V, Th« W«oth«r V.I. ftMtlMT BarM« ran* CiHUMa 9t t»mnn (BateMi M Pait«) THE PONTIAC PRESS Hoxn« , Edition VOL. 119 NO. 188 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 18. 1961—24 PAGES Nikita: TyGoes *Home* in Quiet Dignity Astronaut's Dress Rehearsal WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress generally applauded today the warning to the Soviet Union that the United States will maintain its rights in Berlin. “The U. S. note is blunt and serious, as it must be, and accurately reflects the mood of the American ■♦people, Rain Possible PRACTICES FOR TRIP — Astronaut Virgil Grissom leaves the gantry elevator at Cape ' Canaveral following a (light simulation designed Ar rhaUfix to prepare him for his scheduled flight into space. Grissom's flight, scheduled for this morning, has been postponed to 6 a.m. Wednesday. Congress Applauds Separate Notes Warning to Soviets to Russia Warn of Responsibility Sen, Jacob K. Mercury to Soar i lU »JUUI | outspoken advocate of Midst 80s Again, Temperatijres will soar into the )s again Wednesday. The weatherman said there’s a chance of afternoon or evening showers and a high of 86. The mercury Ik expected to drop to a low of 6$ tonight. Morning westerly winds at 1 mile an hour will become 6 to 12 miles tonight and south to southwest at 8 to 14 miles tomor- firmness on Berlin, said he sup-portecK the administration position, ■'and it should be supported by all Republicans." He referred to similar notes by Great Britain--end FYanice. The lowest recording in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. was 62 degrees. The themometer reading at 2 p.m. was 85. “If (he (kimmunlKts will listen, they can hear. And they had beat take note that this time the great democracies are determined there will be no backdown on Berlin," davits added. Chairman J. William Fulbright, D-Ark;, of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, called the U.S. note "a very restrained, serious and effective statement of our po-■ition." Messages Offer Plan Again on Free Election for German People •WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States, Britain and France told the Soyietj Union today it is jeopardiz-ling world peace and en-** dangering the lives of-' millions by its threats : against West Berlin. The Western powers com- -pletely rejected the Soviet ' Union’s claim that it can wipe out their Berlin rights f simply by signing a separ-i ate peace treaty with ciom-r munist East Germany. ' At the same time they ' Sen. Frank Carfson, R-Kan., a Offered to try to work OUt a Pontiac to Move on 2 Projects member of the Forei^ Relations Committee said he was “pleased with the President’s firm merit on Berlin." Man Shot Due 8 A.M. Wednesday ^ Outlook Good for Launch Water Contract to Get OK; Urban Wrecking Bids Asked Tonight •MUST BE FIR.M’ "In my opinion," Carlson added, "we must be firm. We have commitments and we must keep them." Sen, John J. Williams. R-Del. said he thought all Americans "will support a firm position on Berlin." Two moves of importance Pontiac are expected today — final sanction of the water pact I with Detroit and launching of the urban renewal clearance program. Detroit’s Common Council was 'expected to give ready assent to CAPE CANA VERM., Fla. (AP)| A heavy cloud cover forced .type clouds at about 35.000 feet —Project Mercury officiaig report- postpowoniout o( the original [early Wednesday morning." ed today improving weather con-! launch time, which was S a.m. ditions have encouraged them to| (Pontiac time) today. The Na- proceed with plans for the United States’ second launching of a man ti space Wednesday morning. ’The delay Monday night. time of launch was changed to 8 a.m. (Pontiac time). Astronaut Virgil I. Grissom, the man picked for the flight, was reported obviously pleased at the decision. "I’m r^ady whenever you are.” he told Walter Williams, Mercury operation^ director, after the favorable report from a midmorning weather briefing. Adminlstratton called i On the baMis of (he encouraging forecast, Williams directed launch preparations to proccod. Grissom, 35. an Air Force captain, took news of today’s postponement calmly. When Grissom, 3S, was awakened shortly after i«:S0 pan., .Monday night and told of the postponement, he shrugged, then went back to sleep. ’The two-hour difference launch times was to allow addi-time (or the dissipating cloud cover to disperse. WEATHER BETTER The special weather team reported "Weather conditions in the .. Cape Canaveral area are much Grissom )usti Walter K. Willman said the City im^ved. 'me multiple layers of|2'* before he was to begin I Commission would be asked, prob-clouds are expected to dissipate medical checkups and don his ably next week, to okay a con-leaving a hlfeh thin deck of cirrus^!si»c« suit.- —‘ the 35-year contract with the Detroit Water Board, since the step has already been okayed in principle as part of a long-term expansion of Detroit water service in outlying areas. “negotiated settlement of the unresolved problems of Germany.” Should the Soviets press the crisis, the U.S. note said, the “In-ternationai dispute arising out of Soviet claims would have the gravest effect upon international Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., assistant Senate majority leader, said the note “firmly and quietly expresses the determlna-Boa of the Preoident to tnstet on the legal rights of the occupying powers in Berlin.” Council sanction is the final authority needed to begin preparations for an i8-month eon-structioa program to replace Pontlae’s municipal well sj^em with water pumped here from Detroit. "At the same time,” Humphrey continued, "the President has wisely reaffirmed the willingness of the United States to negotiate freely for an ultimate agreement on the whole Orman question, which could stabilize the situation central Europe.” ’To get started. City Manager w w KWH Spacemaa's Family Waits By The Associated Press How does an astronaut’s family feel after getting keyed up for the big day he’s to be shot into spac» and then finding out there"' a delay? In the white bpick ranch-type hmise at 11 Stonybrook Lane. Newport News, Va., Betty Moore Grissom. his wife, was noncommittal Monday night when told the shot had been postponed. But her plans remained unchanged. She and sons Scott, 11. and Mark, 7, will be glued to the television set when the Untie comes for the attempt at Cape Canaveral. In Texlay's Press The postponement on the ad-ice of a special team of U.S. Weather Bureau experts came as something of a surprise since all predictions up to 6:30 p.m. had beav optimistic. ' Even so, the nation’s newest Lweather satellite, the Tiros III, fiiW a week ago, had detected signs of a developing high pressure system in the Caribbean al-lyiost as soon as it went into or- And in Mitchell, Ind.. Dennis Grissom, a short, graying railroadman, sighed softly wht heard of the postponement. "Well, that just means another day to go through," he excigimCd. tract for engineering of a $3-million pipeline project within the city limits to distribute Detroit water to existing water mains. Tonight, the commission will be asked to start the urban renewal clearance program by calling for bids for the first wrecking con- Humphrey said be had urged President Kennedy to coordinate Allied information services behind a drive for free elections in Iron (Curtain countries and against the Soviet demand for three-way administration of the United Nations. He described the President as sympathetic to his ideas but said he had received no commitment. Two men charged with reckless tracts in the 145-acre project area-Lpefution of motorboats on Orchairl bit. Subsequent reports from the Tiros were watched closely since they substantiated ground reports of the high pressure front In announcing the postponement the National Aeronautics and Space Administratibn said the cloud cover was attributable to "an easterly wave which has been moving acroM the Caribbean for the past three or four days." "rhe weather hitch developed as! 2 Fined, Sentenced for Reckless Boating Demolition of deteriorated homes and some commercial buildings will be covered in the first contract now and clearance of South Saginaw.Street buildings in a second contract later, according to Robert A. Stierer, assistant city manager and urban renewal coordinator. In all, some 300 structures are scheduled to be acquired for clearance by the end of the year, few have already been knocked down by city crews. 2 Million Latins Strike BUENOS AIRES (UPIl-Two Lake .vesterday pleaded guilty before W'est Bloomfield Township Jqstice of the Peace Elmer C. Dieterle. By RALPH McGlLL Publisher, The Athinta Conriitution ATLANTA (fi — All his life "Tyrus Raymond Cobb was in j competition with life, but chiefly with himself. ★ ★ ★ For perhaps a dozen illness-plaguNl years he had been trying to go home again. He could never do it. and it angered him j that here was something with which he could not come to grips ^ and have it out. LONDON (AP) - A meeting i of the Western foreign ministers : for a detailed study of Berlin i and Germany is expected to be I" held soon in Paris. Diplomatir i sources said today an nnnonnee- | nMtrt from the French foreign | • ministry will fix n date between 1 Aug. 1 and S for the meeting, j* It was not like going out behind the grandstand n1th^ Billy Evans, the umpire, or Into n Dallas hotel room with Buck Hersog. Try as be would, he could not find the old dream in the hills of North Georgia where he was born 74 years ago. But he made it at last. He went to that mysterious eternal | home on the sunny afternoon of July 17 just about the time the j players of his day would have been taking the field for batting . practice. \ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) peace and security and endanger the lives and well-being of millions of people." For this menace to world peace, the note said the Soviet Union must bear full responsibility before all mankind. | At another point the U.S. notej declared: j GM Says Fringe Benefits Cost Halt Billion in I960 i DETROIT (AP) - General Motors today pegged vefop. it Is because (he Soviet Of fringe benefits to its 300,000 hourly-rated irniou to attempting to invade iCmployes at more than half a billion dollars last year, the basic rights of others.” | The figure was included in a detailed booklet pre-The notes were delivered in|sented to United Auto Workers union negotiators as Moscow Monday and made public!---------------------a „ i i j simultaneously today in Wash-' , Contract talks resumed, ington, London and Paris. \MackinaC RoCe's b(X)klet alSO "The one here was, given out at' the White House as a reply to a Qver-All Wi/lfl©! memorandum which Soviet Pie- ff Is Blue Horizon mier Khrushchev handed President Kennedy at their Vienna conference June 4. "All the world will plainly see." the United States asserted, "that misuse of such words as ‘peace’ (Continue on Page 2. Col. 8) "Thomas C. Koehler, 21. of Warren, and Orald A. Roude, 22, of Detroit each was fined plus $25 costs and sentenced to two days in the Oakland CTounty Jail or 30 days if the fines are paid. Orchard Lake police apprehended the men after watching them cutting too close to water skiers on the lake yesterday afternoon. BULLETIN To Dedicote New Center 1 Critic Speaks Ricltover ivants Air Force ? abolished — PAGE (. Was he disappointed? "Yes, but I reckon that’s the best they can do. "They want good weather and I want it too.” 'technicians and scientists* were million workers went on strikP| Like Betty Grissom, the father;preparing to resume the count- today in a show of strength against; ANN ARBOR (iwA new $325.-and his wife Cecile will be in down which would have led tojthe government, but the massive 0(X) U. S. Army reserve center for! women passengers report-front of the TV set when blast-offja scheduled 6 a.m. liftoff this i wall^ut failed to still the life of Washtenaw C()unty will be dedi-' edl.V died in the fiery morning. the city. cated here Oct. 7. NEW YORK (AP) — A small plane crashed today in ft thickly populated area of Queens, and burst into flames. Four persons were reported killed. The plane went down between two houses, a block away from a school playground swarming with children. A male pilot and three MACKINAC ISLAND (P - Blue Horizon, a Class D cutter owned by Dick Kaup of Chicago, today was declared over-all winner of the annual Chicago-to-Mackinac Island ■Yacht Race. Blue Horizon finished the 333-mile grind up Lake Michigan in an elapsed time of 60:20.38 and lasted a corrected time of 48:26.24. dsHS A honors went to Nimbus, a cutter owned by Dave Hatcher, also of f lilrago, with an elapsed time of tW: 42.07 and time of S2:S8.4». went to GM’s U. S. union employes. GM said fringe benefits in 1960 averaged $124.58 a month for each hourly rated employe. “These greatly expanded em-pfoye benefits add heavily to GM’a operating costs," the firm’s booklet said, “and are Just as much s'paH of the com- 'time comes. crash. Romahajo III, owned bv Harvey Nadeau of Mu.skegon, finished first in Class B with an elapsed time of 59:58.10 and a corrected time of 50:11.07. In Class C, top honors went to Meteor II, a cutter owned by H. Burkard of the Bayview Yacht Club. Meteor finished with an elapsed time of 56:13.12 and lected time of 49;58.'21. re«1 wages." GM .said the extra benefits represented an added employment cost of 72 cents an hour, or $1,495 a .year per hourly rated employe. The firm said fringe costs last year were four times as much as in 1947. It said that straight time wages. including cost of living, have more than doubled at the same time. The average wage rate for GM employes was $1.37 an hour. GM said Its current average straight (iiiie rate, including cost of living, is $2.76 an hour. The firm said GM’s hourly rated "lemptoves averaged $3.48 an hour. ■■ I including fringe benefits, as of last 'April, ; Two-Faced -♦ Chinese bow and scrape ^ but also hate — PAGE 1$. Job Problem 8 in District Bid to Help Alter Constitution Despite rebound, unen > ployment at 5.6 m i 111 o j - PAClE 17. World Tension Michigan residents building bomb shelters — PAGE For Enemy Warfare _ Army’s planning—PAGE 38.** Morketa ^ Obttaariea TV B Itodia Programs . 81 WBoais. Bsri .......'tf ! WooM’s Pages ...... lt-11 lEdlter'i Rote: Thli b tbc i obS tn s soiiM of iU (toriM the coMtltntlonsl eWTentlon c SUtstu sppcsrlnc on t* diy'i primary ballot OajElaBd Country __________________ _________‘S X larfe number of candidatet. the ■tortea art brief aketebee of both Re-pubUean and Democratic candl-datea. Purtbar artlelea will be run Biior to the Sept. 12 feneral elec-' ilon. Bee-------——---------------- George A. Googasian, a future lawyer. Leslie H. Hudson, former state representative. Dick M. Kirby, union business By GBOBOE T. TRUMBULL JR. When Pontiac voters go to the constitutional convention primary polls next Tuesday, they will find six Democratic and two Republican ctmdidates seeking to represent the 2nd State Representative District (Pontiac). As in similar contests throughout the state, there hiss been little public interest expressed in important v6te. Mrs. Gladys NeWrett, state educational leader. Carl. O’Brlai, former employe of a manuf^turing firm. frwn MM* party—will bqaare oH ia the SepL 12 eonvMitloa efoc- Voters can pick from one of the following Democrats: T. Boice Puixiy, marketing staff supervisor for utility firm. Those pulling the Republican primary lever may choose between: Raymond L. King, attorney. Robert C. Smith, teacher. King, 31. resigned his post as staff assistant for the county GOP committee to devote full time to his legal profession and campaign for a seal tn the tall convention. His work as campaign director (or his party in the city last year has encouraged some ^publicans to believe (he predominantly Democratic city "is about as ripe as ever for a Republican victory. SMITH HIS FOE But first. King, of 1095 Dudley Ave., must outdraw Smith, whoj big the eonipany a* TO REVIEW PRtMiRESS GM also said it wants to review with the UAW the progress of its employes over the past 13 years under the wage formula pioneered by the auto firm and the Union. helped' reorganize his party’ ganization at his former residence in Isabella County in 1956-57. A graduate'Of the University of Maine and Boston Uidversity School of Ilw, King received the Ford Motor Co.’s good cltisen award for outstandbig com-muaity service bi 1$» while serv- purchasing supenisor. Con-Con Vital Swainson Tells Pontiac The candidate served as vice! president of the American Law Students Association and was president of his law school graduating class. When the convention in Lansuig, Smith. 43. of 14 Williams St., hopes to carry a mas- GM thus planned to make its first response to a long series of proposals submitted by the UAW since the start, June 88. of bargsiaing oa a new contract. "We will make a few proposals of our own as to changes in the national agreemnt,’’ said Earl R. Bramblett, GM’s directs ei labor relations, following a discussion yesterday on demands at the plant degree in secondary administration from the University of Michigan as an addendum to his I varied credentials. Gov. John B. SwabnoD hasigan community ... of every man, nominate them next Tuesday. 'the will of all the people of Michi-stressed the importance of ncxt|"'®tean and child. i ‘'Coming before the constitution- 8®^^ Tuesday’s constitutional convention' primary in a special meksage to Pontiac area voters.^ "This fall’s ednstitution convention wilt be the most important political event Michigan times." he said. "The new document to be written will affect the future of every Michi- “The new , .. . .. . "We must expend every effort al convention will be matters in convention the best all three areas of stale govern- possible. An important first step men! — exeOulive, legislative and is to go, to the polls Tuesday and area su y zs. ,.,j^ convention can accomplishifo reflect not only the changes ••"niere is only one way to make:much in assuring more effldentjthat have been wroi^ht fai Michl-certain that the best del^ates areland econ9mical state government gan but also to ciMrt- a sound elected on Sept. 12; that is to and in making it responsive tolcourse for the future." whs write It . . The former (actor) worker and dance studio ow ner has been bistrucltaig Wateriord TowasMp High 8ehool stadMits on government and .American history for five years. t Smith and his wife were active in Republican politics in Mount! Pleasant! - The family moved (Continued on Page 2. (Xd. 4) Lake. foth. A|^t«orMrr. Os*—22.*c f*l ■ nWVe. Tlie present three-year ( I tract, which expires Aug. 31. i ries a wage formula dating bsc the 1948 agreement. ,' It provides (or an annual w increase of 2Vk per cent, or 6 o an hour, based on productivity ties wages with the (kwernmt cost of living index, "There has been speculation i GM. Ford and Chrysler wiouM ;to scrap the fonnula in cur jbargatoing talks, puticttlarly cost-of-livmg escalator. But Unton says the conifiaiiiee. ae (have given no indication ofw 1 wo \\ THE p6NTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY; JIJLY Ifr, 1961 Workers Flee East Germany, Factories Lose Skilled Hands Frmm Oar Nem Wires Iwitk East Germany. Nst-aee a» day. beiare the said today that if another 100.000- ■■ii wnTifi—la IMS 150.000 wori»is flee East Germany, the Communists aiU have to Wwt 5^- I, but Qiey are choosing escape instead of rebellion becsuw of SI Soviet (UvlsiQiis in East GtrnM^. down their factories. Refugee officials said East Germans fled to the West last weekend at a rate of more than one a minute because they fear flieir W’est Berlin escape route may be shut off by a Soviet peace treaty Western officials say the East German regime already is short The officials said psychologically the East Germans arc on the verge of another revolt against comrou- Says He Caused'37 Blast Whidi Killed 296 in School • a-ns. Isday. IWs raised Is nearly IlMt the total sf refs-gees who have fled Bast Oar ■naagr shms dMy 1. The all-time record for one day 'is 3.U0 refugees on March 3. 