph over the Lakers, this time, f Northville meanwhile defeated a determined Milford quintet, 56-and Brighton lowered the boom on Clarenceville, 55-35. The crown will be up for grabs next week in the final loop games as West Bloomfield travels to Milford and Bloomfield Hills hosts Holly. Clarkston was all the Hills' cagers could handle. The Wolves jumped to an early first quarter 20-15 lead and despite the loss of Dan Craven con-tinned to hold the lead until a lay-up by Bloomfield’s Roger Ste-iwart knotted things up, 53-53, Bill Hood and Dick Boari were) with 5:32 left. made two-of-two at the line to put Bloonliield ahead by two, 55-53 but Larry Gardiner of Clarkston countered with a two- EAGLES TRAIL Ferndale trailed 56-55 to Mt. Clemens with 27 seconds left in the game, but George Morey hit _ . , a jump shot and Truman McNeal with four mmutes to , ,,, an fha canrn u/oa tipH Aanin hh-hh tallied two free throws with seven .seconds left to shoot the Eagles into the lead. Mt. Clemens’ Al Hairston added a field goal at the buzzer to reduce the Ferndale winning margin to 59-58. The Eagles are 14-0 this season and are the fourth ranking team in the weekly AP Class A poll. Bob Davis’ 16 points for Mt. Clemens were high in the game. John Hunner scored 22 points in the Trinity victory but relinquished game honors to St. Paul’s Roger Wotila who his 25. Another 20-point man was Central’s Bill Lacy who scored ' ^ League games next Friday will include First Congregational meeting First Baptist at 6 p.m., Macedonia playing All Saints at *7:15 p.m.. Central tangling with Trinity at 8:3# p.m. and Oakland Park still seeking its first win when it meets St. Paul at 9:45 p.m. STANUINOH rr. II n CciiC •' 1 North Farmington Groves Five Tops North Farmington handed Birmingham a 56-51 setback last night in a Tri-River Confer game. Groves had trouble keeping up with North Farmington as 4he victors outscored them in every quarter except one. North Farmington held a 25-24 halftime lead. Northern Farmington’s Mike Flemming led the winners with 15 points. For Groves, Bill Stephenson Was high with 12. The final minute saw a three point difference between the teams. North Farmington was successful enough from the d)ar, ity line to keep ahead. -Another loop game last night saw Port Huron take Royal Oak Kimball 50-39 and move into undisputed possession of third place. Chuck Ingram hit 24 markers for the winners who led 26-22 at intermission and could not be caught. East Detroit upset Hazel Park, 60-47, for only its third victory this year in the circuit. The winners grabbed a 36-35 lead at the close of the third period and never trailed thereafter. Dick Williamson scored 22 markers for the winners. go the score was tied again, 55-55. Stewart then stole the show as he fired one in from the corner of the key and intercepted an errant Wolves’ pass. He raced the length of the floor and dropped it in to give Hills a 59-55 lead. Augusten then stopped t h e clock and his hustling Baron teammates when he fouled Jack Lundy of Clarkston under t h e Bloomfield net. With the .scoreboard reading 55 Lundy converted the first but failed on his .second attetnpt. Bloomfield took quick advantage of the rebound and Stewart dropped in another to put the game out of reach. Osgood earned game point honors with 22 points and Craven had 12 in a losing cause. Stewart garnered 20, his best effort In three years of starting service for the Barons and his beaming coach, Ed Wich-ert was “pleased as punch.’’ Stewart’s performance wasn’t all the Barons’ coach was happy about. ;l told the kids that their vie- Troy Shares Lead in Oakland A Race No one is superstitious at Troy High Sphool. Least of all anyone on the basketball team. Last night the Colts’ chalked up their 13th consecutive cage victory of the season, beating Madison, 75-54. The win puts them in a two-way 1st place tie with ClawsOn. Both have 9*2 Oakland A records with one tilt remaining to settle the race. and 19 in the final to the Redskins 20 and 15 totals respectively. Avondale (1-10) is all alone in the league cellar and meets the powerful Clawson crew next Fri-day. Lyhh Thorpe garnered 12 in a losing cause and Tom Doberstein had 17 for Fitzgerald. ★ ★„ FITZ»BRAI,D (ltt> AVONDAI.B (M) ro FT TF FO FT TP Dob'ateln 7 3-4 17 Thorpe . ,4 4-9 13 aoinb.. ,,4 0-0 8 Acker .. B 0-1 ' Mcciillum 3 6-7 13 Reek ' ' ~ Meanwhile the Dragons from Lake Orion were breathing fire and destruction on Oak Park, 71-62, and Fitzgerald bunded Avondale Its TOth defeat of the season, 52-34. Two players carried the brunt of the Troy attack, Roger Qual-mann and Bill Muir, each with 18 points. Teammates Roger Bauer and Chuck Showalter had 12 and 10 in that or^er. wmiotne Upford ..J Hamilton 1 ......... . . . C»m«on 0 Rap'port 0 0-3 0 Phllllpa . ( Plpk ..,.3 4-10 10,Cuck««y . ' Dolby .,3 7-8 13 ,10-0 3 0 1-3 1 Madison’s Ron Morgan and Bob Barrett had 19 and 16 respectively. In the upset of the evening Lake Orion destroyed Oak Park’s hopes. The defeat gives Oak Park a 7-4 mark, two games behind the league leaders. TOPS FOR ORION Bruce Fritz had 18 for the Lake Orion quintet and Mike Williams 12 while Al Ruby of Oak Park accounted for 17 and John Dolby 13 in a losing cause. Oak Park took a first quarter 14-9 advantage but fell under a 21 point Lake Orion burst in the second quarter. Oak Park .......... 14 13 20 15—8 The Dragons backed up their effort with a 22-point third period Weber-Carter in Big Match Head-to-Head Battle in All-American Meet DALLA. Tex. (AP)-Dick Weber and Don Carter of St.. Louis, two of bowling’s biggest stars, locked horns Friday night with Weber coming out on top to win the qualifying trophy of the $23,-500 All-American Bowling Classic. Weber, champion of the 1961 All-American, totaled 5,123 for the 24-game qualifying route. Carter, bowling on the final squad of the night, needed a 232 in his final game to catch the 125 - pound Weber. Carter managed only 189 and finished with a 5,071 total. Weber averaged 213 in the qualifying. The top 16 ^corers will meet in head-to-head elimination play this morning. The semifinals and finals will be televi.sed by ABC beginning at 3:30 p.m. EST. OAK PARK (63) TTP GOING BYE BYE - Eight-year-old Dale James of Seattle closes his eyes and roles with the giant-sized punch during an exchange with Mike Walker, 8, in a Golden Gloves exhibition match in Seattle last night. There was no decision. By DON VOGEL With Jack Bennett converting 15 of 17 free throws on the way to a 31-point effort. Holly spoiled West Bloomfield’s^ hopes for an outright Wayne-Oakland League basketball championship, 64-60, last night. The home-court victory before a capacity 1,500 fans earned Holly a three-way tie with West Bloomfield and Bloomfield Hills f o r first place. Only two of the teams and possibly just one, will remain at the top after next Friday’s final games. '' Holly will play at Bloomfield Hills with the loser dropping out of championship. The winner wiil be assured a tie for the crown. Mikemen Defeat St. Ben Late Baskeh Difference in Triumph St. Michael defeated St. Benedict’s of Highland Park, 51 to 46, in a non-league pre-tournament ,e last nijght. basketball team to ever play at qualifying leader after 18 games •of “Ghiciror tiw , 14 13 14 12 „ Bloomfield Hills. Last year we Kj had 11 wins and the victory over Howie's Humor Honors Abel DETROIT (UPI) - Terrible tempered Howie Young also has sense of humor. Clarkston is our 12th of the season this year. They’re the best ball club to ever come out of BUS. FREE THROW EDGE Clarkston had 19 field goals to the Barons’ 18 but the Bloomfield squad held the winning margin in the free throw department, 26-22. Young, the most penalized player in the history of the National Hockey League, had a birthday present for Detroit Red Wings’ coach Sid Abel yesterday. Currently sitting out a three-game suspension for blowing up at referee Frank Udvari last Sunday, Young presented Abel with a painting of a Red Wing player in the penalty box with the number “2’’ on the back of his sweater. A note on the painting read: Happy Birthday, Sid. May all your problems be little ones.” It was signed “Hewey.” Young, whose nickname is Hewey, wears No. 2 and spends much of his time in the penalty box. He’s spent 210 mintues in |lhc penalty box so far this sea-Ison for a new NHL record finished third with a total of 5,064. He edged Andy Marzlch, the Professional Bowlers Association leading money-winner. W-0 Box Scores Each team showed its shooting ability for the first two periods of play, but St. Mike’s came up with a narrow three point edge over St. Ben’s at halftime, 28-25. After the first half, both teams decided the time had come for defensive playing too. The light scoring of the cagers proved it. The third period saw little scoring and more hustle as the Mikemen again out-scored the defenders. Decisive measures were taken n the final period when St. Benedict came back to surprise the Mikemen and lead by one point with only two minutes remaining. St. Ben’s attempt fell shy when St. Mike’s Larry Sonnenberg and Rick Steinhelper made baskets to lead their team to victory ^n the final seconds. HIGH SCORERS Pope, Sonnenberg, and Steinhelper had 14, 12, and 11, respectively for St. Mike’s while Tony Menadic of St. Ben’s had a high of 25 for the night. Frederick plays a non- LAKELAND, Fla. M - Manager Bob Scheffing wants all the Tigers’ pitchers to be rally stoppers — but not when they’re batting. So batting practice for pitchers is being emphasized more than las for years at Detroit’s spring cam, Tiger Hurlers Swing Away West Bloomfield goes to Milford and if the Redskins pull an upset, the winner of the game at Bloomfield HiMr will be outright king. A victory by the Lakers will mean a two-way deadlock. Holly needed all the charity it could get while posting its second four-point victory of the season over West Bloomfield, ranked fifth in this week’s Associated Press Class B poll. And the Lakers were unwilling givers when it counted most — in the fourth quarter. PUSHED AROUND The days when the ninth spot in the Tigers’ batting order was almost an automatic out afe over. At least that’s the intention. This will take some doing with Hank Aguirre, admittedly the major league’s worst hitter, pitching every fifth day. He improved his average to .027 last year with steady work after going .000 the two previous seasons. “This is great,” said Aguirre yesterday after taking his licks and actually hitting the ball thrown up by the pitching machine. “We’ve never heard this before down here -— ‘okay, pitchers hit.’ ” “It’s really helping They’re teaching me to chop down on the ball and keep my eye on it.” INSIDE WORK the I 1-3 11 WlManm 1 SOORK BY gilARTERS Utica 5 Loses 2nd Loop Tilt The Milford Redskins (3-10) after lust night tied things up 34^4 at iSjorthvilIc <7-«) wi“> --’rr II ll 'I irii: It was only the .second time 2:00 remaining in the third * * * Utica has been defeated all sea- son, but the 56-44 loss to Lake Northville pounded the V?* iJ enough to skins with 11 consecutive Pni'its,^'J'*J{^,^« } a s 5-a iV'put Utica out of the-Iead in the however and Milford fell behind ncyi.- 2-2 3 eo«'(-r« ! 4 n-o a Bi-County League, under the barrage, 45-34 at the .3 3-n S pllnilill 0 0-0 0 Dnke Shore is 13-1 after the end of the period. r*'"' J ^ . victory and Utica 12-2. Tom Swiss led the way for the| hcork byqoarw Moshenko had 15 and Pete winners with 19 points and Jim It i? ‘a Is-s* ® losing cau.se while|-x Juday also of the Mustangs gar-1 # * * ~ .Lake Shore’s Russ Noyes and ;x nered 12 while Tom Shefflcr and Brighton (sr.t ci,ar‘viu,h laai iDave Genereau garnered 15 j:;! Tim Barnes had 16 and 14 in a ca*« . 3 4^ e Hanaiord 0 oWapince. j S losing cause. 'un«a i-a ij ciarfunt i o'-i 0 Utica made only one bucket in JiOlne attempts In the first quarter » and never recovered. The score vmiien i 9-7 8 j 7-9 7|Was 25-13 at the half In the win- oeVrhart' o 3-3 3 Hcr’s favor. Total ~ ^ Cubs. “He’s not a good hitter, but he’s better than Hank.” Scheffing was backed up by the record book. Brother Rice Gets 8th Win After a slow start this season. Brother Rich High School’s basketball team has started to jell and last night made St. Theresa of Detroit its 8th victim in 14 starts, 73-54. The Birmingham^ool had good balanced scoring led by Paul Jagel’s 24 points. Behind him was Bill Moore with 22, Dave Walter with 13 and Charlie Keller with 12. Moore was the big rebounder for the winner. stressed. A chilly wind forced the Tigers to work out in their converted hangar. The pitchers will concentrate on improving their stroke until the infielders and outfielders report Tuesday. The intensive batting practice may have turned up a weak-hitting companion for Aguirre. Bob Anderson, the lanky righthander secured from the Chicago Cubs, was unable to match Aguirre’s shots off the pitching machine. “Hey, I think I found one worse than I am, " hoIlcred| Aguirre when Ander.son managed clL"'''’"''' only one foul tip on the firstjjJ,'J'i,^ three pitches. “Sorry,” said Scheffing, who waii once managed Anderson with the'jiak't The 5th starter, Steve SestI of Pontiac scored only two points but did an outstanding defensive job on St. Theresa’s high scorer Tom Shay, allowing him 15 points, six points below his average. The score was 34-24 at halftime »s eight [o"pIay.‘ Next Tuesday night Brother Rice closes the season at St. David. Yesterday was the t h i r-d|and the closest margin was eight pdi ----------------------------------------------- Jayvee Scores Madlann Ilalehta < 8t. Mike « aa. at. BPiienici i RoeevIMe 49. BlnnlnRham t lalfolin Bennett's 31 Leads Broncos to 64-60 Win Guard Hits 15 of 17 Free Throws; Laker Rally Falls Short It seemed that every time Bennett got the ball he was hacked, bumped or pushed by a . Laker. He started the period with a field goal and then hit 12 of 13 from the line, ps Holly held off West Bloomfield. The Lakers cut 10-point deficit to 62-60 with seven seconds to play. But Bennett was fouled with four seconds left and made both tosses to ice the game. The 5-10 guard hit eight field goals, six coming on his flying jump shot specialty from the right corner, to complete the best scoring effort of his high school career. His previous high was 25 points. The Lakers scored one more field goal than Holly, but the Broncos had a six-point edge from the foul line. Sixteen of the Lee throws were made in the last quarter and saved the Broncos. They hit only two of their 20 baskets in the final eight minutes. Tom Fagan entered the game early in the thirJ quarter and played a key role in Holly’s success. He immediately hit a three-point play to give Holly a 40-32 cushion and displayed some good ball handling in the late going. Holly coach Bob Pence praised the defensive play of ills team. The Broncos used a zone that kept the Lakers from ,ilriKlng»jwltB.*.ii!TIMS..ImsMs. CASTONE MICHIGAN "Since 1935” 3457 PARCELL DRIVE I The Loria and Sons quintet.lhf®® gauges tonight. 'from Bronx, N.Y., who hit 2980, Wyndham Lanes of Guelph, was in second place. The scoring of both teams late Friday night the booster team division with forced the Arco-Rex Amusement,2770, and C. A. Durr s of Utica, team of Trenton, N.J., the pre-N.Y., moved into second place vious leader, into third place with]with 2717. The Andersons of Rochester, N.Y., now are third with 2698. POJ^TOOX BOATS NEW 1963 MODELS $OQI| With Conopy and Steering llwV 6 Other Models to Choose From 2956. Robert Bella’s 652, including a second game 255, paced the new leaders. Ken Barber, lead-off, made the major contribu- RECREATION ROOMS — ATTICS DORMERS — EXTENSIONS — KITCHENS — CONVERSIONS HUGE MID- WINTER SALE STARTS NOW! NO MONEY DOWN! TAKE 7 YEARS TO PAY! NO PAYMENTS 'TIL MAY! SAVE UP TO 25% The Canadian quintet rolled consistently with scores ranging from Walter Jeffries’ 598 to an even 500. In the day’s minor events Don Dclnura and Gary Loose of Menomonee Falls, Wis., scored 1282 for first place in pins the previous high count by Otto Krueger and Jerry Quinlan of Findlay, Ohio, Francis Gestwicki of Wilmington, Del; hit 672 in the singles to place two pins back of leading Dick Hughes of Baltimore, Md. and one ahead of Johnny Osowick of Port Jervis, N.Y. ★ ★ ★ Buffalo’s Jim Falsone totaled 1866 for third place in the allevents, 19 pins back of leading Bernie Haytcher of Ashtabula, Ohio, and six in front of fourth-place Dick Ward of Carey, Ohio. Clearance Prices on New JOHNSON MOTORS - BOATS - CANOES over 50 left to choose from 'Will Collcr Apache Factory No. 1 Dealer Open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. 1 Mile E. of Lapeer on M-21 For Us at the i DETROIT BOAT [ SHOW I Fab. 16 to 34 After the Shr other offlo ii:,®e fe ”.K‘,\"™Lrrof’‘thi"r.gl.ir«ti^^ “'rererc^te^^ - -........., Frembes, Drayton Plains; beloved husband of Aline Hosner; dear father of Mrs. Bruce (Rosemary) Hally, Mrs. Fred (Dorothy) France and Oerald Hosner: also survlvSfl by seven grandchildren, two sisters gnd five brothers. Funeral arrangements are pending from Coats Funeral Home, Drayton ... dear mother of Mrs. Esther Grigorian, Archie. Arthur and Richard Hov-seplan; dear sister of Mrs. Hermlne Plllbosslan: also survived by ten grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday, February 26. at U a.m. at the Sparks-Orlffln Funeral Home. Interment In Oak Hill Cenietery. Mrs. Hovseplan will lie iR «t»te at the ISparks-OrlffliwFuncrBl ANY OIBL OR WOMAN NBBDINO a friendly * adviser, phone FB ® i^34.%oi(fld"e°ntffl: •LIBS. ^___________________________ifldentlal. PAINTY MAID SUPPLIES. 738 Menominee. FE ff-7805. LOST: MALE MIXED COCKER, blond. nSmed Sandy, license 11786. Vicinity Waterford. OB 4-1S65, ATTORNEY- Full time position open ------ with background ... ________ and-or abstract and title “' ‘ isltlon torney with backgr Estate and-or absti work. This Is a pen....... with an opportunity for profes sional development. Full fringe ben efits. AppHoants must be mem here of the Michigan State Ba AssocUttlqp. salary will depend oi applicants qualifications and hack ground ‘ --------------- — AUTO MECHANIC needed at once. BUI Spen bier and Jeep. Clarksh "S, Miiiii t-laiksiu'r Lake: age 80: beloved husl of Adelino P. Taylor: dear of Mrs. Alfred Nleholls. Norman, William. Donald, Robert and Philip Taylor. Also aurvived by 18 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday, February 26, at 1:30 p.m. at Maranalha Baptist Church. Interment In Oak" Grove Cemetery, Milford. Mr. Taylor will lie In state at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. WALKER, FEBRiiABY 22, 1863, Carrie K.. 3014 Seebaldt, Drayton Plains; age 17; dear mother pf Mrs. Maurice E. Young: deer sister of Mrs. O. L. Bralnard and Joe Kelley; also sur-vlvted by one grandchild and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Monday, February 28. at 3 p.m. at the Hunloon Funeral Home with Rev. W. J. Teeuwlssen officiating. Interment In Drayton Plains Cemetery. Mrs. Walker will He In state at the Huntoon Funera), beloved wife of Clarence L, Wilder; dear mother of William B. and Russell Wilder; dear sister of Helen Barrett. Fuheral service will bo held Monday, February 26 at 3:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Wlldei will lie In state at the Donelson-Johns Fu- nerel Home._____________________ WILLIAMS, FEBRUARY 21, 1603,' Daniel Evan Jr.. 8801 Cranberry Lake Rd.. Clarkston; age 14, beloved son of llah J, and Daniel E. Williams Sr., dear brother of Linda Susan and William Paul Williams, dear grandson of Mrs, Gladys Wtlght end Mrs. Clara Fisher: dear great-grandson of Mrs. Mabel McNeil. Funeral service will be held Monday. February 26 at I p.m. at the Goats Funeral Home. Drayton Plains wllh Rev. Walter Teeuwlssen Jr. officiating. Interment ' Cemeterv. Daniel will He Announcamenti GET OUT OP DfBT ON,A ELAN you can a o IHICIIIGAN CREDIT COUXSF.LORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 8-0466 Pontiac's oldest and Isrgest budget assistance company._________ IN Dirirr Arrange to nay all your bills with one email weekly payment. pateq. I believe In keeping the sales force small^ so^each^ man must be abic to do hts part. Come 111 and talk it over In person. SEE PAUL NEWMAN SPARTAN DODGE, INC. gpptlac TOWN ft COUNTRY . , INC. WANTS 5 .MEN FOR FOOD SALES. SOUTHBAS'TEHN MICHL GAN AREA. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. Would .you like working for the largest fCod company In Its field? Ypu must be neat, a good worker, married, 25-58 years of age. and We*wlll®traln you at our school. Expense* paid. Interview* <;Obl“ci- Soles Help, MBle-FEmate 8-A FAL ESTATE SALE* LAKE LOTS. $10 down. $10 a month. Commerce. Highland, Clarkiston/ area. Leads furnished. 5680 |i Dixie. .Waterford. _ OR 3-J296,___1_ ____^_______ Employinant Ageiiciei 9 Muiwest I^mploynient •nn Rnntiae Etaie Bank nilUtllna FE 6-8227 Help Wanttdi Ftmala inlty Pon-FHexlble ___ . immanent. ____ Cm;,Jielpful._'l_ ■BABY SITTER ALL DAY TUESDAY — part time Wed,, Thur*.,- Frl, $10 week. FE 8-8837.______ BABYSITTER TO LIVE IN. MORE for home than wages. OR 4-0235._ BABY BITTER TO LIVE IN, MOTH-- works 4 days, 115 8. TlMen. BABY sitter FOR'DAyS, PE 6- AabY sitter •to care font. Days. FE 2-5498._ BABYSITTER, DRAYTON I IN-t RE J AJSXBJl’l iCn, * A veav .. - .w. AfternoolU 3:30 to 7:30. prepar«l dinner, OR 3-3164 before 4. COOK. 10 A.M THROUGH 6:30 ner, Mmu to Frl. General J work,'$40. Home nights. Onl perl need with reference! 6-3910. m. 363-pi3. “ CIRi' wanted For telephone survey. Salary i commission. FE 5^6670, Preston Walker Smith EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL COUNSELING SERVICE Bloomfield Office Center--Office 6 •“ woodward ‘ 646-3663 EVI'LYN EDWARDS "VOCA'nONAL COUNSELING SERVICE " . Teiepiione F1<:,4-05M instructians-Schaais I Free placement. "Key, "6 MI'e Rd., Detroit 21. DI I-? LEARN ''bOCCESSfUL SELLING. men WANTED PROM PONTIAC area at once to train for f"*--- position In time study-me-------- engineering. Should have high school education. Factory 'cxper;, . , Jence.helpfuh.- Ptrmrtcmg" avalT- able If you qualltv. For complete GE OR iluiTCK.‘block and " CEMENT work__ Fireplaces. OR .1-11672, "‘"all around'carpenter SaiYic^Sa^Uai 13 A, YOUNG HOUSE MOVING. ■ ally equipped. FE 4.64W. USib-BUILDINO MATERIALS, need 2x4a, 26c each;' 2x8xl2-foot and 14-toot, $1.20 each: gas and oil furnaces and hollers, toilets, tubs, and lavatories, apartment slse refrigerators and ranges. Interior doors, $2.60 and up. Hundreds pf other Items too numerous tq men- AI.L MAKES OP FOUTAIN PENS repaired by factory trained men. Ooneral Printing & Office 8ui)p>y Co.. 17 W. Lawrence St._______ FREE ESTIMATEs'oN ALL .WIR-tng, will finance. R. B, Munro Btectrle Co. FB 8-843I. j___ ELiC'rRtC MOTOR SEBVICIE BE-pairing and rewinding. 218 E. pike. Phone FE 4-3H8I..........^ i>re$smakinq & tonoring 17 ■ Mrs, Bodell. FE S-DO HEWmIno and ALTERATIONS. West side. Reas. FE 2 0915.___ 'i'AILORING — arner. FE 6-2536. 19 REMODELING - Income Tax Service $5 AVERAOE FEE IN YOl We Biieclalir.e In personal It RESPONSIBLE MALE COLLEGE student looking for a esr to drive to Tampa. Flerlda. March 2nd. call 684-8083 evenings..._____;____^ BIDE TO FISHER BODY, AFTBR-• noon shift from Judsh Lake Sub-■■ ■ ' .'IStt-StisV. J/ICEN8BD Wanted Houtiliold Goodi 29 LET US BUY IT OB SELL IT FOR TOU 0 X F O R D COMMUNITY AUCTION. OA 8-2681. CASH FOR PUBNI'TJRE AND AP-pllances. 1 piece or houseful. Pear-son’s, FE 4-7881. AUCTION SALE EVERY SATOR-oi.a Auction. We'H ■I'OP DOLLAR PAID FOR FURNL tiire, applIanoBs. tools, etc. Aiic^ tlons every Friday. Saturday and Sunday OR 3-27)7, B 8i B AUC-nON<50e0 Dixie Hwy.__________ Wanted te Rent 32 Nation :est t FE GOOD (3LEAnSr. IRONER. MON-frYn’siwrtat&n.®™'‘peop'lc, ■ beautlfue home. MI 4-4459. lUTO MECHANIC, CHEVROLET ' EXPERIENCE. GOOD PAY AND WORKING CONDITIONS, VAN CAMP CHEVROLET, MILFORD PHONE 684-1025. _________' BAKER, iCkPEttiiciNCED ONLY. FE I 4-8716 b CARPET Salesman Full Time OPPORTUNITY FOR A CONSCIENTIOUa AND ENERGETIC SALESMAN APPLY IN PERflON EMPLGYMENT GPPICE 'HUDSONS PONTIAC housekeeper TO ASSIST OLDER woman, nve In country home. Light housekeeping and driving. Car available. Will discuss salary. Call OSbonie 8-2422. LIVE-IN MAID, BXCEHiBNT FO-sltlon for right per'^ ------ batween 6 and 11 . attrMtlve FURNITURE REPAIRED AND RE- flnlshcd. FE 2-4735. __________ GENERAL CARPENTRY. HEMOD-ellng, cablneUh kitchen* and recre- atlon rooifis. FE 5-1915.______ WALL WASHING AND C.^PET Cleantnr Oeorge’8, FE 4-1077. Mlchli I. Call IR'S NATIONALLY ADVER-Used In McCalls. Need attractive Intelligent.- women to act a* * MIDD^EAI 12:30 no... OR 3-4427. 3 LAiDY, CARE FOR Own transp., 6 days. MEDICAL ASSISTANT FOR Doctor's office. Must have practical experience. Reply to Pontiac Press PART-TIME SEAMSTRESS, APPLY Pontiac Laundry, jgraBh DESIGN DRfATLER EXPERIENCED ON PRESSROOM AUTOMATION EQUIPMENT, APPLY IN PERSON. Bablln Engbieer-Ing Co. 750 W, Maple, liYoy. PHARMACIST Full time. Top pay. Moderate hours — Vacation pay. References. Apply FE 6-9679. Bart’s Pharmacy. EXPERIENCED GARAGE" ____________ inodernlaatlon salesman, OR 3-5618. EXI^RYBNCED furnace SALE8- ntcrestlng work. To do this you should ^be^ able to and be a good speller. This not magaxine subscrlplh— le modernisation work, bu nepartment of a long, well llshed company. Salary not -------- mission. Paid vacations. Pleasant working conditions. Please Indicate your futeresl by writing " “ pare of Pontiac Press Bo* 16 EXPERIENCED CLERICAL Day Dining Room Waitress anil Hostess TED'S AB'BE R, young, SOBER. / Bloomfield - Southfield area working MAN’S^ $3$5; business Ceavaleiceiit-Nurtlng 21 VACANCY IN vrc"L"cAB*E for THREE fcLUB^ ly. people -In my home. MA 5-3099. Mo^ng and Irucking 22 We^anted Female J}2 2 COLORED GIRLS DESIRE DAY QBNEHA^^ WOMEN UE (RE WALL WASH- IRONING AND HOUSEWORK WOMAN desires EVENING AN^D Saturday , babysllling. Call FE "-9M1 Building Serwlce-Suppllez 13 ALCOA-KAISER-REYNOLDS AUimlnum siding. QuftlHy storm ddors and windows Installed at low *'off«BfBBOh'’ prices. Superlor^^ Siding & MnbERNlZATlO^N. ____ _____________ ~INCO’m"'e tax, BO"OK"kEEPINO , NOTARY WITH seal KEN HETCHLER $3-55 AVO. 591 .SECO.N’D FE 5-.W6 2"beoroom unfurnished a^ or house In Waterford area. FE 4-9521 or FE 8-9362 afterJI;__ COMPLETE^^jRE^TO pltwH AN^ND ;FmY"^^ .luiie or Jjtly occupancy. FE^WP. WHITE FAMILY WITH CHILDREN “hauling and MOV- Painting t^eceretlng___ A-I DECORATING - PAINTING -plastering - papering. Free Eel.. discounts for cash. 682-0620. A LADY II4TER|6r DECORATOR, Paoerlna. FE IMI348. AVERAGE SIZE ROOMS $: --------.... EE 4-28f6. d 5. PER PAINTING," PAPERING, RKMOV- III, washing. 673.2872,^C._Whlte_.__ PAPER HANdlNO A 8PECTALTY Painting, ThompBon._FE_4-8a64._ PAINTING. wAl.i. WASHING, RATE reasonable. FE 2-800A___________ Ponliao_liate Bank Jl„'fc35SL- RAH PAINTING AND DECO-rallng. FE 8-8;i2«._____________ feleViiien-Radlio Sei^ce 24 NEED TV OR RADIO TUBES?^ E R rr Tg iTf "ri’STiNG l Year Warronly on all droQin «r mor* Jwm** »•••> '“J* ' down pdjwionw. Prefer eeet eWe of ndMirbu PoattM. Phone In your 7<»1 Ml»hl«nd im“y Business Is Terrific ,, We h»ve » herd forking rellAWe ■»le« force to repreeent you. Cell ... .... »ot feel obUgetod. we 1 honeit opinion of ____Je of ifeillng your prowsrty, "oOBIUfl A SON, REALTORS ■ sag Dfxle Hvy OB 4'0S24 MOLTBPLE LISTING SERVICE . EEPINO ROOM NEAR GENERAL Hospllel J'E ______________ SLEEPING ROOM NICELY PU^ SLEEPING 'ROOMS POR R Prlvew entrence. H4 sute sESEPiNOrBOOMS NEAR FISHER !^*in^WtMoBrd an EXC^PTIO^LLY UlVELYllobM FOB TWO. BOARD -4* IMP ■ ... _ r. Brlddg<>»t. _ r ROOMS. Private UTILITIES, cleen qjnet_in»n. PE_6-00I*. _ 2 Rooiii/apartment, private belli, feer General Hoipl.. Corner . Hdron end Prell. Apply ........ «^^iSen I RoSi FURNISHED WITH PRI- bath. 736 W. Huron.___ ROOMS AND BATH. II only. 67 Mechenic SI. CLEAN a oiind, $75 m , laundry 3-ROOU AND enirance, utimie.H ft lacllltlea 1“ h»»e'n« week. Eves. FE 5126_____________ CLEAN » ROOMS AND BATH, ONE block from General Hospital. Adults only. OR 3->a3S.__________ COLORED i ROOMS, PRIVATE EN-trance. close to town.. FE 5-0494. COLORED BACHELOR APART- _ J1 utilities Included. Ceil FE g-31S6.___________ FOR THE DISCRIMINATING. DE-luxe 3-reom apartmenj electric kitchen. B garbage disposal. privileges. Broadwev. Ml 3-W56. fiilEE ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH end entrance to reliable, refined colored couple. 1 baby welcome. Referencea required. 673-3796. UNION LAKE APARTMENTS. 2335 Aportmeiits-Unturnisheil 38 ifrluerati r. Huron 4 Rooms, bath^ u^’per. stove end refrigerator, 150. FE 2-6603. 4 rooms and bath upper. Uttlitlea, private entrance. Adults. "05 Florence. HSUtTEO WEST SIDE 2-BEDROOM lower: garage, alove and r Blor. Available March 1st. Pontiac Prt ROOMS AND BATH, VPPKR. no pets. FE 4-7610^____ wisTT^: i-BKDROOM. Slove. refrigerator, hea. rage furnished. Working < girls. Quiet 5-unlt apartmt..... Sn Newberry St. 673. Call fE Kent Howwi, furwiihsit_______39 3 BEDROOM.^ 3-beoroom house, carpeting throusltout, fenced In back yard, full baaemenl. 500 Linda Vlata For oolored. 332-7321. AROOM HOUSE. AUBURN HEIGHTS LAKEFRONT DUPLEX. 2-BED----■n, gas Heat furnished, — 1 June 30. 662-1444. I COLORED. 4 ROOM FURNISHED partly furnished pay OWN UNION LAKE — MODERN. COU^, Rent Howmi, UntNrniihad 40 2 BEDROOM RANCH, FENCED >■ Edith FE 4-6376, 2-BBDBCWM^ 1 ^ - 3~BEbROOM PHAMF BATH AND h and entrance. 20 , OR BOARD. ............ __ :ellent value. MAX^A H°ARTWia"INC* 'ot l-sKd NEW STORlv M-59 Shopping Plaxa. 1 for ladles dress shop . ... lot. Near ______ _______ FHA $315 dn„ ST. MIKE'S AREA. Rent OKice Space 2 OFFICES FOB BENT. le Hwy. OR 3-I3M- _ bROrND FLOOR LOCATION WITH parkbig. W side. $40 ' ^ sq. fl. FE 3- ...._ «rfoor.'?'"iu?’t[.°fSrfi7pi Rent MUccHaneoui^ 48 nan sotTARE FEET, SUITABLE Tor storage. N. ' month dr $4^0._ 756-6114._____________ RANCH HOME. 3 BEDROOMS. AND family room, I'M baths. 2-car ga-rage. Pvt. beach privileges, near school and shopping. Low down payment. Call after 6:3D. OR S-WS- -BEDROOM HOME. BASEMENT, garage. $600 down. CaU after 3. EM 3-0504 ________________, -BEDRobM 2-STOHY HOME BY 2-BEDROOM HOUSE. LARGE X^. -BEDROOM BRTcK. Ui BATH®' $15,900. $500 down. B. Wachal. PE 2-0063, automatic HEAT. LARGE lOT 10 PER CENT DOWN FOB QUAt IFIED BUYER. WATKEFOF AREA. CALL FE 3-7171. 3-BEDROdM RANCH. 7 YEARS OLD Urge family kitchen. Cariretjni ; Of ar*- 3-BBDROOM T 3-BEDROOM HOME. l‘s B large kitchen, living room family room, and large room. No baaemenl. 2-ci Inched ‘ ilUlty ....... ifavetf street’paved dt good location, tia.m. 674-1633. -BEDROOM. FULL BASEMENT, double lot, garage with patio. Northern High School area. Low down payment or "*** -BEDROOM. BRICK RANCH, 1> 3 BEDROOM RANCH MACEDAY Uke area. Full baaemenl. approximately 3 years old. Oak floors, eating apace In kitchen, large 175| 125 ft. lot. On P»y*<* Streep. ^ Wall $"looo'* T'years taxes ’^wlll ^ov ^AT&FOy^ REALTY. OR 3-l77|. 3-BEDROOM HOME. 4 YEARS OLD. 3 blocks from .grade school. real Urgaln at $7,900. $230 clowc $60 month. Call FE 2-9122. DeLorah Building.____________ 4-SEDROOM HOUSE. Fe‘4-2779.______________4. 6-ROOM HOUSE WITH FURNITURE $0,850 ON YOUR LOT - _______ $58 MONTH ____.1 Open Dally 1-5 942 DeElta. Troy Gooden UL 2-4550 or 679-0 I VOORHKis. 293 C 6' bedrooms, 12x24 living room, den. Youngstown kitchen, Immedfate * 82.000 down. - _ 1-1600 after 6 p.m. 1 bungglew wood noOra ... DOWN Waterford - s roon ....-... axes and Insurance. CaU Mrt. .Hilman, OR 3-239L rr------ Underwood Real Estate. O'NEIL LAKE FRONT 81.1 ....... ■ iwn payment droom ranc featuring a ______ „ _ 10x20 screened- In porch. 3-car attached garage'. Nicely landscaped with an outside barbecue pit — Priced at only $17,900. Im-medlata possession. Dial PE WEST YALE AT STANLEY, PONTIAC 2-3-AND 4 BEDROOMS. RENT C NORtH PONTIAC , $69 Down NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME $55 Month b gives occupancy. Model IS nley at Hopkfcs. FE !r4m, V ,00 and UN 2;^2252_____ ' LIVE IN'ROCHBSTER NEAR OAKLAND UNIVERSITT This 3-bedroom, brick ranch I on a . black Ion winding roa In Christian Hllla Sub. Built-In In the kitchen ....... make this e for Investment. $6,000 CLARKSTON RANCH 3 bedrooms. ■—* High S ' ■ , atlached « „._i0 wUh -' "" E 5-5773. ROCHESTER AREA '3-bedrooiii bungalow, “ ■rbt'S HAVEN , , of playmates. Near schools. M8 93 mo. plus tax and Ins. now. HAOSTRoM real ES-! 4900 W. Huron. OB 4-0358, _ call OR 3-6229 or 682-0433. WALLED LAKE. IMMEDIATE HOLIDAY HILLS Ranch. 4 IMroonifl. : lly room. OE kitchen. «a...y garages large lot. t land-acaped. aved. close to .schools. RORABAUGH '^Wwldward at Squore Lake Road O'NEIL GI NOTHING DOWN LAKE FBONT - Six room Payments^^^—^ No Down Pr.yment threi 1. OR 3-5ft pay. Better Ask for Ron RAY O’NF-H-, Realtor 282 S. TWOW.nRAPH FE 3-7103 iTNToirLA^KE 'village ...........- kitchen. room, recreation room, leges' lo'Yakes. 6y owner, EM 3-0033. ___________________ I'irst Time Offered Rochester area-3-bedrpom _brlMc Living ■ Ished bi j baths. 2-car garage, f icll. owner. Ol"*035*5 and weekends. A MONI'IY-MAKER 3-famlly floors lliroughout. an Income of $.')00 per month. Present Income 8200 per month. Out-ot-clly owner. Price reduced lo only $15,900 Terms, R'LOYD KENT, Realtor B2‘'i N. Saginaw S' Sacrifice—Quick Sale BIRMINGHAM--BY OWNER 2-bedroom ranch,.gyage. baaennen|. Full drive, screened porcln carpeting. refrigerator. reasonable offer . Diamond 1-Si MULTIPLE LIS'HNO SERVICE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SAtURDAY, Mt 49 . FER^ ,UARY 28. 196.3 NO MONEY DOWN TrI-levbi or ranbb itarter homes o vour lot. Model oi^n U-8 Retirbme.nt—Newlyweds CLEAN-CDTE-NBAT galow. Large kltohen. full bath, new oll'furnaoo. Nice glasa poroh tcrogt front, wlin new alum. fs;',*r" SSrMHK: groVd“t«-|8,lS CHEAPER THAN V rent— F^EATURING .11 to wall oarpettaig srood doora OPEN High on a Hill IN CLARKSTON SAT. and SUN. 1 to 6 sneak PREVIEW amllv plsimeU home with fam-pleasing features In ail 1 features lly ^lc( bedroom 'brick'— 2 oar'auicbed Sarqgc —full basement — IMi sths — mahogany paneled family _ fiirnihire finished cabinets large wooded lOOx- In kitchen - B, City w ter and gas. Ail this tor only .... 700. Low down payment. Pick your lot now. Directions; US-10 lo M-19, tin'll rlghl on Waldon Rd. of a mile lo 6095 Cramelanc. WATERFORD REALTY. OR 3-4525 , 2891 Dixie Hwy. __________________________ .. -f 8'ro a ....... Vevarything. >PEN DAILY 12 to 8. 631-1565 CARLISLE BUILDING CO______ CU.STOM lUJlLT HOMES YOUR LOT OR OURS Ros!> Homes. Iric. I'E 4-0.S91 ATTENTION COLORED ive a fine aelecllon of h KAMPSEN 171 W. Huron St. _ __ FE 4-OSB HAYDEN .TREDROOM TRI-LEVl'.l, $f»(y)5_$1000 DOWN 4-RI‘DROOM Rl-LEVl-l-10.9tl5—1096 DOWN Living I ROCIIE.STER Large 3 bedroom, I'i baths, frame home. Full baseme rage. 814.906 with MARTIN, iv, OR 2-9761 TRADE-INS 3-bedroom ranch, gas heat. N(7CRk:DIT Q1ICQvS' No mortgage approvals needed. *opeU {2* w*8 daily SPOTLITE BUILDING CO. — $-6685 NORTHERN HIGH ARI'IA ti-6^l6*'weeknd D Building Co. jfWWJilit. 'f- BEDROOM Mome. I newly decorated, almost new, very, very reMonable, in noftli part of city near Pontiac Motor and North^i em High BEAL VALUE, 626-9575. rUn-t SELL , OPTION 3ibedroom single home \ WALL TO WALL CARPETIN } CHOICE LOCATIONS (In north pbrt of Pontiicl and NORTHEl I f'nsa'.'iiSsj'’"™, IRWIN_ Tizzy By Kate Oaann Sale Homes 49 ON YOUR LOT Russell Young ^AXLY MEANS BETTE|^B|>|^T $18 DOWN-AND OMLY jjW 55* week'. 4-rm. home .with utility full bath. oU AC furnace. needa patnttng and purohaier mwt agrea to do lanie In reaaonaUe $280 DOWN — AlLreqondHIonod • rrkling neeb^uU basement i AC fumaoB, paved etfeei. n two bedroom bungaiow. Only 8 y gSM DOWN-and what POUR-BEDROOM RANCH®* - Just across street from lake lot, 3 large lots, full basement, wall-to-wail carpeting. Excellent neighborhood. Prloiid at only 818.900. Easy terms. • IMIrm baVAt M M “Dad liked the boy who dated me last night. Do you suppose there was something wrong with the boy or with father?” SELL^GB TRADE — TEN ACR.BS wURymiOllt new 3-bedroom brick rancher. 3-oar attached garage, all bullt-lns Completely carpeted, I'/a baths, ,, ,2* taxes' iveu* restricted. Sale Houses ^ 49 WATERFORD VILLAGE. NICE 3- bedroom ranch. OB 3-0780, after 4 (OT.ORED “jack' LOVELAND DO Cass Lake Rd- 883-121 BATEMAN OPEN SAT. 2-6-SUN. 1-6 New Models YOUR CHOlCli: RANCH or TRI-LEVEL FEATURING: 3 bedrms.. I'M baths, foml.y rml. range and oven,' brick and aluminum: garage optional. $10,600 to $11,975 PLUS LOT 10 per cent down or free mortgage. You can ^'R^ADE WhhtleTst'' (Opposite Pontiac OPEN .S808 Berkley ,‘i8 E. Rutgers 7M }■:. Ikverly "i: PICTURE OPEN SUNDAY 2-5, 6657 Siiowapple CLARKSTON; olmost^new brick rancher, family rm. ■»'™J',,‘'“r da- limcdla*c possessli; llarkston Schools. 1 /waLon. right lo 0 Open Sunday 2-8 .5125 Roseamie JAYNO HEIGHTS. won(lf privileges on block. Brit eatly i cosing costs will V' ni* Hwy lo Silver Lake Rd, lo Walti left lo Shawnee, icll to Iloscanitc. Open Sunday 2-3 36.50 Clinlonvillc Rd. BRICK RANCHER With garage and hosement 3 bedrms.. r'a baths, carpeting, drapes and water aoWener. Big deep lot with rear yard fenced. Just $1,800 down plus closing coats. It's really nice. Dixie Hwy. to Sashabaw to Walton, right lo Cllnlonvlllo Rd., left to properly. Ask About Our Trade-In Plan OEE1CI-: OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 Cherokee Hills 3 BEDROOM. 2 baths, water sof-eher, new carpeting and drapes. Fn.l basement and gas hot water heat. Loaded with extras and U.IUIO. 062-3617. [ NOKTl! EM) JH'.MO.X L.'.KE U'IE\ y'Seute-’*bYeV^^^ aluminum COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK For Home Ownership Loai -I's Easy__________FE 2-8171 v3-Hodroom Prick Ranch Paved street -- clly conveniences. I'iT’ck NO CREDIT $100 DOWN malic heal and hot water, oak floors, plastered walls and Is a good deal tor home and Income, only $1,000 down, bedroom. In easy walking distance OEOROE R. IRWIN, REALTOR Spotllte Building ( __________335-4039 _________ Peak of Pci'feclion *e. $19,950 never bought 5 ' IIAG.STROM REAL ESTATE level ateadlly renting lo month. Dandy location. I paved atreat. priced to a at favorable terms. NO DOWN PAYMENT-OI and Resale. Why rent when you buy a nearly-new home wit down payment. Monthly pat Iholudihg taxes and Insurance, less JAME-S A. TAYLOR REAL ESTATE—INSURANCE 7732 Highland Rd.. (M59I OR 4-0306 NiCiT'2-BiDROOM. “NORTii sit Basement finished. Caroling Fenced. Nice shrubs. Safe or New 2-bedroom. West suburban. Lake privileges, Sale or option. Also 3- and"4-bedroom. ..... Nelson Bldg. Co._________OR 3-8191 BY OVVNl-R” wallet'* Lake. Near Pin Modern 8 rooms and^bath nftce.'2>eftr gArtg«. On 2 — BOO. Term*. Inquire/eTea Ukevlew $9,500 anch-Blyle iJI basement. . birch cup-~ "art’MEYER NI'AV BARGAIN NO MONEY DOWN Associate NO MONIiY DOWN Mixed Neigliborlioods Laud Contract, VA, MIA ASSOCIATE BROKERS GLES hardwood floors f AREA - Sharp NICE INCOME I (iir.Es REAi/rv co. FE 8-8175 321 Baldwin Av( MUL'n^LE* LiSI'INO KviCB I 6 illage 113,51)0 X 100 landscaped 1 n fireplace, family x-car gaisKe, bullt-tn oven. . Low down payment will FLATTLEY REALTY Nl-:w IIOME.S 3-BEDROOM RANCH \Villi .Mtaclu'd Garage ,$69 Moiitli e Model Dally II I,akefroiit Home lei'jy fine {8'“’/,“” 2””'' idled garageaVeslIbule entramie large carpeted Hi kitchen with bi b‘S I bedrooms i I addl- plus laundry 4-Bcdi'ooni Brick Rauch Conveniently located between Wesi Bloomflled High and Our l.ivlj pellrig and drapes. Privileges < taas and Orchard Lake, Ibe^ fi price ol 826.r- " "" makes this an outstanding ‘lids'*' glKr'wl TRADE Sale Housei 49 BRICK SUBURBAN: 6 years old and a 3-badroom rancher. I'M baths, family carpeted living room large, basement, reoreauun iuud oil neat,' water softener, 2-06r a |sched^ garage^^ ***'*®. *®i ..allable. Priced . ... ...,h $1790 down. Near immediate possession. condition. Large llvl fireplace, dining roi amt drapes, nice breakfast room, bei bath, 3 large bedro up, basement, gas softener, storms Priced at 813,900 w" Immediate possesslea. LAKE FRONT: Lake Oakland bl-level: Living -nnm «,!