1903. Lower Saxony Station officlalsj in Hanover said Monday thati special Western allied commercial l^nes are being chartered to By out the refugees Jamrhihg West Berlin. OKLAHOMA CTTY. Okla. tUPD —A 41-year-old ex-convict with a mental hos|rital record said today that he caused a Thxas school explosion that killed 296 studenU and teachers 34 years ago because the Some officials believed his story. Others did not. IV ex-cen\1rt Is WUHam Estel aimed robbery pad toreesqr M k beewne be threatened to tions on the gas pipes two weeks befnre the exfdo^. letting the gas escape and collect, "All I warned to do was to run up a gas bill because the principal of the school reprimanded me.” he 'My stepfather owned a pipe-yard and I had worked with him. r knew plenty about oil and I p^es. I didn't really intend to kill anybody." He said his sister and a cousin ere killed. "I am ready to go to the electric chair." he said. OUalMNiM Oty fWel of Police Daa HoUiagsworib said V did - Benson's niece, who lives in Kil-gwe. Tex., said it was not the first time he had blamed himadf Ibr the explosion, although prior "confessions" were confined to family. LINK TO SISTER’S DEATH? The niece asked not be puUidy identified. She believed he blames himself because his 14-year-old sister was kilied. *'He bas been a menial pnttont Whitley and Sheriff Pete Gibson said they would go to the London ■ lilt after the explosion, to investigate further. "His mind is bad and he doesn't know anything else because he has been thinking about this explosion so long. " The school was the public school in the town of New London East Texas. An explosion tore .. . apart March 18, 1937. Authorities I /» /» i i bumrt u» » „^(Qf Con-Con Lagging The refugees riding The Day in Blhninf^atn BIRMINGHAM - A public ing on a proposed VMO.OOO medical village in BevUrly Hills .will be ' eld Aug. 7. At that time officials of Medical Village, Inc., headed by Dr. John M. Burger of 1T7S E. 14-Mile Road, will present their proposal for land use at the comer of Beverly and Southfield roads. tv story. Detective CUpt. Jsck MalHnex said; *. official Malcolm R. Lovell of Bloomfield Township chairman of the special commlt- : Wind velocity o eeti TuoMlsy *t 11:K Wcother- Mostly lunny Ht(knl and Trsioerotarri Tkl> Dale la M Veara in 1»« M In Masday'a Tcatsocatara Ckarl — 1 ...,n.'Oa ----- III Xacantba SO Alpena III Xacnntk- ss or. Raplda *' -- ahtoo Monday la raatlae (at reearded daaalawal Hifbeit lemparatura .... Mm? Um^AU Trav. Clly Atlanta nitmarck Weather—Partly cloudy 15 M KanaaaCIty ., „ 71 SI Lot AlMOlet SI SI » SO Miami iMch 05 10 13 55 Milwaukee 14 M 11 50 He* York OS 14 15 50 Omaha II St 15 U Photnlx — — M SO Plttiburith „ „ IS S4 SaltLakoC. SI M IS II a Pranclaeo SI " 00 01 B Sta Marie It IS 14 Seattle It 55 Xnmpa 01 IS I Ar rhololaa NATIONAL WEATHERe—Showers and thunderstorms are fore-cufll for tonight in the Northern and Central Plaint and the Upper d Valley while thunderthowers may oqcur over the pouth-n slates. It will be coMer in the Northern and Central Plains and tbe -Northern Rockle*. ' im the Pontiac area aee Raymond L.'King, ION Dudley Avc., and Robert C. Hniith, II Rllliams kt., VIh con - con candidates; Charles Tucker. 117 LutVr 81.; Charles W. Harris, 437 Moore 81.; Coua-ty Clerfc-Reflater Daniel T. Murphy Jr„ 144 W. Iroquoh Road; Mrs. Harold E. MacDonald. 411 Elisabeth Uke Road; and Alger Conner, 6 Ultoa Road. Elliott said the committee will attenipt to pinpoint major con-con issues for delegates and develop education and information programs to keep voters abreast of convention developments. Other committee members include Dr. James C. Covert. Royal Oak superintendent of schools; Thomas B. Adams, president of Qunpbell-Ewald Co. and member of the Wayne State University Board of Governors; D. B. Varner, chancellor of MSUO, David R. CAlhoun, Mayor of Huntington Woods; and Raymond L. Baker. R-Berkley. Find Long-Lost Charter ASPEN, Colo. Oh- The long aearch is over for Aspen's city The story is based on a story that Meiade is convicted of statutory rape. In Jackson Prison, he disrovers that the other priaonm hate him because of the crime for which he was convicted. So far, only jail sceoM hi been shot. 8ceues to be shot the near future Include n m« Arrest 'Revolutionaries' GUATEMALA (M-PoHce today Law, huwever, to nut running. He’s pushing hard for Googtston, bis political protege ud son-in- The 25-year-old son of a Pontiac grocery owner hopes to be admitted to practice law in Pontiac after he takes his bar examination in September. The June graduate of the North,-western University law school plans to tackle another assignment in September — the general Section campaign against the winner of the King-Smith runoff. Sharing the same desire Is Mrs. Neldretl. M, of « Marivs Ave., who believes her years of work with the nattonal and Michigan congresses of Parents and Teachers, the Michigan Vonfii Oommisston and Leagne of Women Voters qualifies her as a dele- AAarket Slide Slows LONDON (B — The severe slide in stijek exchange prices slowed | today and there were modest gains in some sections. The market was extremely sensitive, however, and business was on a small scale. Mrs. Neldrett, who'll receive an award at the State Fair in September for her education leaiter-ship, prepared a report last year lor the White House conference. It was on the achievements, trends and problems of education in Michigan. KIRBV HOSPITAL TRUSTEE A 43-year-old agent lor the Detroit, Wayne, Macomb and Oakland Counties Building and Construction Trades Council, Kirby, of 91 N. Edith St., is a three-year member of the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees. Campaigning for Coa-Con In the April eleetton, Kliby was a roembei' of a county eoorMnat- O’Brien. 31. of 477 E. Montcalm L. is the treasurer of the Pontiac Democratic Club and has served as a county delegate to state conventions. The candidate is a former employe of the purchasing administra- tion department of the Ford Tractor St Implement Division in Bir-mtagham. His education was at Wayne State University and Henry Ford Community CcAege. Ont after the nomlnatisn, and making Us first attempt at poll-ttos. Is Bnrdy, 41, of m linden He is a marketing staff supervisor for Michigan Bell Telephone charter. Oouncilmen found it and|Co. odier documents, missing about 10 He was graduatod from the Uot-years, in the courthouse at Gun- verstty Of Michigan and holds a niaon. Aspen wum in Gunniaon law degree from the Detroit Ool-ooqnty, instead of Pitkin, when it lego of Law. At ont timt he was incorporated in 1881. {a newspaper reporter. of the Warner Brothers movie-makers swept into the jail at 9:30 a.m. yesterday and spent the day playing their trade in an Patty McCormack, expected to be scheduled for local scenes soon, is still in Detroit after flying from the coast. Another actor from this area with a role is John Anthony, 51, of Redford Township. A thmtrical booking agent in Detroit, he plays the role of a convict. This is his first appearance in movies. time Stole Bank. The movie is said to be based ber of persons oltlelally described as revelutlemufy ceuspir- deutlal sectioB of Guatemala. Ne Echo Schedule America’s Echo I satellite will be visible in the north sky Wednesday at 2:01 a.m. 89 degrees above the horizon, and at 4; 06 66 degrees above the horizon, moving northeast on both occasions. on an actual case that reportedly occurred in Oakland County several years ago. However, the writers have taken considerable pains to avoid identifleation. "Because the crime is not un- this kind of production here bc^ fore, but this is the first am convinced will put the crime across in the rl^t way. It should act as a deterrent to youths who might become involved in such a situation. NOVEMBER OPENING The movie is expected 4o open in Detroit sometime in November, Martin said. During the shooting, incidentally, Martin asked the cooperation of the public in not crowding around when local scenes are being shot. Medical Village Hearing Slated in Beverly Hills C. Altoe has been elected chalrnsan of the Birmingham Recreatian Board, succeeding Mra. William Jackeon. Named vice chairmgn of the »rd WM E. Rrps Hanaon. Marcia Hug^ was appointed clerk and Patricia I. Hui waa named deputy clerk. TIm oorperattou Is seeUag a soutog ekaege sf eae seottoe sf the property, a lTT-amipetitor sports has ever known went home as (piietly as if his father had andleader was agonizing^ concerned about his wife’s moral welfare before she died. "We will unfold a weird ttde the activities'-of his wife . . and we will show beyond a doubt that Cooley was only attempting to protect his home,” P. Basil Lambros tdd United Press International. Cooley, SO, is accused of fatally choking his 37-yearold wife, Ella Mae, in their Willow Springs, Calif., ranch home while their 14-year-old daughter. Melody, watched terror-stricken. Proclamation Gets Sharp Soviet Reaction Policeman Cleans Gun, Bullet Goes Through Door, Kills Tot DETROIT (AP) — ’Twenty chU-dren had Just completed the last act and dance of a gay variety Iww. They had been performing Monday on the lawn of a house across the street from policeman Lawrence W. McDonald’s home in suburban Southgate. h * it One of the tots was McDonald’ daughter. Linda. 7. She and the others were chatting about their show. In his living room McDonald, 1, a policeman three years, was cleaning his service revolver before going on duty. Politics Discussed by Common Market BONN, Gomany (AP)—Government heads of die six Common Market nations met in the West German, capital today to discuss future political cooperation. ’There ___was t»"np prospeet they would the pltdi that followed the 19S9 agree to meet regularly to discuss political issues. ★ ★ ★ \ France’s President Ch^es de Gaulle .and the premiers of Italy, VIENNA (UPD Kennedy’s captive nationa week proclamadon has produced riuurp reaction from Oommunist countries, the criticlam has not reached prodmatkB. a At that time, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev told visiting Vice President Ridiard M. Nixon that the prodamatlpn was "direct in-terfereiKX in our internal affairs. (Current Cnmnunist reaction is limited to Bfoacow radio charges that the Kenn^ administration is following theEifenhowerre-gime’s policies and to press attacks in the satellites. The weapon discharged accidentally. ’The bullet smashed through the front-door glass and struck Linda 138 feet away in the abdomen. She was killed. 'My God,” ^cDonald wept over Unda’s body. "I’ve shot my own daughter- I'll never hold a gun McDonald and his wife. Sue, 30. have another daughter, ^ery). 9. Fellow officers said Linda' death obviously was accidental. About one-half of the elementary schools in the U.S. are still of the one-room variety, but they now contain only about five per cent of the grade sciml enroU- pean defense, including the Berlin crisis, and relatians of the (fom-mon Market with Africa and Lato Aniericara W ; ♦ h Diplomatic ai^rces said the fan-lediate issue Js whether pddtieal cooperation is I to be implemented by little summit conferences frequent intervals to bring the six closer together oh other than nomic matters. Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg Joined Chancellor Konrad Adenauer in the one-day meeting also was to consider Euro- Says Ties Stronger With United States NEW YORK (AP)-President Ayub Khan of Pakistan fUes home today, professing a strengthened friendship tor the United States., Ayub, adx> came to the United States tor top policy talks with President Kennedy and Secretary of State Dean Rusk, told a news conference here Monday that "We are not neutralists." ★ w * Of friendship with the United States, he said: "We stick to our promises and obligations. The U.S. government should know that.” At a United Nations dinner giv-1 by Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold, Ayub said "The United Nations as now constituted fai. jnoce important to- the smaller nations than to the great powers.” Mwe than 000,000 Canadians, 10 per cent of toe labor force, are employed in retailing. (AdTertlumcDt) lactery RspiesMtative Here WIDNISDAY—^ »• 3:30 P.M. RECONDITIONED Electric Shaver REMINGTON •tor* trttf Wtdnndajr i EleeMe SAovirir—Mala ftoor SINUS CONGESTION mMs eliiiiii & hii fmr TRUMAC TABLETS IMM SMm ml CsmOi ti bt Mini lirtmNy hr nM If dan namlita.^ Hiht Ms H d|M da« mfantmbnsIHai. N iM wNwfm ■y d He aksn asMtai ml bm IrM sour pntanbMS-TWt Nmi hh dlMn ebs hm bM Tnmc aai sb- mMk 08 N. Saginaw SL —Main floor Wants National Flower WASHINGTON (UPI)-Sen, Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y., has called on Congress to sriect a national flower. Keating’s choice—the rose. He said it ’‘po8se88ea.lhe.^ digni^ of solemn occasions—it has the beauty that is America.” OPENING SPECIAL Brand Nnr Vagran ' l-Yoor Guorontae F... 1CN Service I Ir REffLMnMmRS PI4-4240 Any i/i^ay you took at it - Mwjiys Shop the Store That SELLS LESS... la Pontiac SIMMS It BIG DISCOUNTER ... aria that hat been since 1934, years of cut prices for Pontiac and Oakland County folks. So why don't you be a Smart Simms Shopper? Hero Arc Some Excollent Buys TOMORROW-Wednasday Only These ore |utt o fsw of the many, many Bl<3 DISCOUNTS in Simms — hurry, because we hove plenty of tome, few of others. Rights raterved to limit oH quantities. BARGAIN BASEMENT Lightness? Stroh’s has it. Smoothness? Stroh’s has that. Refreshment? You’ll say it’s the mostirefreshing beer you ever tasted. Pick up a couple of six packs of America’s only fire-brewed beer today! at popular prices everywhere! THE STROti BREWERY CO.. DETROIT 26, MICH. V' - . ' t TUNE IN FOR EXCITING DETROIT TIGER BASEBALL ON TELEVISION AND RADIO Big 2x6 FOOT Rug Runners Regular $2.95 Values — Now ut pile rugs, in solid colors multi colors, foam rubber or rubberized non-skid bocks. Fully washable, tome bound, tome with fringed edges. CHENILLE SPREADS FIRST QUAUr Twin or double I bed sizes in white or solid colors, washable pre-thrunk o.nd colorfost. With 2W inch fringe, •wweeeeeeeeeeweeeeeeweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee WASH 'n WEAR V/HITES MEN’S Short Slfovo Sport Shirts Our $2.49 Quality 1 89 2 for $3.S0 white cotton sport shirts in sizes M-1-XL-XXL and XXXL (15 to 19%). Deluxe Drip-Dry Wosh 'n Weor fabric. Gleaming white for dress or sports wear. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS GLASBAKE 7-Piece Ovenware Set $1.50 Value C «eweeeei Starter lel includes Oval Coiserole with cover, 9-in. pie plate ond 4 cuitard cupi. Glaibake ovenwore it guaronteed for LIFE ogointt oven heat breakage. . -------td’eed Genuine THERMOS *Keapsit’ Vacuum Bottles Regular $1.49 Seller — NOW Intuloted filler with new formula ttronglat makes this bottle shock Istant. Full pint capocity for Protects Steps Against Wear — ALL RUBBER 9x24 In. Stair Treads Regular 39c Value —EACH 2S Ribbed rubber treads with curved npsing to protect steps and help reduce house noises. Easy to install 'em yourself. Choice of brown or block colors. No limit—nohe to dealers. ••♦•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Round Style — Sturdy Woven Wicker Utility Baskets Re«eler$M9 Seller Stylvd os shown — sturdy corry-ing hondlos, largo 18" lop diomolSr, 16” tall. For laundry. et N. soeiMiw St. [7^ FOUR THE PONTIAC PRgSSi TUBSUAY, JULY 18, 1961 the Hhito-Mtln Aiiport aetflUMB tn ^ te BoOr. 1 AUTO AIR CONDITIONER WITH THE EATON KeEFieeMTto AUTO AIR COHDinONBR It's cool comfort driving In Mw hottest weathor, yet Ifs priced well below what you might oxpoct. Quick, quiet cooUng reaches every eomer of your car's interior—even at foot-level. Just set the dial Indkaler to the amount of cooling you want—It wlH be maintained automeHcally. It's installed, at your convenience. In |ust e few hours. See a dsmonstration today — drive in cool comfort oliGMAL tmmm «Mtmi tJUM — Buncg PIKE RADIATOR SERVICE 403E.PilnS». FE 44692 Ihs fint Bicbt la 1 MW hoow b e loBclr O Just moved? See us about a low-cost personal loan If you and your family juit moved into our neighborhood, you’ve probably spent considerable money insetting relocated. If so, and you would like a loan, why not drop around and see ui. You can ar« range this loan quickly and confidentially. Fact is, you can get a personal loan for any worthwhile purpose. Education. Medical expenses. In virmally every case, you pay a lower rate of interest than you’d pay anywhere else. And because we’re a JuU-strme Bank, we can meet other money needs as well. Checking Accounts. Savings Accounts. Automobile loans. We can take care of all your financial needs under one roof. We cordially invite you to visit us any time. What it a foll-aerviee Bank? It offers you more than any other savings Institution. It’s the only place that meets all your banking needs. Here are some of the many services available at full-service Banks: Checking accounts YES no Savings YES YES Personal loans YES no Car. loans YES . no Home loans YES YES Business A farm loans YES limitad Paraonai bank standing YES no GOOD SERVICE IS A HABIT AT PONTIAC STATE BANK Gets Eichmann Ail Tangled Up ProsGCufor Brings In Evid«nc» Proving Adolf Had Lied JERUSALEM, Israel (AP) ^ Atty. Qea. Gkleoa Haurnr ma- ed the eirGcstapo (tfllcer with coBtradietDry docummtary Unto erosaaxamiMthm for the eighth day Eichmann denied; 1. That he "made the corrections” to the official report of the Wanntee coBterewce in 1942 which the deciaioii to exterminate all Jews In Europe was discui 2. That his department IV-B-t liad anything at all to do with "OperatkiB Retohard." the liquidation of all Jews in occupied Poind. 3. That IV-B-4 was listed as the transports of Jews came from Poind to the Auschwitz death smp. The attorney general confronted Eichmann with the Wannsee record in which Gestapo Chief Rein-hard Heydrich ordered Eichmann to make the CQCTectkns in the final draft of the death plot. The defendant contteded the ment II-A was involved.. He tod “They were not at thq Waimsee oonfSrenet and you were," Haus- Bertt!# Crook to Hovo Hi Fint CHy A^nogor BATTLE CREEK » - Orville Over, 41-yeapold city managw si aarfcsburg. W. Va., Monday was named Battle Greek’s first dty Over win start his duties as dty managw Ang. 21 under terms of a new dty charter adopted last year by Battle Greek vd ing diseeinflSsd. adaoededged: "Yes, that’s dgM.” But he could not be shaken in his denial that I wrote the correctioM in the port. “Wdl, we shatt let the court decide," Hauaner aaid. Eichmann admitted also that the coaforanca In January 19t2 In the Wasnset suburb of Berlin produced the figure of U million Jews to bo oxterminated In Europe. But he refused to be linked dbectly with this "cxecutlvt de- Nomos Dotroit Doctor to Notional Comniitloo WASHINGTON oi - Preddent knnady haa named Dr. Dewitt T. Burten of Detnott to the Nattonal Advisory Oommlttee on the Selection of Phyaldans, Dentists and Allied l^wdaUsta. The committee advlaes the sdec-tlve service system on the selection of doctors, dentists and oOier specialists lor the armed servicea. The Hammurabal ruled the west Semitic kingdom of Babykm from a067to20Q5RC1heCbdeofthe Hammurabal is one of the eaiilest examples of codified law. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., poaes at the Capitol with photos of new Russian Jrt planes which he dlsidayed earlier inihe Senate, saying the UniM States was ’’hoodwinked’’ Into taptong=b(f mraied-ahtTaft devdbptot w(i& went full tpeed ahead. He identified the pictures as showing Russia’s new sitoersonlc bombw, bigger than any U.S. aircraft except the slower BS2, and the new Soviet fighter similar to the design of the U.S. Fin which was abandoned. Retain Boycott of Dominicans, OAS Is Asked WASHlNGTOTf (AP)-The diplomatic and economic quarantine sign stiil hangs over the Dominican Republic today after the 0^ n of American States was urged to adopt n wait-and-■ee attltxide toward the successors of slain dictator Rafael L. Irtijil- ■ I. An OAS committee vriildi . nine days In the Dominican Republic and a month deliberatiiig in Washington said that it ia premature to say whether or not the Dominican government has token the Democratic road after 21 years of dictotorshlp. The committee thus recommended that the nations of thi ic and . which they have Isolated tha Dominican Republic sine* last year. Hw sanctions were impoaed after the Trujillo dktatwsfaip was found to have been Implicated in an attempt to aasaaslnate Vent-■ Betan- Solid Confort Gas Heat CUmUl BUTH6 WILL INSTALL DELCO COLEMAN LUXAIRE FLO^O MUELLER AFCO FURNACES FRII ESTIMATES Chondler HEATING CO. 4431 Fomell OR 3-4492 OR 3-5632 Comi 3rd Cabinot (UPI) — Pro-Weetern Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda today completed (xganizatlon of his third cabinet which included four ’’strong men" of the faction-ridden ruling Llberel-Dtonocratic party. PRESCRIPTIONS P RESCRTTIOIIS ROPISSIONAUY ROPERIY PERRY DRUGS Mf L IN. 1231 Mtoin •t Pwrr el XpMmu n S42S9 n 2-IS59 CARL'S KIDDY LAND 10 SIDES SI Car. Dfaile and Telegraph Rdi SOLID Cl IMPORT Solid comfort and Yronderfiil peace of mind... that'a idiat you have—24 houra a day—when you treat youi^ to dependable, automatdo Natural Gaa heat. With time^aving, woric-eaving, mt^ani Gaa houae heating you can lelaz— •iljoy more leiaure time becauae there'a no coal to ahovel or aahgn to empty, no &raa to baqk, or dirt and grime to remove. The heart of your heating ayatem ia a clean, quiet flame. No other heat in the w»ld ia more carefree and automatic than Natural Gaa heat Your fuel supply is adequate and always available—right in the houae—ready for instant, finger-tip-fast control. Itr automatically fills the houae with warmth before you get out of bed in the nwiming and turns its^ down every night without a single thought or care firom you. Today, In 8 out of 10 new homes, It's NATURAL 0AS FOR HEATING! CONVERT TO GAS HEAT...NOW! CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY 27 Weal Lawranca Sitotf ( TtItpliOM FE 3-7812! H-Vi boys and girls were playing soldier as it gn'w darkr in the Encino hills. A dog barked at them. Its owner, Raynor P. Winward, thought U was coyotes again. Coyotes had frequently invaded the swank foothill district in cent months. RARKING WHITE HOUSE INTRODUCnON-de Lesseps Monison, newly sworn U.S. representative to the council of tlfe Organization of American States, holds his 4-year-