>(, {ireplace, dining L. ex-kltchen, 3 bedroom* and ■ ■ level, family----------------- bath on 1st level, famllj with fireplace, bath and i storage on lake level. 2-car 1 tached garage. Urge lot. Shoi by appointment. MILLER 35 EVELYN COURT: . 3-bedroom family hi room, dining bath up. Basement, gi John K. Irwin 81 SONS-REALTORS bedroom home. Living room w picture window, family kitchen. I bath, carport, 3 lots, $7,950. 8m down payment. Call now. CRAWFORD AGE.NCY !56 W Wallon 338-EI06 iflOE.FIInl SCHRAM 4-Bo(lroom Ranch Ing. corner lot. good nelghborhnud. Immediate possession with r ■— sonable down payment. Northern High 3 bedrooms. Master bedroom 11 X 15 living room, knotty dinetle. Full bssemenl with fe lot. Priced at $10,500 with 1 Brand New 3-bedroom ranch room. 10x15 with 14x15 llvir —-iblnatlon kltclx and dinette, full basemenl, with gi - ---- heat, and a 13x34 re small down payment. IVAN W. SCHRAM Kl'-.ALTOR EE 5-9471 942 J08LYN COR. MANSFIELD MODEL OPEN Sun. 2 till 5 .36.14 Lorena St. ilkins Hills off Watkins Lk. I I'’nll Me: OF lIVABn,tTY II and friendly ranciv beautiful ^carpeUng. Yoii^ a i-d'iota " ■ ' ----- $21,200 1 LE'l iv]^K fu\ $21,200 Witte $2,300 d< costs LET'S TRADE Xcurly aVcw bitUiM. beautiful recroallon r new 30 year mortgage. LET'S TRADE Sylvan Shores CALL NOW. LET’S TRADE Save Money NO MORE RENT. Neat n Williams Luke prlvllr Uck Almost Aiiylliinf^ ranch 2-car atlacluci „...„ . 3 bftdroonis. baAemnit, ceramic tile bath. Aiichoi f bedroom, bath. ■ ' water heat, alt. garage. $8,380. r down payment. 1, . enclosed porch, amity Income, $8,- $9,8$6. WE BUILD, 3 trl- • vel homes. Pl»»Ur;d walls, oak oora. vanity, In bath, brick Irl^ Hi B. C. Hiller. Realty, 3880 !»“'>«*!' I-Sb?. “S.'S' - Very choice neigh-brick rancher with attached 2-oar garage, tiled bain, also Va bath, ftre-place, walt-to-wall carpeting. Very attractive Mni well oonatruowd home. Frlced low at only $17,900. Terms. trame.l4x20 family rm. 2 full wall flreplaoos. IW baths, attached 2th-oar garage, situated on large wooded fot - ------- t near take. Truly ' a t TRADE - US - we buy, trade, 24 yrs. experience. OPEN SUNDAY 1*4. Multiple Listing Serv- CLARK , ARLY j^A ■clean-i7.M( - 2 bedrooms — enclosed porch— refrigerator Included — - olt flrpd furnace ~ St — 87,800 — Only $500 CLARK REAL EStA'TB 3101 W.HURON. PONTIAC C 3-7888 — Evenings call FE 4-4813 Multiple Listing Service cleaan well kept 3-b« large 70x220 ft. lot. . an(T screens, alum s wlif handle!* OOVERNMEMT RESALES 2 and bedroom homes, City or -•-..vh locations, ^all .1^ conmton. you will find me one lo piease yon. No down payments. Just closing costs. COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE close Ip a lake. An acre of ground with large chicken house. e*ppJUo{_*f; „.v- A neat 2-bedroom single y home with perfect hot heat. Ith-car garage •xeway. You won’t find a buy. 89,800, terms. William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 NEAR PONTIAC MOTOR. 2-BED-9om with large carpeted living nd dining room, full basement, utomatlc ' “ ileal, I a-car ggragr le appreclalei REAGAN GAYLORD OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 1 north to 148 New- LAWRENCE W. OAYLORD FE 8-9693 Broadway and Flint OPEN Sunday 2^ ..... ro'ft 616 Sharo! r APPROACH anoh* home, featuring all brick aiifortabli amlly r wtth 49 WEST HURON , Near Falmor to settle esUifa two for rOsldenco, TRADU beautiful S-BBDRMM WEST SUBURBAN TRI-LBVEk — MAHOGANY 2 BATHB-LAROB FAMILY ROOM —2-CAB OARAOE-LAROB DOT— waL TRADE ® ® home in or near PONTIAC. WRIGHT. 382 Oakland Ave._EUill* JOHNSON BRINO your TBAmNO PROBLEMS TO US PROBLEMS TO attention I several homes 2 »ml 3 bedrooms, decorated '' m insiue and out. Reason-jonthlv payments Including 1 and Insurance. Homes now 8-FAMaY , Mr. Investor --here ®,»®®® opportunity bringing In per month. Building Is In *6e^!5VL??!'a dltlon Newly decorated. P' 'I -i.fc reasonable terms. A y maker tor someone I Sveninp after^S Wj'ljClkrtt Wheaton A. lOHNSdN & SONS R®AL ES'fATE-INSURANCB FI<: 4-2533 Homes-Farms ,.e parcel-2 ml. from Water-Clarkston A Lady of -s Schoo'.a ‘ . 4 bedroom farm SMALL PARM-18 acres. Cosy, est country home wltn an exterior Including closed porch. Bern will accomodate 5 head of stock-chipken house -source of Shiawassee River. Black peat garden soil-flowing wcll-r ghi on edge of town-paved to Pontiac. $12,900. Terms. LITTLE 10 ACRE ESTATK-2 m from Clsrkslon-scenlc and scciudei River travels through properly, bedroom clean bungalow. Basi ment-barn ’workshop - 3 cs 18.500. Mon CANAL FRONT-Maceilay, 3 berfi year around home. $6,000. ^ lake PRIVILEOES-2 bedrooms sulaled-near Drayton Shmipln'' ter. $8,200. Low down-Chea you deconalc. SEE OUR AD UNDER FOR SALE FARMS Cheaper STOUTS Best Buys Today d basement. Priced accordingly $8,000. Ter WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — locffi “just off Wlillanis Lake Road. Vacan..................... session. $500 ) located of 150. WEST SIDE CITY — Well I Just oh'Voo'rheT GAS * tiifoIJ'hout ''pGced'Velo'y for quick sale. WOI.VERINE I.AKEFRONT — beauty Includes everything have been looking for In a lakefront home. Beautiful ... peted living room with lodgerock flrdplace overlooking Ihia lake. 3 bedrooms, IVi baths, basement, attached 2-car garage. Copper screened aummer poroh. $5,P“ Warren -Stout, Realtor 77 N. Baginaw St. FE 8-8168 Pontiac FOR A QUICK BALE, CALL US I ANNETT Eltxabeth Lake Roa IDEAL LOCATION -the city. 3-nlce loti yard. I'/a-car garag iiig and IVa bath TRADE for your ho ;i • badroom bullt-ln ecramlc bath, (5) 6'.'fI"doOT""wa'n; (6) attachpd garage, (7) roo-lype basement. Will appraise your present home for trade. lack Frushour Realty .Jit DORRIS MODEL OPEN .Sun. 2 till 5 2555 Weiulovcr off Square Bloomfield school (I 1 '"t”* 8-'7303. ^ 'OPEN 224 Cherokee off West Huron St. ilnol« HIUh -- Vacant llirec*b room home, In excellenl cor 3-4778. ‘ KAMPSEN 1071 W. Huron 8l.,„ . FE 4 0921 After ' 8 call ML! OR 3-7886 ELIZABETH LAKE E8TATM BARGAIN; _r $0500 C e iippeallug. bri styled iHima V 'avlitg Michigan ,g but a wonderl WATERFRONT I tamlly kitchen you eye-catching home - $11,960; Situated oh a sweeping corner lot wltli mature trees, evergreens, shrubs, perlnannual plants and all planted by a master planter. attracUve home with living , room 12x18. master bedroom llV* x 14 Screened porch, gas heat, garage. DANDY HOME; 1 carpeting and d 1.-located ofl carpeting and .(•111 bath, nice Auburn $11,500. DORRIS & SON, REALTORo , 138 Dixie Hwy. MULTIPLE LWnNO SERVICE VII. bal. I Hills Scniinole Brick and frame home built 1952. l.lvlng mi. with FP., separate dining rm. modern kitchen. 3 bedrms. Cui'pcllng. Full basemenl, gas heal. 2 car garage, tmmed. possession. Terms. Sola Nmm* Templeton DRAYTON PLAINS bairMot »nd Oloan throup-----Fended yar^ olSy driveway.,^ Only W.»» with aa*y terms vr loss for cash. K. L. Templeton; Realtor NICHOLIE Living a> BulIt-ln 1 basement. Oil 1 easy terms. ...... .......sing space. Baselnent, oU hoat ^ cently decorated. About $1 you In. Call today. north east side and dining * ment. Oil HA decorated. Ak bungalow. Llv i. Ifltchen. JPi at. Vacant. N»' Living . iRwfy res you ''“’'"lasemoiit." Sardwopd antlE/lBV terms. CaU today. Eve. Mhd; Siin, CalUMr- JWloB O'NEIL SPECIAL ONLY $600 down and $76 ritaLpTb'Illro^m' Ju“n"gan u.'ban‘’«r‘e"a o'VoJJtlSe. g for Mr. Blsognl, OB 4-1768. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 262 8. TEIEOBAPH. FB 3-71jB Suburban. Two-bedroom h menir'^'iHl-etoryrif^ wfth North Side ... Very nice two-bedroom houee, a’vJL Via .trikftt many Humphries FE- 2^9236 If no answer call FE ^593l| xxcanye'ilti.K'L^ervlce Val-U-'Way Ol’F OAKIvAND You must see this excellent home, clean and sparkling Inliig oak floors, a most conveii ■ ent kitchen with bullt-lns, full basement. Only $1®,5M. $550 down, $82 per month Includltig taxes and insurance. SUBURBAN CGI.OR ED S bedroom. 8®®'}, U.450. $600 down and $60 iiioiilli. Why not call toda ICC some of these 1 late. R. j. (Dick) VALUET REAIH'OR El': 4-3531 345 OAKLAND. OPEN _8UN^I»9 O'NEIL OPEN DAH-Y ONi: TO SEVEN 2904 SHAWNEE LANE "BEAUTY-RITE" • BRITEI It gives pleasure to exten 'jrY paneled family room, the sunken tub. Doors leading directly off the master bed- family room take you ( the bolcony. You 11 love II French provincial decor ar ' I ooft a " •— t School House Lake. OPEN Sunday One to Seven 2827 W. \Valton Blvd. .lAYNO HEIGHTS With ac- iKirmoi All 80 Acres North of Clarkslon only ' miles from new C'lirysler Ex piessway. 70 aorcs tillable Modern 4 bedrm. home am fair barns. $27,000, terms. OPEN. SUN 2-5 P.M. Cn.stom Built Kancli Fenccd"*londscape(l^^acre lot. iarpelhig tliruotil, custom dr... en "FHgldalre" bul dishwasher, Ige, dhilr 3 spacious bedrms.. garage. I $32,500. WE • WILL Realtors, 28 I* Open Evenings TRADE , llnron St. d Sunday FE 8-0466 'BUD" North Suburban Small 2 bedroom bon land. Just north of Only $15.50 Down “Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 49 Ml. Clemens St. I'E 5-1201 After 6 ILM., FE 2-3370 show^ife'lIsiS and the lovely m la carpeted, has 0 celling fireplace 0 a 12x20 covered present horn TIIADINO sell? et ^^9.500! Pla down plus a 3-bedroom ered, painted g room, and kitchen o ahlnlng, three-bedroom suburban at $9,900. Sharp, roomy kitchen, tile bath vanity, oak " foTal alro'i.% eaay payments tool G.L No Money Down- YOU NEED FOUR . YOU BEDROOMi.......... East Bide dandy has II plus hew huldWood fli lo go at RAY O’NEIL. Realtor Office Open $-$ FB 3-710.3 OR 4-1761 MULTIPLE LIB’nNO 8ERV1CB \/ 7:^7 ^ ; , '.‘A, J- 7' THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2S, 190;{ TWENTY-ONE MtoHoviM COLORED Have Good Credit ? a(ar«s?A.n strjisau.M-'tt MM MW. lint it ui£« hp^ o»ll ft .. -- thi decorated. .'Ifududlr Here's An Example; Mewljr .deooriletf 3-bedroom homt mohotiny peneuni , SYi:.VAN LAKS or®j»3??® *"*“■ •?*•*•*'* K FROM PONTWC NORTH-w... - bedroom .ranoh, 7 yre. . * ‘ 8g'Sl«;ro\'‘oJ«T'.S Int at Mtt OWjier. m H.7837. VATliRPROOT, Brick Bench—With Ufi->-AcrM|» chIr®ee”?IIllsi You'll Uke tbil urOwlni coi |rtl«ld'’’c‘iyntr"yT.*.«'5 S«S»?s 125 ACRES N»AB APPROACH TO N»W CHRY-SLBR HWY. — Tiro lekee, ■ one private. Double road frontage. Old LAKEFRONT FARM MINUTES FROM PONTIAC. 35« acre atock term, In excellent farming area. Qood bulldinge ani* fences, two modern houses, gooc fishing In semi-private lake. Hen Is an A No. 1 farm prl ' Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 00 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FB 2-om - Open Eves. ---------artlng____ Stile t^anni Itte&eT'tJ^e!’ M^llul’ yard V«cLl“ lorhood. Shown by appob VERT aUraetlv»-3 bedroom i port, paved dri Rear Itanced. ONE of the few bomjtc—for caie In LInooln Helghte. t room brick, •twin to unirinlshed attic, full mt. gaa heat, 3 ear g—*— lot, only 314.000. >T< Bua service and lak :es. • TED McCOLtOUOH, REALTOR OPEN 3-S ^wa^AaTEuYABBTO PHONE 682-2211 IN THIS. BUYER’S MARKET NEW METHODS CAN HELP YOU TO SAVE 3 THOUSANDS 3 EXCHANOE YOIJR HOME C YOUR H . _R ONE SUITED TO YOUR NEEDS W. II, BASS WEBSTER SCHOOL AREA ' Xrai4gwAtm off HUrODi s heat, avaU- CLARKSTON BRICK FOR ROCHES'TER HOMES Call OL 1-aiun Frank Shepard Income ‘ no E. HOWARD STREET 7-famlly dwelling complex, consist. Ing of S buildings total Income of two -.....g complex i buildings which ' per m......... _ 1 apt, This Is islbmiy ■ *•' lal Investment possIbllUy at 3 K) cash to mortgage. Ideal foi down. FB 4-0S28. Bateman Realty E AVENUE ...- house, with e for doctor's clinic, wen necorated first class C( 1. Rentals will total 3110 per irtment. All white oooup------ Is property must be seen to be I Property COMMERCE—ROUND LAKE-31 lots—310 down. 310 a month, fli swim, boat docks. OR S-128S, I ..... —‘ n corp. j20 ACREf —BY OWNER quality clay loam aoU. 20 woods pasture. Live stream ern 7-room house. 3-room venani house. Barn, machine shed. Hay shed, granary. Steel corn cr“-Work shoL. All buildings In fli class condition. 23 milk cows, heifers. Bulk tank with 000 lb. m base. All fine machinery.'Hay a grain needed to continue with . tooa paying business, 496 8. Maple-leaf Road, Lapeer. Michigan. GAYLORD FARMS. 30 jtcres. IS-room house. 60 acres tmabie, 30 acres in soil bank. 17 miles from Pontiac. Call MY 2-2621 or FB 6-9693. Office open Sunday l to 3. FARM. 31 acres, all under cultlva-*'— Dryden. Call MY “ " Office open BEAUTIFUL SHADED BUILDING SITE— on 16 acres. It’s secluded but has 400 ft. - MIS eomme— frontage. Just S minutes from .... expressway — small pond — river— flowing well. Hug- ........... It and make offer. - high ai HOUSES TILTED HOMES-FARMS. LAPEER COUNTY farmhouse. 6 rqoms and bath, c... >11 furnace, garage, 2 barns. 10 lores on blacktop road, next to 1100 acres of state land. Large ake 1000 feet from house. 313,SOO ’"UTmer'^farm K> acres of good clay loam. Good bams, new silo, 322,100 Clarence C. Ridgeway FB 8-7081_________298 W. Walton COUNTRY LIVING 10 rolling acres and an excellent minutes from Pontiac. tl3,60i C. I'ANGUS, Realtor OBTONVILLE 422 Mill Bt.____ NA 7-3816 WEBSTER LAKE ORION-OXFORD 95 acres. This farm has everything. Ideal for stock farm, river runs through property, woods. 2 modern, homes and barn. Other out-bulldlngs. Fenced — beautiful setting. 349,500. ----- C. A. REALTOR MY 2-2291 Salt Business Property 57 COMMERCIAL BUILDING AND acres on Pontiac Trail. 9x12 ove. head door. 14-foot celling, oil furnace. Sell or lease with option trade equity for a( 'thing of equal ilX-ROOM MODERN YEAR HOUNP urban house. 10 ml. from Pontlao, Only front 10,000 oaeh total price. .............. Press, Box 40, OPEN SUN. 2 to 5 Altractivs bl-level home with rooms and loads of closet — 1,1x26 ft. living room, fireplace, separate dining room, «c: ’"' tile bath, 2'A-oar garage etcam heal. Only 322,400. Clar. Real Estate, FE 3-7808. Rcs. FE 4-4313. Reduced WHO dc“ UNION LAKE Wllmont comer Lockltn. L a r g < aluminum siding ranch witli pat Ual basement, new forced al heating unit, Merlon Blue sod, al 8 large rooms. Needs ccpolj". the Inside but a steal at gO.OOd. J. L, DAILY CO. 148 Union Lake Rd. EM 3-7114 MOBILE SITES. DON'T RENT. BUY ■'« Bite $31 down. $20 a month. OR ^1298, - ■ ------ Lots-Acrsogs 31 acres at CORNER OF BALD-Wtn and Morgan Rds, Land gently rolling and partly wooded, Wlll dl- Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 75 W. Huron St. _ FE 5-8161 A'TTENTION BUILDER8: FOUR — —'e reasonable on car-d. next to the brld^i Of 6 acre parcels, 12.600 to 13,01 with only 10 psr cent down. C. PANGUS, Realtor ^ ORTONVILLE 422 Mill l8t. "HFHILL VlLLAGi: FULL-PINANCINO AVAILABLE BEAUTIFUL HILLTOP SITES Paved 8‘— Wanted!!' In th» City of-Pon^ )TLITB BLDO. CO. BLIZ. 315 dZABBTH LAKE 30x137, 3L5f HAOB'rtlOM REAL ESTATE. 4^ V well traveled highi on building, balai... STROM REAL ESTATE, 4000 W. Huron, OR 4-0360, eves, call OR r. $3,600 I E-Z. : 3-6229 or 682-0438, New Perimeter Road D get a new location ........• buslnees office or bcc shop? Here’s a good propcil Brewer Real Estate JOSEPH F. RE18Z, SALES MOR. ESTABLISHED BUSINESS IN OROWINO COMMUNITY Near expressway. Ideal family store building, currently lawn and met supply - well stocked and equipped. Meal to divide for party store. n ranch home with basement, will divide CALL FOR DETAILI SMITH-WIDEMAN REALTY Suit or Exdiangu OppUiKilrtllto 59 A 2-8TAU!. MODERN SERVICE STA-Hon. avallabl* for leara with 40 ft. itowroom.,Oood Mtentlal for aseo-jiatod buslneai. Major Oil Co. FE EXCHANGE What You Have for What You Want XOOALLY OR NATIONALLY icluding — ALASKA and HAWAII »■—FAl MOTEL8 — WAl iipa .RiflOU IF YOU HAVE A PROBLEM . Call FE, 8-7161 TOM BATEMAN — BXCHANOOR Boolety of Exchange Counselore' BEAUTY SALON >rohard-Caaa Lake area. 2 booth'' Sitabllshed buelnesa. Very r- Cabinet Manufacturer u^pU|s, ^Wonderful ^opjior- Take noma pax c week. * MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANOMB8U----- 1573 8. Telegraph polntment for further LOW.PRICE. TERMS. F3 BATEMAN REALTY CO. an ap-details. WILL BUY Or Lease, automatic car wa. Oakland county. Reply Pontiac Oil Company will buy or tehee eervlce eti or choice etatlon iltee In Oe ^unty. Reply gontlao Frees MEN BETWEEN TBE AOE0 OF 36 lor youreelf. Awrey Home delivery route in Pontiac area. Truck Inveetment regulred. For info airport terminal bldg. .. equipment Inelalled. Ideal ....... and wife operation. Tel. 6^4-0458 Monday thru. Friday, 8 to 6. MODERN POP CORN TRUCK. ALSO a trailer. Reasonable. " ” Marshall.____________ Porter Rd.. White Lake Town- >urn Heights arei 810.800 tbie yeai It to qualified mi PARTY STORE Comer location In Dotroit suburb. Easy operation and over 811,800 proven net profit. On terms et 88,000 plus stock down. T. T. WARDEN, Realty 3434 W. Huron______333-7137 BOWLING- LIQUOR. FINEST OPER-atlon ot Its slu — anywhere. '■ alleys with AMP automatics, - cocktail lounge, deluxe pent- cosy cocKiau lounge, neiuxe pom-house apt. Excellent Income and still room to expand. Beautiful bldg. Included at HO.OOO down. OAKALND CO. Orooery doing 3170,- Comer location. 8-room apt. Included. Ideal man and wUe operation. Bualnesa and real estate for 37.700 down plus stock. A terrific deal I REALTOR PARTRIDGE Member Partridge 8t Aeeoclatei, Ine, tssoclate offteea thruoul Mich. W. Huron FB 4-3581 BUSINESS CORNER On M-18, Modem 2 bay gas station. also largo well built home. 7 room living quartere, plus 3 room apartment upstairs. Approximately 300 state InsiMCted evergreen trees. ' .... highway ' Wanted Contrade-iMtge. 50-A ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST AC-tloh 00 your» land contract. buyers waiting. Cali Realter tridga. FB 4-3361. 1050 W, H ACTION n your land contraeO tCrgo or naif, call Mr. Kilter, FE 4-3330, roker, 333S Elle. Lake Rd. (IaSH Foil LAND CONTRACTS. NO WAITING sod ---- quick deal •7157, WARDEN REALTY, Wanted land ton d o N T R A C T S WANTED. Garre’s, EM 3-25118 EM 3-4080. SEVERAL SEASONkD Money to Loan ; 61 _^jj^(Lleensod MoneYtender)^^^ WHEN^OU NEED $25 to $500 We will be glad to help you STATE FINANCE CO. FE 4-1574 LOANS 325 TO 3500 BAXTEIWLIVINOSTONB 101 Pontlao State Bank BuUdIni FE 4-1538-9 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY _____ 'YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Drayton Plaint — Utica Walled L TEAGUE FINANi 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST.' CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS 3500 LIVES'mCK' HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 5-07U OL PL 2-3518 PL “FRIENDLY------ U 2 -3510 $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE Auto or Other Security FAST, CONVENIENT 24 Monthe to Repay Home & Auto Loan Co. 7 N. PERRY_______FE 5-8121 LO'ANS Get $25 to $500 Signature PHONE PE 2-9209 OAKLAND Loan Company 202 Pontlao State Bank bldg. Cash Loans $600 to $2500 Voss 6c Buckner 109 NA'nONAL BUILDING FE 4-4729 MoH'rOAGB ON ONE ACRE With l^loot^ ^ntejre.