d.Ot3m-mand Europe must be organized, equipped, trained and deployed so as to be able to react promptly and effectively with: "First, conventional weapons, when such weapons are adequate to the military situation. “Seeond, a I s m I e weopeas, when the am of such wrepoas la lllaess that It to lafectioas, that is, commaaieable. U this eptaion to correct, the iOaces to certainly only mildly commaaieable from peraon to peraen. Perhaps it to transmitted indirectly by way of intermediary carrier. Treatment? We have in stock all kinds of fancy shots, etc., if you are fond of that sort of thing. AAA But in the present state of our knowledge of pathology of this disease, I'd say your best bet to to stay home for a weric or two and loll about the houae, yard or garden until you begin to feet ashamed The Country Parson "5. EbccepL in certain wdl-defined oases of direct sellf-defense. atomic weapons should be introduced Into battle only after a particular dectokn to do so W resulted from the operatkn Of an "A nsB. Bke. a tree, eaa / break eat ef jngwactrehlii ep-- by sUaMy eihttoriag to By DR. OEMtOE W. CRANE CAS£ J-444:’ Anna M., aged 28, to a frustrated wife and mother of 3 toddlers. “Dr. Crane,’; she began, “my husband ridicules my housekeeping and belittles the fset everything to usually in a turmoil around here. “He says if I used the neatness of his office staff, { I'd be able have a spic - and -1 span house. What| do you thinkt" That’s malarkyt No good motbe opic-aad-spaa hoase for more than a few miaatoa, eopeclally If she has toddlen and the ronitiple chores of ohopping, laaadry, fM^, dtaperiag qpd teadlag If you men have such a neatness compln, then take over the entire weekend job for a Saturday and Sunday. “Or. Crane,” one husband remonstrated, “I did that and I had a pretty neat house those two days.'* AAA Ihat may be true, for be put on the extra pressure of tiying to prove his point, but just keep it up the other 363 days of the year and see how soon the male inorale will i^lt! But h«v are a few hints by ■» add more efficiency to (1) I the week’s tonndry, that may re-qnire several hoars. Then when you strike a lull, pick out a task fnnn your agenda that meets your available thus slot. Don’t tackle a 3-hour item when you know your available free time is only going to be 15 to 36 minutes. (2) Remember the old motto that "Many hands make light work." So teach your family to share some of the daily chores. For example, the last perooa oat of A double bed shoald make the bod. And year Undergarton-ere ate atoo old snoagii to be taught how to make their twin bed. The last person in the bathroom should atoo be sure the towels are neatly hung on the rack. And the last one to brash his teeth should always wipe off the flecks of toothpaste from the bathroom mirror! Remind your diildren that the Pullman trains expect each person who uses a wash barih to dean it up for the next passenga*. So , you mothers are'not tanposiiig an unfair at unnatural regtdatkm. the table top with a wet sponge or dish cloth. (This may help spur some of your lagi^u'd eaters to q>eed up.) The first person in the kitchen should start the fire mdei^ the tea-kettie. And sfler (Bnlag. as la a «• aette or oaaek bar, eaeb dtoer iboald take hto dtohre and cap or gtam to the slak, where they abonM at toaot be riaoed oH and clading pajamas Is the n Treat evnybody alike — adults and school childrw, and add some suitaUe penaHtos. Such he^ wiO relieve Mother tremeiKlousIy and also teach neatness to all the rest of the family, too. Atoori ortU to nr. Omtso w. ciom Si eora d Th* PmUm Praai. FooUm. MtoUtwi. todoiiw 0 toot 4 fs«gl ■tuniMd, MU-mUraMad aratopo sad ■ (OWYWHI INI) Mrite it a rule, too, that the last ' B the tabic must wipe off emttne >n tomi am prleteSto iws dto!55Sia “ M *0 AP Tlw footloe Pran a Sonrarad bf Mrrttr fw a «mta > *tek: abert mattod to Oaktud. Oaaaaa. Utuic-rtoB. «eoa;b. Uprar aad Wa»b-t«BN OsoaUw H to $MSS a rear; ajftASsarjt THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY ij 1961 ■razlev CASH MARKET JL 78 N. SAQINAW STREET * . WEDNESDAY ONLY SURER SPECIALS! Shouldtr Cut Veal Steaks 49> Ug or Rump _ Veal Roasts 49> SEVEN' — ^ AT rhM*tu GINA KISSES YUR(-Italian actreM Gina LoUobrigida rewards Soviet spaceman Yuri Gagarlii with a Ug Ufa after obtaining his autograph Monday. Stars atteiMlii)g the Moscow fflm festival met the spaceman in the Soviet capttaL FVTUBE HOME OF PONTUC BUSINESS INSTITUTE Completely Modern Occupancy Scheduled for August Mid-Summer Term Opening Monday, July 34 Pontiac Business Institute 7 West Lawrence Street FE 3-7028 Ttmniug for SasiooM Careers Sioco 189$ lAdvrrtttement) (AdTerUumcot) Stops Constipation Due to **Aging ^lon” New laxativs discovery re-creatas 3 essentials for normal ragularity Ai you grow older, the internal mu»- ■>•'''---------- clea of your colon waU alM age. lose the atrenrh that propela waste from the body. Stagnant bowel contents become so dry and shrunken that they fail to stimulate the urge to purge. Relief, doctors say, lies in a new Uxative principle. Old-style bulks and moisteaers may create gas, 'eke 3 < (I) CoLONAiD moisturizes dry, hardened waste for easy passage srith-out pain or strain. (2) Colonaio's unequalled rebulking action helps re-tone flabby colon muscles. (3) And CoLONAio acts gently, on the nerve reflexes that stimulate the vital ‘’mass movement” of y^ lower colon. CoLONAiD relieves even chronic Bowles to Slay With Kennedy Plans. 18-Day Trip for ^L&rRMigfKrtiof^ Apparenrty Wrong WASHINGTON (AP) — Under-aecretary of State Chester Bowles leaves Monday on an IMay trip to Africa, the Middle East and Asia. Ar * * In the wake of several news re-I ports that he was resigning, Bowles met with President Kennedy Monday. The White House j said afterward: "It’s obvious he’i j staying.” ★ ★ ★ Pierre Salinger, White House press secretary, told newsmen about the trip but did not what Bowles' plans are after this mission. Bowles first stop is La-. Nigeria. He will hold regional oxiferences with U.S. Ambassadors in the various areas. An unidentified administration >urce, before the Bowles-Ken-nedy session, said the department official "has neither resigned—nor has. his resignatiaii been asked for, and his resigim-tion is not currently expected." Autoiita C6. Earnings Are Sharply Reduc^ TOLEDO, Ohio OR - The Electric AutoUte Co., whi^ recently sold two plants to Ford Motor Cb„ Monday reported sharply reduced earnings for the first six months ot this year. 11.582,302 or $1.04 a liiare compared with $4,734,713 on $2.98 a share in the similar year ago period. Sales totaled $82,606,510 in the six-month period ended JUne 30, compared with $125,042428 in the first half of I960. A dairy cow drinks 12 to 15 gallons of water a day. 4 days for relief. CNd-«tyle tails and constipation overnight; it to gentle it drup cramp and gripe the entire wu bmpital proved safe even for ex- relief that works only on the lower or other food nutrients. Get COLONAm colon (area of ConstipationX today I INTaODUCrotY SIZE AS* The New York Times, the New York News, the Washington Post and the Washington Star printed stories Monday reporting that Kennedy is believed ready to ask Bowies to resign and accept a post as ambassador. The electrolytic process for making aluminum was discovered in ‘‘Sdyl How do you like your RAMBI-ER?” “It’s a tiger on the road and a mouse on gas!^^ “With any previous car my best was 18 miles per gallon—now I get 25. A tiger on the road — a mouse on gas!” These are just a few excerpts from Mr. Hoffman’s letter about his Rimbler. With its higher-torque engine, the Rambler American has far more zip and hill-powd- than other small compacts. More head-room, actually, than any “Big 3” car! See your hoffman, ofj^- J O J Heights, N.Y., Rambler dealer! (not pictured here) Thisa sn the woidt of supennuket merchsa-distng maMger BURT AMERICA'S LOWEST PRICE Manufacturers euggaatad factory-dalivarad prtea for Rambler American ^ Deluxe 2-Ooor Sedan (not ahowiO. State and local tsxea. If any. $1847 about bis Rambler car I'va ovroad *ver Ssicmbled such perfection under one roof!” 1%1 Rambler American Custaoi Fdbr-Door Sedan RAMBLER-WORLD standard of compact car I CLARKSTON HIGHLAND LAKE ORION ROCHESTER nin Sgaoei. pa. Wllaaa Aata Salat, tea. Eoaa Jahaaaa Si a. Mam SL MS M4S Mater Salat •• ■•»*- M-S4 its M. Mala St. UNION LAKE n A C Malar SaM SMS OaaiataraaM. Solon Wants Give G>nverted Is Abe Sifting on a Museum? surprise of almost everyone, thnt« is a place to hide in case of an atomic attack tm Wadilng- I a man-made cave, directly under the Abraham Lincoltt Memorial, a cavern so big it’s busy creatii« its own stalactites and stalagmites. But if Rep. Fred Schwengel, R-lowa, has his way, it will be more than a vast hideaway. It will be turned into an underground museum in which the 2.5 million memorial visitors each year can learn more of their, and Schwen-gel's favorite hero. A Schwengel and Randle Truett, chief historian for the National Capital Parks, took « couple of rqwrters on a conducted tour of the cave. ‘BI08T VmrED’ “This,” Schw^el said, ns «s climbed the steps to where Ua-coln sits pondo^, "is the mont visited memorial in the whole world." said. ‘Linctdn is the most American American He had U 1 the spirit of our Sdiwengel leads the Uncoln bloc in Congress. When he was a boy, he bought his first Lincoln 10 cents. It now Is worth around $10 and has been joined by 599 other bodes and 54 pictures of Lincoln. Aid Schwend climbed down] the ladder into the dingy cave below with the enthusiasm of a collector ort the trail original copy of Lincoln's Gettysburg address. It's A huge hole, all right. About 165 X 60 X 60 feet. Aniarently the bujlders had to clear away a lot of dirt jn order drive pilings heavy enough support the weight of the Me-mmial. On the piling^ they erected huge ooncr^ i^lars. When they finished, they didn't bother to fill the huge cavity. Schwmgel has written Conrad Wlrth, National Park Service dl-l rector, for a preliminary estimate of what it would cost to turn the' cave into a museum. And he has even figured how, at a dime a quarter a throw, it could start paying fw itself. .... CASTONE AND ALUMmUM SID»6 ag low as »16»oo FIS! 1000 SAH 6rs«i StaMOg H 2-9421 , 24 HOUR SERVICE 24S7 PorceH DrWe-^safloc Oeatures think at different! speeds. It may take a full sec-| end for a thought ta imss Tronr one side of a large jellyfish to! the other. But a nerve impulse! races through the brain of a cat at the equivalent of more than 100 yards a second. TRY...BLATZ or Fronkenmuth for 0 rafreshing chongtl DR. HENRY A. MILLER Optometrist COMPARE OUR LOW PRICE ON BOYS’ SPORT SHIRTS Qoumroonoiis, PRINTS, SOUDS, SHORT SLEEVES YOU CM CHiUNIE IT NOW AT PENNETS 'Whit a buyl What a collection ... new-look prints, fashion tone solids with neat emblem. All tailored to Penney’s exacting specifications with a short point coUv, short sleeves. Machine wash. 7? 4 to 18 O. J. ‘ Save 3 wavs with Big D DREWRTS INNEWJORE CONVENIENT Glass Cans! Drewrys in compact new glass cans lets you save 3 ways! Save space in the refrigerator ... save returning bottles... save money because there’s no deposit! What a rewarding * way to get Big D-the beer brewed by an exclusive process that keeps all the refreshing flavor in... brews sweetness out That’s why Big D’s never too heavy - never too light -always just right! You can enjoy glass after glass wiUi no full feeling after. Get Big D today ... in the new glass can carry-home pak! ^S&)C€i£S^-}tice^ ..4 - >K|GHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JULY 18. 1961 DON’T BREAK THE CHAIN When someone stops advertising, Someone stops buying. When , someone stopsJbuying, Someone stops selling. When someone stops selling, Someone stops making. When someone stops making. Someone stops earning. When someone stops earning. No one can buy, sell or Make, or even advertise! So advertising greases the wheels in the chain of events that enable our making a living and that spells out the progress of this community. Don’t break the chain. ADVERTISE!NOW! IN THE PONTIAC PRESS /" ^ / THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1961 NINE EAGLE nraimT IroeiClift intheinlliislonpniM IThelmaRitteri the Misfits PAlllNIKIl-lllIHIOMNI LOOK IN ^ ANY WINDOW TOI STARTS 2-EXCLUSIVE ★ FIRST RUff=1 ★ AND ★ ■CiMiwiASecM^C ■ LAST TIMES TONITE |RHIWlll!tnWM^ FE 2-1000 "tHI RAD SEED" A SHOCKU S. Ttlt^vpl' kivara Likt Rd. ITS SEHSATIOHAL! ——AND------ WE ARE PROUD TO BRING TO YOU FOR THE FIRST TIME IN A DRIVE-IN THEATER AND ON THE WORLD’S LARGEST SCREED THE GREATEST MOTION PICTURE OF ALL TIME! -Exocfly qs Originqlly Shown- 11MMDEW AWMIDS i..cMM«-BECT nCI^ MtnOGOLOWrYNMAVU TCCNMieOLM* .POLICY. Welfare Slash Fails as Project Town Finds Only One Man Able to Work and Be Taken Off Relief NEWBURGH. N.Y. (AP)-This dty’s protnm for thrinklng its w«ltu« bui—* giant ai • subject of controveny — today allowed aigna of remaining for aome time a dwart in application. The machinery of the iS-point . racnm began to roll Monday, and the flrat few caaes checked turned up only one man on relief roUa able to work. And even that lae haa yet to be fully appraised. The caae came to. light as of-fidala began a tentative review of the city’s approximately 900 welfare clienta to determine how many an physically able to take iIm OB projects, aty Maiva^r Joseph MitcheO, who launched the program despite opposition from state officials, hiul estimated 60 men would come under the work-or-else rule. But the preliminary welfare department check turned up only three prospects, and two of these were ruled out the claaslfica-tion. One had obtained a job and gone off relief, and the other had iiffered a foot injury. The third individual still was ^ Youth Anonymous Starts Oakland County Unit Youth Anonymous, an organha- i ijtion devoted to helping delinquent ' ) through 25, recently eatabllal new chapter in Oakland County. The fhwt membership meeting ' win be held Tuesday, July 25 in | ' the Birmingham Unitarian Church . Community room, 31 N. Wood- | ward at Lone Pine Road, Bkxxn-t field Hills, at 7:30 p.m Ernest Rumaby, executive dlrec-k tor of YA appointed Mrs. Edwin | V. Clarke (rf Birmingham, and Mrs. WUliatn , s4. Gemmona of | I Bloomfield Townahip as coordinat-jin| district leaders. NOW I THRU FRIDAY er, Sl-ycMU’-oId Vernon, Fla., man, holding two Boston terriers, tells newsmen in Cedar | Key, Fla., Monday ot being adrift in the Gulf of Mexico for 17 days on his cabin crulaer. He said he went without food for seven days ahd water for five. I San Salvador, capital of Q Sal-1 vador, was founded in 1523 byj Spanish conquistadmes under Pe-| dro de Alvarez. | NOTICE To patrons of the OXFORD THEATER Due to power failure the last showinir of “Hie Absent Mind^ Professor” wiUbe TONIGHT Tues„ »iily 18, 1961 Children of Louisville Are Sour on Ice Crebm LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)-Miss-ii«: Children who like Ice cream. There’ll be no ice public school lunchroom menus this fall becauae, Supt Samuel V. Noe aaid Monday: 1- It lan’t popular. 2- Bids reoeiveduwera too high. Noe said the 47,000 youngsters Shm iTAUakU rI Xetfe -Tiailer Paik III60 HAUOI ON REACH SITE OR SHADY PARK ^OCATION • B*Mh FriTUti*! • FI»r(rMw4i • BMUat • SwMWiBt Rant by Waak ar Mantk in the city school consumed <»ly 20,000 gallons for the entire tdiool year. M IB' TOPEnw SSOTl SnOB UD IB. n 34«i ★ STARTS TOMORROW I ★ EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN IN PONTIAC! — eousewwqMiii asBFRQOuowow M^eocsHmuiAN' ...AND RMISOFFTHE DEEP ErJD fORTWDGBDCWGUyS..., Come with the go-go set fy y lUSINESSMEN'S LUNCH ^ Served DaUx , Wrealttast—Dinner ' reiturlng Our Famoua , Kuher Corned Bdef COMPLimE CARRY-OUT 8XRVICB 4 ' Our New Location [ RHIMES DELICATESSEN KNOCK THE "0" Out of OSMUN'S St CARL'S lASEBAU RAN6E Car. Dhiia at Tslasuph M. NEW FORMULA FOR FUN];/ ot 7:00 and 9:02 HURON It Begins Where "Peyton Puce* LeftOfL. Return TO PEYTON PUCE TOIVIGHT famIubt SUPER BONUS NIGHT LOAD UP THE OLE' BUS AND COME ON OUT FAMILY SPECIAL-*1">twc.r ---AND SEE- ALL COLOD PROGRAM ‘‘BETWEEN HEAVEN AND HELL” —COLOR— OMHimdiUMQM Dainjaais^ — TOMORROW — including BEST PICTURE % aJWUJAM Plat—In Cinanwscapa and c Cana Stratton-Portar'a "FRECKLES" Box Offica Open 7:00 South Union Loko Rd. EM 3-0661 ‘The WaekIml Skill la the Amy’ Starring Jack Lemmon Riekty Nelson (RRgRtPEKrcatBiiintRtjKOiiiMi ,wVICW7BC«ffdDWII«-8»eawiaxwnumBiEOOKaw.sww PLUS TK'mwTkir smuiiK tfklniar/’ iUI . .-wait -awn Steve PONROT SemMler W NOnMAN KAIMOV-Fron t HMV l> Mev Mi aid Nennai Iteaev Rnieiiilaa Olteim w RCMano QuiW ■ EmwUw Pniwir IMIWM lunOeR WAIT Dims LAST TIMES TONIGHT! Dedicated to the propoation that tera-agers and parents are created equally hilarious! TOMORROW! Illlllllllll^^ TOMORROW! \Walt mMltrV —— ■ NSW ALA-CAdtroON nUTuni^ OMHuikKd^K'One Dalmaiians STARTING TOMORROW EXCLUSIVE I FIRST-RUN I FEATURES 1 A World Of Beauty And Rollicking Fun For Everyone! OPEN 7:00 P.M.—SHOW STARTS S:30 P.M. 'BEN-HUR' STARTS 9:00 P.M. REDUCED ADMISSION — $1.25 Childrtn Under 12 Yoon FREE! Um EuIy iti RmB PiiklBf I Oily Oit NifonMBct Each Nifht! ED6GN STimniROA iCDlMGUy QMnB'iiniRiiuw-Maui^ uumm -ALSO- TNRT ivn ranL-ROAlB OUT OF TNI nn oFimi -GORJDtt WRIT DISNEY PRCSCNT8 TECIHKOLOr HIYIEY MILLS-HinEV MILLS mepmEBTlRAP^ MURKN O’HIM - BRIIN KEI NEARTommy Sands and! Annatto ting I Clarin RUCiSlB • ilARHES 1 PRBTNSE PICTURR FOR ^ | LAST TIME TODAY! 1 STRAiwO 1 1 Qaallly Caaiciaas Paapia | 'GONE WITH THE WIND" »I TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 18. IMl ThcMK Mwly-fa«tik»iMe. wMer, rtfeWeiW rain tuitB need wdsy 'SwabMng to itny peettir PRIDE Integrity from *50 AAA (QUALITY Gaaranlwd Bond Wth I Tov CiMira of Mo No society — gem or __ governs the quslity ot a er's purchase - ---- your guarantee. a lowel-prkie is «fJEWELBB8 IIN W. Hiinm FI t*MU October vom art planned by Joyce Wanda 'Riduudaon, daughter of the Claude Richardsons of Third Avenue to PaulRochna, son of the Anthony Rochnas of Detroit. JOYCE WANDA RICHARDSON Needn't Be tfPoke With Umbrella JANET LOUISE STOCKWEIL MARIE ANNE GUELLEC Abby Sayg; Make It Snappy CRUISE 12-hour "Dream Voyage** thru the Venice of America, past the Walpole Indian Re*-ervation, Hanen's Island, to Pc. Huron. Sarnia, and the beautiful Blue Water Bridge. if V Mt el MMa Umt lra»fy if ThMein, M mmk. $8»5 $525 ill* oaoup um-M or mom DOCK FT. OF W. GO. liVO. Sail. 9;30 S.BC ■ Ret. 9:30 pjn. PONTUC TRAVEL SERVICE Invifafion Given Carelessly Deserves but Best Wishes Pair Weds in 2-Ring Ceremony Christ Lutheran Is Site of Green-Kuhn Nuptials Dear Abby; One of the girls where I work is getting married tomorrow. Everyone else who works here received a printed invitatiaa to the wedding three weeks ago. *n^y all gave her beautiful gifts. I got my invitation this morning by mouth, and can't accept. Must I give her a gift? LEFT OUT Dear Left: Give her a gift ‘‘by mouth.** Say "Best around the beach, and every ABBV Dear Abby: I Just returned from a public beach and saw TWO (one would have been enough) e young expectant mothers in the scantiest of bathing suits, ^f all things! The young . I don*t believe, because a woman la pregnant, she should go Into hiding, but do you . JUnlta public he^ji, wlth-inen.-^ women and children of all ages, is the place for a woman in that condition? OLD SCHOOL Dear Old: We all arrived in this world via the same route, so there is no reason why pregnant wranen should stay away from the beach if they like the sun and water. However, a woman in that shape ^should cover it with a more modest costume. women were both about their seventh month. They weren't content to sit down and sun themselves inconspicuously. They paraded all Dear Abby: I have been married for four years to a man who is very kind, considerate and well-mannered— until he gets to the taUe, and then the picture changes. I have never seen a human eat more like a dog. I was aware of this before I married him but, like so many starry-eyed girls in love, I thought I could change him later. I am a very good cook, and set an attractive table, but it s annual .UMMER SALE starts tomorrow at 9:30 A,M.! Your opportunity to SAVE on almost everything in the store . . . including oil furniture, lamps, clocks, pictures and wall decor . . . plus special savings on many patterns of fine chino and crystal, housewares of all kinds, and hundreds of gift items! A Summer Sale Feature! Hand-rubbed Antique Maple Finish 1776 BOSTON ROCKER *15 Full-site Boston Rocker with comfortable scooped saddle seat, steam-bent top back, authentic in detail. 42" high with a 20" wide seat. An extra special buy during our Summer Sale, this is the kind of rocker that usually sells for $29.95! Limit — one to a customer. SORRY — NO MAIL OR FHONI ORDIRS . . . we want you to tee ALL the, outstanding values at WIC5CS — so comb in tomorrow and browse thru the store — and take advantage of this spectacular saving on the ever-popular Boston Rocker. Take yours home with you and save the $1.50 delivery fee charge on this special. Shopping for a wedding present? give a set of these elegant, personalized MONOGRAMMED GLASSES vith script initial ond wide bond i Queen's Lusterware SET OF 8, only .........*4»s 14-oz. sham-bottom glasses of heavy crystal, decorated in opulent Queen's Lusterware, make a teally "royal" wedding present! And they're so modestly priced, too. 24 West Hviron St • I^ontiao • open Monday and Fridoy 'til 9:00 P. M. FREE PARKING on Our Own Lot Directly Behind Store ! Kickena me to lee what he does to it. He piles so much food on his plate it is soon all over the tablecloth. He fills his mouth full, tmd chews with _Jt wide opOT, He doesn’t use a napkiii. He wipes his mouth with bread,', and licks his fingers. Naturally J d«i't invite guests for dinner. Is there a book that teaches people how -to eat,' step • by step? Or perhapa a course he could take? I refuse to nag him. Something u trivial as this has set me to thinking about divoree- NO NAME PLEASE Dr. Milton U. Bank so that it points go well above the head of another, or lower^ so that its points cannot strike the face of another person. ’ Q; The questlm of papw doilies has arisen and we’d like to have your answer; (1) Is a paper doily or place-mat in go^ taste on a dining table? (2) Is a doily proper on a small plate if a stemmed glass is pot on it? The used qKxm would have to be put down on the doily and we wondered if this made a doily unsuitable. put on anything but a plate. A place-mat is ptit un^r the plate and should be of linen. (2) Yes, that is why a paper one is correct. Q: I have just been made secretary of a woman’s or-ganizatkm. One of my duties is to send cards every month to the members notifying them of a meeting. I have been criticized by several of the members for signing the cards Mrs. John Smith. Will you please tell nte if this signature is Inocnrect? A; I am sorry to say it is. You riwold sign the cards Mary Smith, secretary. Hospital Auxiliary Planning for Tea Arrangements are being completed for the Women’s AuxUiaiy to fimtiac General ■ Hospital’s annual membership tea. Mrs. James Clarkson of St, Jude Drive, Draytcm Plains, will be hostess fw the affair from 2 to 5 p.m. on July 26. Mrs. Clark J. Adams is general chairman. Women interested ii) Joining the auxiliary have been invited to the tea. Q: When a girl has a date with a boy who is driving his car and they park to go to a movie or to have a soda, must she wait fer him to go around the car and open the door lor her? It is certainly not an onerous task to (^)en a car door and get out by oneself, and to me it is ridiculous f<»* an able-lxidied girl to sit and wait for a man to perform this duty. My friends have criticized me for not waiting and say it is belittling to the boy. I would like your opiniwi. A. When dressed in evening clothes, you should wait for him to come around and help you out of the car, but when wearing informal day clothes, an able-bodied young woman quite naturally, and properly, opens the door herself and is out of the car before he gets around to her side. Event Is Canceleci An Ice cream social slated Wednesday by Blue Star Mothers of America, Pontiac <3iap-tw 4, has been canceled, according to Mrs. Jqjm Yungk, the group’s publicity chairman. Have You Tried This? Cut-Up Gumedrops Give Elusive Flavor to Bars By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor Some members of the Cro-foot School PTA will be happy to see the recipe today. They have eaten these cookies of Mrs. Ralph Rotsel’s and have expressed a wish for the recipe. We like our readers to tell us of good recipes to track Beat eggs thoroughly. Add sugar and water and beat well. Sift flour, salt and cinnamon. Use a little of this mixture to mix with the nuts and the gumdrops. Add the rest to the egg mixture. Told In nuts and gumdrops. Mrs. Rotsel is active in church work and manages to get Involved In the Red Feather drive each fall. She has a lively family of four youngsters. OUMDBOP BABS By Mrs. Balph Batsel Poor into a greased and floared 11 x M pan. Bake at au degrees aboat M mhi-f Btes, oroatil done. Takeoat-af ovea aad frast at once. tXit Into bars. Store these cookies In a closed metal can, or they wifi dry out. ^jsbltipooni oraacs JulM caBMn-ContMUoBcri iuisr Mix melted butter and orange Juice. Add enough sugar to make frosting that ■preads eksUy. Tre*t yourself to a new. up-to-the-minute haircut, custom styled Just fra you by oor expert coiffure artists. HaircuUing by Oscar TINTING - BLEACHING w Permanent Wave $6.50 up Parisian Beauty Shop ' 7 W. Uwrenec (Upttoln) J Pair Weds in Saginaw Ceremony SS. Peter aqd Paul Church. Saginaw, waa the aetUng tor the marriage of Marianne Beth Makl of Saginaw to Gerald S. Keesling, aolenmlxad by Msgr. John\J. Sone-feld. July 8. Daughter of Mn. Charitia Steere of Veatabutg and Nichoba MaM of Saginaw, the bride wok floor-length Bilk organzi and a fingertip veU of muaion. She carried a of white gladioli ahd Janice Kay Rohn, in bouffant coral silk organza, was ho no. maid, and Annette Pepera, wiring pale blue organza, served as bridesmaid. They held crescents ol pink roses and stephanotis. Daijlel keesling was best man for his brother with Jack and Michael Keesling seating guests. They are the sons of the John S. Keeslings of East Montcalm Street. Also ushering weK William and Steven Steere; both of Vestaburg. After a reception in Thomas Township Hall, Saginaw, the couple left for a motor tour of northern Michigan. The Keeslii^ will be at home on Kemp Street*. About 40 per cent of the United States is drained by the Mississippi River system. fXY TODAY See ... Traveling by air saves time ... so does using AAA’s Complete TRAVEL BUREAU Service AgenU for aU Air lines NO EXTRA COST TO YOU Also Headquarters for: 0 Foreign Documents and Road Guides 0 Auto Shipments, rentals and purchase 0 Guided and Independent Foreign Tours and Cruises 76 WilUams Street FE 5-4151 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUEsIdAY. JULYJ^* 1961 ......_ ..........\ Aiin at l^mifeoals First ELEVEN Lose Pouniis Gradually Never has the glowing suntanned look enjoyed suth widespread popular- . ity as in recent years. Time for sun basking is included in the daily schedules of even the busiest homemakers. Above, household tasks completed, PraUtt Pren Ph*U Mrs. Thomas Zielinski of Garland Avenue, Sylvan Lake, suns and keeps a watchful eye on her three daughters (from left) Carrie, 3; Wendy, 1; and Vicki, 2. Tan Right and Avoid Red Face MARGARET BROWN . The cosmetic company has pre-,and after 3. there U) practically Striking ^ suntanned girls f'”' -kfe tanning j no tanning action. wniich lists recommended ettpo- If you re vacation bound, na-sure times depending on the sMn turally the location you select will type and proximity to water, make a difference in the sun’s which reflects 50 per cent of the | intensity. Old Sol is far stronger sun’s rays. jnear water or srtow than in grassy areas and is much more intense Fine 1] pholstering by TOWN HOUSE 2t4S Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 8-41M legion these days. H’hether the golden glow comes from a Jaunt to Florida, backyard sunning session or lotion b^tle, the effect is the same — the tawny lasses are targets for countless admiring gazes. The much-touted brouied he-man Image appears to be “fading” Into the shadows as the golden girls step Into their place In the sun. The suntan fad apparently be-'gan among coeds who frequently return to campus brown as the proverbial nut from holiday vaca-. itions in wanner climes. ' Now teen-agers, working gals I and homemakers are sun worship-ipers, too. Familiar sight on a I drive along any residential street this summer is the young mother sunning while kiddies frolic in a I nearby wading pool. BE CAREFUL A few words of caution about suntanning, however: Both health and beauty authorities warn that too deep a tan can cause the skin to be leathery and unattractive. Strive for the topaz tone. It’s most fashionpUe and flattering. -known tanning lotion ner who. incidentally, wisely saggests that young women try muscle toning exercises while basking, reports that Girls with sensitive skin, for example, on the WHit time out are advised to remain in the sun only 25 mlnntes minus n protective potion. Tlie sun is at its peak intensity from 11 to 2 p.m. Before 9 a.m. at high altitudes. ★ ♦ * So if a trip to the Rockies is on your summer schedule, stay safe in the sun: and we’ll see you in a few weeks done to a golden Sharon Smith Honored August bride-plect Sharon Lee Mrs. Veriyn Dawson, Mrs. Roy Smith opened shower gifts Saturday evening at the home of her aunt, Mrs. Virgil Hamilton of Madison Avenue, following an evening of lawn games. Mrs. Layton W. Smith of Bielby Street attended her daughter’s shower with Mrs. Robert G. Ferguson of Dover Road, mother of Robert Ferguson, bridegroom-elect. SUMMER KNITTING CLASSES THE KNITTING NEEDLE 452 W. Hiuon FE 5-1330 type classes which their tanning abiUty. Many blondes and brunettes have ’’normal’’ skin which tans rapidly but also sunburns readily. Sensitive complexions, freckled faces and redheads, of course, burn easily and tan slowly. ’Then there is the “resistant ikin’’ which tans quickly and sunburns slowly, Dark-haired and olive skinned folk fall Into the latter category. I One-baU of tM chronlcaily^ U| peopla in the United States ara under agt 48. By JOSEPHINE LpWMAN Here are some things to r member when slimming. * ar ★ 1. If you have a lot of weight to lose, say 15 or 20 poundi or more, break it up In your own mind into small parts. Don’t think, 'Oh, I will never do It! I have so many pounds to Jose.” Aim at ao many pounds in a short time, and forget the rept until you get to It. ’This la why my Nine-Day Reducing Diet Is so helpful to women. If yon have only S to 10 pounds to lose yon can do it In nine days. If you have much more to lose It gives yon an encouraging, flying sUH. 2. Steam baths do not reduce you. T h t y will decrease your weight, but this is a. temporary water loss, not a loss ol fat. There is no way to avoid calorie counting if you want to lose pounds. ■k ir -k „ 3. Alcohol (whisky — gin) is burned up rapidly and is not stored as fat but is is fattening because it supplies tnergy which would oth- erwise have been supplied by food, of sugar has about 20 calories and a baked potato about 90. ’Thus more food la stored u lat. SKIPPING’S OUT . 4. Many studies have shown that the most successful reducers divide their allowable calories between three meals a day. ’They do not skip one. S. When doing bending eser* dset, breathe OUT when you " ‘ and IN as you raise This places lees bend « strain on the heart. 6. Men require more calories, even when r^ucing, than women do because of their greater stature. If a woman is on a thousand-a-day calorie count, the man in the family can usually reduce just as successfully on 15 or 1600 daily. So, if you are usuig my Nine-Day Diet, lor instance, and your husband wants to reduce also, add 500 or 800 calories to his food Intilke. Lucky him! NO KIDDING Don’t kid yourself that you are reducing just because you leave sugar out of your coffee and eat potatoes. A teaspoonful 2 Showers Given for Bri(de-Elect Biidal Shower Held in Honor of Carol Duitie Mrs. Raymond Edwards ol Cass Lake Road honored Carol Duffle Maniha Ann Stapp. hridMlactJat a bridaL-.ahower Satwvfor Alfred W. Harwood, opened gifts of linen and bathroom accessories Sunday afternoon at a tea in the home of Mrs. New-land Begoie ol Milan. Guests were Mrs. William Armstrong Jr., Mrs. Robert Armstrong, Mrs. James Armstrong and the senior Mrs. William Armstrong and Mrs. John Black, all of Toledo, Ohio. Great-aunts of the bridegroom-elect, Emma and Katherine Hert-ler of Ann Arbor and Bertha and Mihy Hertler of Saline were among the 18 present. k k ^ College friends of Miss Stapp brought kitchen gilts to a tea Saturday afternoon given by Mrs. Allan Rentschler of Saline. The guest list included Carol Amoe, Port Huron; Mrs. Gerald VaijDyke, Detroit; Judy Mleres, Midland; Jane Ann Russell and Marianne Lynch of Ann Arbor and Unless you drink n lot of oof-IM, you enn nfford the small luxury of sugar In It and n po-teto Is a splendid Hem on the rednoing diet If yon do not dunk It In butter or fry It. Try nrfug snH and pepper and a bit of gar-He salt or parsley with a dot ol butter. Usually when a woman says, “T caraiot understand why I do not lose weight. I haven’t had any sug-! 'ar in my coffee or a potato in weeks", she is eating a lot of things she should not eat. She is either fooling herself or does not understand calorie counting. * ★ ★ ■ 1 If you missed my nine-day Diet; and would like to have it, sendj ten cents and stamped, aelf-ad-dressed envelope with your request | for the booklet. Address Josephine i Lowman in care of The Pontiac | Press. wmn BEAUn SHOP "FaniMinaiita Tbt tuHsfy" COMPIETI BEAUTY SERVICE Vsrda ftnsft. Owner 515 C PIKE IT. (Comer Avsn Apt- Building) PHONI PI 2^161 Alwoyt GOOD COFFEE mm FOUNTAIN 17 W. Huruu Our New Location ia 70 UFATETTE ST. Notional Lift & Accidont Inauronco Co. 338-0451 ning. Donna Edwards was hostess. Guests included the bride-elect’s mother Mrs. Clyde Duffle and Mrs. Wayne Lenger, mother of the prospective bridegroom. Gifts were opened from Mrs. Harold Hoffman, Mrs. Charles Yockey, Mrs. Harold Francisco, Virginia Brandon, Mrs. Ted Mack-ell, Mrs. Maurice Shelton, Mrs. Allred Langervin and Mrs. John Godsell. k k k Also attending were Mrs. Mildred Duffle and daughter Diane; Mrs. Clifford LaFaber, Mrs. Lewis Meacham, Rohima Curtis, Mrs. ’Thaxton and Mrs. William Herapton. A Sept. 2 wedding date named by Miss Duffle and Gary Kemp, Mrs. PhUip O’Guln, Mrs. Norman Terpenning and Mrs. i Jeanette Cockle. James Lonie. A3fio present were Mrs. Deloyl Present at both affairs were Brown ol Yale. Mrs. Frank Poole;Mrs. Mell D. Stapp ol Inverness of Birmingham. Mrs. Gary Kipp;Road, mother of the bride-elect, of Rochester, Mrs. Milo Brown of I and her fiance’s mother Mrs. Imlay Qty, Mrs. Donald FerfnisoniWebb S. Harwood, also his grand-of Milford and Mrs. Harry Wilch! mother Mrs. William Harwood, of Wayne. [both of Saline. ^ 5390-5400 Dixie Highway OR 3-1225 J A new machine is now able to manufacture butter without churning and is said to be highly satisfactory. PERMANENTS Complete with Habvut and Bet No Appoinhnunl Nueussmy FE 1 LOUIS Tor la West Huron—2nd Floor Next to Bnckner Ftnaneo 14 through FrI. Bowl 'Em Over One reason why so many are bowling enthusiasts is that bowling fashions are practically irresistible! Culottes with matching tops, one-piece Tinee-tickrers, blouse and skirt combinations — which come in luscious colors and fabrics — are all easy to launder after every strenuous bowling session. 4 JULY SALE Summer Cottons 5 to 15 Half a lemon on a shell of the refrigerator will help to absorb odors. REPEAT DOLLAR SALE of Fiibrics / DRAPERY FABRICS-1200 yards, taken {r6m our regular stock and placed on two long tables for quick selection. SOLID COLORS-In WWte, Eggshell, Beige, Green, Turquoise, Pink, Coral, etc., also many prints. FIRST QUALITY-All fabrics at Cost or Less. Some bolts up to 80 yards. All 45” to 48” wide. OUR^PURPOSE-To reduce our inventory and attract new DonH Miss This Opportunity $ Uyd. • Sale Enda Monday Night, Jnly 24th. I • Caah, Charfs ar Layaway , I • Ns • rkoak Toa lot Tonr Bxwlfoat Bmpouto to This Spodol Last Wook This Solo Is lot Oat ladividaal CutoaMts Only, and Hot Olhor f asin*ss Cencons. OPm FRIDAY md MONDAY NIGHTS 1666 S. Telegraph FE 40516 JULY SALE Suits $54 «$89 Regular $65 to $145 Regular $40 to $80 Sport Coats $29 .. $63 Summer Pajamas Regular $090 $5.00 ^ Short Sleeve Knee Length or Long Leg. Slafcks / Regular $1085 $15.95 to $30 ^23®5 Knit Shirts $390 Regular $5.00 and $5.95 \ Neckwear Regular / $2^ and $3.50 ' J tor / OF PONTIAC \ , HURON pt TELEGRAPH I Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10 to 9 — Tues.. Wed.. Sri. 10 I* 6. I 8 to 18 Regular to $25 UVi to 221/2 58^9 .;'J1799 Short sleeve types, patio sleeveless dresses in both casual ond dressy styles. Jamaica Shorts Regular $6.00 ‘3” Blouses Regular 1 99 to $10.00 ' ‘2’ and $ J 99 Sleeveless, roll up sleeves, solids, prints, silk shirts, cottons. Regular to $22.95 Swim Suits 9 $U99 $ and 14” A6cm^ OF PONTIAC HURON at TELE(5RAPH Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10 to 9 — Ti^., Wed., Spt. 10 to 6 TWELVE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY IS. 1961 ^ stack of rent receipts. ..or a home of your own? Those who wish th# homo should cohie in no^<^ and talk it ov*r. Saviaii a(d Um'maathly PkyMat HOHEIOANS Capitol Saviags & Loai Assi. Establi$hed 1890 75 W. Huron St., Pontioc FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OF lUILDING To Canvass U.S. MiiitaffAbiiity JFK Cdis AAMtingi of Joint Chiofs of Staff and Security Council WASHINGTON - President Kennedy catted a meeting of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for today and the National Security Oamil f 9 Wednesday to canvass the* nation's military ability in the face of So-[Vlet threata to worltl prace. The meetings are the wii phases of an urgent military study. Kennedy asked the Pentagon to take another look at military power, particularly of a conventional type, more than a week I be finished by late Dr. Stanley W. Black Optometrist 3513 EUsobMli Uka Rd. Comar of Cast Uka Rd. Evenings by Appointment Phone FE 2-2362 CloMd Wod. Homes Collapse; 3 People Missing temonmturc owuntiiig to M.S. The cabinet and* Its agsadi PHILADELPHIA UB-FWar row Four were dug out alive, and practically unhurt. One of them, 6-year-old girl, lay under the tons of rubUe fOr nearly three Maay bean alter the reUapae wUrh recked the aetghborheed, flremee searched the ralas for debris, uncov«tng the child, in die words of one' rescuer, Ing her miraculously alive. F|Kn QunnoN Cheryl’s first question was, "Did my brother get out?” Her rescuers could not say. They still can't. Cheryl escap^ with minor bruises. The Daniels homes, brick and two stories tall. ^ gave way at 11:15 p.m., plunging •n: I occupants into the cellars and The three missing are Wayne ^^oiping furniture and heaps of Daniels. 9; Jesse RobiiuBn, TO, i 0,5^^ o„ top of thein. who Is blind; and his wife, 55. Rescued were Wayne’s father. Ernest Daniels, 35. and his other chUdren, Kenneth, 11. and Cheryl, 6. and Mrs. Robinson's sister. Nannie RuaseU. 