^ No^ a|j- pralsal fet. B. D. Charles. EquI able Farm Loan Service. 1717 Telegraph, FE 4-0521. hway frontage. Buy all this ... only 812,500 down. _ State Wide—Lake Orion iny N. M-24_______ OA' 8-1600 EXCLUSIVE Distributorship This is your opportunity to own a profitable busiL ness where you will know your exact monthly income. Non-Competitive Your own business and no competition but to qualify you must be well respected, bpndable, and financially able to deposit $2,000 for supplies, materials and mcrclian-(lise. CASH Loans to $2500 on autos, home equities, and furniture, 24-48 months to repay. Group aU your debts with only one small monthly payment. Family Acceptance Gorp. 317 National Bldir. 10 W. Huron Telephone ‘ B 8-4023 or more. Big 1 instruction Co FE 5-7833. A Mortgage Problem? We make "mortgage loans to meet your requirements. Any property, any amount. Prompt, dejiindabie '*'"Ash "i Swaps HAL-TRAINING factory A well-trained staff _will assLt you. Your income will be projected three years in advance. For complete information w rJ t C.- twh resume to Pontiac Press Box 3. Westinghouse PLAGUED WITH A BU.SINESS OR REAL ESTATE PROBLEM mi ere the right party or ■ offer; 1. Complete PLANNING CAN SOLVE IT, OR LUNCH IS C me” your AT’TORNEY and A' ANYTIMEI HEAL__KSTATE and toXCHANGE COUNSELING IB AN EXACTING SCIENCE IT REQUIRES FULL-TIME PROFESSIONAL Mention AND DIRECTION. SO-STATE COVERAGE But^nsii OpportvnitiBi It required, major Oil company, -ISIS, before 3 n.m. Y 628-1516. betorr _________________ FOB BALK T-. 1 CHAIR BARBER " " 275 B.;'Telegraph Rd. from r'operstlon. Around 8I0.0V In ik. Priced at 195.000 with reas. 1.000 SQUARE FEET 9<(!;!«uj!??s{:'„„‘‘rk.Yoc!’ifo.t'’ BATEMAN REALTY CO. commercial PhonaFE 5-6311 Call or write today. ALD, Inc. 17214 Wyoming Avenue Detroit 21, Michigan Phone: 864-406b Sals Land Contracts .25% DISCOUNT On land oontraots with balance of 33,770 at 830 per month 82.076 to buy. several other smaller ones to chooBS from. C. PANGUS, REALTOR ORTONVILLE 422 Mill at. ____NA 7-2818 AN IMMEDIATE BALE 88 Land Contracts Waated tontrocti-I^B. 6M II AN IMMEDIATE BALK 18 FOR YOUR Land Contracts use before you deal. Warren . --- 77 N[. Saginaw St. stout, I F» 8-81 1861 JSiY''''metal CAB, LIKE new, with snow Plow. For sale or tradeior good used oar. OR 3-7430. ADULTS POODLES FOR CAMERA, 1 or what. NA 7-2831. COMMERCE WATERFRONT LOT _Jor car or wm_aeU. FE 4-5219. to Pontiac. I have a 4-bcdroom .west side home In Pontiac. It In clean and In good condition. It has a gas heating furnace, large lot and a 2-car garage. 1 would like to trade. Write Box 17. Jonttao ---- CARNIVAL By Dick ^urner l«.mirg-• Carlson. 12 wall ampMIler. Slrom-berg Carlson speoker In mahogany oablnet. Complete with 10 LPS^lSS. (HI 3-94;i7. Guaranteed USED 'I'Vs wide Selection From $33 Goodyear Service Store 30 S. case FE 3-8123 TV STUDENTS ATTENflON! AS IS •—'B 17-In. -- - - ....... 2-2237. VM TAPk RECORDER.^ LIKE NEW. _Reasonable, FE 2-3420 bclore Sj.)(), 23 INCH CONSOLE TV, LB(jS~fHAN U' ........ ..... Sale Miscellaneouy 67 I VIBRATOR BELTS. 2 VIBRATOll tables, one roller massage. 2 bicycles from slenderising salon .puts other Items. Rodsonably priced (dr rick eale. Tel. FE 4-tM4, after p,m, LI 7-0910._____________ , I COItj^AR’TMENT BINK, gl’C" Ifgiit, baby swing. OL 1-1817. STAINLESS STEEL SINKS ’ rim. $29,96; Delta single level ccts, $19.95 with sprav. (1 Thompson, 7005 M59, ’ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 WEST LAWRENCE Everything to meet your needs. Clothing. Furniture, Appllani OIL SPACE HEATERisr USili' AND NEW OFFICE PURNI- wrlierK. cleaned, oiled and adu*‘ ed. $12.50 up. FORBES. 4500 Di> 4 MI 7-2444. We a ;w,’« WATER Softener used, «o grains, 3 years old, private o _er. $70. OR 3-96.38.______ WANTED: 50 TO 100 METAL PO DRAYTON PLYWOOD COMPANY 1911 Dixie Hwy,_ __OB Hand toois-Machinery 68 Cameras ? Service Store Equipment utility presses, two 2 Ib. tumbler. 2 Huffman prsssers, water softener, starch cooker. —mpressers. 8ch p. and l-h,p„ tx-:usl fans. Up-to-date Laundry. 87 Saginaw, Pontia ‘ Sporting Goode APACHE CAMP TRAXLERB, 8 morieis, 3326 Up. Camper’s ”— 368 Auburn, 832-86B7. APACHE CAMP TRAILERS iaUdW new 1862 models left at big T" All five 1983 models “ pickup cs display a........ .... ‘ pet, light In weight, plenty of head room ai a winter hours, open dally 8 a to 7 p.m. Easy terms. RlII Co: Apar.Iie Camping Center 1 V E A f H E R B Y, 300 MAGNUM Scoped, $328. Polaroid IlOB oom-camera kit. 6115. UL 2-4070, Sand*Gra»el>Dirt 1 TOP SOIL. CRUSHED STONE, sand, gravel and fill. Lyle Conk- lln. FE 2-0672. ________ ■ >'manurB" FE 2-0601 -- FB 4-1163 HAMBTiERa. CANARllB. Atf fET Bhop. 66 Williams, FE 4-3433. PEKINCiESB PEI PARAKEEI'S. CANARIES. CAOES, . tropical fish, aquarium supplies. . .... ,ii8P'"/u'burmTL*2.W«o! POODI-E PUPPIES No Money Down , 31.28 s Wf«k All other breed or dog • Same Hunt’s Pet Shop ra_»-3ll2 RloffifiRED WHITE SPI'lCoNB ______336. 624-3141.________ REOMTiRED TOY FOK TERRIOR, 338. FE 0-0422. REOISTEREd 'springer SPANIEL, female. 3 mos. old. hunting stock, $29. Ek 2-3070, MA 4-2441._ THOROUGHBRED BOafoN’' BULL 4-4021.■ Auction Solei It B AUCTION BALES ______ FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. , EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P-M. ---■BRY-SUNDA-Y..... Sporting Goods — AH Typel Door Prizes Every a *-I buy—sell—t---’- Conslgnm)..... ... 5089 Dixie Hwy._______OH 2dUI7 I. retail 7 days aCfcBons, f. Long Lake Rd. 6 YEAR GELDING PLEASURE horse. Saddle It .bridle. UL 2-4769.-GALLON OORBN BULk! MILK tank. 4 Holstein Helffers, di Hoy—Grain—Feed V. will dellvor. MU 9-1487 EAR CORN. B’nULMAN J. EUVELL. Phone aw 0;352S._ ILD BIRD FEED AND DOG FOOD, many kinds, pet supplies. Straw, cedar bedding, salt, package coal. Wayne Feed's Open 8 to 7, Sunday 10 to 3 Barber’s Lawn and Pet Supply , 4909 Cllnlonville Rd. 673-9331 8865 Highland Rd. (M59) 673-9182 Form Produce 1, good 6^,—” , — ....... bushel, Oakland Or- ds. 2306 E. Commerce, 1 mile ot MlUord, 6-6 dally.____ NOUS WHITE FACE TENDER DELICIOUS BLACK ANGUS LEAN, TENDE MEATS. Visit our plai mond where we kill come; see what 00« best beef roi cuts for 120.40. so* uraaii stewing meats for 18.76. 6 days a are wcl- l*rl5* sWsfe cuts tor 839.50. side ot choice or prime as low as .39«. 73s hall hogs $23.50. 60S aide veal, 824.60. 26« half lamb, 312.25. 25# lean pork chops o" — hams center cuts In all, no hock or end for 312.76. Many hinds, fronts, sides and halves at great savings. Friendly people serving you with respect. Richmond Packers Inc. Pontlao r“"‘ SEE US FIRST AND SAVE, JOHN Deere, HARTLAND AREA HDWE. Phone HARTLAND 2511. _ BE OUR LINE OF MAkURB ___Homellte cl_________ ach. Co., ortonvlllc, NA lur John Deero, New Idea. _______Mayrath dealer. FORDS FERaufioNS AND <6lI-I vnra. ' 27 new and used tractofs' farm and Industrial. 1 1861 . —Industrial. Rc-44 yd. bucket, )0def 1871 Ford Ford like newi Industrial ______ _______ Beleot-O-Speed transmiss low lira 1 1841 Ford dU... lb. Fork Lift 4-whsel drive, 31. ...........—lan hr little 'you have a 33,000 niaoiiine apectal at 31,776. I Oliver diesel with baokhoe and loader. A heavy duty machine priced at $1,098. 1 Oliver Diesel Dozer reconditioned, live PTO and hydraulic 3 pt. hitch. *' " 9-1963. of , Special 1 only lar list on this equipment $Wi. Salo 1 wk. only ,85,176. Pontlao Farm and Industrial Traetor Co. Your Oliver and Massey Ferguson Dealer. 836 Woodward Ave., Pontlao. Phone FB 4-0431 and FE USED TRACTORS . ah bIsc6 and makes KING BROS. FB 4-0734 PH 4-1112 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Trovel Truilars TRAVEL trail: them and got a domonstra-at Waynor 'Trailer Bales. .3090 ... Huron (plan to Join one of Wally Byam’s exolting caravans). discounts. AH five 1963 models on display, see the new pickup camper, light m weight, sleeps 3. plenty of head room at 3326. Winter lwuM. opM dalW 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Easy terms. BHr CoI-ler Apaohs Camping Center, 1 mile eaet of Lapeer on M-21. 'WANTK5:__A travel TMILl^ 3 FAMOUS MAKES DETROITBR-ALMA PON'HAC chief Open house days i Most units (teO hebtsu tvi j»u, ------ ------.-- y„u , GRAVEL, FILL. CEMENT kina. Pontlao Lk. Bldra. “ ............. 1. OR 3- Wood-CoalCoksFuel ALL KINDS OP WOOD. SLAB, fireplace, kindling and as or ' ' elno tree removal. ATa Heaping. FE 4-4236._______ Seasoned fireplace w < Pets-Hunting Dogi 79 KFIUIY BLIIF lEHRIFR AND model. K4». $4W) REVERBERATING ORGAN. speaker for_8130. .738-0158;^_ )(;COHfai()NS 'low'PRICES, fOAN- _er» am, Icsaons. FE 5-3428.__ ' BEAUTIFUL BABY GRAND PENDER PERCISION BASE Seg bass amplifier like i) ■6484 af— - MANOUS CHORD ORGAN . 844.30 balance. Terms. Curt’s pllances. 6481 Hatchery Rd. 4-1101. Thomas organ, mahogany I Time Player Plano . USED GULBRANSEN i e above inrirUmeiits' WIEGAND MUSIC 408 Elisabeth Lake Road FE 2-4924 OPEN 'TIL 8 P.M. EVERY. NIGHT ADUH 1 OODLES A^IX^MUST AK( DAC HSIUIND PUPS $10 down, mi^dogs. FE 8-2838. AK( imnrANY spaniel pups 1 YEAH FEMALE GERMAN )hcrd. Sell or trade lor ■ puppy. 832-- (OCKFR PUPPIES SpGAtt EM 3-0242^_______ BFAULE PUPS FB64ALES 810 Males. $15. FB 5-0706. BEAGLE PUPS. 5 MOS. oLd. AKC. slrt)d by ,1 ohamp, mi I. 628-3018. BRrf’TANY PUPS, 330. DOU.S BOARDED, DOGS TRAINED. JUiive On.ob's Kennesl .FB 2-2648. DACiisIlUND puFWis- AKClSia- ...... 1-6625. aillMAN sIepher^^ world famous strMn. all ages, Inooulated. uncondllloiiaVy guar. LlebOstraum Kennels. 23*0 Lahser, Southfield. OER^N SUORT HAIRED POINT) erjmpples. OA 8-2821. ____ ddLDEN'"¥iT'mBViirpupra AKC registered, 860. EMJ;2803. ooBd'homk for tWo s-Rir ...................... ««..1 Bn^lsh Setters. Pay foi the «d. 401Kepilry, Blqomlield Township. old AKC, nlly. Oper » 00x10 f r %?606f prices. Hob Hutchinson Mobile Homes Sales, Inc. 4301 Dixit Highway OR 3-1202 Drayton Plams Dally — Sundays 12 to 5 Open 9 to 9 3 FORD 6-CYLINDBR VANETTE __________________ Ice box. oablnets, chemical toilet, now battery and . ----- Kune goixl. Sacrifice, Viola, olf M18, Orton- good t 8300. 1 CARSON'S 23080 Telegraph Rd. 9 Mile CUS'rOM ZIMMER. 63x10, COM- ................................. ‘ 754.1410. Parklnirst Trailer Sales • FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING ™ Featuring New Moon—owoseo— " ‘ ......ty MobUe Venture Buddy Quality 6 SHORTS MOBILi HOMES Good .used home type trailers. 10 PER CENT DOWN. Cars wired and hltohes ItAtalled. Complete line ol parts and bottle gat. FB 4-9743 ..----- STOP IN AND BEE The "All-New” 1963; FAHS. franklins, cress, •" to 28’ on display— ---------on ALL USE lUYB on A .JAILERS '■"Open',7, days, a. wqeh—iii ■■ .j Holly Travel Coacn, Inc. 10 Holly Bd„ Holly ME »3771 Campers anti ‘Trailer* TWENTYTWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1968 '''''M 'He», Boi „ IS S*lM. bio., 4101 )^e _____ion Pltlni. OH 1-1^ nSVE FOf.T Dm’KOlTRR. ___j OT«r pnymentt. OR 3-0T11. OXFORD TRAILEI" SALES IMl — Vkcabond'i. Ocn- ' crnl'i i StewMra, Chnmplon's. Wl-Yellow Blone'e and Oem'j. All elMie. termt. and priced to jroin' Satlafaetlon. . 60i Units on Display Lota of food need uniu. all at Otpper'a to M wide. . We know we have one el the heat eeleotlona Jn Uila ai Come out today, 1 i Travel Trailers AVALAIR NEW r.IGHTWEIOHT FULLY SELF-CONTAINED Ellsworth auto’ sales tW7 PlKle Hwy_ MA l ltOO Rent Trollerjp«ce^_^j90 sJ" 1M)2 tempest engine. COM-nlrtc. 106 h.p. Will demonatrate. Il65. Muat eelf EM 3-0201 Ihej'AntO'Tpw^ TRUCK TIRES W5-J0. 18 ply. Nylon Ut ate No Money Down, 6 n WANISD: ’S4.’«1 Ellsworth “TOP DOLLAR PAID’ FOR "CLEAN" USED CAH« Out State Market For '59—’60—'61— MODFLS GLENN'S oil weiili Huron St, , I'E 4-7171 ' FB 4-17W TOP *» CLEAN CARS-TRUCK Economy DIacount 2335 Dixie Hi Used Avte*Tnicli Ports 102 WANTED; BODY PARTS FOR 1935 - ■ eluding hood, •- ---■ boarda. radh New and Used Trucks 103 lACK TANDEM B71 _______ luminlngH engine, oil lines to pende. lock, A-1 shape. Before ■2840, after 7, MY 3-7341. ' 1953 PANEL TRUCK, 8*5, Better Used Trucks GMC ]*'aclorv Branch OAKLAIJD AT CASS FE 5-9485 1962 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE. ,.7_-.hi*, wan «.jtaaa 3 TON FORD PICKUP. M^9^21___________ ■tOV CHEVY PICKUP, ’ »t oiler. 53 Neonie. Mansfield Auto Sales ??rdOerc car. cylinoera reoorea. i.uca i« chine Shop, 33 Hood, Phone I 1883 HARLEY SPRINT. USED VERY little. Take over paymenta no- money down. FE 2^7667. Bicycles 34 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN 8E Ing qualtly new and uaed bll Scarlelfa Bicycle A Hobl^ Shr 3« E. Lawrence 8L__PE_3_: ENOLIShIiKeT EXCELLENT O BMts—__________________________97 17 FOOT CANOE. GOOD CONDI- Ilon,,tl30. 693-2855. _________ /tTHORSE EVINRUDE ALL ELEC, motor. 450 Starnight. Call after 6 30. EM BOAT SHOW 25 boaU on dlaplay Inaldo Owena Crulaer 24-30 ft. ■ Century Jet A Lapatrake Raven Chrle-Craft Thompaon. 3 modela Owena FIberglaa, 6 modela Skee-Craft, 3 modela ‘Thompaon Broa. Peatlgo. 4 models • Evlnrude Outboard-Volvo Ouldiivea Many uaed rige and motora ; WALT MAZUREK’S ^^AKE & SEA MARINA South Blvd. - ‘— Auto Insurance kuNPHY 19 - FOOT LAP8TRAKE ' BW and fukt. full oanvaa. power ■ eteerlngi many extraa. 75 H.P. Johnaon electric, real clean. Complete outfit. *1.875. 6*2-2767. 1685 Ruatle Lane. Keego Harbor._ bAWSON’S SPECIALS a the 1963 Carver wood lapetrake •»Bla.^ truly quality line. Alec he t/aVller flberglaa and alUm unfUBiitk Economically priced and Tlrat^claaa In nerlormancc. Evlnrude motora and Painco trail-era. DAWSON’S SALES et TI" BICO LAKE. Phone Main 9-2179. CLEARANCl': ekatea, hockey i , toboggana. - football, baaeball. arcbery, Ing hunting goqda, ——i— • aoriea jmd novelUca. ^ r'BALEs” BOATS- MOTORS TRAILERS CRUISE-OUT -“'WO I E. Walton Dally 9-6___________________ *OR YOUR CONVENIENCE -LoornU Boats and MARINA will be open on Sunday's 1-6 p m. Starting Feb. 24, 1963. 14*16 Fenton Rd. ' Fenton, MA 9-222.4. _________ CaROE aluminum BOAT, MOTOR, trailer. Any - E 2-1048. UTE MODEL JOHNSON 3 HOR8E-power Sea Horae bi carrying caae. Run Icaa than 5 hours. *100. FE 3-7379.___________________________ iuiST SELL 19-FOOT 6-INCH CEN- JOHNSON MOTORS star Craft boats and Gator Irallcra — Everything lor the boat. OWEN'S MARINE SUPPLIES Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-8020 WE LOST OUR WAREHOUSE — Muat move 100 — 15 to 17 It. Canoea. some square sterna, were as high aa 8234 NOW ALL MUST OO FOR ■ Cliff Dt-cyer Gun liiid Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly. ME 4-6771 ' ’JOHNSON MO'i'ORS . . iahing Boala LltUe lud Hull-Oarcl.'Trailers. PINTERS MARINE * N opoyi*'’ ^............... —WINTCH PRICES-- JOHNSON MOTORS Doraetl—ThompBon-Iame Star Aero Craft -OMC Bmila data and Aluminum Canoes I’AUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy l week Credit no problem' J71, UNIVEHSAL AUTO, 15(i 1057 CADILLAC 4-DOOR WITH ALL * ..... —-ivcnlonces needed foi driving, no money Convertible 1961 Cadlllac^ConverUblr^Pu^^^^^^ fed*anywh!i'rmteHoi5 »3,69s"*'''"" WILSON PONTI.'\C-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward HASKINS CHEVROLET, SALE 19*0 CHEVY Blscayne 4 door, cyl. engine, Powergllde. radl beaulKul blue finlahi 19(1 chevy Irapala 4 door hardtop, V8 engine, Powergllde. power ateeiing. brakes radio, ahowre—" new ihroughoiit. Beautiful beige •Tb' engine, Powergllde aolld tin HASKINS Chevrdlet-Olds "Your Croearoada to Savings" US 10 on Mill MA 6.*071 “ MA 6-«101 19S7 BUICK .... PONTIAC AUTO Walton at Perry . „ i*«o and ii»3 CAfafiSpS rchavya ItM to 1*«1 ‘tt FOM wagon and dellvai nn othan . t . *3* up----------- — DW« Hwy. iWCHEVROLET 2-DOOR. CLEAN.. ---latlon price *1*7. THtymanta of 6 pc " " *• "4 *11.46 per month. Credit lam. buy hare pay hare I Univaraal - ~ FE 8-407*. DwSarf cfiiYy. dark blue l».u-..... ... glide, radio, heater, wbltewalla. Dowar hrakai and ataaring. *1600. iSrWEVY * PASSENGER 8TA-“ wagor 8 cyl„ power atyerlngi eff 3*71*, -----iOLE idla. ^ ^“Hgjirwaak. B, SagCTaw St. 9 MO CHEVROLET BISCAYNE door with radio, haater, and al_.. dard transmiaalon, aharp turquola color. *200 down, payraenU of *49.05 Guaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every u.sed car offered for retail to the public a boiiafide 1-owner, low-mileage, sharp car. 02 BUICK wagon, 8-pass.*2985 ■62 BUICK Special 2-door ...'.*20?| ■62 BUICK Invicta 2-door ....*2TO5 '62 MONZA coupe. 8.000 ml. . *2095 ■81 BUICK Convertible.*2395 ■6l BUICK ELECTRA 4-door , 60 DODGE 2-door hardtop ... '60 BUICK ELECTRA 4-door .. 50 BUICK LE8ABRE 4-dopr . 50 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door $1196 FISCHER BUICK 5 8. Woodward. B'ham Ml 4-9100 54 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR HARD-toD, radio and heater, excellent condition, low mileage, full price $197. Weekly paymenta only *2.21. No money down, call or see credit manager Mr. Cook at: KING AUTO SALEb 3275 W. Huron^Sl. HARDTOP WILSON rONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward cash’needed. Credit no problem! FE 8-4071 UNIVERSAL, 150 8, Saginaw. 'Mr!'^il?5 )er month 24 MonI P BROOKWOOD V9. radio, heater, anil brakes. Sharp LLOYD'S Meteor—Engltali Foi 232 8.|agln»* I90B CHEVY II NOVA stick. FE 5-4494. _____ tW'ClSivriMPALA. HARDTOP, «'• •'“t. OL 1-0591.__________ "2-DOOR. 1 owner trades 1961 Mercury hardtop $1,695 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM Kh. CHEVROLET BISCAYNE ■ with radio, heater, Powe transmission. own. payments ol $98.10 p LLOYD'S Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Meteor—English Ford 232 S. Saginaw EE 2-9131 ___ iiS7 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR 6 Marvel Motors PRICE BUYERS WILSON ]>aNTlAC-CAI)IU-AC 1350 N. Woodward BIRMINGHAM Ml 4193 ~ 'CHEVtUbEL AIIUC - 869 PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS Walton at J^er2___^FE 4-9)00 i995 CHEVROLET 200011, CLEAN, g7i*”uNI%lR8AL 8. hurw. WARMADUKE By Ahdereon & Iiceminar I spent 15 minutes getting dressed! You can’t change your mind now! 1999 CHEVROLET 1957 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR STA- Mr! Parks at’ MI 4-7500, Harold Turner. Ford._______________ 960 CHEVROLET "CORVAIR’ condition. Quaranlced for a ful year aiid dur lull price Is only iyLf ”bYdgeT ‘KiSSnoh^* CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH, 912 8. WOODWARD. Ml 7-3214. ____ — CHEVROLET 2-DOORf(, V8 EN- Ihrbl --------- CHOOSE FROM,' automatic, all w------ -----, down. Act fast on these. LUCKY AUTO SALKS "Pontiac's Discount Lot", 193 8. Saginaw, FE 4-221^. 1958 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR 8-CYL. engine, automatic tranamlsaton. beaullful white finish, full price $795, Marvel Motors BEST BUY WILSON rONTlAC-CADlLLAC 1350 N. Woodward BIRMINGHAM_MI 4-193 1957 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-credll no problem. Paymenta of SagJn^w^FE t4079;_ ________ riFEVROLET. AOTOMOBII.i LOANS for new, uaed ears. Lo' bank rates. Pentlao Stale BanI MUST HAVE ROOM 0 Corvalr. Like ^new. Fully ^2335 DIxl^Hway. 1958 CHEVROLET 2-L__ with V8 engine, automatic trans-mlaalon. radio, washers, and whitewalls I RACE’S USED CARS 148 Dixie Hwy^______674-1400 136 CHEVROLET STATION WAG- credit'manager Mr. Cook at: KING AUTO SALES 3275 W. Huron St. ___________FE 8_;;4088_ 1953 CHEVY. DOOI Very nice. FE 3-7542. body in excellent ------ ---- price only *197 and weekly ^jay- No mOh'Jj "Tana er'"^Mr ° Whim at KINO AUTO BALES. 