62. It was little Cheryl who lay bar'd so l«mg amid the ahhMered plaster and splintered, twisted wood that had been her home in West Philadelphia. Firemen, us-i giant crane, tore away the At the same time the forepart of an adjoining house fell sway, but Jesae Steward, 6L who lived there, got out safely, along with two diildren and two visitors. The actionB followed Soviet demands over Berlin and Russia’s decision to halt a reduction iU military manpower and increase its defense budget by a third. No topics of discussion were announced for the 5 p.1n. session with the Joint Chiefs of Staff -a session aiuwunced belatedly. But the military review obviously was ! coming in for attention. I And Presidential Press Secretary Pierre Salii«er said, 'T understand the study is one of the ,!had been evacuated together with things to be discussed Wednesday ’ /or LQQSe 10 DUlJCf about 600 other persons living in afternoon when Kennedy brings .. ^ ^ the ^ame block, LeMAY PRAISES BTS I Pontiac city commissioners are On Capitol HUI, Gen. Curtis Le- ‘’xpected to approve tonight a land-. May, tinging the praiaes of the to* * hangar at Pontiac supersonic BTO bomber, toW Con- Munidpiti Airport lor corporate-grest he feels bomber production I owned aircraft. I should not.be cut off now. The lease, prepared by Homer Expect Approval The elder Daalela was watch- At 4:30 p.m. ing bouse collapsed, imperiling flremen and rescue crews. But by jthen the occupants of that house Now in Eighth Wrok Ti^IFEI. FonnoMi » - Fo^ the elghMiour workiiig! JI^DISCOUIIT PRICES day In favor of qm of six hoars. wee 1 ^^AFPUANqS-TV Thousands an spending thelrl nights in the streets or paries la, TOM'S ELECTRIC UsBlt nua WalM Lah* order Is escape the stifling tamp-i eratwys indoon. | MAXIMS AVOID WHEN YOU TOUR! rating hOTIL’' OF 2.500 resor'= FOUND EXCLUSIVELY IN THE NEW 1961 MOBIL TMVEL GUIDE This new 383-page travel encyclopedia gives you syewifNess and resorts. Here are hard-to-get facts about prices, quality, service, cuisine, atmosphere, when open, EVERYTHING! IKHAME MSmiME MSIMIKE MSmUKE Thatcher, Patterson & Wernet 711 Community Notionoi lonk IMf. The new Air Force chief ef staff gave his persoaal views andcr qaesttenliig by the Seaate Defease AppropriatioM snbrommlt- D. Hoskins, airport manager, ers 15.000 square feet in the south-central section of the airport where most of the commercial business is located. All these hemes were built over , •l-j-ear-eld sewer line ninning i from the west edge ef the city ; In sigsag course to the 8ch«.vl- ! kUI River. TO THE GREAT LAKES AREA can decide at a glance where to suy and eat—and what to expect when you get there. Tils a*ere te gi-«lMt te tee sad dal The Guide pinpoinu thousands of fascinating places to visit—gives facts about landmarks, local history, hunting, fishing, sute and national parks —and includM lists of camping, Jywting, hiking and scenic sites. During the -past-iew months every establishment jistriwas personally INSPECTED^ a team of travel experts and RATED from betUr than amrag* (*)toeii«oiidiHj(*****).You Now on sale for only II at most Mobil stations. Drive in for your copy todayl I .rwTi I Kennedy's budget calls for no new bomber funds in the current fiscal year, although bomber deliveries will continue well into 1962. LeMay put his personal opinion other, on the line, in oppoaition to the President's while the administra-j The company is not a newcomer tion worked on revised defense ito Pontiac Municipal Airport. Its Hoskins said the land will go to LeRoy Robtaison. owner of Sturdy Broachiag Service, lac., of South-field, lor a •.4M-sqnare-foot all-steel hangar to house aircraft of plans of its own. Michigan Marshal Out WASHINGTON (fi - President Kennedy Monday accepted the resignation of Harry Jennings as U.S. Marshal for the Western District of Michigan, effective July 15. aircraft hav% been bas^ there | many years, said Hoskins. WWW The construction program will be the second by private interests this year. Michigan Aviation Co., a major maintenance service at the airport, is currently adding 12,400-8quarc-|feet of space to its hangar. We Answer Your Phone! 24 Hours A Day No Recordings — No Gadgets AU CALLS ANSWERED For Less Thdn 4« per hour By Exptritneed Soerttaries TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE. INC. 15 W. LawrtRGt FE 4-2541 Offer by Laos Could Mean Peace Progress j GENEVA tUPU — The pro-; Western government of Laos has {offered a ^stantial amount of transport equipment to the Interna-, tional Djntrol Commission, a U.S.' spokesman said today. The offer signaled a possible break hi the bUfer P^asl-Wesf dispute over strengthening the traced control team. It had been expected to be announced at a conference session thM' alfernoon but the session was canceled by the British and So-^ Viet cochalrmen, Malcolm Mac-1 Donald of Britain and Georgi Push-| kin of Russia. | They wanted more time for pri-, vate discussions on a compromise they were reported to have reached on procedure. KYOUR Hom me mUBH^ Hove BIG BEAR Build You . . . GIANT ROOM ADDITION Rough Only Exterior Completely Finished with Windows and Doors For ee Little eg No Meney Down UnHI Sept. ‘16 N USE IT FOR • Mroom • Family Room . • Kitchon • Utility Room • Dining Room • Extra Storagt FIMSHED Exterior and Interior Completed with Heat, Electric, Dryurall^ For as Little os No Money Down No Poymonts ^ UnHI Sopt. rywoii, riooring *24"~ " ■ Muulk FE 3-7833 BIG BEAR CORSTRUCTIOU CO. 92 WEST HURON ST. “If we can catch up to the United States in per capita production of meat, butter and milk we will fire a powerful torpedo into the foundation of CAPITALISM’’ Mr. Khrushchev knows that American agricultural efficiency is the cornerstone of our standard of living. He knows, too, that in the struggle between freedom and communism, food is ultimately more important than missiles. In spite of intensive efforts, however, critical food shortages still exist in Iron Curtain Countries; and Khrushchev himsetf admits that the Soviets lag far behind the United States in agricultural efficfency. American fanners represent only 9% of our population, yet they produce abundant food for all of us. In Russia, on the other hand, 45% of the population must work the land in order to grow barely enough food for the country’s needs. What’s more, Uianks to farm efficiency, our food bill takes only of our income. The average Russian worko- must spend H his income just to feed his family. The difference in remaining income—'What remains to be spent after food, clothing and shelter—makes the difference between our standard of living and Rumia’s. American farmers are few in number but their contribution ia great: to our standard of living and to our prestige in the eyes of tho world. MICHIGAN MILK FRODUCERS ASSOCIATION ^ TUESpAY, JULY 18, 1961 V THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN^. THIRtEEN 'Instant' Reserve Force Army Goal, Says Official CAMP GRAYUNG l» - Gene A RobeiM, a apecial assistant to the aecreUcy of the Army, says the Army wants a ready reserve force that can be deployed in a matter of weeks. it it Robens, special assistant for reserve forces and ROTC affairs, is on an Inspection tour of Camp Grayling, where Michigan's 46th Division is undergoing its annual two-week summer training. He saM the Army waaU at least two Nattenal Geaid «vl-sions ready for "The day of deliberate mobilization is past," Robens said yesterday. "The accent today is on readiness on mobilization day, or as shortly thereafter as humanly Served, nine months were deeded to train them. The services reorganization plan .roposied' by President Kennedy calls for two National Guard (li-vislon, at full strength of IS,000 men each and wilh the latest equipment, ready to be deployed within three weeks. WANTS t DIVISIONS The President wants another two divisions ready for action after five weeks, and an additional eight divisions ready it from mobilization. There are 27 National Guard divisions ^ 19 Army Reserve divisions supporting the nation'i standing defense force. "Every iMvMm wIH be thor- Robens noted that in World War I! it took one to two years to train a guard division for overseas duty. During the Korean War, in which eight guard divisions f'- ' =AREA . NEWS Two Men Die After Accident Victims of Van Dyke Crash Were St. Clair Shores Residents WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP -Two St. Clair Shores men whose car overturhed Sunday on Van Dyke just north of 28-Mile Road died yesterday from injuries suf-' fered in the accident. ★ it it Romeo state police said the driver of the car, James M. Herron. 36, died at 7:40 a.m. at Community Hospital near Alnmnt. His passeager, DoaaM F. Dh'-ens, S8, was dead at 10:U a.m. Herron’s condition was iistcd as criUcai and Divcns was reported to be In serious condition when they were rushed to Community Hospital following the ncddent. A witness toM police she saw their car approaching behind her vehicle at about 7:30 p.m. Sunday. She said the car swerved 00 Van Dyke and onto the shoulder of the joad. OffiWrs said Herron pulled out In a wide arc to pass the witness' car, then attempted to pull back on the road and skidded off the pavement to the right sk)e. it it it Herron’s car, less than a month (dd, hit a culvert, flipped in the air and mapped a utility pole into three pieces. It also uprooted six jadc-i^ trees before coming to rest upside down. ★ ★ ★ The vehicle was totally demolished. Police estimated it traveled (A to 70 feet in the air before crashing to the ground on its top. ■The^two men were on their way to a cottage at Elk Lake, Lapeer County. made to the Army by November as to which will be the tep priority dlvlstons, he added. In a national emergency, divisions would be railed up on a basis of priority, with the higher-rated ones going first. Roben sahl he was "terribly impressed by the spirit and .quiet leffloiency’’ of the Michigan guards-{men as they moved into tlu field yesterday lor four days of day and' inighi training. I "The degree 6f professionalism made me mighty proud of the National Guard," added Robens, colonel in the Army Reserve. Parish Bazaar at Orion Set for Two Days ORION TOWNSHIP - The two-day annual bazaar sponsored by the guilds ,of St. Joseph parish will be held Friday, 4 to 9 p.m, ‘ and Saturday, 2 to 7 p m. A nsh fry will be served Friday from--4 to s p.nu TTie guild presidents who ar chairmen of the affair are Mrs. Arthur Keefer, St.. Gabriel Guild; Mrs. Robert Green, Immaculate Heart of Mary; Mrs. Roidte De-. Jude; and Mrs. Vernon Shea, St. Theresa. The church is at 705 N. Lapeer Road. Boat Club Sued by Sylvan Lake Group Reportedly Had Used Residential Area for Storage of Trailers 2 Avon Area Men Get Prison Time for Check Deals Jackson Prison terms of 14 to 2 years w'ere meted out yesterday to two Avon Towmship men who were part of a bogus check passing ring. ★ ★ ♦ Sentenced by Circuit Judge Stanton G. Dondero were Burton Hodgson, 24, of 3185 Eastwood Road, and Billy J. Short, 33, of 3100 Crocdu Road. They pleaded g^lty June tS after first standing mute to a higher charge. They admitted Isoutng checks without having Utey My the lot is soiled residential. an area in which only a home can be bailt, according to the city soning ordinance. Two other men involved in the Judge Beer set a show cause hearing for July 31 when he’ll decide whether an Injunction jhould be issued. He would not grant a Short was on parole after being sentenced two years ago to IH to 10 years for being the fifth person involved in the attempted holdup of the Father A S Market, 856 Oakland Ave. Majorettes in School for Boton Twirling Twenty-five members of the Land O’Lakes Majorettes Corps left last night for s week-long baton twirling school in Milwaukee, Wis. • ' Daring their stay at the Milwaukee CUnic the girls will at-tMd ctasaes eight hours a day. Hie majoietted, directed by Roy Hess, were acoon^ionied by ' group of Self-Operating Library Is W. Bloomfield Goal , By JIM LONG WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A bid to make the township library an independent operation will re made next Tuesday when voters here are asked to approve a millage increase. The five-member library board.lj"* o" “ jf’ headed by A. Finley France, ex-board is maintaining and di-plains that unless a one-mill tax m at least 48 it necessary to-tighten the puns* hours a week and to proride ad-miiristratiye and technical aid. Includiag a qualified head ttbrmr-Ciirrently, the library is operat- strings of the library board. The towmhlp bow Is appeattng hike proposal is received favorably by citizens drastic cuts of already reduced standards would be necessary. The tax increase, which would cost taxpayers $1.84 for each $1,000 of assessed valuation, would provide approximately $50,000 for the operation of the recently opened $100,000 facility on Orchard Lake Road. The one mill Ibvy is being asked or a period of five years. The funds are required, according to the board, to keep reeling all activities at the new building. NOT ADEQUATE The library service now offered is not adequate to meet the standards established by the Michigan State Board of Libraries and consequently the library is in danger of losing 2.000 books borrowed from the state as well as state aid. , a .* ♦ The standards were met for a short time in the last fiscal year DEAR BABY DEER—Bambi. a 1-month-old baby deer dearly lovds his friends Christina Masini and Anna Chipukites, especially at mealtime. He was rescued by Seth Monroe who lives near the Proud Lake Recreation Area, Little Fawn Escaped -Pack of Dogs By REBA HEINTZEIAIAN Bambi, a beautiful baby deer, is being treated more like a "dear" baby than an animal in a soft, straw-laden enclosure at the Proud Lake Recreation Area near Milford. However, this was not always so. One month ago, the sfiUness of the nigM was shafteMd by Site barking of a pack of nlld dogs, startled nelghbon for mites around beard the noise and one —Seth Monroe climbed out of Protests that tlte Sylvan City Council failed to enforce a zoning ordinance which was allegedly being violated by the Oakland County Boat Club bore fruit yesterday. The city sued the private club in Circuit Court to keep its boat trailers out of a lot zoned as residential. ★ a At the same time and in' the same court. Judge William J. Beer refused to continue a temporary restraining order prohibiting the club, of 2330 Femdale Ave., from using the residential lot for storage of the boat trailers. The judge ordered a suit whieli had been started by a S.rlvan iaike couple placed on the calendar for Immediate trial, “because this is not a new and both sides are entitled have their day In court.'’ A motion made by the''club to dismiss the lawsuit started by Bernard and Gloria Barach, 2370 Pon-. tiac Drive, was denied by Judge Beer. He speculated that their suit might Ite heard next month. ♦ ♦ ★ The new suit signed by City Manager Earle D. Knapp, and filed by Tom T. Reese, attorney for Sylvan Lake, asked the court for a temporary and permanent injunction to stop club members frm using the same lot in question for storing trailers and cars. U.S. School Aid Bills Killed in Committee Frances Muir Duffield Engaged fo Earl Clark AVON TOWNSHIP - The en-gagonent of Frances Muir DM-field to Richard Earl Qark is announced by her parents Mr. and Mrs. Alexander M. Duffield of 6081 Winkler MUI Road. it a * Hw prospective bridegroom the son ^ Reid Clark of Toledo and the late Mrs. -Oaik. a a An Aug. 11 wadding date has a county tax allocatloa of 1.4* as Its share of the total ti county mills. Hie township is in a financial strait as a result of meeting its required payments to the county for its share of the Farmington Interceptor Sewer. GROUNDLESS FEARS Supervisor John C. Rehard said today, however, that the fears indicated by some library board members that the libraty is in jeopardy of closing its doors if the millage proposal is defeated m groundless. < . . ’Admittedly the Hbrary Is auf- and the library received more than _f«tog •• • »f »o^ $800 in state aid but the financial condition of the township has made township board woidd tot the M- Frew Ph«U when a pack of wild dogs drove the fawn into a w'ire fence. Bambi will spend his first year in a safe enclosure at the park until he is old enough to know where he's going. Area Police Make Mercy Errand Civilian Defense Worker Now at Parents Bedside LAPEER — A mercy errand by j suffered a heart attack Thursday police from Romeo, Center Une night. He obtained an emergency and Detroit allowed a civilian de-i leave and flew from Nuremberg, fense worker stationed in Germany to be at the bedside of his sc-«gly ill parents yesterday. WUliam A. Shaw Jr., 82, was. I Dc- Bambi the Deer loves Being Babied the Monroe fence Tine and i The dogs had come to a halt at Monroe consulted A1 Masini, the conservatum park manager, the two decided that the tiny deer was at the mercy of the dogs if loose, so it was taken to the park. The faw'n's nose was cut and his legs bleeding. The deer had outrun the dogs but its endurance was Masini and his park rangers lit-gone. 'erally worked day and night in After Monroe got rid of the dogs,‘effort to save Bambi — a name he carefully disentangled the half- selected by the Masini children, alive deer and tenderly carried it, The vNerinsrian kept close in^e. A veterinarian was called | Match on the deer's dally prog-and the wounds dressed. A broken as it lay in Its hind leg was set and after a mild sedative, the baby soon fell asleep on a soft pillow. * ★ * Because the law prohibits persons from keeping wild animals, WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Rules Committee voted 8-7 today to table all proposals for federal aid to schools. The committee action in effect killed three school bills for (he present session of Congress. Chairman Howard W. Smith, D-Va.. said "I don't know of any way the action can be reversed in this committee." The motion to shelve the bills was made by Rep. William Col-mer, D-Miss. A motion to reconsider the action also was tabled by an 8-7 vote. The committee^ has before three bills approve by the House HOLLAND (API — Officials at;Education and Labor Committee. Conrad. Inc., today totaled losses I One would have provided for gen-expected to exceed $300,000 from eral federal aid for school iron- Fire Causes Damages Exceeding $300,000 protected new home. Soon the fawn was drinking milk (It prefers summed to homogenised) out of a 82-ounee pop bottle. The \-eterinarian donated his oerrioes as did the milkman, the milk. ★ ★ ★ From a mere 5 pounds when it M’as rescued until now, B continued to gain weight and at present tips the scales at a good solid 20 pounds. Only once has the little tried to escape. When it was about 3 weeks old, someone left the gate to the yard open and Bambi got out and strolled down to a nearby swamp. ★ ★ • a This was where the searching park rangers found the fawn mired down in muck up to his neck. Presumably, Bambi was so embarrassed that since then the deer has been content to "stay put." trolt to the Lapeer County General Hoopital by a relay of police cant. Shaw’s mother Mrs. Verne Shaw. 52, of 260 Borland Rd., Imlay Oty, JFKt Advisers Concentrate on Foreign Aid Plan WASHINGTON (B — President Kennedy and his top congressional advisers concentrated today on a foreign aid program which House Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas said is “now in pretty good shape.” i * ★ * Rayburn told reporters that the Western notes delivered to Moscow Monday on the Berlin situation were not discussed.i Nor. he said, was there discussion of the Berlin situation in general.- The Seiiato and House Demo-cratio leaders met with Kennedy nt their regntor Tuesday breakfast session. Raybnra said afterward that the talk centered primarily on Kennedy’! |4.* hlllfon Germany, to Detroit only to find he would lose valuable time in Detroit waiting for a bus to Lapeer. it it it Shaw called Detroit police. A shuttle senice was set np and he was tnuwportod to Van Dyke and 8-Mlle Road by a Detroit oquad car. He was picked op at the city limits by a ear from the Center Line state police post and rushed to Uttcai. Romeo state police took him or the last leg of his journey from Utica to Lapeer. Officers at the , Rmneo post said the trip from Detroit to Lapeer, a distance of some 75 milte, was covered in slightly over two hours. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Shaw was reported in critical condition this morning at Lapeer County General Hospital. Her husband also is seriously ill with pneumonia. “I imagine the township board would share proportionately with the library whatever it does receive from the tax allocation board." the supervisor added. * ★ * «"We’U just have to dig down deep for funds, but even then the board could never meet the budget asked this year by the library.” a a ♦ The budget presented this year by the library board was more than double the 1960^1 budget of $25,000. The (aads are used not only to operate the new building, which havl^ Its troubles on Capitol 'I think everybody thinks we are now in pretty good shape,” Ray- He said he believes "the world situation will induce people to be-' come more liberal” a^ that the result will be a reasonable authorization and appropriation lor foreign aid. Katanga and U.N. Exchange Shots Picnic Planned by Collectors of Antique Cars SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Antique-car hobbyists from all parts of the state will converge on Holiday Park here Saturday tor the annual picnic sponsored by Auto Enthusi-sts International. ★ ♦ * The picnic will be held from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Dinner is scheduled for 1 p.m., followed by special events at 2 p.m. HlghOght of the day will be a The park is located on 22-Mile Road, about 14 miles west of Van Dyke (MSS). Refreshments will be furnished and no registration fee be charged to drivers of special-interest cars. also to operate a branch In Weat-aeres. Since the library’s budget ran out in April the township has provided $2,000 monthly for the operation of the service building. Library board members said that taxpayers are now paying one • mill for the construction of library but next year is the laid for the three-year building levy. • * ★ * (^uestkMis regarding the millage proposal will be answered by library board members Thursday at an open house at the library, 5030 Orcluud Lake Road, between 7 and 10 p.m. Insurance Man Is Feared Lost Recover 2 Companions From Lake Erie After Yawl Cap$izes, Sinks LEAMINGTON, Orit. (B-A Detroit insurance agent was missing and feared lost today while his two companions recovered from an ordeal in the chill water of Lake Erie after their 28-foot yawl capsized and sank. Decorating to Be Topic at Newcomers' Meeting tearch would be reoamed today. Zambas’ companions, Thomas Dodkto. 