115 8. .Saginaw, FE 8-04(12. ____ 195l ClIEVYS."! ™ CHOOSE FROM W. Montcalm l-E 5-3390. . . 1956 CHEVY nation wagon. V8. runs fine. Full price only $195, SUIHM.US MOTORS I 8. Saginaw FE 8-40.'l6 .CHEVROLET PATTERSON For a real good deal'. 100O S. WiMidward Ave. lOsf cHkifSLKR reek,' fio*cash needed. Credit KESSLER'S DODGE I N Lapeer Rd. Oxfi Next lo world's largest gravel pli ___C)A 8-1400^w OA 8-l552__ 1998 flom K'mileager’fnU price" only 1297 and weekly payments a low *3.33. No mony ^down, ^i^H M kTnv/A UT?r, .SALES* 3275 W, Hiironl Bt. ___ __FE 8-4088_____ 1961 COM^BT 2 'DObit RADIO. IIEA f. er, automatic iranamlsslon, a real buy at (200 down payments ut *46.80 per monlli. 24 Months (OW> Ouaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Meteor—English B;ord 232 8. Saginaw EE 2-9131 —Demo— 1963 FORD l'';iirl:me “.5(X)” 4-l)oor Healer, radio, washers. V8 engine, forilainnllo transililsslon. m while, walls, this car. Is equimed Just Ihe way you like lU. Priced to BEATTIE "Your FORD DEAtBH Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN.WAl'ERFORll AT THE STOI^LIOHT OR 3-1291 New and Used Cart 106 1959 FORD 4DOOR COUNTRY SB dan wagon, VO, engine, automatic transmission. ^ radio. ^ Easy terms. JEROME-FElWUSONi Rochester Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711. 1960 FALCON 2-DOoit SEDAN WITH automalie tranemiselon. a nlcr fresh new car trade and a rea gnoo buy for some lucky per siln. No money down needed oi this honey. LUCKY AUTO SALEl "Pontiac's Discount la>l". 193 8 1961 FALCON station wagon, auto, tranamusion, radio, oar loo carrier, whltewnll tires, «2M. Van guiip aievxalet, Inc. Harqld 1‘urner, Ford. 196r”T-BmD HARDTOP. RADIO, beater, power steering and brakes, windows sharp finish, with a white Interior, full price *2.795. LLOYD'S Llncoln—Mcrcury—Comet Meteor—English Ford 232 8. Baginaw ' EE 2-9131 957 FORD CONVERTIBLE, RADIO, healer. Fordomatlo, 2 barrel oarb., power steering and brakes. 32,000 303-2556. MOTGItr ira4TBR80N CHEVROLET ' 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., 1 MINOHAM. Ml 4-2735._____________ 1990 FORD WAOON. SHARP. NO cash needed, credit no problem. Buy Here — Pay Here, pnyments of (0 per week. Universal Ai"~ 150 B. Baginaw Bt. FE B-1079. 1959 FORD 2 DOOR. 6 CYI4ND* radio, healer, slick shift. Al oi er that Is clean Inside and o good rubber, r "" runs good * ) 4 door, I 1960 FALCON. .2 DOOR. RADIO. HEATER. WhiTBWALL TIRES. absolutely no money down WITH PAYMENTS OF *2,975 PER MO. Call Credit Mgr.. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner, " ^ 1960 FORD 9-PAS8ENOER COl try Squire station wagon, rai heater. V8, power steering i brakes. Light blue finish I *175 < LLOYD'S Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Motear-Enghsh Ford 232 8 Baginaw I'E 2-9131. 1801 FALCON, DELUXE TRIM. RA-dlo, heater, 101 engine, *1,175. Marvel Motors I960 FALCON 2-DOOR. RADIO. i’T^RD BE'dAN, radio , 1957 FORD 2-DOOB HARDTOP. I dio. heater, whitewalls and tn-r paint with matching trim. Yo for 0 • — 1954 FORD VO.....RANCH WAOON. Good condition. Now tires, nsw bat- tery. *205. KM 3-4020.__________ 1994 FORD 2-DOOH CU8TOML1NE. , standard overdrive transmlKslon. radio, heater, Extrk clean Oiuy $399. Easy terms. JER-ROME-FERGUSON, ROCHE8TKU ... ...FaU'd.i.DftftUia.— iw* f-oSe.....*®‘j*®{* healer. Good^ transporlahon "‘T FEBOUlKy BOCHES-POBD DEALER. OL 1-8711. -Detno— 1963 FORD li'airlanc “500” 4-Door Heater, radio, wasliers, V8 engine FordoinftUc trftn§ml»Hlon, w n 11 p wrUii. tms car Juut equipped Ju8 the way you like It. Priced U Save I BEATTIE ,T THE STOP OR 3-1291 RD 2 Dooii vlc'rbi'tiA, LLOYDE Meteor—English Ford lHj2-*9f31 1956 T-BIRD, IT'8 DRIVABLk the loft front fender Is uam-aged. It Is priced below Jhe market No money down. LUCKY AUTO BALES, "Pontiac's Discount Lot", 193 S.,Baginaw, FE .................... 1962 FORD Deluxe Club Wagon | healer, radio, washers, second and 3rd row seats, real sharpi $1995 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930", ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD, OK 3-1291 Ntw ami Und Cart 1M HU, tow - c Ouaranteed Warranty LLOYD'S Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Meleor—English Ford 232 8. Baginaw FE 2-9131 1950 MkkeURY, RUNS GOOD, looks good, $250. Call MA 4 1057 MERCURY HARDTOP, POWER atcering and brakes, very good FEBRUARY BPECIAL8 LIKE NEW CARS. ..2 8-22 Mercury Comet. 1961 Wlllys station wagon, 4-« ^ 1<)5^^^ OldsmoWlc ‘W’ 3(l.’o(w”*acluaf" mlicB, "looks drivci and rldoB like a new onel $1295 BILL SPENCE Kanil)ler-Jccp CALIFORNIA CONVERTIBLE 1 LLOYD'S Nfw and IlMM'Can 1695 1957 Pontiac Hardtop Sedan ......... $ 595 1956 Chevy 6, Standard Shift .......$ 745 1955 Olds Sedan .................... ^ 395 1955 Porttiac 4-door................. $ 295 1955 Pontiac 2-door.................$ 195 19.54 Chevy 4-dpor ................. $ 145 RUSS JOHNSON^ ■' PONTIIAC-RAMBLER M-24 al the Stoplight Lake Orion MY 3-6266 I V '7-'' ... * ■ ' 'i THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1963 TWENTY-THEEB ...................................................................^ ;■ ^ ■ W(^k€im Te^ Pxtx^ams y hyrntt^ti^M tUted in this miutm arip suhjntit iq SkumgstM mithnut nMu^ M___ <^»»»17h*U’XV3P*'A |ili|git^imi4*v ChttM*(ftl2^-^jlBK-rV ^ 2:30 (2) Sports Spectacular (7) Issues and Answers 3:00 (4) This Is NBC News . (7) Club 1270 3:30 (4) (Color) Wild Kingdom (9) Movie: “Adventures of Mark Twain.” (19k). Fred: rich March, Alexis Smith. 4:00 (2) Movie: “Please Believe Me.” (1950). Deborah Kerr, Peter Lawford. (4) (Color) Wonderful world of Golf (7) Championship Bridge 4:30 (7) Alumni Fun 5:00 (4) Ufxiate (7) Major Adams 5:30 (2) College Bowl (4) Probe (9) Tombstone Territory SUNDAY EVENING 6:00 (2) Twentieth Century (4) (Color) Meet the Press (7) (ilheckmate (9) Popeye and Pals (56) Musicale TOGO BEPUBLIO Thn ARENDAHL 213-G-25-M COLOR TV The superb cabinetry of this RCA Vidor Mark 8 Color TV Is executed in smoothly sculptured Nordic lines and the warmth of Danish Walnut veneers and selected hardwoods. PRICES START AT 'SuomUmI n eptio m Ths Most Trusttd N#m« In Color Toltvlilon RCA VICTOR DIST. CORK,'7400 Intervale, Detroit^ >N’T BE SWITCHED . . . Your RCA VICTOR Dealer-HOWI 8:15 (4) (CoW) Davey and (^Ch Hath. (9) Sacred Heart 8:30 (2) Ask a Priest (4) Frontiers of Faith (7) Film Feature-r-Religion (9) Temple Baptist Church 8:45 (2) With This Ring O.-OO (2) Decisions k) Church at the CSross-roads (7) Understanding Our World (9) Oral Roberts 9:15 (2)To Dwell Together 9:30 (2) Detroit Pulpit (4) (Color) Bozo the Clown (7) Rural Newsreel (9) School of Christ 10:00 (2) This Is the Life (7) StarUt Stairway (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow 10:30 (2) Fellxihe Cat (4) (C;olor) Diver Dan (n Realm of the Wild 10:45 (7) Changing Times 11:00 (4) House Detective (7) Championship Bowling (9) Herald of Truth 11:15 (2) Cartoon Cinema 11:30 (2) It Is Written (9) Home Fair * 1 r- r" r“ r- '8 9 10 11 / 14 15 16 17 ID 19 20 2i 25 27 r 66 6(1 W ^9 ?r 43 41 56 53 \u 5^ 66 |6!f 23 It Pertaining to i 37 Conductor 36 All 36 Unaccompanied ---premier Is ■ Bylvanus Olympic nlcknam* . il^lst -Pewter coli Thailand 68 Above 60 Foetener bl Mine entrance 62 Roman emperor 63 East_JFr.J_ M Wliherea^ 66 Essential beinjc - 57-E*ecuUv« (ttb.) DOWN 2 I 3 Pertaining to the mind 6 Consume 6 Utopian 6 Rich oake 7 Wbeya of milk ^8 ^o^ering -Weekend Radio Programs- WJRI760) CKLWieOO) WWJ(950) WXVZdSTO) WCAR(1I30) WPON(H60) WJBK(ISOO) WIIHFM(»4.7> TONIGHT ;00—WJR. Newe CKLW, Nows , WWJ. News, Melodies WXVZ, Weiss WCAR. Bacarella g:6»-OKI,W, Bee. State W.lR Trends VTPON, Norm O’Nell Show WHFI, Don MoLood ;:08-WJR. Nows. Lelsurs WXYZ, Lee Alan CKLW, Tniirlst WJDK, Jack. Bellboy WCAR, Dan Logan WHFI. Area, State News 7it6'"Wm.' »6eipiW"*"’» CKLW. Album Time WHPL Tom '''■■■■ 7:30-WJR. I t Card LW. C. MoLellan T: 45—WJR. Sound Slory 7i66-WPON, Basketball Detroit vs. Cincinnati tloP-WHFI. News, ; >;00—WHFI, News. Tom Clay ;I0—WWJ, Melodies 11:30—WJR. Music \II\U1 MiiHin 'll] Dft WCAR. Dftn totfan SUNWAT' 1:00—WJR, Farm Review l,:ow. —WJt,. reim CKLW. Album Time WXYZ, Studio Bhowoas. WHFI, Sun. Beet Music 6:80-WJR, organ Cnoorei WJBK. Heartbeat Theater WXVZ, Young People W8U CKLW Maroh ol Faith tiOO-WJR. News, Hymns WXYZ, American Parmer CKLW. Church of Air WJBK Hour of Crucified WCAR. News. Wuudling WPON, Kniscooal Hour WHFI. News, Music wyvv. news, Mweiw WXViS. Dr. Bob Pierce 'CKLW. You- Worship Horn WJBK. Muslo with Words WPON, gl. John's Lutheran 6:80—WJR. Renfro Valley WWJ. aioryland WXYZ, Revival Hour CKI.W, Pontiac Baptist WJBK. Prolealknt. Hour CKLW.’ Bethesda Temple WJBK, Voice of Church 'CftR. Nl'ws, PsU'ick PON, Protestant Hour WHFI. News. Music lsl»-WJR. aelenoe. Muslo WJUK.; World > Tomorrow WJBK, News. Lutheran Hour WPON, Emmanuel Baptist WHFI. News. Muslo 16130-WJR, Moioow Boone, WPON, Religion In Newi CKIW orsl Roberts WJBK. Voice of Prophecy 11:00-WJR. News. Music WWJ. St, Paul's Oath WXYZ: Israel Message. News CKLW, Pontiac Baptist WJBK. News. Town Hell WPON. Central MethodUt WHFI, News, Muslo ■:6ie-WJR, Halt Lk. Choir WXYZ. Christian In Aotlon ,-•1,1 W TJawn At.ollenn 'a BUNDAt ArTCKNOON I2i00—WJR. News, quest WWJ, News, I.vnker WXYZ, Newt. Dave Prince wnri, ne lliM-WJR. —... —, WWJ, Hows. Lynker ""tYZ,....... ” iW. ItOO-WJR. Newt, Muslo WWJ, News, Lynker WCAR. Music WJBK, News, Dsvo Mlila WXYZ. Dave Prince WPON. Newe, Bun. Best CKLW. News. Staton WHFI. Newt. Music WJBK,’ News, Dave Mlllan CKLW News. StatOD WHFI. News, Music l-WPON. Piston WXYZ, Dave Prince WCAR, News, Logan WJBK News. Dave Mlllan WWJ, Newe. Maekelbergha WJuk, News. Dave MlUan WXYZ. Dave Prince WPON, Nows, Sunday Best OKI.W News. Staton WHFI, News, Muslo 6:30~WJR. Hawaii Calll .. „J, News, WJBK, Nows. uav. WHFI, Music. Pont. Speaks WWJ, News. Chanoellor WXYZ. Sebastian, Sporta WJBK, News Assign. Detroit 6-^wfjSr iSewi ^iroadway WWJ, News, Melody WJBK, Background WI^, Bobostlan, Newi CKLW. Obrliladelphlans WPON, Youth Forum 7:60—WJR. Nows, Story Hour WWJ, Nt«i, Red Wings CKLW. Radio —*• WXYZ. BebastI |0:0»~WJR. Net 1, Sports , Muslo WJBK. News, Manlon Forum WPON, Conversation Piece WHFI. News. Muslo 7;30-WJR, Latin America CKLW. Word of Life WXYZ. Sebastian, Newi WPON, Teacher’s Report Car WJBK, Towkrd Peace liOO-WJR. Nows, Spectrum CKLW. Voice of Proph WPON, Church of week WJBK, Young America. WHFI. N--........■- WXYZ; Sebastian. Sportk '8:08-WJR. News. Hymns WXYZ. Docum—- — WJBK, Lav WW.' •’ WC/ ... ....... Newt .. JJ. News, Melody WCAR, Brotherhood SboV WPON, Sunday Beat WHFI. News. Muslo 18:00-WJR. News, Muslo WWJ, News, Manens WXYZ, Brsskfast Club C. LW, Joe Van WJBK, News, Clark Rell WHFi; News, McLeod »i6«—CKl W. Kennedy Cal’li 11:00-WJR. News, Godfrey WWJ, News. Lynker CKLW. Tima to Chat W.IBK, News. Reid WXYZ, Winter WPON, News. Olsen WHFI, Newt. BurdioX 8:.10-WJR. Chapel Hour CKLW. Bible Study WXYZ. Jas* Acad. Nows WWJ. Meet the Press WJBK, Science, Adolescents 11 no-WWJ. Newe, Lynker 0:80-WJR. Laymen’s Hour WWJ. catholic Hour WXYZ, Trutli Herald. Nrwi CKLW. Hr. of Decision WPON, Sun. Best WWJ. Catholic Hour WJBK, News, Concert WHFI. Nows. Music MONDAY A______ ____ 18100—WJR, News, Farm ■■••”J, Newt, Lynker OKLW,' Light, Life lliOO-WJR, Nr WXYZ. Meet I CKLW. Elder ...... WJBK, Muslo from Albume WPON, Newe, Sun. “ WWJ. News. Mush WHFI, News. Music 11:60-WJR. Music ’I WWJ News, Mush CKLW WXYZ. I d Answttrs MONDAY MORNING 6:00—WJR, Voice of AgrL WWJ, Nowi, Boborti WXVZ. Fred Wolf, News CKLW, Farm Non WJBK, News, Avery WCAR, News, jherldan WPON. Newt, Weston WHFI, Ross, Music WJUK, : WXYZ, V.......- WPON, News, Dale Tlno 7:0O-WJR. Newt, Muslo Hall WWJ, Hews, Rober-wxyz, Newt, • ■ CKLlV, L,..., WJBK. News, WCAR, Newt Sheridan 6:00—WJt^. Newt. WWJ, Nows, Roberts liSO-WJR, Musto Pall WJBK, Newt, AVary CKL.W, News, Oavtd WWJ. News, Martens WHFI. News. Muslo WXYZ, Paul Harvey, WoU 6:30—WJR, Leo Murray WXYZ, Fred Wolf CKLW, Mary Morgan WJBK, News. Hold WCAR, News, Purse WPON, Nows, Olson WHFI. Newt, Burdick l;S0-WJR, Bud Quest WWJ. Emphasis CKLW. Joe Van WJBK, News. Reid WXYZ. Winter, Newt WXYZ, Winter, News CKLW, Newt, Jog Van WHFi, Newt. Burdick I.’OO—WJR. Newe, Wood WWJ. News. Hultman WPON, Nows. Johnson WJBK, News. Robert L WXYZ. Sebastian CKLW. News, Jot Van WHFI, News, Burdick WCAR, News, Sheridan WJBK News. Lee WPOIL News. Johnson 6i60—WJR. Muslo Hall WWJ. Bmphatit. Hultman OKLW. Kennedv Calling WXVZ. Sebastian. Hews WXYZ. Rebastls ..........s, Davies WJBK. Nows. Lee . WCAIl. News, Bhe-ldan CKLW, newt, ijavies WXYZ Sebastian. News 6:0O-WJB, NeW«, MUSIO WWJ, Newe. Bumper Club WXYZ, Scbattlen WJBK, Newe. Lea WPON, News, Johnson WHFI, News, Don McLeod 6:30 (2) Journey to Adventure (4) (Ojlor) Science Series-Document^ (56) (Computer 7:00 (2) (Coior) Lassie (7) Biography — Robert A. Taft ’ (9) Invisible Man (56) Food for Life 7:30 (2) Dennis the Menace (4) (Color) Walt Disney’s -World (7) (Color) Jetsons (9) Flashback (56) Guest Lecture 8:00 (2) Ed Sullivan (7) Movie; TCkdor) ^‘^Trap-eze.” (1953). Burt Lan>-caster, Tony Curtis, Gina Lollobrigida. (9) Movie: “Ivofy Hunter,’ ^952). Anthony Steele, (56) American Memoir 8:30 (4) Car 54 (56) Time for Living 9:00 (2) Third Man (4) (Color) Bonanza (56) WSU TV Theater 9:30 (2) True (9) Telescope UAW 19:00 (2) CarolJk Company (4) (Color) News Special (7) Voice of Firestone (9) Close-Up 10:30 (7) Howard K. Smith (9) Quest 11:00 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News 11:10 (9) Weather, Sports 11:15 (2) Sports (4) Weather (7) Weather 11:20 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Sports (9) Changing .Times 11:25 (2) Weekend—Jerry Lester (7) Movie: “Salome.’" (1953). Rita Hayworth, Stewart Granger. 11:30 (4) Thriller 11:35 (9) Movie: “AlWays Leave Them Laughing.” (1949). Milton Berle, Virginia Mayo. MONDAY MORNING 6:00 (4) Continental Classroom Atomic Age Physics 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) Continental Classroom: American Government. (7)j Funews 7:00 (2)1 News (4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty 7:05 (2) B’wana Don 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) Reading for Teachers 8:30 (7) Jack La Lanne (56) Friendly Giant 8:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 8:55 (9) Warm-Up 9:00 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7)iiovie: “This Thing Called Love.” (1941). Part 1. Melvyn Douglas, Rosalind (56) French Lesson 10:50 (56) Gorman Lesson 11:00 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jane Wyman (9) Movie: “Vice Versa.” (1948) 11:05 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Yours for a Song (56) Unfolding Vision (9) Chez Helene (.56) Careers 9:15 (9) Nursery School Time 9;m (2). To Tell the Truth (9) Sing Ringaround (56) Numbers and Numerals. 9:45 (9) Friendly Giant 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:09 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Romper Room (56) Our Scientific World 10:15 (7) Hollywood Report 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Girl Talk MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (56) Discovery 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) 'Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:40 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round (56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (9) News 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) BestclGroucho (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: “The Painted Veil.” (1947). Greta Garbo. 1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) People Are Funny (7) One Step Beyond (56) World History 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Merv Griffin (7) Day in Court (56) Adventures in Science 2:25 (7) News 2:30 (2) Divorce Court (7) Seven Keys (56) Tomorrow’s Craftsmfen 2:55 (4) News 3:00 (^Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day 3:30 (2) Millionaire (4) Young-Dr. Malone (7) Who Do You Trust? 6) Scarlett pi 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Mickey Mouse Club. 4:45 (56) French Lesson 4:55 (7) American Newsstand 5:00 (2) Movie: “Arson for Hire.” (1959). Steve Brodie. (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Flight ttt Mars.” (1951). Cameron Mitchell. I (^) Larry and Jerry (56) What’s Newf I 5:30 (56) Friendly Giant 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends. (56) Americans at Work 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall SONOTOISE Honse of HewelBf 29 E. CORNELL (OffBaldwlD) Housewives Is Dust Your Problem? Let Kle*n-Air Furnace Cleen-Ing Equipment rid your houia of wearisome household dust. CALL JIM LONIE OR 3-0100 For Gas or Oil HEATING SERVICE Call JOSEPH GAUTHIER OR 3-5632 ^Chandler Heating Co. omldM>rpa0ain CALL Any of the TESA of OAKUND COUNTY mtmbon electronic service needs. Blake Radio flr TV FI 4-5791 8148 W. Baron, rratla* Cole't TV UL 2-3800 8X87 Anbnni Raad, PoaUa* Dalby Radio Or TV FI 4-9802 Dobti^ TV » Radio OL 2-4722 184 W. UBlfaralty, KoahroUr C O’V TV Inc. FI 4-151J U8 Oakland, Fontiao Grogan'i Radio fr TV <25-2l«< Hod'i Radio fr TV FI 4-5841 770 Orehard l>ak« At*.. Pentlaa Lakeiand lioctronici OR 8-0111 Lake Orion Appl. MY 2-5711 188 S. Broadway, Xakt Oriao Latimer Radio flr TV OR 3-2652 888(1 Saihabaw, Draylm Floloa Obai TV FI 4-4945 8488 ElliabcUi taka Hood, PaoUa* Pear Appiianca IM 8-4114 8181 Commero* Rd„ Union Lako Stafaniki Radio (k TV FI 2-6967 1187 W. Huron, Pentlao Swaat'i RadiifkTV 114-1111 488 W. Huron, PoiilUo Sylvan TV fr Radio 682-1350 8888 Orohard Laka Rd., konC RoodingTV MY 3-1124 too Joriyn Rd„ taka Orloi Taiovlilon Sorv. Co. Ml 6-3500 887 E. Maplo, Blrmlniham Walton Radio flr TV FI 2-2257 818 E. Walton, Ponllao' WKC, Inc., Sorvico Dept. FE 3-7114 80 W. Alloy. Ponllao Seasonal Savings NOW! BEAUTIFY YOUR HpE complete exterior FACE LIFT! End Painting-Save Heat! Jltt ALUMINUM-STONE Alcoa—Rayiiolda—Kaiaer Awnings, Windows, Doors No Poymtntt 'HI JUNE Free leflniates in Our Showro^ or in Your Horn* ![ 3-7809 - Open Men. thru Fridw 'til I F.NL LEO BOGIRU OWNEa 919 Orchard Lk. Rd., I Ilk, I. of Tolo|Mph (Near Totn'i Hardwaryl mm and STORM WINDOW SAUS ■ V ' ’> : ; ■’ ■'f ■ ' 1?\VI?:XTV-rOUR £ pJunlor Ecfitors Quiz on QUESTION; Why were 4-H dubs organired and for what do they stand? ANSWER: “I pledge my head to clearer thinking, my heart to greater loyalty, my hands to larger service, my health to bietter living, for my club, my community and my country.” This is the pledge 4-H members make when they join. Tlie motto of this organization, open to both boys and , girls, is “Make the Best Better.” The pledge and the motto make clear what 4-H stands for. Members learn about things by doing them and they are always trying to improve what they are doing and themselves as weU. Of particular interest to 4-H members are activities which center about the home and farm. Our picture shows a few 4-H projects, but there are a great many more. Each local group or dub meets at least once a month. Expert leaders help members with their various projects. Clubs hold picnics, go on hikes, organize musical groups and so on. 4-H members compete for awards in both county and state programs. The movement started through the organization of agricultural groups for boys and girls about 1900. In 1914, the Smith-Lever Act gave Federal backing to the organization. Now the idea has spread to many parts of the world. FOR YOU TO DO; There are many 4-H projects for boys and girls who live in cities and towns as well as in country locations. Yoir can find opt more about 4-H activities by contacting your County Extension Service. BATEMANS TRADE-II^ POST OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 tiuobeih LoU W to Plymsreiod; U OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 8 F HJTOFl'S-li-«dint» 2 burfroom, corpcling, bo5».™-w i/oiKiortuI rwnr wiH. ffuit ntiH flowrr,. Only down ond tS',' pr '<• OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 701 E. BEVERLY-Norlhurn Hiah only I WocL, 3 badroom, floroqn and f< F#or yard. Immedlata possnsslon. Only $99.“i down and $59 per month plus ond Insurance. Joslyn lo Eost Beverly. Trading h Our Bminess r'sol_riti I^OLDl ISOLO ISC3L-DI FOR SALE BATEMAN REALTY CO. FE. . FE. 4 0528 8 7161 377 S. TELEGRAPH-/’0^r/4C THE SIGN OF ACTION npipipi THE PqVtIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 23. 1963 ^ (Ui (Mil C Oiinl on I ... (,?njd i t> ('o*h(s NO St'ios , No Plionc Orders, C,O.D.’s or Deliveries* I.«rKe lU'iii* Be Smart, Be Thrifty-Momlay and Every Day! You Can He Sure of Extra Saving* at Seara! {MONDAY oriiT latest styles & colors girls in Spring toppers Charge It Arrilan toppers in the latest styles anti fashionable Spring colors to compliment her wardrttbe. One-bntton closing, handy pockets. Washable for easy-care. In sizes 7 14. Thrifty priced for ex. tra savings, Monday! sawe up lo 72% Spring hatg Values to #7.98 ('.harfir ll >r liiifte of fuiihions you’ll find every poll every new ulyle ImaKinaldr tu plement your Spring outfiin. Laditi' Millinery, Second Floor Save Over 25% women’s Elfin cordtex bras Regularly $1.98 147 JL Uh. me’n'js briefs, shorts or “T” shirts ”harge It Elfin inserts lift to giye you a youthful line. White cotton has butterfly embroidery. Wide >laN-tic front for glamour. 3-way back hook closure. Self-lock buckles. Designed for comfort. Sizes 3242, A,B,C. Y'our choice ... at 16c, savings each! Spft |{ec. 64o white cotton biiefs, tee shirts and boxer _ shorts .. . designed for comfort, long-wear. ‘ Pilgrim quality. Men’s nizes Pilgrim Athletic Shirt................38o Men’s Fumi$htng$, Main Floor Charge It men’s Gold Bonds Spandex or Lace Panty Girdles IS-inch 2l^2. I'.ineh 399 Charge It Spandex or lace panty girdles ill regular or long leg styles. Blissfully light, yet. gives firm control. Small; medium, large „ Reduced Monday boys’ slacks > iilucs to #3.99 Charge ll 2>-*5 or 2..^7 pr. Mf|t's elose-oiit of asNorled curd and ■ will slacks in an array of Spring shades, (diiiose from sizes 0 lo 22. Limit 4, while quantities last! Save. ‘itoys* Dept., Main Floor SAVE UP TO 70% . men’s dress slacks reg. $8.98 to $13.98! Charge It Wools, purl-wools, flannels and worsteds ill solid and fancy dark tones, (dioose plain or plealed models ip sizes .30 lo 42. Allcrations FREE! .Save up lo $8.99! Men’s Dress ClolHing, Main Floor MONDAY ONLYI MONDAY ONLY! MONDAY ONLY! graceful designs bath mats Charge It Moehine-washable Avis- eo® rayon rugs in assorted wasiifast colors. Soft, luxurious cut pile resists mat-ling. 21x.H6 or 24x24 -iiielies, filled. Save h.'ie Monday! 27vl8-ineh............... 3.66 Ihmealir Depl.. Main Floor 21-Motith Nylon Allstate SP-350 Tires on Sale! 15S. Your Choice: Sanders, Sabre Saw or Drill .50x14 Tubeless Blackwall 13^, 8.00x14 T iii.eless Hlaekwall 7.50x14 'I'ubeless Wbilewall NO MONEY DOWN o 8.00x14 Tubeless Whitewall 18^ Values u|i to $<32.98 Cruflsmun Tools 19 99 Your Choice of Any 2!4-Yr. Guaranteed Battery Charge It Kegnlarlyat $15.45 U4420! 12 88 I .Sears l!asy Puyiiieni Plan NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED! Nylon stands, up best of all against heat, impact and moisiure damage. Cel yoitr Al.l.-STATES Monday! Auto Aceessorim, Perry St, Basement .Choose a reg. $27.99 Sabre Saw (1/.3-HP) that docs the work of 8 different saws (with edge guide); reg. .$29.9<> •■‘/a-ln. Drill with spindle lock, Industfial-raleii; finishing or Ofbilal Sander with dust attachmci.t. Hardware Dept., Main Basement And Old Battery Charge'll Butleries for most American made ears... 6 or 12-voll. Power rating stated on every battery. Jf you’ve been needing a bat- tArV ttnw’ii ihib titkiM linv auiirak iliSa Lfa SATUllOiVV, KKliliUARV 2?!, 190.‘{ . ~24 I^ACPiS cnited press international ......... .. .'1* To Reduce Subversion on GIANT HANGER - That’s what this steel frame will be before long. A four-story addition to First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland, 761 W. Huron St., will be suspended from it. The structure will be coming down while it’s going up — the end result being a new, modern five-story building. Dims Test Ban Hopes Soviet Threat Doesn't Shaka Washington Officials Call Speech Nothing but 'Blast and Bluster' Propaganda WASHINGTON (/P)—Apparently unimpressed, official Washington has shrugged off the new Soviet missile flexing over Cuba ‘■blast a n d bluster” propaganda. The threats from Soviet Defense Minister Rodion Y. Malinovsky were regarded as’ blood-and-thun-der morale builders-both for at| home and tor Fidel Castro’s re gime. In a Moscow speech Friday, marking the eve of the 45th anniversary of the Soviet armed forces, the Red marshal warned I that if Americans attack Cuba, I it wiil mean a third worid war ! and nuclear devastation for the ! United States. i The usual type of oratory "you| j expect on the 45th anniversary of| !the Soviet armed forces,” saidj (Secretary of State Dean Rusk. But] DISCUSS FINANCING - Gov. George Romney talks and Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh listens during conference yesterday with state legislative leaders on legislation to bolster Detroit’s bid for the 1968 Olympic Olympics Proposal Soviet Quits Geneva I The usual type of oratory "youj Asks Broad Powers C.| Last night, ‘the United States speechmaking, he added, isn’t go-bring the 1968 Olympic Games to Detroit could re-j . the 0,.au„n 01 one of the moat powerful agencies From Our News Wires jean chief delegate William ( GENEVA - The Soviet ynionj ...... announced that its chief disarm- ^ »>ack tomor- ament negotiator was returning! row for resum^ion of the H-to Moscow today, lessening hopes ‘•^‘'“rmament *»*• ■ , , . . ,1. Inwino n r»nnri Ia PrpRinpill for prompt nuclear test ban talks. ■k * * The Soviet delegation spokesman gave no explanation for the departure of Saviet first Deputy Foreign Minister Vassily V. Kuznetsov on the eve of the return here from Washington of Ameri- Romney'sGoal: 'Togetherness' Second Inauguration in Upper Peninsula Family of 10 Killed in Blaze at Home MOREHOUSE, Mo. (AP) - A family of 10 w^s killed in a fire I at its home today. Dead are Paul Saville, 47, his wife Shirley, 25 and their eight children, Paul David Jr., tO; Glenda Sue; 9; Hester, 8; Everett, 7; Alvin, 5; Michael, 2; Henderson 2: Zelda Mae, 4 months. Chief of Police J. T. Kindred said the family was trapped in the one - story frame dwelling. The bodies were found in two beds. Kindred’ .said. “By the time the fire department got to the house, tlie place was all in flames,” Kindred said. “It don’t think those folks ever had a chance,” he added. In Today's . Press Tax Program Congressmen examine, , prepare deletions- PAGE 6. .v; Ask Red Ban c state bill vetoed by ' Swainson proposed again -PAGE 6. Battle's Over Baltimore theater permits Negroes to see mov-ie.s-PAGE 12. Astrology ........... 8 Bridge .............. 8 Church News ..... 10-11 Comics ............. 8 1 Edlloriiils 4 Home Section .... 13-15 Obituiirics .. .V.... 0 Sports .......... 16-18 rheaters 12 TV & Radio Programs 12 Women’s Pages 5 lowing a report to President Kennedy on the progress of the first ^wo weeks of talks here after the Christmas recess. Foster left Wednesday. Diplomats said there had been hope his return might have sparked a new drive to budge stiffening Soviet opposition to immediate nuclear test ban talks. MAINTAIN INTEREST The diplomats said Kuznetsov’s departure lessens these hopes. However, the Soviet spokesman said Kuznetsov’s departure docs not mean a lessening of Russian interest in the Geneva parley. The Soviet spokesman said he believed Tsarapkin would meet with Foster but “I don’t know' when.” The new development came as Western Delegates to the conference met privately to discuss the Soviet position. Although the United States offered another concession on Us stand, the Soviet Union refused yesterday to increase Us offer of two or three on-site inspections, and broke off the three-nation talks. The United States had banked most of its hopes for progress in the,se three-way discussions. „ might agree to only --- , the-spot inspections a year pro- Behind the clo.sed doors ol theiin Stale history, vided the Russians agree to Senate Armed Services Commit- originally stated the administration’s purpose in “meaningful” inspection Pi’«ce-tee. Secretary of pefense Rob^^ establishmeht of a state recreation and iures. g.,McNamara outlined U.S. meth-^ . * j ♦ In the test talks which have |od.s for carrying out American been running on and off since j policy toward Cuba. 1958, the United Slates origi- j Aflei-ward committee Chair-nally sought around 20 in- man Richard B. Russell. D-Ga.. spections a year. i said McNamara had “made it Supporters of the push lor a| very clear that we are pur-(rcaly say scientific detection ad-1 suing a policy that will result in vanced liave allowed the West the elimination of Castroism to lower its proposed figures — and communism from Cuba.” first to eight to ten and now to I But Russell declined to go into seven — without actually lessen- details on the grounds they New Warm Trend Likely Till Monday ing the safeguards against cheating. are classified. * * committee, Rus.sell said, that U.S. Even if the Reds do an about j«ny Cuban-face and agree to the latest American demands, a test ban treaty couldL^ips or installations, face rough going in the U.S. Sen- ^ ate. A two-thirds Senate maj^-piLes, even ity IS required O ratify Ameiican adherence to a treaty. ■' The warmer air which moved into Pontiac today-miay stay McNamara also as.sured the (hnnigh Monday, says the weath- 22 NYC Railroad Cars Derailed in West State BATTLE CREEK (IIPD-Twen-ty-two cars of a 119-car New York Central Railroad train were derailed near here yesterday. State “Jiblice at the Jonesville post said only nine of tlic 22 cars loaded. The train was bound from Michigan to Elkhart, Ind. No one was injured. if they do s ale,” said RusSell. He said the question of retaliation had come up in a discussion with McNamara of the Cuban MIG attack on an American shrimp boat. Scoffing at the Soviet suggestion that any U.S. move on Cuba might touch off another world war, Russell said, “I do not bejieve that the Russians arc 10 feet tall. I hope we can avoid any nuclear lernity party collided with a bus war because it would kill tens ofjloday, killing a 16-yeur-old girl millions of Americans while we in the car and the bus driver. Six are eliminating them. ” lother persons were injured. exhibits building authority was to guarantee adequate financing for a proposed 100,000-seat Olympic stadium ^costing an estimated $25 |m i 1 y 0 n. The stadium is Iwanh^ to bolster Detroit’s chances of becoming host to the international sports contests. But the bill which Speaker of the Hou.se Allison Green, R-King-ston, introduced yesterday would grant far broader powers; pow-fact, that would exceed even those of the Stale Highway Department and fascinate any empire-building bureaucrat. According to the bill the recreation and exhibit buildings authority, with approval from a three-man majority of its five-man governing board,, could: -“Acquire, construct, purchase, maintain, repair, remodel and convert stadiums, buildings, indoor or outdoor swimming pools, skating rinks, exhibition halls, auditoriums, community buildings, convention halls, parks and all other facilities necessary or convenient for the conduct of sporting events, exhibitions and erman. A low of 15 is predicted for tonight, along with a high of 20 for tomorrow. Little temperature change is expected Monday. Skies will be partly cloudy this /ening and Monday, but fair tomorrow. Winds today arc from the southwest to we.st at 10 to 18 miles l)cr hour, 'rhe lowest tempefa-in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 7. At 1 p.m. the thermometer read 20. 2 Die in Bus-Car Crash PHILADELPHIA (AP) - An auto carrying three young couples home from a college fra- From Our News Wires ESCANABA, Mich. - G George Romney goes through his second inauguration here t^ay, determined to erase an imaginary Masoh-Dixon Line which, has relegated Upper Peninsula residents to the status of Michigan’s “forgotten citizens.” On the surface, today’s festivities are the fulfillment of a campaign promise. JFK to Moot Latin Leaders for Discussions Further Isolation of Castro Regime May Come Before Vifit From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — The Organization of American States (OAS) was expected today to soon take hew dip-ilbmatic steps to reduce Communist subversion in Latin America, j Such action by tlie 20 nation OAS could include measures to isolate further the Communist regime in Cuba before President Kennedy visits Costa Rica March 18. !; ★ * ★ The President is scheduled to meet with the Central American presidents next month in S a n Jose, Costa Rica, to.jdiscuss the Communist threat to tile hemisphere caused by Premier Fidel Castro and other regional problems. The OAS made public yesterday a special security report urging new steps to meet ‘tthe increasing gravity of the threat posed by Castro-Communism.” A special security committee of the OAS said in the report that new measures by the organization “may not be postponed” it effective action to cqrb Commu-nist lerrorism is desired. The committee advocated adoption by OAS countries of a sweeping ban on travel and funds to and from Cuba. It also implied broadly that it felt that Latin (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) 'Nobody Knows the Trouble Tve Seen The 5.5-v e a r-old automaker- countries still maintaining rela-turned-governer told an airport ti«ns with Cuba-Brazil, Mexico. Cold Can't Catch Catty Greta Patches Broods Over Bad Break crowd here last October that, if elected, he would return for a special “second inauguration” in this region of 300,000 population. * * * Romney, however, has a more serious objective in mind for the area above the Straits of Mackinac where people often have complained they are forgotten citizens. Theme The theme of tlie celebration. Pulling Michigan Together,” emphasizes Romney's belief that Michigan’s urgent problems are the revitalization of its industrial and business economy. These are matters of acute concern in the Upper Peninsula. Many of the iron and copper mines for whidi the region is famous have closed. Inaugural officials, iuteading to exploit the heavy snow and below zero temperatures which normally mark an Upper Peninsula winter, planned to provide Gov. Romney and his wife, Lenorc. with a horsedrawn sleigh after his arrival by plane. The Republican governor and Mrs. Romney will ride down E.s-canaba's Main Street to the State Office Building, where he will affirm the oatli of office he look ear’s Day in Lansing, the stale capital. Romney, cn route lo his second inaugural told College Young Republicans Convention in Grand Rapids early today the GOP cannot afford to splinter itself. * * * In a restatement , yf liis frequent cull for a broad-based, citizens participation type of political parly, Romney said: “Too many of us have proclaimed loudly and pioudly that we are Taft Republicans or, Elsenhower Republicans or Goldwater Republicans. * * ★ “Wliat are thc.se lyphenated and modified Republicans anyway? I defy tills convention, or any meeting of two or more individuals, to reach a unanimous definition or even complete understanding of conservative or liberal or moderate or any of these other artificial labels which hamper our common purpose Chile, Bolivia and Uruguay -should break them. HOT PURSUIT In other developments, concerning the Cuban situation, a revision in standing order which -President Kennedy told the Pentagon to make in case of further (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Struck by Cars; Man, Girl Die Mishaps Occur in Birmingham, Highland teen-age Birmingham girl and a 46-year-old Highland Township man were fatally injured last night when they were struck by automobiles. T h e victims -e Ruth Red- Oaklnnd County High wav Toll in ’6:i 17 field, 17. of 1668 Eton Road, and Lloyd High- 1, 1330 Water-bury ffoad. Miss Redfi'^ld (lied at William Beaumont 11 o s -pital, Royal Oqk, at 2:15 a.m, today, 2‘-j hours after she was hit by two automobiles on Woodward Avenue at Lincoln Road. Highlen was struck by a car on Highland Road in Highland Township while pushing his stalled auto to the shoulder. ★ •k 'k He died at 2:45 a.m. today at Pontiac General Hospital,' six hours after the accident. The girl was hit by a car driven by James L. Dries, 17; 217 IIillbor(> St., Birmingham, and thrown into the path of a ear driven by David Tliornbury, 16. of 392 Lakeside St., Birmingham. Roger Fischer, 22, of Detroit, was the driver of the dtr that hit Highlen. All three drivers were, released by police after making statements. Jl ' X . ^ \ I / THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATITllDAY,, FEBRUARY 23. 