30. and Charles Nicholson. 27, both of St. aair Shores. Mich., were hospitalized here for treatment of exposure. Their condition was listed as satisfactory. fire which ruined nearly two-thirds of the Space Age Test Materials manufacturing plant. ' ★ ♦ ★ A cause of the fire, which broke out last night in the engineering and drafting section of the one-story cement block structure nearby Holland Township, was not immediately determined. One Holland Township fireman was treated for a head injury and smoke inhalation. Food Stamps Being Used at 72,400 a Day DETROIT (APt — A daily average of 72,400 in federal food stamps has poured into food store cash registers since the stamp program began in Detroit July 7. The pilot program, under way struction and teachers’ salaries; another for long-term loans for limited construction for private well as public schools; and a third would have provided for scholarships. The school measures possibly could be rerived if a majority of the House membership. 219 members, signed a petition forcing a House vote. Such a move would have little chance for success this late in a session. Speaker Sam Rayburn, D-Tex. said prior to the Rules Committee action that it was "very doubtful" that there would be any school aid legislation in the House this year. However, Rambi will be released in another park because the romantic Masini says he knows of a "cute little doe over in the -Highland Recreation Area — just right tor BamW.” ROCHESTER - The monthly When Bambik 1 year uldil will ELISABETHVILLE. K a t a n ga,‘meeting of the Newcomers CHub be allowed to once again roam The Congo (UPl) — The official I of Rochester, formerly the Planter • * * isieX-isrsrffi gtgjg Guest speaker will be James it * it 1 Reynolds of Pixley’s Home Fur- The spokesman said the incident mishings Store. He will talk on occurred near Nyemba, west of the ’home decorating. Lake Tanganyika port of Albert-1 A que.slion-and-answer period ville. will follow. At a livMy council meeting last week, residents H»manA>rf the dty in ■even^ other arcM of the ciyi-rilforce its own zoning laws. ' $3.5-Billion Advance in Personal Income WASHINGTON (B-Secretary of (fonuneroe Luther H. Hodges said today personal Income advanced try, replaces the direct distribu- by $3.5 billion in May to a record tion of surplus foods by the gov- anntial rate of $416.7 billion, ernment. Hodges also told a news confer- DasM J. Ryui. head of the ahow 8»,iN of the daUy to has bees opeat by tanilBes i Under the latter two piograms. recipients pay for some of the stamps and receive a government bonus of additionai stamps. They receive an average o( CO in fiotnpf for 16 csrii, Ryan said. I The program smoothly, Ryan said. ence that shipments by manufac-turers of durable goods Increased by 1 per cent last month to $15.7 UhNL Balanced against these ericour-iing items was a de|»rtment vey. indicating that new orders booked in June by manufacturers M hard goods dropped 1 per cent fo $15.7 Million. Asked if the de-in orders was d Hodges said, "Not for a single month-4t doeai’t bother." He noted there bad been sizeable dvanoes in new orders eanier in the year. Contract Dispute Delays Painting of Capitol Dome LANSING (B — The big white dome atop the State (fopitol is going fo be repaired and repainted —but not until state officials settle a dispute over who gets the contract to do it. ♦ * ★ ^presentatives of Dalman Caremier of Holland, a firm of steeidejacks, told the State Administrative Board that they submitted the low bid on the .project but didn’t get the contract. was The firm ottered to do the job for $39,640 and for $58,800 If tt inclu^ removing all the paint the dome beforehand. it it it The Department of Administra- “The U.N. troops, of course, returned the fire," the U.N, spokesman said, adding he had no information of casualties on either side. Katanga officials disputed the U.N. account. They said U.N. troops fired first on the Katanga tro(^,'Wing.m()rtars. A Katanga statemeHt-said-Katanga soldiers were killed in the incident and one wounded. thm I ; the $46,605’ bid of Kish Industries of Lansing. It said the Lansing firm indicated it would complete the project in considerably less time. Oil Industry Is Leader HOUSTON, Tex. (UPD-The oil industry leads the nation in capital investment — $64,000 per employe compared with abmt $15,-000 for industry in general, according to Humble Oil A Refinfog Senate Chaplain Hurt in Accident at Capitol WASHINGTON IB - The Rev. Frederick Brown Harris, chaplain of the Senate, was severely cut on the forehead and neck todi^r when a scaffolding around a new levator shaft at the Capitol collapsed. w # # ' The Methodist clergyman told a reiwrter, "All I know is that the Scaffolding gave way, and I was Arms Talks Secretive MOSCOW (UPI) - The United States and the Soviet Unkm kept their disarmament talks ' under wrapt today -but there was no indication were doing any better in Moscow than they had> in Wadiington. SIMRON LEE MeWETHY Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Mc-Wethy of 2275 Richwood St., Pontiac Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Sharon Lee AT William E. CSarlc, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer B. Clark of 2216 Rkhwood 8L. Pontiac Township. No wedding date has been set // George Zambas, 24, \ I called trace of him could be foond. A U.S. Ooari Gaard spokeoman said night perched atop an oil drum. Nicholson, owner of the yawl was washed ashore at the tip of Point Pelee, Ont, Sunday night. Four U.S. Navy helicopters completed a search of the wlwre the boat went down without find-trace of Zambas. Hopes rose when a floating . air mattress was spotted 18 mUes from Point Pelee. But it was empty. ie ir Dodds s^d he and Zambas were in voice contact until about 11 p m. Sunday. He speculated that Zambas either tried to swim to shore or possibly found something to float on and drifted away. Burglar. Likes to Report All About His Business GRAND RAPIDS (UW) —**«»• lice pondered today the qneotlon of the bargtar who Bkre to broadcast his barineM. ★ * , * He’o a fellow known as Mark who, night before tori, walked MncqnUlne Brawn, 22, hn hnd Inst stolen a drtes, writonse and Queen, Prince Entertain LONDON IB - (Jueen EttzMwth and Prince Philip were hoMs al a tarewdl tancheon fo r— li cmiiiilMlBwr hi Brtt- FOURTEEX , THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULr^B, .IMl 'Georgia Peach* Leaves 20 Recx>rds Which May Never Be Broken ' Cobb Is Gone^ but Baseball Legacy Remains 9$ IMM mm ATLANTA, Ga. — Ty Oobb k from hk native Narrows, Ga., gone, but he leaves behind a fan* where he fir^ played baseball as taatir legacy of 20 baseball rec-la boy. ocds which, lUn hk rcpuation, mayj Cobb's personal physldan. Or. last for aU time. {Hugh Wood, said "he died peace- - Oobb. probably the gnetest hlt- *uUy “d P"" ” doc- ter that ever lived and most cerwjlw «dded that Cobb, who was the t.h.iy the finest base stealer,|first man to be elected to base-finally was cut down by a com-|***l‘»’ Hall of Fame at Coppert-bination of cancer, heart disease,to*"*- N Y., "talked baseball occa-and diabetes yesterday at the .ge ^tonally " during hk stay in the of T4. hospital. The "Oeotgla Peach." whose' T»>e legendary "Geocgla Peach-general condition "deteriorated }»>•<* * raior-edged temper and npiifly" during the past two weeks'■•*shing spikes that and whose weight feU off from 185 ^e greatest-and moet feared pound to 165, died at Emoiy Uni-(-*'»»>«• ^ htotoiy. Cobb had the highest lifetime I ibattlng average, won more battiiig {Championships, and stole more bases than any other player Hk marks of .387 ftsr llfetline mark, 13 batting titles, and 89C stolen bases over a 24-year old Major Cabb. elected te besebalTs Hatt •t ranse by entpelling bams nu ilii« Babe Beth by aeeee vatae in the artgtaal balletli« In 1M8-waa the aatqea geaiaa a( the Ty's Records ATLANTA UA-Ty Cobb held 16 Major League records and stared 5 at the time of hk death. Bsoonna snu. imsonra Blfhmt ptrwnust, IS ifet gifted with the power, the speed er the strength al ana af aanie rivek. the fiery Oeaigla-ben Detratt Tiger eatftaUer bieeght to the game a speelal brand at daring, Inleaalty and eaaaanaing wUI to srin that never has been matched by any player past er preeet. The most hated player At Wagaerk deakL Oobb oak he net only was the areateet shsri-step of ah dnae'lwl also tho tan in New York during the 1913 Detroit players conaldored feo npenokm unjust and rafuaad is take the field In Philadelphia tor a game with the Athletics. "It Ty doeen't plVi> neither do wo." tiwy told Tiger manager Hughk Jennings. "Wo’A striko.'* BO that dsMfegs had te hka ^ yeatta from it dsaaph'e (Fa.) OsUega la order te avoM payiag a 9M08 flaa lor ferialt. Iha Ak woa Bw BUM aad aaly ana of tbo oeliegku ever playad la aaotbcr Major League gama. Much as (^b loved bauball, he rarely ahowad up at a gama once ha wu through. Us praterrsd to read about it. And he always atuek to the balkf that the gama ai in hk «a of tho ateal, squeexe play and dead ball wu the best. FLAYINO BOM The fact that Cobb wu playing manager of tho Tigers from 1931 thnu^ 1936 k almost loot, In hk blast of personal accomplkhnianta, which induded icortaig 3.344 runa and driving in LWl in 3,033 gamea Ha reidacta Jennings u Detroit managM in December of 1930 after Jennlaga had run the dub 14 au-soM. Under Cobb'a direction, the Tigers reached (he first division four out of six tlmu but never won Bt. Detroit released him IMT of 1138 and he heeded tor Philadelphia to wind up hk the end of the IfM seem end betted Oily JMI In 41 gemee lor them that year.-Bookke virteally had to fight their way leto the bettiag cage te take pro-guM hard koeoM he leeraed la hta reekte yau aadoabtedly eaw-tribaled te hie uneonpromlriag bettkle whi. Following his retirement from baariadl. (kbb divided hk time he-; tween a luxurious home fat Athar-' ton, Calif., and a lodge in Glen-brook, Nev., which overiooks Lake Tahoe. He spent hk lest daye living the nlaxed life of a feU^ aqulrt, who liked to talk baseball with fellow oM-tlmers. Foytack's Success Story-Grand Slam' ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER THcicinsmSs Checks, Glens, Stripes, New Compound Colors in PALM LITE' The lightest, coolest, nx)st comfortable Summer Suit ever! From Our Wire ServloM Comments about the great Ty CM>b have been flowing across the {country since he wu taken tqr duth yesterday afternoon. H9re [are some of them. John Fetter, T^r President: "The world of baseball has suffered one of its greatest losses." F, A. Batchelor Sr., who cov-erM mori of the home game* Cnbb played In Detroit: "He wu the greatest player who ever lived." Casey Stengel: "Cobb wu the greatest man I ever saw in my time in baseball." Former teammate Bing Miller: 'He hated to low.'He loved to hit and slide. The skin on Ty's legs and hipt wu always raw.” Frank Bartholomew, UPI president and longtime friend. "(Mb's I motto all his life was to play the igame to win." Here’s a suit that's jot iverything. It’s superbly tailored from the finest blend of Dacron^ Polyester and worsted—a blendwith unbelievable wrinkle resistance, crispness and body. By reversing the twist in certiln threads, thousands of tiny “windows” or bruthlng spaces are created where the yams interlica. This invisible ventiliting system lets cool lir In, body heat out As for fit end stjfie-well, no one cm match Palm Beach Co.’s lightweight suit tailoring know how. Off// $4995 mchcjnsanHsf SAGINAW ot LAWRENCE BIRMINGHAM—272 W. Moplo Open Friday Sight Until 9 THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC All Baseball World Mourns Cobb Loss He wu a perfec great paycholegliit.' Bawball (^ommksianer Ford Frick: "Cobb wu a great baseball player who wu representative of a competitive sj^t that must be continued it the game k to continue." (knr. Ernest Vandiver of Geo^ gia; "Together with' spork lovers around the world I am deeply a "Oobb wu u togaud In AmaoioM Gen. Pete Quesada, Wuhington owner: "The passing of Cobb takes from bawball its most dynamic character. He revolutionized the game by hk aggreutve spirit." Ex-star and manager Bill Terry: He wu the best bawball pkyw n the world." BosIm olab owner Tom Ynw-kig: "Oebb wu the grsutset af an time." Geoiga WtiM, haad of tta Naw Ytak Mtk: “Oobb wu undoubtedly the greatut of all." NL preeidant Warren Gike: 'Besebell hu loet one of Ik great-Mt pkyert." R^rs Homiby, Mickey Man-tie. "Home Run'' Baker, Dlziy Deu, Sam Crawford, Davey Jonw, BUI DeWitt, Fred Haney were alao Wallop by Cash Carries Kurler to 7-4 Victory 1st Win Over A'g Is for Tiger Pitcher Nearly 2 Months DETROIT If* — Paul Foytack, winning u a starting pitcher tor tint time In almost months, says hk success formula k simple. ^ * ★ w "I-can sum It up In two words," the wisecracking Detroit pitcher uid lut night after the Tigers’ 7-4 beating of the Kanaas City Athletics. "The words are grand slam." Norm Cash hit a graad shun lome run In the first Inning eft Nhxliall-caali'i grend eUna af the sm-ad both tava came eft noM made Poy. task's first start akwe May 19 a The TTgers' victory preserved their half-game hold on first pkci In tta American League u tht runner-up New York Yankees won from Baltimore 5-0. Staked to a 4-0 lead, Foytack breezed put the Athletics until the ninth inning when he needed one-out help from Tarry Fox. Foy- among tta many heaping praiw tack tad ykkied alnilt runs In on the departed star. The late pitching senution Walter Johnaon once said that Cobb "could do everything better than any player I ever uw." "He was a winner all the way," Nap Lajole once stated of Ty. the third on Jim Rivera’s home run and in the aixth on thivc alnglea. Two singlu and a double la the ninth brought manager Bob Schefflng to the mound with Tbx. The Tiger relietor got pinch batter Deron Johnaon on a soft fly ball, but the-A’s aecond run of the Inning ecored on a throwing error by shortstop Chico Fernandez. AT 74—Ty Cbbb died yesterday In Atiantt at the ago of 74. Thk picture ot the all-time bawball great wu taken in the hospital last December. Ford Posts 17th Win at Orioles' Expense WATtaroBD aorTBAu btanbinos kwkftw Lmtm. ssn 11 S PIT* Spet te 1 OrkruT 1 1 I IS NkljM^ LmCM w t Rokkr'i LaktlkDd S k ReekMW i t Big jUB'i I • 4 10 By The Assootated Press When Ralph Houk managw by the book, you have to figure he uau the farmer*! almanac. The New York Yankee skipper, taking note of the hot weather ahead, aimounced that Whitey Ford, who won 16 on a fouixky {rotation, wu going to pitch every 'fifth day th the second half of only twe game* ,the season. So what hapnened on all of I9S6 when arm bothered him mmt of the sea-BM. Last Bight's victory wu Ms sixth against five lenses sad marked the first time be hu defeated Kaasu City EAHMs errr dbtmit UrkM (krk ----F-nsnU* u S k I _________ . PojrUck p B * > e rot p 1 11 s >■ < 11 TMata ^ . ItelUpa in Mk^ k—HMS C-TMunSH. eo-A-CnniM CUy Kll RivBrn. e-iwM, - r “* .** ’ . s \ \ : \ rp—ifuikkli. Kunkci. U—K . aiM, SBkwktto. T-S:IS. , MIDAS MUFFLERS ARE GUARANTEED FOR AS LONG AS YOU OWN YOUR CAR Ones s MIDAS MeBsr Is iuttUkd oa year car. k U ibe kM waBer pee will ever pay for m Ipec u yea ewe'tbu cu. Tbu't wbu ibe MIDaI •SMSMSeMSUt If tver rtptkceaiMM it eeeded yoe will pay aeih-iaslbr tb« ainicr iiacif, waly k tervice cberte. OMy MIDAS oSm tbit guertiiww yeo4 tt ell MIDAS tboiM wberevsr yea dri*t Uom rout to CUM... tn^ M tnra cottl Ctll MIDAS sed e^ you cutty atuBct ptobleiui eon ted for ML 431 I. USUAW CMDIT CARDS HONOttt n i-ioip Mm„ twm.. Was.. Tkm. *UI ItM PftUr ta S sttatonr Sa I p. M. Ford's first start with the extra day of rest? The stubby southpaw ace ran into hot, humid weather at Baltimore—and pitclM^ a alxdilt shutout for hk 17th victory and 11th in Whitey, pitching in rain u the game moved along, grew stronger on the way. He gave up hk only two walks and left six men first three innings, then allowed only two hits the last six tramu u the Yankees wrapped up a 50 decision. The rain, however, barred the Yankees from a twi-night sweep-causing the second game to be called with New York ahead 4-1 in the top of the fifth. That not only washed out home runs by Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle, hut also left the Yanks in second place in the American Laague race by one percentage hind Detroit. The Tigers walloped Kansu (3ty 7-4 for their fourth straight success. Early Wynn gained his 392nd career victory with a thrae-hlL 4-1 decision over Boston for the Chicago White Sox In the only other game scheduled In the AL. Ford (17-2), who hadn't won more than 16 in one aeaaon sin hitting bis one-year high with 1M6 rocoed in 1908, strucdi o nina whila butlng tta Oriofes for tta third time. R carwr vtctocy. Ford had a three-run lead ha-tore ta went to .work. All thru were unearned, sroring stop Ron Hansen's banes-loaded throwli^ error. Mantle and BUI Skowroh. tack after mtaslng slx{ ggmes because of injury, then'eu^* homered in the sixth Inninc off kwer Milt Pappas (8-5) R was Mantie’s SSn. tagged what would have been No. 34 except tor tta rate that waahed out the nightcap. Mark, the major league leader with 35, and Qete Bo^ alao hit nOK»unt homers off Skinny Brown in the aa " game. Wynn (8-2) gave up nothing hut singln and struck out five, loeine shutout in the fourth with baaes-Ioaded wak. J, C. Martin’s two-nm, twoout single broke a 1-1 tie in the sixth for the White Sox, and hung the loss on rookie Galen Dsco (1-4). t PRESS BOX Reid Buehong of Michigan and Bob Lusky of University of Detroit bsve been cut by the Minnesota Vikings after one scrimmage. day night la U:SSJ. It hap-psaed IB Dahlia, Irskad. ★ w ♦ Capt. Joe Schmidt and GU Mains «-ere signed by the Lions today. Butch Songln inked a pact with the Boston Patriots. WWW Teenagers Dick Harris of New Jersey, a 1st baseman, and pitch-John Flowers of Valley Stream, L.I. were signed to minor league contracts Monday by the Braves. WWW raaeral servloea were held today for lebany Bay, manager of fenner fight hoavywelght boxing WatBrford Standings Tomoanra^acNBiiu DnttM Hklaifsrk Sk&ss;* ^ l:M-j)rtrtea Drut n. Hv« apet ““'w&xsanAT-i acnoDU T p.m.-Bit Jtm'i vt. Peatut Reek-«ot* (NtUonsI) l:l»-8troh'> VI. SptDMr rtoer Ckv-•rlo| (AmerlckD) Elements Woij( Against 'Twins' NEW YORK (XP) - Roger Marts and Mickey Mantle today could blame the elemmk for making the road toward Babe Ruth’s season home run record of Utile « As if spurred by an edict froin seeball Commissioner Ford Frick that Ruth’s mark can be tied or bettered only in 154 games, the New York Yankee home run hit a total of three in Baltimore Monday night, only to have two of thent—one for each of the sluggers—washed out as rain forced postponement of the second game ot a doubleheader wlUi New Yorit leading in the top of tta fifth 4-L As matters stand, Mark has hit 35 home ruiB in 88 games. Ruth did not hit, hk 35th In 1927, hk record year, until the lOeth game Aug. 5. He hit hk 33d in the 95th game July 26. So Mark k 18 gamea ahead ot The Babe's pace, and ManUc k aeven gamea In front. WWW That the road ahead k steepter and rougher tor tta two Yankaa power men k Indicated by the perfOnBBBoe of tboae who challenged the Babe’s record in the past, only to taO. Yankee Manager Ralph Houk said Monday In Baltimore that Individual honors could not be a matter (tf concern until the dub hes the peiynt, if It doea clinch the pennant. After that be conceded he would bat Maris and Mantle 1-2 jn tta lineup Jto give them extra at-bats te thdr quest tor Ruth's mark. If r or both of these had • V THE PONTIAC, PRESS, TUESDAY, JOLY 18, 1961 V SnoBol Takes 1st Place With 5-1 Win Over Ano Si^Bol moved into the driv^i •eat In the American division of the aty Softball League last i^t with a 5-1 triumph over Arro'Real-ty in their showdown battle for Ist place at Beaudette Park Marian (Fat) Keith pitched a Jnasterlul five-hitter and struck out nine batters to feature the victory as Sno-Bol seized a half-game lead in the American loop race. Arro hurier Harry Avesian dueled Keith on even tenns until the bottom of the 5th inning when Sno-Bol erupted for five hins to break a aoDreleaa tie and wrap t)>e all-important victory. Ruelle’s home nin was the big blow of the hefty stanza. Sno-Bol had Memphis State Coach to Talk With Warriors MEMPHIS (AP) - Memphis State Coach Bob Vanatta said Monday he will talk with officials of the Philadelphia Warriors this week about the possibility of taking over as coach of the pro basketball team. Vanatta, a winning coach with Memphis State for five seasons, said he had been invited to Philadelphia by Eddie Gottlieb, president of the National Basketball Assodation team. Vanatta said there \_________ definite about the Job, adding: "1 don't know at this time whether I would be interested. I have always had the feeling I'd like to try coaching in pro ball. It is a big business and a real challenge." Vanatta coached at Army and Bradley, among*other schods, before coming here. Ken Spears outpitched Jerry Thomas at Northside Park as Usher Body Local 566 nosed out the Metropolitan Club, 3-2. Tbm Dabbs’ •ingle delivered tte winning run in the bottom of the 7th. Spears allowed three safeties and Thomas O'Neil Realty collected a dozen hits, three by Jim Glyim, to hand Smltti Silo a lOd licking on the Northside diammtd. 