1963 Devastated Town Gets New Tremors AL MARJ Lib\a >Jfy~ Fresh i around campfires on the open less clustered on the bare earth tremors today wenchedi jjround. unwilling to go to sleep, [ ground, the town now appears "this once h.3ppy town, now almost' “Praise be to God,” they de-j S y* ^ ^ jvoutly murmured with the end of The only people on the Streets deserted. leach brief tremor. Since Thurs-|are soldiers probing for possible At least 265 have died. tremors have been fre- survivors and attempting to dis- There are literally no homes! for most of the other 12,000 peoplei; rHOSTLY who lived here until Thursday TP V.’N GHOSTLY ^ ^ . night Then, in d matter of sec-i Authorities say only about six onds, two shattering earthquakes:lasted more than a split second, all but crushed the town. but this is small comfort to the In the cold hours before dawn, small groips huddled I Aside from groups of home- Asks Broad Powers (Continued From Page One) other general recreation pur-,functions under this act and to [fix their compensation.” —Acquire by condemnation poses. —“Employ consulting engineers,'Architects, superintendents managers and such dther construction. accounting, appraisal and financial experts, attorneys and other employes and agents as may be necessary in its judgment to carry out its duties and Expect OAS Action to Isolate Red Cuba (Continued Fnjm fiage One) attacks on U.S. shipping could turn out to be permission for “hot pursuit” of the attackers. Kennedy, at his neivs conference yesterday, emphasized that no decision had been made. He said a clearer pattern of the situation would be needed first. Contingency plans for reaction in case of direct attack on U.S. territory from Cuba almost would likely include hot pursuit — and much iiiore tjian that. But they vrould not be expected to provide blanket authority for hot pursuit in incidents of lesser magnitude. The doctrine of hot pursuit generally is accepted as a valid application of international law. In use goes far back in naval history. It has been invoked in cases ranging from simple smuggling operations to a major controversy in the prosecution of the Korean War. Secretary of State Dean Rusk said last night in Cincinnati the United States will continue its ef-fwts to calm present drises with the Communist world and avoid nuclear war. In a speech delivered yesterday before the Ninth Annual Conference on International Affairs, Rusk said: "We believe that the leaders of the Soviet Union if\Pot of Communist--------------- China — recognize a common in-[era!’s office may question some terest with the rest of us in of the provisions of the proposed avoiding a nuclear holocaust.” |act and other methods any property the board feels necessary for “accomplishing the objectives of the building authority.” -And "authorize J»y resolution or resolutions of its board to provide for the issuance pf revenue bonds for the purpose of paying part or all of the cost of the facilities to bd acquired.” Restated simply, the state recreation and exhibits building authority coiild build virtually any structure it wanted; hire and fire as many persons as it desired; set without question the pay for all its employes; capriciously condemn any and all property it desired title to; and bond itself eternally to finance its aims. TECHNICALLY The cost of the authority’s bond projects would technically borne by annual rental fee charged for use of the various facilities that might be built or acquired. Realistically, however, t h e money would come out of„^ the usually overburdened general fund since the act provides the authority guarantees its bonds by renting the constructed facilities to the state. The chance of the state allowing one of its agencies to default on its bonds is very slim, and thus the state would be obligated to make good whatever bond issues the authority decided it needed. Even Speaker Green is already having second thoughts about the bill he intro^ced on behalf of Romney’s administration. He said flatly last night, think we should tighten it up as much as we can. It was put together hurriedly to try to meet these deadlines (of getting a stadium financing plan approved before the Detroit Olympic Committee has to go again before, the U.S. Olympic Committee to defend its selection as the U.S. choice for the site of the 1968 Games).” It has also beert" reliably learned the state attorney gen- cover and bui^ all dead before an epidemic threatens. Those who stay in their "^lomes seem too stunned to do more than sit or slowly examine bits of broken furniture. Fully 80 per cent of the towu’s dwellings are either rubble or close to it. Some 500 injured have been taken to hospitals in Benghazi and Tripoli. Several hundred more people are now housed in hastily built tent cities. But most of the townspeople appear simply to have vanished — living with nearby friends or relatives or simply huddled somewhere beneath the sky. S. Air Force rescue teams from Wheelus Air Base, Tripoli, British Army units from Benghazi, and Libyan Army and civilian medical teams have been working to help as many of the strick-n as they could find. Param^ics of the 58th U.S. Air Rescue Squadron based at Wheelus, the first Air Force emergency help to get here, found families clinging together in the rubble t‘ their homes or beginning to dig out what possessions they could find in the ruins. BERLIN (AP)—U.S. authoritiesiSandkrug Bridge checkpoint in today barred four busloads of So- the British Sector. Viet military personnel from en- The British sector checkpoint tering West Berlin at Checkpoint provides the shortest and most di-Charlie on the Communist wall dividing the city. 33 Plead Guilty After 2 Raids Thirty-three persons arrested in two raids on gambling establishments in Pontiac early this morning pleaded guilty to charges in Municipal Court.* Jake Guajardo, 42, was charged with maintaining an illegal gambling house at 22 N. Merrimac St. Paul Palace, 56, was charged with maintaining and operating an illegal gambling house at 74 Baldwin Ave. Guajardo was fined $75 and Palace was fined $100. FINED $15 EACH Loiterers arrested in both places were fined $15 each by Municipal Judge Maurice Finnegan. Members of the Pontiac police vice squad raided Guajardo at 3:30 a.m. and Palace at 5:45 a.m. Birmingham Area News Columbus Boys' Choir at St. James on Friday BIRMINGHAM—Have voices-r First Methodist Church of Bir-will travel. That is the story of mingham and Bloomfield Hills the Columbus, Ohio, boys choir,'Country Club. STOP SOVIET BUSES — Two of foUr Soviet buses stopp^ by U.S. authorities return to East Berlin at Checkpoint Charlie to- day. Loadpd with military personnel, the buses were en route to a Soviet war memorial in West Berlin. Military Personnel Halt Reds in Berlin The Soviets were on their way I the Soviet War Memorial in West Berlin for a wreath-laying ceremony on Red Army Day, A U.S. spokesman said the buses, were stopped at the request of British authorities, , who had reached an agreement with the Soviets that military personnel going to the memorial would use the Three Killed as Plane Falls ELBSERRY, Mo. (UPD-Four men en route to a Florida auto race died yesterday when their lighP plane crashed in the Mississippi River Bottomlands. DUDERSTADT, Germany UP) —Thirteen East Germans, including a'^ border patrolman, escaped across the mined and barricaded Iron Curton border into West Germany near here today, police reported. Gen, Ivan I, Yakubovski said in an article in the East German Communist party newspaper Neues Deutschland that Allied plans call for using West Germans as the main attacking forces. rect route to the memorial near the Brandenburg Gate. After the four buses turned back, they drove to the Sandkrug Bridge checkpoint and weye allowed to pass. OTHERS MADE IT But they arrived too late for the ceremony. Several busloads of Soviet soldiers and a number of Soviet passenger cars had preceded them across the Sandkrug Bridge. Two Soviet generals and the Soviet ambassador to East Germany, Pyotr A. Abrasimov, were among the participants. The official party went ahead with the ceremony after waiting in the cold for 30 minutes. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report I»ONTrAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy and not so cold today and tonight with a few snow flurries this afternoon. High today 20. Low tonight 15. Sunday fair with littie change In temperature. High 20. Southwest to west winds at 10 to 18 miles per hour. ^ or harass us, they certainly could have done much better.” In another phase of Red Army Day, the commander of Soviet forces in East Germany accused the Western powers of planning to drag the world into a thermonuclear war. The West German militarists are preparing themselves to wage war of revenge and to revise the eastern borders of Germany,” the general charged. “Therefore, the U.S,A. and her NATO allies sabotage the solution of the German question by using various pretenses. “But these dreams, of midgets, who think they are giants, will be vain. ‘America’s Singing Boys. One of the most traveled choirs in the United States, the group will appear at St. James Episcopal Church next Friday at 8:15 p.m. The 26 boys who comprise the choir arc veteran performers, having sung on raido, television and on the stage. They travel' between presentations on a specially designed bus, which allows fiext-to-normal studying conditions^- Surviving are her husband; one daughter. Sister Mary Kathrine of Monastery of St. Therese of the Child Jesus, her mother, Mrs. 0. K. Cook of Winona, Ind.; a sister and a brother. Memorial tributes may be made to the Michigan Cancer Foundation. Their March 1 program will include a one-act opera “The Apothecary” by Haydn. Tickets are available at the church office or Grinnell’s, Blr-ingham. To Mrs. Carolyn Levin, there are no bad children or good children, only growing children who need help. She is being honored tomorrow by the City and Country school of Bloomfield Hills for her 15 years of service as a nursery school teacher. Although not retiring completely, MrsTLevin has decided to limit hec school activites to occasional visits. The reception will be' at the school. A former Birmingjiiam resident, James L. Juhl, has resigned as city manager of Durand to accept a similar position at Red Bank-White Oak, Tenn. Juhl worked in the engineering department and manager’s office while employed by the city. Mrs. Bart Cotter Service for Mrs. Bart (Mazel) Cotter, 57, of 1915 Rathmore Road, Bloomfield Hills, will be p.m. Tue.sday at the Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co. Entombment will be in Wood-lawn Maii.solcum. Mrs. Cotter was a member of Disappeared Sunday BROOKLYN (UPI) Witnesses said the one-engine plane, due to land at St. Louis, went into a tailspin and plunged i to earth. Wreckage was scattered I ★ * * over a wide area. | “Since the o,ther buses used the The four were headed for the Sandkrug Bridge, we are inclined the largest manhunts in Michi-Daytona 500 stock car race in to believe that someone on the^ggj^ history began today for a Florida. One of the passengers Soviet side just made an error housewife missing since was Harlan W. Terwee, 27, a sending the buses to Checkpoint ^ champion race driver. The others:Charlie,” an Allied official said. were auto enthusiasts. l“If they wanted to score a point Hundreds Aid in Search Increase in Welfare Losses Reported by Pontiac General Pontiac General Hospital had more “paying" customers last year. At the same time, the hospital’s welfare losses went up. These seemingly conflicting facts reported in the hospital’ annual financial statement are •aused by an upturn in area economy on one hand and an inrecase in occupancy on the other. Last year the hospital suffered a $217,452 loss from bad debts The 1961 figure was $225,672. NONQUALIFIERS Bad debts are the bills owed by people who don’t qualify as state t)r county welfare ca.ses and have no means to pay. Total billings to stato welfare cases last year was $1.38,453, compared to $107,865 the year before. Billings to county welfare eases totalled $501,221 in 1962 and $4.38, 734 the year before. The hospital’s average cost i to county welfare patients per patient day has risen from other hospitals in Oakland. 2* ji Administrator Harold E. Eu-“} ler noted in filing the annual re-II jJ port that “the general improve-"11 M.ment in Pontiac area economy J'l «' last year simply meant more peo- .....pie were able to pay their bills.’ The economic trend, however, didn’t have the same affect on state and county welfare cases. The hospital’s loss on state welfare cases was $50,521 last year •ompared to $34,242,the year before. NA’nONAL WEATHER — It will be warmer in the eastorji half of the nation tonight with little temperature change elsewhere. A few snow flurries are forecast for the lower Lakes 1 Area, the Ohio Volley andjnim tlie northern Plateau south-i euilward th^qjigh the central Plains. ■V'V. : \. , ' , V. .. ■ ■ Losses on bounty welfare patients were $73,854-last year compared to $62,956 in 1961. INCREASED LOSSES 'I'hus, the grand total of bad debts and welfare losses last year was $.341,827 -- some $18,948 above the 1961 total. These bad debts and welfare Ios.ses are a major cause of increased costs to patients. The paying customers eventually foot the bill. The “loss” on welfare pa^ tients is the part of tbe||f- bills which the welfare agency doesn’t pay. The state pays a flat rate of $25 per day on welfare ca.ses. The county pays 90 per cent of the bill. $24 in 1951 to $46.68 last year. One of Pontiac General’s annual problems is the large percentage of welfare patients it handles compared to, other hospitals in Oakland County, say administrators. The amount received to cover county welfare patients last year M27,.367 — about 56 per cent of the $758,000 doled out by the county to welfare patients last year. The remaining 44 per cent went But They Prefer AF Hundreds of volunteers, state police and a Jackson County sheriff’s posse of 25 horses will comb the area for Mrs. Joan Watkins, who disappeared from a laundromat here while One of washing her 10 - month -baby’s diapers. .loining in the air-land search will be 200 Civil Air Patrol volunteers with five planes, police officers from eight adjacent | The deal originally was to have counties, area firemen, Jackson;been made at Paramo’s city police and area residents. Find No Clues on Missing Men To Examine Trio on Dope Sale Charge Three Pontiac men, charged with selling heroin worth about $75,000 to addicts are expected to appear in Federal District Court, Detroit, for examination in late March. ' Armando Lemus, 43, of 412 Elm St.; Manuel Paramo, 34, of 700 Fourth St., and Epfanlo Flores, 42, of 51 Feneley Court, were arrested Thursday evening by federal agents, aided by Pontiac police vice squad members and Detroit and state police detectives. The trio was apprehended at 6:45 p.m. outside the Pure Food Restaurant, 253 S. Saginaw St., after a Federal Bureau of Narcotics agent, posing as a heroin user, had made a “buy.” They were arraigned yesterday before Federal Judge Theodore Levin. Lemus and Paramo were released on $1,000 bond. Flores iS in the Wayne County jail, failing to post a $10,000 cash bond. Lt. William K. Hanger, who led the Pontiac police in the arrest plot, said a sale of 84 grams, worth nearly $3,800, was negotiated Thursday. Federal agents previously had made several smaller buys totaling about 20 grams, according to Hanger. Each gram sells for about $45, according to federal authorities. The confiscated drug could have been converted into about $75,000 worth of “fixes” for addicts if it was diluted. The three men offered no resistance when they were approached by more than a dozen law enforcement officers. The state police have also brought in their famed police dog, Schuyler, to aid in the ::h. At least one state police airplane will be brought in also. Workers at the Clinton Engine Co., where the 28-year-old woman and her husband work, have also volunteered .to help. shop, Saginaw at Raeburn streets, but it was later decided to negotiate the exchange at the restaurant. Reward money for inforrriation leading to Mrs. Watkins’ return was upped to $400 yesterday, TROY, Pa. (AP)-Two business-|when a local couple, Mr. and Mrs. r^en have vani.shed from this|»arold Robb, added $50. They own northeastern Pennsylvania town of. the laundromat where the wom- ,500 and police are admittedly hard pressed for dues. Mrs. Watkins vani.shed late Sunday ijight. Her car was found beside the building with the keys NASA Enlices Experts The two~Loron Leonard, manager of the Troy Equipment!beside the building wiin me Co , and .lerome Blaine, 45, par(-l''' vehicle and her coat ner in a leather goods firm and,biside with the '*.... father of ten—disappeared earlier| in the week within 24 hours of ich other. Police, however, said Friday 'night they do not believe the di.s-appearances are connected-. I Leonard managed the Equipment Company, a farm machinery outlet, where he was one of three emploves. He was last seen Monday afternoon when he lelt I barber Bow-Arrow Holdup Man Disturbs 300 at Bingo CAMDEN, N. J. (DPI) - A youth holding a steel-tipped arrow strung on a bow invaded the hasement of St. Bartholomew’s Church last night and attempted to hold up 300 persons playing bingo. After Fred Lee Johnson, 17, announced “This is a holdup,” off-duty patrolman Clyde Waters grubbed him and his weapon and hustled him off to police headquarters. Johnson said he was hoping to get enough money to go to Florida because “it’s cold outside.” WASHINGTON (AP)-The National Aeronautics and Space Ad ministration has tried and failed to lure away two of the Air Force’s key space experts, an informed source said today. The source identified the targets of the unsuccessful raid as Col. Charles E. (Chuck) Yeager, commandant of the AerosMce Research Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., and Maj. Robert M. White, also of Edwards, X15 pilot who holds the world altitude record for aircraft.'' side the Mercury man-in-space project who has qualified astronaut by flying a vehicle at an altitude of 5jp miles or more. He took the rocket-powered X15 research plane to a repord altitude of 314,750 feet-,59.61 miles-last July 17. Yeager, who 15 years ago became the first man to fly faster than the speed of sound, heads the program in which the Air Force is training its own group of fts-tronauts to fly the X20 or Dyna-Soar orbital space plane, NASA’s two-man Gemini spacecraft and military space yohicles of the future. ; ' White |is one of twi| n)en out- The other X15 pilot to attain astronaut altitude is NASA research flier Joseph A. Walker, who took the craft to 51 miles last Jan. 17. A repre.sentative of NASA was said to have offered Yeager the job of directing the training of astronauts for the Gemini and Apollo programs—the same type of work he now does for the Air 'orce. White was invited to accompany Yeager into NASA, the informant .said. He added that both men rejected the offers—and the hefty pay boosts that went with it—to re-] main wjth the Air FoPcc program. for his home in Athens, about 35 miles north of Troy. ' • INSURANCE RECEIPT Blaine, a partner ifi the Penn-L leather Goods Co., disappeared Tuesday afternoon. Police sakl he left his office .spying he was going to Elmira, N.Y., just over the state line. His wife later received an air insurance receipt from the Elmira Airport. Officer Ted York of the Troy police said he had been told Blaine’s brother, , whom he de* scribed only as living somewhere in New York State, had heard' from the missing man. He said the brother apparently received a call from Kansas City sbmetlme after Tuesday night. York saitl tllSre was no apparent connection between the two missing men, in either their business or social lives. In fact, York said, |)olice had been unable to ascertain wliether tlie two even knew each other. SMILES AT 1(»7 — Mrs, Josephine Werner, celebrating her ,107th birthday tO(iay, reads with a smile a card sent her at a Uniondale,^ N.Y.,'’li()me for the agediwhere she has lived eight years. I <«. • 'I'lIF. I’OXTIAC: niFSS, SA'H 1{DA^’. I I'.HHI Ain- l>;j, Hh;:}. I^msn^yj^gr New Citizens Celebrate ...jigsaai"***** A, Wefstgates, the Andrew Hep- Mrs. Theodore Widrsema burns, Christ Schjck and led the group in patriotic Flora Grimaldi. song.s accompanied by Mrs, ■ JosephI Bennett at the, piano.' 3,000 indivjduals obtain their Since the first itarty-, Miss US. citizenship through Antona lia.s helped more tliari classes she holds regularly. Uans Henstder, Binnin^liam., made ihr. .scroll on the wall to addnate the 2dlh anniversary of the ^ew Citizens heui>;ue. Adinirinf!; it are Janice Antona, ITe.st Ann Arbor Street, .sponsor of the To Give Fashion Show The Italian-American Club of Pontiac Women’s Auxiliary will present its annual* spring fashion show and card parly Monday at the club hall on North Tilden Avenue at 8 p.m. ^ Club members who will model fashions from the KB Shops include Mrs. Albert DeSantis, Mrs, Carl Grassi, Mrs. .Joseph Polling, Mrs. Ralph Mazza and Mrs. Paul Spada-fore. Youngsters who will model clothes from the Tel-Huron Children’s Shop are Francene Rotunda; .Joseph Spadafore, Mary Calabrese, Randy Grassi and Cynthia Ranzilla. Mrs. Sam Calabrese is chairman. Assisting her are Mrs. Joseph Pollina, Mrs. Sam Rotunda, Mrs. Ihuil Felice, Mrs. Grassi and Mrs. Spadafore. Tickets will be available! at the door. l.ooliiiin joavard to inodeliiijji jnshions at tin' Ittdian- tniericnn ('.lab's If omen's Ainilinn spriiii> . style slioiv and card paily Monday n/’g7// are .Mary yranees ( '.aldl>rese. Did, I venae, and Joseph Spado-lore, I 'oorheis Road. The shoiv is at the Itidian-American Club, .\orth Tilden Avenue at H p.m.^ NEW WAY . . . <‘l«‘ans iny and <’ai’|»rls h(,' .•J . to I'csloi'* the color and luilu iny ruijs l>y vacuum ciconiny ■ but It did not scilisly me . . . New Way'i di'c.'p clennimj does llto job nciht. jiisi i»ii(MU‘..n:2-7i;{2 Professional, expeiienced craflsnion and new modern cleaning equipment removes Itie dee|;ly imbedded grit und dirt that shot tens the life of your rugs --you'll be sotisfied. They pick-up and deliver. vrrv r<'a.soiial>l«‘, l‘'’'Yrbriien's Cliri.slnui Temperance Union cohfph'Icd laj) robes lor j)a-ticnls in the U.S. Veterans Hospital,- Grand Rapids, at their Thursday meeting, Mrs, Frank Deaver intor-(liiccd plans tor a library Mrs. Nellie Monroe, lor mcr fc(l('ralion prcsidi'iil, gave devotions and Mrs, Peter Niemi spoke on the organ iz.'dion of the WCTU, ' Th(' dislri(;l institute meeting will be April 24 at First Baptist Church with registration at 9:4,') a:m, and a coop eralive lunclieon at noon MRS. riiihiR ii. i \ iniiTh Prescription Delivery FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY by HOWARD L. DELL Your Neighborhood Pharmocist A DRUG’S EFFECTIVENESS CAN BE CHANGED WITH AGE ft pti'-iayft o( liirm enn nficit llioui an)(|\ Cook 'fly in youl mndioim iI'psI Somn Hiugs dfttrnorulf jh a(.|pj some got sliong«M, i^fhpiN wftgkpi Id^om) jft, using outdated modiuiio cun bo fuj/cudous Baldwin Pharmacy 219 Baldwin <> FE 4-2620 Aoi i;asi i;i{ poi{ i kaiicoi pox |{t‘aiiliiiil tUIO l iPiu li (in v I'orirail and lliis eon i> iiM-d bv \[iril .!(l, l'l().i voiir iiniiH- ivill In-riil(-i-rd in conical for I()v20 lili'hi/.e I'lilor piiririiil, cnin- iMlIi I'laine, ri'n In-noliln-d \Li> I.")). 'I'Jiis rind IxlO tiiiiid\. Xn Adiilli', F(i‘mi|in bliKlith liiglirr. t.liiMit'i\ iiiiiU br firt’«>m ipil l>v prii’Piil)'. VAI{I)EN fcl lJDtO i:. IWwivnee Si. I K I -1 rhaili'i members, rcicncs a nn.sape from Mrs. I nior Rronn. (.larhston (riphi). a new member. John //. Davies. Coleman Street, and Mrs. 1 heodore Cnm-oponlos. South Jidnison Street, look on. Michigan Weather Jolts Briton cult of flower arranging and the rfgid set of rules surrounding it, Niehols says he IS tired of "biggerness and beltcrness." He cherishes small arrangements. Some' women attack flower arranging as if they were building a war memorial or erecting an Arc dc Triompbe, the Englishman stated. There’s nothing wrong with a few daffodils arranged in a 111 111 bier "Flowers nowadays arc jiist a unit 111 tlie design, not just flower.” MUST LOVE FLOWERS ■'A good arrangement comes with love of flowers, not .strict rules of floral experts." Ill eonelusion, Mr. Nichols spoke brielly on a subject dear lo him, ;ind one be has been .studying lor several yi-ars. Its scientific name is rad-ie.slliesia or. radionics. Those who believe in this believe that everybody and ('verytliing' emits radiation Irom birth until dealli and even allerward in such things as trees. (Tills is not be (-onfused with aloinie radiation i . This radiation can and is' /leing measured, assessed and phoUjgraplied. L('ss formally, this has to. do willi having a green llnimh or whal the English term "green tiiigc'rs." A green lluirnl) means having the magic property to’ make jilants flourish and grow. The f('rni goes hack to the roots of the English language and be^ul. It is fuiind in every language. Niehols went on lo say that 10 1,') per cent of every aii-dienee will have this magic-gift or radiance. He gi|ve his listeners directions kH’ testing them.selves, A eelchrity luncheon at King.sley Inn followed the Church Unit to Hear Talk The Rev, Edward A. Rolli will speak to the Episeoiial Churchwomen of C h r i ,s 1 -, Chureh Cranbrook on "College Work in Michigan" at their luncheon ni e e t j n g March 3. The ehureh's work In tlie diocese Will be the theme of the talks. Mr, Rolli was gradii^c'd from the Ejiiscopal Theological .Seminary in Cambridge, Mass. He was assistant chaplain at Harvard University and then chaplain at the University of Michigan. Since July 19(),'!, he has been rector of All Saints I'lpiscoiial Church in East l.ansing. Club Planning Ball The Kalcri Club will sponsor a "George Washington Ball" this evening in the Cedar Room of llie Knights of Columbus Hall on .South .Saginaw Street, Tickets will be available al the door. Demonstrofes Resuscitation Lt. Donald Kraft of Hie Oakland County Sheriff’s Department demonstrates "the technique of mouth-to-moufli ressueitatioii before the Fashion Your Figure Club Thursday evening in Adah Shelly Library. Former Pontiac resident, Mrs. Russell Gortner from Hacienda Heighls, Calif., was a guest. Engagement Announced The engagement of Nancy .^^ane Radke to Seaman James E. VanSeoyoc is announced by her mother, Mrs. Marjorie .1. Radke of (Jre.seent Lake Road. tier fiance who is stationed with the U.S. Navy at Norfolk, Va. is the son of Mr. and Mrs.' James R. Van Seoyoc of Pontiac Lake Road. An April () wedding is planned. ■ on your INCOME TAX to muk» miitokn, tflll your )a« i.loin. Why toko (h» risk o( coJIly errori and tim * butiot^ino auH))i 3 UP , TODAY Of TONIGHP 0 guaranice occuiatft preparation of every r make any errors Ria( cost you ony’penalTy or * P^y. «)i Utf Oitllril Sl»li> 732 W. :HU*RON ST., PONTIAC • II m 1(. <1 p itnil SM.I P B Ml III p.m IE t-TII'f __________N^PEN TONITE vr I'' •■■1 II THE POXTIAC PRESS. SATITRDAV, FEBRUARY 23. 1963 W-0 in 3-Way Tie as Holly Beats West Bloomfield Stewart Stars as Barons Top Clarkston, 64-60 Northville, Brighton Post T r i u p hs; Race Going to Wire By DICK POINTON Bloomfield Hills met a threat i from Clarkston last night and be* jfore a gym (ull of screaming fans took home an important 64-60 Wayne-Oakland victory. Last night the Colts’ chalked up their 13th consecutive .cage victory of the season, beating Madison, 75-54. The win puts them in a ‘two-way 1st place tie with Clawson. Both have 9-2 Oakland A records with one tilt remaining to settle the race. SUPPING THROUGH - Pontiac Central's Ray Sain (44» slips past Midland'.s Bill Grosskopf (15) on (his third quarter drive for the basket last night, Sain's drives and jump shots were a ciinstant worry to the Chernies as he tallied 17 points in the game. Central won, 70-34. EML's Runnerup Slot Captured by Seaholm Romanskl 3 1-3 V The win put the Barons into a three-way tie in the torrid W-0 race with Holly and West Bloomfield, all 10-3. Holly and Northville have been the only W-0 opponents to defeat West Bloomfield; It was the second Holly triumph over the Lakers, this time, 64-60. Fitzgerald . Nortbville meanwhile defeated a determined Milford quintet, 56-52, and Brighton lowered t h e boom on Clarenceville, 55-35. The crown will be up for grabs next week in the final loop games as West Bloomfield travels to Milford and Bloomfield Hills hosts Holly. Clarkston was all the Hills’ Birmingham Seaholm clinchedl The Maples led all the second place in the Eastern Mich-|but saw the jRoseville quintet euK,^^^ quarter 20-15 lead and des-igan League and Ferndale had:a five-point half ime deficit down Craven con- toscraptosaveitsunbeatenrec-lto one several times in the 1^^^ to hold the lead until a ord in the loop’s featured con- hal. Slater had 16 in the game Bloomfield’s Roger Ste- ............... '^h.le Ron Jacobson hit 20 for the ^ « 53 53 winners. ,..uh s -jo wt Bill Hood and Dick Boari were the visitors’ chief threats with 17, LEAD CHANGED and 14, respectively. ,john Augusten of the Barons EAGI FS TRAH f^^ade two-of-two at the line to Ferndale trailed 56-55 to Mt.jg-^ ^|^field ah^d Clemens with 27 seconds left ^ . ..h a fwn the game, but George Morey hit Clarkston countered with a two- a jump shot and Truman McNeal . .C . .. .... ...______go the score was tied again, 55-55. Meanwhile the Dragons from Lake Orion were breathing fire and destruction on Oak Park, 71-62, and Fiti;gerald handed Avondale Its 10th defeat of the season, 52-34. T\yo players carried the brunt of the Troy attack, Roger Qual-mann and Bill Muir, each with R«p^port o 18 points. Teammates Roger ppmy’.■.j Bauer and Chuck Showalter had 12 and 10 in that order. tests last night. Seaholm used six straight points by 6-4 John Slater to pull away from bothersome Roseville in the final two minutes of piay for a 57-52 win. Baptist Team Tallies 114 in 'Y' Loop jtallied two free throws with .seven Trinity Baptist pounded St. Paul Methodist Friday, 114-53, i fourth ranking team in the to feature action in the YMCA- | weekly AP Class A poll. Stewart then stole the show as he fired one in from the corner of the key and intercepted an errant Wolves’ pass. He raced the length of the floor and dropped it in to give Hills a 59-55 lead. Church Basketball League’s senior division. Bob Davis’ 16 points for Ml.lJ Clemens Were high in the gtSnie. .seconds left to shoot the Eagles linto the lead. Clemens’ Al Hairston added a field goal at the buzzer I to reduce the Ferndale winning margin to 59-58. The Eagles are ' 14-0 this season and are the Augusten thfen stopped t h e clock and his hustling Baron j teammates when he fouled Jack iLundy of Clarkston under the I Bloomfield net. Other league games had; Another loop game la.st night Macedonia stay one game be- Ugw Port Huron take Royal Oak hind Trinity in the title chase jKimball 50-39 and move into un-jf^*'®'^ attempt, by beating last place Oakland disputed pos,session of third Bloomfield took quick advan-Park Methodist 62-53. place. Chuck Ingram hit 24 mark-l^^f?*^ of the rebound and Stewart An All Star team of coaches ers for the winneT^who led 26- a™f^ner to put the and referees was defbated by 122 at intermission and could nof Sa'Iic out of reacm Central Methodist, 43-40. Cent- j be caught. . ...... East Detroit up.set Hazel Park, : 60-47, for only its third victory this year in the circuit. The winners grabbed a 36-35 lead at the clo.se of the third period and never trailed thereafter. Dick’’ Williamson scored 22 Troy Shares Lead in Oakland A Race No one is superstitious at troy High School. Least of all anyone on the basketbair team. and 19 in the final to the Red- skins 20 and 15 totals respective- Avondale U-IO) is all alone in the league cellar and meets the powerful Clawson crew next Friday. Lynn Thorpe garnered 12 in a losing cause and Tom Doberstein had 17 for Fitzgerald. Ch» - Manager Bob Scheffing wants all the Tigers’ pitchers to be rally stoppers — but not when they’re batting. So batting practice for pitchers is being emphasized more tSan it has for years at Detroit’s spring camp. The days when the ninth spot in the Tigers’ batting order was aimost an automatic out are over. At least that's the intention. This will take some doing with Hank Aguirre, admittedly the major league’s worst hjt-ter, pitching every fifth, day. He improved his average to .027 last year with steady work after going .000 the two previous seasons. “This is great,’’ said Aguirre yesterday after taking his licks and . actually hitting the ball thrown up by the pitching machine. “We’ve never heard .this before down here ■— ‘okay, pitchers hit.’ ’’ . MlltfR Young, the most penalized play-I'f in the history of the National North Farmington hancied Bir- ii,„.k,,y L(>ague, had a birthday mingliarh a .56-51 V;tback last;present lor Detroit Red Wings' The Milford Redskins (.3-10) after last night tied things up 34-34 at Northville (7-6) with 2:00 remaining in the third quarter. Northville pounded the Red- Utica 5 Loses 2nd Loop Tilt night in a Tri-River Conferene'ej game. | Groves had trouble keeping up j f„r blowing up with North Farmington as the « ..........^ victors outscored them in every oath .Sid Abel yesterday. Currently sitting out a three- skins with II eon.seeutivc points e quarter except one. North Farmington held a 25-24 halftime lead. Northern Farmington’s Mike Flcmiplng led the winners with 15 points. For Groves, Bill Stephenson was high with 12, The final mihute saw a tliree point difference between teams. North Farmington was snct.'OBsful enougti from tlieciiar ily line to keep ahead. Kincheloa Defeated EVERETT, Wajh! (H -Hariliil- lon Air Force Base, Calif., won Its third straight National Air Command basketball crown Ves-I 'erday with an 87-65 victory over Klncheloe Air Force Base, Mich at referee Frank Udvari last Sunday, Young presented Abel with a painting of a Red Wing player in tlie penalty hex with the number “2“ on the back of his sweater. A note on the painting read: ‘Happy Birthday, Sid. May all your problems be little ones-'lJt was signed “Hewey” ’ Young, wlio.se nickname Hewey, wears No. 2 jind spends niudi of his time in The penalty box. lip's spent 210 mlntues in the penalty box so far this sea; son for a new NHL record. Abel yesterday celebrated his 45th birthday but it wasn’t exactly hi.s- happiest .since the Wings droppfed a 5-3 decision to the league-leading Chicago Black| Hawks Thursday nigjit and will play at (Jiicago tonight. however and Milford fell behind ^ ■<> ~ under the barrage, 45-34 at the j v"". :1 :i. end of the period. *' Tom Swiss led the way for lhe| winners with 19 points and Jim Mi’j,',',","''’ Juday also of the Mustangs gar-1 * ered 12 while Tom Sheffler and] »k'o“''on e 'im Barnes had 16 and 14 in a ( »»" 3 1 losingcau.se. luu"’""'' '1 'i Cl.t) ■T 4'f Brighton dominated the entire tilt de.spite the. disadvantage of " the Clarenceville gym and home fans. The Bulldogs jumped to an early 16-2 first stanza lead while k(Vif)ii)g tlie (-’larenceville offense without a single tally from the floor. Deiyiis Hartman had 1 6for the Bulldogs and Roger Lane 13.” It was only the second time Utica has been defeated all season, but the 56-44 loss to Lake .Shore Inst night was enough to put Utica out of the lead in the Bi-County League. Lake Shore is 13-1 after the ■ victory and Utica 12-2. Jim Moshenko had 15,and Pete Claw 12 in a losing cau.se while liake Shore’s Russ Noyes and Dave Gencrer^u garnered 15 ^■aplfecer— i5 Utica made only one bucket in J nine attempts in the first quarter n and never recovered. The score 7 was 25-13 at the half in the win-3 ner’s favor. (roll 13(1, Swiii-iim 1 Anuflim J13, l,ou"« in(, Cltlruji Last clbll for AL Ump Cleveland (upd -Ameri- _jn l.*ague umpire Harry .Schwarts, 44, dltd last night of lung cancer at I.utheran Hospital. Schwarts, of suburban Euclid, was admitted to the hpspltal Monday, apparently unaware of tlie seriousness of hi.s illness. .. - NFIL Standings Tiger Hurlers Swing Away Cubs. “He’s not a good hitter, but he’s better than Hank.’’ Scheffing was backed up by the record book. After a slow start this season, Brother Rich High School’s basketball team has started to jell and last night made St. Theresa of Detroit its 8th victim in 14 starts, 73-54. , The Birmingham school had good balanced scoring led by Paul Jagel’s 24 points. Behind him was Bill Moore with 22, Dave Walter with 13 and Charlie Keller with 12. Moore was the big rebounder for the winner. “It’s really helping They’re teaching me to chop down on the ball and keep my eye on it.” INSIDE WORK Yesterday was the third straight day pitcher’s batting was stressed. A chilly wind forced the Tigers to work out in their converted hangar. The pitchers will concentrate on improving their stroke until the infielders and outfielders report Tuesday. The intensive batting practice may have turned up a wcak-hitting companion for Aguirre. Bob Anderson, the lanky righthander secured from the Chicago Cubs, was unable to match Aguirre’s shots off the pitching machine. “H(>y, I think I found one ivorse than I am,” hollered Aguirre when Anderson managed only one foul tip on the first three pitches. ‘Sorry,said Scheffing, once managed Anderson with the Brother Rice Gets 8th Win The 5th starter, Steve Sesti Pontiac scored only two points but did an outstanding defensive job on St. Theresa’s high scorer Tom Shay, allowing him 15 points, six points below his average. The score was 34-24 at halftime aiid the closest margin was eight points with six minutes to play. Next Tuesday night Brother Rice closes the season at St. David. Jayvee Scores . 'll 52. MUIland 30 HloomflftUl Hlils 53, Clarkston 40 PNH 57 Southfield 47 *Vo8t Blootnflold 49. Holly 42 ■rov 44. MadlHon HelKhts 41 ^ 1. ^Iko’K 64. Bt. Benedict's 3t Eosevllle 4‘ ... FH»8«.r«l(l 4(1, : 0 87 n Seaholm Hazel I’ark 63, Eael Uelrolt 8 HO Klml)iill 47. Port n»ron :I4 Oapac 45, Armada 2' Rochester 83. Lapeer 48 Dryden 71, Almoiit 41 Cllntondale 47. Lamphoro .18 Clarenceville 44, Brlahton 39 ' lohor Day 48, New Haven 33 th nfaneh 47. MlllInRlnn FannliiRton 88, Dlrm. On Walled Lake 67. Waterford SI Clarenceville 44, BrlKhton 88 Lakeahore 46, Utica 43 Bennett's 31 Leads Broncos to 64-60 Win Guard Hits 15 of 17 Free Throws; Laker Rally Falls Short By DON VOGEL With Jack Bennett converting 15 of 17 free throws on the way to a 31-point effort. Holly spoiled West Bloomfield’s hopes for an outright Wayne-Oakland League basketball championship, 64-60, last night. ' The home-court victory before a capacity 1,500 fans earned Holly three-way tie with West Bloomfield and Bloomfield Hills for first place. Only two of the teams and possibly just one, will remain at the top after next Friday’s final games. Holly will play at Bloomfield Hills with the loser dropping out of championship. 'The winner will be assured a tie for the crown. West Bloomfield goes to Milford and if the Redskins pull an upset, the winner of the game at Bloomfield Hills will be outright king. A victory by the Lakers will mean a twO-way deadlock. Holly needed all the charity it could get while posting its second four-point victory of the season over West Bloomfield, ranked fifth in this week’s Associated Press Class B poll. And the Lakers were unwilling givers when it counted most — in the fourth quarter. PUSHED AROUND It seemed that every time Bennett got the ball he was hacked, bumped or pushed by a Laker. He started the period with a field goal and then hit 12 of 13 from the line as Holly held off West Bloomfield. The Lakers cut 10-point deficit to 62-60 with seven seconds to play. But Bennett was fouled with four seconds left and made both tosses to ice the game. The 5-10 guard hit eight field goals, six coming on his flying jump shot specialty from the right corner, to complete the best scoring effort of his high school career. His previous high was 25 points. The Lakers scored one more field goal than Holly, but the Broncos had a six-point edge from the foul Ifne. Sixteen of the free throws were made in the last quarter and saved the Broncos. They hit only two of their 20 baskets in the final eight minutes. Tom Fagan entered the game early in the thirJ quarter and played a key role in Holly’s success. He immediately hit a three-point play to give Holly a 40-32 cushion and displayed some good ball handling in the late goihg. Holly coach Bob Pence praised the defensive play of his team. The Broncos used a zone that kept the Lakers from driving with consistency and also was effective against outside shooting. Bill Eliason, dropping in baskets from Ih^ corner and underneath, was the offensive star for the Lakers with 16 points. He scored all four WB field goals in the third pjpriod. Bob Aumaugher, playing after being out of school for two days with flu, tossed in 15 markers good under the boards despite his weakened condition. ,i,y (64) F(J FT KOZY * KALL KIGER American Hoiii* Haating Oils 24-Hour Burner Service MoiitrvAl DaUpIt N««< York Boaton 30 J ,68 178 18 T8 04 180 : IP 13 6P 143 38 U 43 163 No Otmet Hohedilliid t , , ", ' ■' J TOM KIGER S|irANDARD BURNER SERVICE COMPANY 9^5 WEST PIKE STREET —FE 4-1584 V I.„. *■' 'V,. \ ______________