0'NeU scored live times in the 1st iiming aitd coasted to victory. Walter SawicM of First Baptist pitched a five-itming no-hitter in the Pontiac Church Softball League yesterday as the Baptists trounced Church of God, 11-0. Sawidd, who also homered in the contest, has won eight straight games on the mound. Cub Mound Great Ed Reulbach Dies GLE^tS FALLS. N.Y. (AP)-Ed Reulbach, the only baseball player ever to pitch two shutouts in a doubleheader, died at his home Monday. He was 78. Reulbach was a pitching great with the Chicago Cubs in the early 1900s. He led the National League in victories in 1906 through 1906, three years in which Chicago won the pennant. The Cubs won the World Series in 1907 and 1906. Reulbach pitched 42 shutouts in his career. He shut out the Brooklyn Dodgers twice in one day in 1908. That same year he pitched four consecutive shutouts. Maguire Duo Tourney Winner; Bone Best Pro Bill Yeamd, Ray Maguire’s amateur partner, assisted the Bii^ mingham Country Club pro on nine holes Monday as they formed a highly efficient team to win the MicWgan PGA-sponsored Spahn Beats Reds for No. 297 la the opener at Beaudette. Jake Masnr twtried a three-Mt No. n» Maaked m Way OoUWon, S4h Do«r«aU was the loser on By The AsaocUted Prrin The magic number now is three fbr Warren Spahn, the southpaw ace who has disc^red the last five are the toughest in his bid for that diarmed 300th vi^ory. Compared to how the 40-year-(dd wonder has had to battle to naU his 296th and 297th, the first 295 victories of his 17-year career were almost a breeze. It was almost a month ago that he beat San Francisco 2-1 for No. 296 after losing three of four. And it took him six tries, two in relief, to get 297, Spahnie «ot it Monday night, beating Cincinnati fw the first time this season as the Milwaukee Braves clobbered the Reds 13-4 and trimmed their National League lead to four games over second place Los Angeles. The Dodgers held off Pittsburgh for 6-1 victory. Jets, Demrick Whip Leaders The J(^ Boy Jets moved'withia one-half game of the Pontiac Merchants in the city baseball standings by whipping the front-runners 5-2 last night led by Larry Dem- Last place Philadelphia knocked off San Francisco 10-7, and the Louis Cardinals, with Bill White and Julio Javier each collecting eight hits, came from behind in both games tor a 10-6 and 6-5 twi-nlght sweep over the Chicago Clubs. Spahnie (9-ll)had lost four in a row, and two of those were handed out by the Reds—Mie of his favorite patsies (58-25 lifetime). He gave up 11 hits and blew a 30 lead when Wally Post banged a two-run homer in the third inning, but walked just one and w^ all the way. rick. Demrick allowed only one hit and broke a tie with a three-run home run in the 9th off loser Terry Hoy. A1 Barkeley's 1st inning double was the only Merchant hit. It produced a lO lead which short-lived. The fifth-place Braves, after j losing 11 of 15 to ■ the Reds, bounced back with five runs in the fifth, breaking a 44 tie on | doubles by Ed Mathews and Lee Talbott Lumber I la the other sesdor a IS-hIt attack with a homer, double and single. Jim Hoke also Among the Junksrs, Arnold Drugs tO(k Herrington Pirates U-6 and St. Mikes dawned Baldwin E. U. B. 7-3 in Class F. Cranbrpok tiipped the Waterford Firefighters 5-4, E. U. B. edged Huron 8-7, and Auburn Boys Club Wank*^ Weinberger 1-0 in (3ass E American. The Oldtim-ers downed McDonalds 4-1 and St. Mikes tripped the Angels 11-10 in "E” National. Widget scwes were Providence 7, Vikings 4, Eagles 7, Lions 3, Owen Eagles 17, P.O.A. No. 113, Three Sisters 12, LriBaron Metropolitan golf tourney at Barton HUls. Maguire and Yeamd combined for 32-33 — 65 for a one-stroke margin of victory over five other teams. Maguire and partner Tom Lowery also shared 2nd place with Pontiac’s Gene Bone, head pro at Warwick Hills, fir^ a fc^ under-par 31-37—68 fo pocket J67.50 as the tournament's low i»o. PUTT-PUTT 54 Hole COURSE FREE $40,000 IN CASH aim TKIP te HAWAH PLUS GOLF COURSi . . . Jut C«m In nnS EctUtcr OPEN 7 Dart a Wmk 9 A.M.-12 P.M. man’s took Our Lady of Refuge, 3-2. Glenn Brooks had a triple and homer for Arnold. Dave Schultz homered early and scored the clincher in the 7th for <>anbrook. E.U.B. won on a three-run 6th. Dennis Acker anxious to compete against Russia that they didn’t even tell Elliott of their injuries. Drayton, * who ran second Frank Budd in the 100 meters and handled the anchor leg of the world record 400-meter relay team was the most seriously hurt. I “He pulled during the 100 onS Saturday against Russia," said Elliott. "Then instead of telling me for fear I would hold him out, he (ran on the 400-meter relay team. This aggravate it and to make matters worse he ran 200 meters the niext day ’’ 1 It doesn’t feel very had," saidj Drayton. "Maybe it will be okay for the meet against England Friday and Saturday.*’ Uelses, who was born in Berlin and is back in Germany for the first time since he left wh&n he was 11 years old, said he felt all right and was ready to go. ’That’s how those kids are,” said Elliott. ‘"Ihey were so anxious to beat the Russians that I think they would tiave competed on one leg." Hayes Jones will replace Drayton in the 100. Chuck Frazier will take his spot in the 200 and Earl Young will take care of his position in the 400-meter relay. Jones will play the Iron man part with three races today—the 100, the relay and his regular specialty, the 110-meter hurdles. Elliott also replaced Ulis WU-liams with Young to give the youngster a rest in the',s400-meter Other' charges will send Skaters Pass Tests Roller e O»llo, Cheryl Henke. Chuck ^werd. Hob Blonde. Kurt Anulmy. Cnrole Otcone, Snndra Tyler, Nancy Selberk, Nancy HU- No. 1 Dance Bar: Florri ----------Lund. Kim Anwlmy. No. 2 Danca Bar: Mary Mar'' III Wootenden, Florence Blonde. Stiver Bar Dance: Danny Odni,... Free Btyla Bar: Jamee Lund, Holland Lund. Kira Aneelmy. Joan Hartley. Bronae Medal Free Style: Holland Lund, surer Medal Free Style; Ron McDon- nell. Bar Free Style: Ann Schafer. I Figure: Sandy Tyler. Linda Ber-Debbie Bhira. Cathy Welch.' Eve-_ Idler. Owenn. Gallo, Joan Bartley, lann Jtarluccl. j. 3 Figure: LauretU DeWeUi. Mary MacDonald. Sue Wagner ' »lgure: Cheryl Lelneke. p,j|.-- ^n Sai J gardlees ot practical Ctainsea Mao provad to a Stalin he waa right: A OiliMaa Communist revolution could auc-ceed. When tt did, In 1N9. SUlIn summoned Mao to toe Kremlin and obliged him, after a die-cuitkm laaUng more than two montha, to Mgn a mutual aaaiet' sae aaurea affrlolloa, M Today thera are frequent, cau-tkHie Chlnaea reterencee to tha Wang Ming and Own Tu-etu “da-viatkma." Wang Is called a “left Okea Tu-hsta, toe party's loaa-der, oat of power, ead organ-leed ton 4th route army to bo-gtai teeurrecUoa wUeh' would grow lato revolutlau one day against the Kuomlatamf. Moscow, still seeking domination, sent in Wang Ming, a Soviet-trained follower of the Kramlin, and 27 other Chimse to take "over. At Stalin’s order, he disapproved of guerrilla war against both Japanese and Chinese Ns- pend tha rovDlutlen by refusing to taka advantage of opportunities. Chan was a “right opportunist” wiw overamphaMiod national front unity to tlw detriment of revolutionHuiny action. Hw insinuation has baen that if the diviatianlBto-and thus the Russlane—bad been given their way, there would have been no suemseful Red Chineoe revolu-Uon, Thie le an Importont peliit in aseneing the contemporary frictions between the two huge Cbm-munist pertnere. Ae the Chineoe newspaper Red Flag put the ciee not long ago, cottoning the struggle to legality and avoiding other types ol struggle were proved wrong. It means, if toe GUaese had taalty eecarsed, regardlesa of That Includes the risk of au-dear war. The frictions remains and in- deed eeem to be growing, as As dibate rages behind the bamboo and Ifou eurtotne. Nexti iho palato at la«w. To Sptok Of CtroMOnV The cod is one of tha Ufk; of fish, a female 38 hicbee long producing up to 3 million eggs. YPSnANTl »-Dr. Roger W. teyna, doen ( Heyna. iaws of the collage Of Ot-eratuv. erienoe and the arts at the University of Michigan, wlU ■pwk at Eastam Michigan vanity's 10th annuel summer con-vooetton Mcndey. Approximately 900 etudento will receive degrees at tha osremoniaa There is a tialfie accident every hiee seconds In the United Slates. ALUMINUM PATIO Any Siaa Up ta •nd Includinf • GIANT 8Ft.x20Ft. Full Price »»9 riM laiUUiliM MO MOrnr DOWN SUMMER SPECIAL Coll NOW for Frto Homo Domonstrotion No ObligoHon NO MONEY DOWN —3 YEARS TO PAY FE 4-4507 A 100% Rustproof W Pay PonniM o Doy -A Always Cool WAddt Rpoufy fo Your Homo STERUNG ENCLOSURE CO. FE 4-4507 Newspapers Direct Your Message Right Where It Counts An advertiser wants to make his point with people who are pot^tial buyeri. Newspapers deliver more '‘ready to buy” prospects than any other medium. Headers are attracted to ads that interest them. This means that readership ratings on Rds represent live prospects for the advertiser. These are people who are easy to sell because they already have a product interest. People look for—and advertising in the daily newspaper. The Pontiac Press THE PONTIAC^ PRESS. ^TUESDAY. JULY ] U.S. UAemploycd a Sticky Problem DRIFT MARLO Rebound Can*t Keep Up With Jobs By SAM DAWSON AP IlMliiMg New* Analyst NEW YORK - Return ol Indus, trial output to prerecesskm levels and rile of avei^ge factory worit-er’s weekly eaminKS to a new high merely emphasize the economy's stickiest problem ~ the number of would-be workers who haven't Jobs. The rebound in the productioa of the factories mines and utilities has helped push employment to a record for this time of year. Still the official estimate puts unemployment at 5.6 million, 6.8 per cent of the total labor force. And Washington experts are predicting that despite the ren-eral growth in the economy they foresee for the rest of the year, h h h the unemployment total is likely to be above 5 million next January. This would be more than 6 per cent of the expected labor '>roe. Some question both the ac-cunu:y of the federal estimates the gloominess of the predic- Angel for Boys Clubs Voted "Manof-Year tions. They contend that the labor depi^tment's tally or the unemployed takes in many wh» a.** merely seasonally employed, and many who are looking for jobs they don’t really need except to I money. OUTLOOK DIM But the hard core of the Jobss, even if the fringe cases are trimmed of, is unmistakable. And the outlook for shrinking it is less than roaey. Labor Department figures show some 40 per cent oi the jobless to be married men with/family le-sponaibiUties, and some 43 per cent ol the Jobless to have been jout of work for more than 15 By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - America faces the choice today, a master salesman said, of "selling itself short—or selling itself into a bigger boom than it has ever known." ... *'We cquld use at least a mil-“ lion new sales-, men right now." aid Frank C. I Russell, "and if Awe had them we 'I could keep every J factory humming. \ good sales-keeps least five other people at work, he said. Russell himself BOYLE has been a topjwMbws while pfaying ' salesman for more than 40 years and has sold everything from shoes to windows. His interest in windows began as a child when he knocked a home rgn right through a neighbor's window while playing sand-lot baseball. The lady of the houw bawled him out so vigorously that the boy, who didn’t have a . dime in his pocket—let alone a credit card —made a silent tearful vow. 'I decided that if I ever made enough money I'd pay for every window any kid in the land broke," Russell recalled. In 1951 while head world’s largest storm. film (it did a retsJl business of million "Biat year), Russell mentioned his childhood vow to business friend. DO SOMETHING 'Well, you have the money now —why don’t you do something bout it?” replied his friend. Russell did. In the last years he has replac^ed at a cost of more than |32,0(X) some 3,500 windows broken in sandlot football or baseball games. (For obvious reasons, he didn’t extend his offer to kids who break Retaining programs for those whose skills are no longer in demand are under way. At best, they can handle only a small part of the Jobless. The biggest part is the unskilled, and it is among th(8e that unemfrioyment showed the sharpest rise during the recession. The lengthening of the factory work week has helped, many workers who were skimpng to get along on smaller paychecks. More hours worked and rising wage scales have brought average weekly earnings to $84.24, ac-eording to the Labor Department. Also helping was the increase in overtime pay. OUR ANCESTORS Marriage licenses Paul 8. Pucboran. Warren and Bonnie a Henderton, III I. Ounn. Rocheiter. Kenneth D. Oouflaa. IMH Indian. Southfield and Lola M. Stephan, Sail- Prank V. lUUw. in S. Saslnav and Jean B. Jacoby, SlM Maraton. Bernard A. UeOulrt, 4431 Dixie. Drayton Plalna and Barbara T. PlaUi, 4137 W. Walton. Drayton Plalna. ----- - Wrlfht,----------—" — o. MM : Lake'and~karM^.’ Maja Union Lake. Edmund B. Tarry. 117 Berwyn. BIrm. Ineham and Vlrlan P. Stanard. Clawson. Ronald J. BeUrdInellt. MMt Mulberry. Southfield and Nancy 11. CWverly. 33131 lOG Mile. Southfield. Oeoree M. Stroud. Tucson. Arlaona and Senia W. Kaanta. 3330 Malone. Wlxom. James D. Schick. 343 Anderson. Orion and Kathleen M. Badsero. S3I Lake Charles L. Prucha. 11131 W. 14 Mile. Birmingham and Sue A. Lamble, 11310 Reedmore. Blrmtngham. Ralph P. Pear. 3344 Locklln Une, Union Laka and Oall S. Brummel, 31N Soulhwlnd. Walled Lake. Allen P. Baiaanl, 33MI Berg. I---- field and Rochelle A. M. LaCrou, 11334 W. II MUe. Southfield. Vernon L. Orltmh. 31431 Waldron. ParmtegOon and Xlaanor R. Pearse, li- '. Johnson, Pleasant Orors,' John P. Wlecsorek. 43M C _________________... MonUcoUo. Chariea O. Haathcott. M73 Wlndla.., Waterford and. Charon L. Roltmeysr, 3004 Lotus, Waterford. ------d W. Schruba. 1171 Lakeland, I. RockefoUer, 1101 Park- 'Even as it is, one sourpuss accused me of encouraging Juvenile delinquency,’’ said Rumll. But not the Boys’ Qubs ol America. They voted him a Man-of-the Year award. 2 Demand Examination on Charge of Kidnaping FLINT IB — Two Georgia men demanded examination Monday at their arraignment on a kidnaping charge. Robert Marks, 26, of Warner Robins, and Nick Adams of Augusta were released under S1,C bond each. Examination was set for Aug. Adams, reportedly the father of eight-montlMild Angelo Johnson, told state police he took the baby from its home Friday in an effort to make his estranged wile return to him. Such increases usually precede anY general expansion in factory work rolls. As Industrigl output more ol the unemployed KNua find new Jobs. Even this won’t solve the overall problem of unemployment. For thing, increased mech- lizatioh is accompanying increased output. This means that while factories are turning out more goods tfiey are doing so without hiring more workers, and times doing so without as many workers as formerly. I ★ A. ★ I But the main reason unemploy-1 ment seems-likely to stay high, is that the total work force is growing as fast as the number of Jobs. The total of the employment may be rising impressively. But constantly more persons are entering the labor force. This is because of the big rise in the birth rate in the 1940s. Each year a new batch reaches the working age and goes looking for Jobk. The number in the labor force increased only moderately during the last decade, because it was fod by those born in the 1930s when the birth rate was teld down by the depression. But now. and for several years to come, the labor force Trill bt growing fast. That leaves the question; Will the nation's economic growth be large enough to furnish all the new Jobs ne^ed? By Quincy RIchkrd xnd Karen K. BouthtleM. Pype. 4304 Rocheitcr, Trop . SMiUl, 3MM Corsl Oablti, Bowman, 47M Jotlirn tal Mia and Palth A. Coxen, Royal Oak. "No we can't stay longer! $20 for a week’s room and board is highway robbery!" BOARDING HOUSE________ MV WORD,TVNln. Drayton PUlne. . W. HUdehraad. lMS_Rea>urih (UK aad Ana M. Rwart. 444 I. Tbompion. Ml Jordon and DIU 33M Sradna. ■umI. hr Alnti^Man MbaI fJtkdB By Dr. I. M. LcYitt, Tom Cook* and Phil Rvaaa walked in and maoc MVSELF AT HOME/J ■•“SINEO YOU'D BE 'IGHT BACK.' ADAM AMES iGUESSMoerof^THa TDWN^ C0(iMNCa>-THAT IF 1 DIDN'T Acimuy MURPeH.BEEJAy,l By Loo FIm THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert __j, BECAUSE I TH____ AN IDIOr DOESNTMEAN I-I DONT LIKE ALLEY OOP By V. T. CAPTAIN EASY By Le«lie Tamer By Ernie Buahmiller MORTY MEEKLE By Dick CavalK BuriFiCHANfieiwe ( > FBl6NP9MlPCUJ9iNlDA NO4-4>ia0nT0iaSANIZATI0N I WONtMAke ANYMONB/. fOPPETE<9aAkE,Vi CWVOUTHINKri— TDflTARTTHeC_____ INTHE FieSTflACe? TO 6P»?eAt? Twe <5Pi(?ir OF friend^ip in a 60(^ay■^ax)BLED WORLD? GRANDMA. By Charles Kuhn I IT HIDES TH’ SMWnS I COT BUMPIN’ INTO TH* DOOR LAST NIGHT.^ f- DONALD DUCK By Walt Disne.v >0 ___________ /AtONeyiDTHe SANK, l^Bjjr-rwev^ETr--- AAV (rreosTA * AtONeXT ----- TO RENT ^ ATRUCK-THERE A4L©T SS SOMB OTHER VtAO*? EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY It, 1061 Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths Servlet lor lHmi« Bun. ao. ot 76S HariboTMvh wtB be held «t 10 o.m. W^dMiday at St. Shnloa Chureh. » W. Sma Mile ML. .Detroit. Burial will be In Whlto| SurrivitiK are fotir dai^hten, Cbapei Memorial Oametaiy. IMn. Hilda Philll|w ^ Grand Rap-Mr. Bun* body la at the WOUm Ha, Mra. Zora Webb of South Ban^ Vaau FoMral Hone, IS75 N. Wood- Ind., Mia. Klaie Huffman of Am ■afa from the i___ ___ arda that riireataa it. However, with om inenr. aace policy yea caa now Rceeerate for wind, theft eandaHaw, per- * •oaM liabuity. aumy oHier perila. See na ah^t our medera Hoi----- icy today. L W. IittMltckw Iftaqr __________ Royal Oak. Proprietor of the Bun Bar lor 15 yaara, Mr. Burs la a of tbe St. Stmion Church Sanfire, he 'leaves Iwr daughters. Mrs. Ann iGUracc of Highland Paric. Mrs. Leontina Pekett of Yuungalomi, Ohio, Mn. Minerva Popp at Royal 0^ and Mrs. Irene Metes of Oac; three sons Irtmie Jr. and Nick, both of Pontiac, and Lt. Ool. Alesaader Bun; and 13 grand-I children. Mr. Bun died Saturday at St Arbor and MabM Hagnl of Detroit; Walter of Howril' and Alton of Grand Ra^da; 14 grandchildren and 21 graat-grandchil- SOUTH LYON - Service for (Nellie E.) of 125 Detndt St., wttl be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Phillips Funeral Home. Burial wUl be in the South Lyon Oemetery. Mrs. Havenhaw died Sunday at Hmmital afliw a lone * daughter In' Ann Joseph Mercy Hospital after a long fcaiowtag a heart attack. A Bfe-loM re^nt of the area, le had owned ^and < mwald m. pabm RIXHESTER — 8 e r V1 c a and burial of former Rochester realdeid Donald M. Farmer, 42, was to be held in Burbank, Calif., today. 1 Mr. Fanner of North Hidlywood, Calif., an electrician at Lockheed .Aircraft, wu electrocuted while at work FYiday. He is survived ^ his wife, Ifari Pat; a daughter, Dana Jean; a son. Donn; parents. Mr. and Mrs. iJsny Fanner of Rochester; a sis-iter. Mrs. Lsoia Oak of PontUo; land a brother, Howard of I operaM Haverahaw Ho^al in Souft Lyon a, discontinuing HENRY HAG.VI SOUTH LYW — Service tor Henry Hagnl. M, of S05 E. Lake was to be held 2 p.m. today at the PhiUipo Funeral Home with burial In the South Lyon Cemetery. Mr. Hagnl died Saturday following an illnett of six wedo. PROTECT YOUR I1JN That boot ond occMsories rtpreMnt a big investment. Ashore or afloat you should be protected ogoinst fire and theft, domoge to other boots due to collision and other hozordb! Liability insuronce due to personal injury from boating Occidents should be included. Marine insuroiKe is well worth the low cost. Coll us. Good Demand U|)s Grain Fultire Prices CHICAGO t* — A good general ---1 .-.... —futur-- HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 102 I. Heron n. ft 4-82S4 tollawlhg t I la 1549. She is auiv|ved by three daugh-srs Mrs. Mildnd KimbaU of Pontiac. Mrs. Bessie Sweet of South Lyon and Mrs. Blandie Carey of Ann Artxir; a son Nile of Chicago; a brother Wilbur Nugent of South Lyon; 11 grandchildren, 26 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandson. WILLIAM U HERSHA' TROY — Service for'former, area reddent William L. Hersha, 27, of 1048 Haynaa St., Birmingham, will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Price Funeral Home. Graveside service will be at 2 p.m. Thuraday at Boyne City Cemetery. Mr. Hersha died yesterday after a long illness. He was a of the Macabee Lodge in all along the Una in Initial dealings on the Boerd of Trade. July Boi'beans, long under fairly .«avy preaeure of Uquldathm, l«d the advance with ^ns ibnning to more than three cents during the first several minutes. Wheat and ly* moved up a cent or more in spots, corn and oats fractimu. Brokers said the atrength In soybeans started with heavy buying by a commisaion firm and that it had attractad actlva shoit covering after the gain in July reached wo cente. Grain PricM FOR INVESTMENT SECUSmES and ACCUKATE QUOTATIONS CALL C J. NEPHLER CO. FE 2-9117 818 Community NotiOnai Bonk Bldg. Boyne City and a former Delta County Deputy Sheriff. Surviving are three sons. Lyle f Trey. Frank of l^wortii and Elra of Detroit; a daughter, Mrs. Ona Simmons of Birmingham; 27 grandchildren; 26 great-grandchil-; and two great-great-grandchildren. MARTIN T. KARCHER UNION LAKE - Service tor Martin T. Kareher, 82, of 6515 Alden Drive, wUl be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Doneleon-Johne Funeral Home, Pontiac. A second service is scheduled .at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Thompson-vlUe Congregationa.' Chureh, ThompacnvUle, followed by burial in Thompsonville Ometery. Mr. Kareher, a member of the Thompwmville Lodge, FAAM, died yesterday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after an illness of several weeks. . He la survived by a son Martin H. of Union Lake, two sisters and two grandchildren. MRS. ALLEN E. KENAGA HOLLY — Service tor Mrs. Allen E.. (Cora) Kenaga, 91, of 208 Sherman St., will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at .the Dryer Funeral Home foltowed by burial in Lakeside Cemetery. Mrs. Kenaga, a lifetime resident of this area, was a member of the Holly nasbyterlan Church the Pamona Grange. She died Sunday at Pontiac General Hospital after a short illness. Surviving are two stepdaughters Mn. Albert Barnett of Keego Har-b(v and Mn. -Harold Jumisco of Ferndale; six grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. Give Securities ...the Gift of Golden Opportunity Birthday, anniversary, graduation, wedding, whatever the occasion... A gift of ateuritiei will bt long remembwad because aecnritiei can ptxMda laatinf valiM... ^er futora growth potantial. ... reflact can and ooDiidantian on tha part of the gi w. A 0/aaoirtftee can {xovida ywmpten with an awarenaaa of how stocks and bonds contribute to economic growth and industrial expansion, while providing a foundation for a aecure financial future. A gift of aecuritia may be the start of a second income for rela-tivee, frienda, or employees. A gift of tecuritiee ia always a welcome addition to the portfolio of any inveatmr. Watling, Lerdien’s registered repreeentativea will be happy to assist you with the selection of gift securities, smaQ or luge. ' Drop in to our nearest office at your earliast convenience. Or, if you prefer, you can phone us at any tima for oomplata informa' tion on the wide range of aecuritiee available. •TOP IN OR PMONR UR ROOM f Watling, Lerchen & Co. MemherMNnYerkStodtSadmegi ' 402 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLOO. PONTIAC, MICHIOAN PHONE: FE 2-027B AnnArtor»Jaehon • Kalamamo* DETROIT* • Doartonfffm York SERVINO MICHIOAN INVESTORS SINCE 1010 MAR0S The tollowliig are top prlcca eovering salec of local^ grown Ntxluee by greweie and told by hem In whdewle package lots. Quotatiom are .ftnrnltiMd by the Jetroft Bureau of Maifcets, u of Tuesday. Detroit Produce nujiT ChWTMf, IVMt, IS St.....W-W sssMTj'f ••.............'.a SUeeSantM, Pumf. lJ .. Market Quiet, Settles Lower Rezoning OK Expected for Third Trailer Park leas BtroM puUlc opposition devriops at the last minute, cKy eonyniaSoMra tonight are expected to approve rcaoning to permit a third troaer park wltMn the city limits, . NEW YORK (A - The stock msr-ket settled lower early this afternoon in quiet trading. Pivotal lacuea declined from tree-tiona to about a point. A few stocks Rostsd moderata gains. No opposition to the move haa, arisen during the past few months at hearings and pubUc dlscdaakms before the commission and the planning commiealon. The final hearing it tonight. The eamp weald be looatad an the aaal sMa af OU Teiegraph hava'beea sleepsr U net for a rebound of a aombor of poiale by Do PoBt, which welgbo heavily ki tbe market laSeatora. A lower trend was displayed by meet other chemicals, nonferroua metals, tobaccoe, electnmics, farm Implements, steels, utilities and aWnsA, M. mrlu dwrS. to.. . —‘■pa ta ...... Poultry and Eggt DBTEOrr POVLTBT It (API—VrtcM per _____ __________ .} Detroit lot No. 1 qwllt, Ut. poultry; Betry typo hen. lt-11; Uttt type hid. I-II; Miey type router, oyer 5 Ibi. It-M: broiler* end fryer. S-t lb*, whit*, it-ll: Burred RocU ll-tl; turkey.: Hen* im-tl: tom. 11. Women Hospitalized Following Collision Two women were reported in fair condition at William Beaumont Hospital today, following a| tATOcar collision at the Orchard Lake and 13-hDle Roads intersection in Farmington Township yes->rday. The driver of the two trailer parks la tha olty. The other is oe Walled Boadevard. commiSlon approval of a trailer park by contending the land is useless for other commercial purpoaes that through traffic bypaaaes Old Telegraph Road over the u derpaas at Orchard Lake Road. PLANS AMBmOVS They have presented ambitious plans tor a model camp complying with new sUte restrictions against crowding and have promised such facilities as paving, water and While not actively opposing the camp, aty Manager Walter K. Willman has expressed disfavor with trailer pariu in general on grounds that thetr contribution to the tax base is not In line with from the city, achooia and county. Mayor Pk area, has favored the tiaMer park both as a efty coiuinlssloiiar and as a member of the plaa- But several other city commit-tionera have expressed surprise over the move. It was about a year ago, they remembered, that the city, on recommendation of the planning com- New York Stocks Plsure. ultor Seclmsl point, un .Ifbth. Air ... M.4 JJij Si Ei«ct City Man Member Ltd . . «e Ji*4 .... fT*f I _ _ ' . . • . . , July IS (APi-Prte.. psld'Amue W a C n.l JJJJJ -li®'' by flrrt reeelyer. d»HT*r*d Armour a Co M.» JJP* "" , loou In M dauD uuu eon. Atchlwn .... M lartt Urse 3 Livestock Mele drivea by Frederiek Oard-aer, It. of SUll Oxford Both Gardner and his passenger. Thomas (Fishman of 2365 Doleman Drive, West Bloomfield Township, were treated at the hospital for minor injuries and released. Also treated and released were two other passenger’s in Miss Winter's car, Mrs. Alice Jenune, 55, of Livonia and her 21-year-old daughter, Shirley. Underwood--------- -------Olivetti rmWRITIRS — ILICTRIC, STANDARD AND PORTAILIS ADDING MACHINIS AND CALCULATORS AND OFFICI SUFFLIiS Cscinsive Anlkorised Dealer JONES TYPEWRITER Silti aad Service loss W. Hana St. •ItushUr .leer* heUcri not **tabU.bed; eou. .tMdy; me*tly chelce SM-llkS lb. itetr. ».1»-13.10: (004 to low choice llJS-IS.ni etendird lt-11.00: utIUty covt 10.10-10.00 cennen end cutter. IS-IO. Ho(, 400. atMdy No. 1 end 1 IN-W lb. butcher* IIJI-ISAO: mUM No. t, ] end 1 110-100 lb. 11.10-11.10: No. i. 1 end 1 100-400 ». sow* 11.10-14.10: No. 3 ond 1 11.10-11.3S. T.ultr.-U0: mo-* 13-14: food end e DOW-JONSS t rjl. AVUAOtd 10 Ind*. on.io Off 1.40 to lull. 114.H oft i n 11 mu*. ni.M off 0.11 10 stock* nf.li off on Volum. to 3 p.m. 1.M0.010. Stocks of Aroa Interest i|2p*'Sr^ hMc Lonweb rt elfhtht BM A*ked .11.1 111 rifuiu Acr-1 _____T. U '..n' Baldwin Rubber Oo........11.1 Borman Food StorM .........41 CurUee-wntbt Corp.........11.1 Hi Hoorer BaU a Bsarfe SSnHS?,:'; n Auto L .. uaofu. ..... Xa-Ccll-O .. ralrb Whltaey 11.4 .44.4 40.0 1J.1 34.-.34.4 10 .;opb»t Co. . RockweU Staadard ............... . — Toledo XdlMD Co...............11.1 11 OVXB THI COCNTXa STOCKS The followins oupUtton. do aot n camrlly r«pr»Mnt actual trtniaetloD. but are Intended a. a (Uldc tr *•“ proximate tradlns ranse of t Amerlcan-Marlatta Co. I IS neetrcolca InternaUonal Frlto Co............................ McLouth Steel Cc........... a.4 M.4 MIsbKan SMmtpM Tube Oo. M.S ».4 Plooeer Fl^ee ............. II S4J StaatterpnoToiaw Cerp. ...I 31 IS Taylor fibre .............. 4.4 1.4 iTre i_.______ ______ I Vemori OInscr Ale . 11.1 13.1 .. 4.4 0 .. 14.T 11 BAKER ond HANSEN iRSlIRRCt CtRpUiy INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY Phene PE 4-1SS8 714 COMMOmn MATIONU lARI ILDC. PONTUC Keyetone Orbwta K-t _____ Mom. Inyeatorc Orewth . M.u. Invutor* Truet ... Putnam Orowth ........... TrlerUlon SlMtronlce _____ JSbT 111! 11.M . 11.41 ISJf .. I.IS IC.IS . 11.01 UAO . 11.01 IS.IO . I4.« 10.10 10.40 st.oe .. 1.11 MS . low 11.10 . 10.10 11.40 The spadefoot toad of North America breeds in temporaiy poeds created by heavy raii». The tiny toad eggs may hatdi in a day and a half. of Accountant Institute Joe G. Benson, CPA of Pontiac, has been elected a member ol the American Institute ol Certified PubUc Accountants. Benson is with the accounting firm of Paul V. Engs from A Co. In' Detroit. S:00 a.m. m July 14. INI. a IM ,_____ f FDH HT, MTlal nu«Sb#r 1 W04W_»SI40l, *• ••« At MbUe ^ CelancM .. Cert-Teed . ChM a Oh ' m4 Ohio on ...... " ISO Owun* Cn( ... ' 31 • OwMt lU Ol a ; Pac o a XI .. : ».i 5“ ■ 55 7 ParamHlet’ .’i ; Parka Da .... ■ u* 5?R‘r : ■■ 77'4 Phetpe D .... Dot Idle . DU C aeoc ns o*y xot .... 40. in4 >>*r Teh .... m.: Hoyal Dut .... 11 1H4 Ba/eway Bt ..40.1 • S 2i SSS5??:';JS4 2; 13 aou Ry ......M.4 Ford Mot ...n I: Oaa Motor, a Tol a Tel OoB Ttr. . Oaitewo .. OlUetU "110 4 Textron . TimkRa. Orah PaUe otAap Ot No Ry Orryhound Quit Oil Rammer Pap SiVaS* Ins Rand . . latBuilteh . \AfSS. Kan. that addrei Tu^yHi.^r.iii PUBUC SALK t:N a m. on July 14. IMl. l ____ 3 DR P/L 000. eerUl number CIFTIISMS will be Mid at pubUe mIs at Woodward Ardmore aerrlee autun. moo Woodward Arenue. Ferndale OUcb lean, that addrn* being where thi yehicu 4. .torM mid m.^^ ________________________ Woodward Ardmore Senrtce Bta----------- ----- -----ird • Arenue. Ferndale. addrea being where the * —* mar ha in*paeted. July 11. ilT«n Klchltun, _________ rehlcla U etered ai ADVERTmniBNT----------- ot Wolrertne Uke, MIOlenMiy RMd, WaUed Lake, Mleb., unttl Jufir M. INI, it LN p-m.. at wMeh ptaM and iw propoMid VUUsa BaU. Tbe skffled tradee will be inr^red: Flomblnt. Palntli^ CSfpentry. Sal u eiAUoed U flu pUna aiN ipecltlea-‘—a on file U tbe abore office. Plan. tnecUlcatlon. aur be asaaUned ' _ l^fc Otfle. froni t;N s.m. to p.a. Monday thru Frldar Tbo right U roMrrad to n propoaaU, ' to propoMl. propoMi whle most farorab! tST*lueeewful Mddtr will bo roqulred > prMobt Mttafactory erldonM of bar-Mdonaworkofj^lUrnMgm^^ VlUase cierl VUla(t of Wotromo Laki July 11 and lA INI •d to reluct any or any InMnnallty In PNTwd and to accept any the TlUate deema to be to the tat----- * ** NOTICE OP POB£iC HKARINO aty ^Council J»f _the Bylren vated a new xoning claastOcatton expressly to ban new trailer parks. Now tha planning comiqiaaion has reoommtMiled that the city permit the camp atta to have Community Nsdoiial Bank of Pontiac f Fwattae II, Is the Btoto of MIehlsan. .1 tbo olOM of buiiaeM ob Juno mTiNI. FublUhod ta rcepeoM to oaU mad# by eOmptroUer of tbe earroaey. tuidor aM-Hoa MIL U-a. rerl^'rtatutM. . 0 .^111,101,ON.ll M^t^jrdfreet au. suarantaad ......... 10,01i,l01.M Uifatione of dtatee and ^Heal Mbdlrbiou .... M,Ud,0M0t *er boadt, netea aad do- - „, benturM ............. K.SSl.a _______ Miu and dlMounU (ta- SW ,.r": l-jSmSrr 41.W.H4.H fttraltsrs uid ..... 111,406.10 Mll.14S.il IMl Mtoto owned ottor ' thMi bnnk pr.«lM. .... ithor somU ....... ■ eie.NUl Total AiMto .^^^SIN.III.IN W UAMunes Demand depotiu of tadirld- Sfc„II3r^, nu^N..> ima and Mrtafi daxMlta of indinduali. partner. „ ahlpe, sad MrperetlM. . N.m.tU.IO epoMto of United eUt*. &rsi,e. M01,m.N a»«.j|i.a. Depoeiu of bank. ....... S.OOO.OO CerUHM and o f tt e . r r _ eboeks. etc.......... etS.Pff.M D^to .. m.n4j4U4 (a) Total d«-mtto^. .*'fU.4».l».41 (bVTotal time and JSiikrr"” Total uabuiu.. erei>.eu.w CAPITAL AOCOUNTB capital atMk:> Common .took, total par ..|l.Mei0MJ0 l.eoo.OM.M aurpiui ............ 1,000.000.00 UnArldod pretit. ...... ni.tll.u ~eeorrM (and rMrement account for preferred ctock) .............. dPW,111.11 Total Otpllal Acceunti .. MOO.Sll.M Total UabUIttn and CaptUI Aeeoubte .. MM.eiUM.M MBMOBANDA Auete pledfcd or tnliMd to aMora UabUtle. aad for otbar purpem. ... Mlt.NO.FI Loana at ihown aber. era efter deduction ot re- ■errM ol ........... 071,001.41 eccurttleo a. tooon abovo art after dodoOloo of re- urrto of ......... 414.110n Roal ootato loan, taeurod undor Tltla. □, TI. aad TOT ot tbe Nattonal Houalne Act ....... . 361.30136 suarantood portion, only Ffdoral Houitai Admlnlt-traUoa TlUt I irpalr and modernisation Initallmuit loan., to tbo MMt batwaoB 10:M ' '* OVER n. WALUtD QiSi Al J??*'. for%lt TIAC MobUa Horn a Park, in E Walton Blra,_____________ ‘ REAL ESTATE BALSSklAN Town 6t Country Food Co., Inc. WANTS 5 MEN for Food Sales PONTIAC and Surrounding Area No Experience Necessary Would you 11k» workins for tha larieit food companr In Iti field? You muit be neat, a food worker, married, 2$ to U yeari of a(o and have MMay’(hroU(b*W^ tHt TOY Dellrari — CoUai.„ — CALL n t-tni_______ responsible coloreHTTSHFl, motUy for cbUdran and kltobcn *^'*^ *^ *“• W*Tfc WOifAN'WiAiytoV wbUe mother works. Oear St. Call alUr t p.m. OR »SSU.__ rouAN t6 wor2Th RooutSS bouee, live In. Pb. PE 4-ltt4 be-tweeo U-4 p.m. WOMAN mTH SHOi BALES EX-Mrlence lor part-time work lemlly »hoe itore. OR S-M12. )R biSiHWASHfNa Apply IMO Olsla “ ONE MARRIED MAN S3 to 40 tor talea work. Serrlclns aetabllabed euatomare and aetab-Uahlnf naw aoeounta Mutt be a bitb iiSiool arad. tin weekly |imrantaad ■ whUa tralnlnf. OR Help' Wanted Female !? APPLtCATIONB BBINO AOCEPT-ed for Lottnto waltretaea. CaU In person only. Tbura. between Mrs PoL^r'"'’**‘‘ ^ AVOfTPRODOCTS AR» PorTraE onUre fomily Leom how to be a coametic and toiletries eipert Above tvtrsfe earninpa. Phone Interesting Position AVAILABLE - tor “0 ‘'“rty. end ODjey workins with tho NEED MONEY? Mn Ptssr Nawt profrtm,* — - !lW' S.'as *Muat **1^7 SALES LADY tamltlaV''wiai VontUMs'^and**a— rou^t araaa. PuU Uma. Strict, ly Commlaslon work. Prefer one with eaperlenco but wUl conalder tralnln* rlfUt woman. L. IT Brown ^tor. M BUsabaUi Lak ~^TOY CHEST AND OnV'op'toFWNIBT TOY PARTY PLAN IN MICH. Our nth Yaar t Amaalng "Party Mta Olft’ furnithed frat I TOP DIMONSTRATtON ADM ksMUent company tralalnt I*iSl " ' .JT Borylcai Olrl CoameUc elianta — _ to be eitabllihod tn and around ------- -• - wtlUnt ■ WANTED-EXPERIEUfCED GRILL - Phono UL S-ISM after 10 __Patio Drive In. WANTED BEACmCIAN. l%ONE PE 0-0007 after 0 p.m. ‘ COUPLE WHO WOULD LIKE NICE sate hnuat apt. on laka and gooo Incomt for part time wprk. He aa handy man and aardner. Bhe to do upstalra work and llfbt laundry Could bo retired couple in good health or couple -‘-'* man has some outaldo me^. Prtfer oo ebUdra ixicOTIVB TYPE BALBBPfRSON. DnUmlted Oj^rtunlty. MY 3-14S0 !r.r’‘Si MAN OR WOMAN WITH CAR. earn 02 to $3 and up per hour. Nationally advertised Watklna Pood rouU. Experience unaecea-aary. Old ago " whiii ___.days, Wedaeadaya and Prl- dayt. Al Jobnatoo, NorUiwoat corner of Seymaur Lake Road and mTaRP~REAL estate SALEH people fr- • ■■■h. dlvlalooa. SHORT I fast moring sub- EVELYN EDWARDS "VOCATIONAL _ COUNSEUNQ 8ERV1C*’ m Sbist Huron AH?* Phone FEderal 4-0584 Sales K%?L”for“.Si^Wo» must bo H. B. grad and prefer um Mlltte. Balarlod. Ml^eot afgW SECRETARY $400 Work Wanted Malt 11 XINETEEK fcARPl____ _____ remodeUng. 6t2-2*7*. U to 2 8.B S. BiniSlNO CO. CASH FOR Your home ip TOh PURNISHraS AND UHTTONISHED 1 BEDROOM. SMALL 1.________________ “ ”■ I to Tel-Huron. Ideal I rm a.iB4S i -.»riting couple, 166 per mo. I It hrokerTPE 4-Wl PRIVATE FURNISHED; R MMdlotan • apartmoat Rice noighborhood. ;• ■ • w i sTri------------' Baby welcome. UlUltUa furhlahod.i* ... —................. iTR* I »i PB 4- . *46. OR 3-2157 program. Wo bare buyers wuh cosh looking tor home. We neod homes to show ra"s4ws“ocTiy^ISbi." Lawrsnee W. Oaylord “ -------- 12* E. PlkaSt -------1 nint WANT TO SELL? Rstabllsbod busin Uks to buythroo-homo on Wsat all It nolgbbo of chudroi. .... from downtown Pon- --Approxlmatoly drive from dow Use -Moderately p ioeotlon and prieo.' tumlahod. DL 2-3«W. Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 > 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatic host — Poll baatment WILL DECORATE $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 East Blvd. N. it TaltPCld l!f™Ria-i__ kEEoo harASr 'IbREBiday medtra, *ga mo. CaU ayes. M2-1374,_____ _______________ with opunu to buy. Ml s m«aUi. II Mckmloy Dr PE *41**. lOMMBRCl YowNSHIP? Sm with qpUen. SehnoliMr, MA 4-12*2. IVe. MA4-266*. COLORED Brand n*w 2 bodreom fuO bSM- r,"i.'KSf;^*m*"T2d?rraS!; Kitchen yont lan-bood. Nleo Mg lot. with aide driye. Lew raitf BttUt by Ludu Building Co., Bales by Rom Roolty, PE 2-W IKN INO ROOM, CL6at In. 21 Nor on clean ROOM FOR MAN. PRIVaTI entrance and ibowtr, (7 r~~'~ NICE ROOM POR GENTLEMAN. SLEKPINO rooms WITH KIT en near Plsher, FE 4-1020. For Rent MiscellanBOUE 48 Wallpaper Steamer Floor sandori, poUobora, haod aandora. fttmae* vaoaum oioan-ots. Oakland Puol * Paint. U Orthard LaU At*. PE 44UT For SrI(b; Houm asss DOWN BMmeDt mT* 2*0. tM^^Mth. PE 6-3272. $700 DOWN Inchidos 0014 on thl* raosb atyl* h0|n* with attached garage. Fully, tiled bath, hardwood — -i—- jMge^ A^ly, Laadocai^Mtiaac* of only M.70S. PsyabI* *tt por month. IncluOlnt uxci va4 to-aurnnet. 4 par emt ioUrtai. . C. PANGUS, Realtor ORTOHVILLE ________NA74SU a-BBDROOM HOME OPP~SaM^ land, near Witner Bcbool. Pull basement, w^ f.-.--—----- tlon room, Corpi Mrpoting I hv^ street* amT'sIdtwsIlu!*^ II?i**** Terms* svsiSabi*. levsly w^^pord’ realty." PhTMi 34628, PE 2-7121. 3 BEDROOM RANCH IN ORION -Townsbip. With largo Uvlng room.. Only g7,*4> with terms 2 LAROE REDROmi RAbdR -With gas heat and 2 tar at-taehod'garage. Hardwood floors throughout. Lot 100 x 160. Brand '*“’' ** »«»• Id.Otto; JOHN LAUTNOitR, REAL ESTATE ■■■■ Williams Lk Rd. OR 44MI Lake Beautiful yan Florida. MA 6-JTO. ^bedroom, pirep___________ prlTllages, largo M. OH Leaving far . I EM 24723. X 270. I BEDROOM BOUEE. APART-mont party finished up, 2 car gorag* withb apartmant, 2 bod. room rough, 4 Ms 20 :-------- M iO X 12*. UL 2411*. BEDROOMS. w . PE 64MI."' tractit* landseaplns, Andtrson windows, 2 bathrooms, Ige. cor- . Mtod llytaf rm., family rm.. 1 nreplaeos, lower leyel Oray Weld-wood panoUng, lerooned poreb. sun deck, |KMM. Proaant lih per ' cent mortgage- Owner, OR 3-270*. BEDROOM M^DBRk RANCH Low Interest mortgage. Low down ' payment. By owner. EM 24134. 2 BEDROOM BRICK kltD ^AUE recreation rm. 2 flropioc** < baths, csrpoted. sandy h balanea owner. ROOL _________ yllle Complotoly Italy remodeled. **,- , paymont. UL 2-421* , 600 Low d____________________ 7-R(X)M ROUSE. 2Mi ACRES ( 2 ROOlte. NICE AND CLEAN | U6 ROOMS AND BATH, PIR8Til370 .N. OPDYEE RD. I V.— ....... 3,1,-, —, ----- week. Inqulr Hollerbsck 1 ROOMS AND BATH. UTTLITTBS. *13 a wk. 22* Florence. 2 ROOMS UtlUTIES. LAkE jirlvIlcgM. 63S7 Hatchery Rd.. Wll- 2~cnTE RCKIMS. CALL AFTER 5 30. PE 5-04*4_______________ 2 ROOM* AND BATH, NICE AND ____________________________________ _cI«n_PE 544*5._40 Edlson St ig ROOMS AND BATH. UPPER 2 ROOM APARTMENT. UTILITIES ------------ "" '— —---------- paid, private bath. Inquire at 230 W. Huron.__________,_________ 2-ROOM KITCHENETTE, UTILl-ties, isundry privileges. PE 34236 3VS ROOM. NICELY ITURNISHED. floor. UtlUUi come. *20 pel Baldwin Avt! ---- “EMI Hrsted and * parking space, clos . Apply 57 Mechanic, APARTMENTS. PE 4 3 ROOMS AND BATH, WASHER. ~1t WUllams. PE 847*4. I ROOM AND BATH. BABY Wmh- PE *-1421 Inq. 273 Baldwin Are. HoUerback's Auto Parts I 3 RMS. AND BATH. E~RB APART- WANTED: MEDIUM SIZIXI DEEP trees*. Must bs In esc. eondl-Uon. Reasonsble. OR J-*4*8. 1 ROOMS AND BATH, UnLITIES, adulu. PE 3-6263. > i ROOMS, CLOSE IN. NEWLY decorated, 1 child welcome, no drinkers. 414 week. PE Mltl. Wanteii Miscellaneous 30 OFFICE PURNITURE AND BOSI-noss equipment Forbes Prlntlnt and Office Supply. MI 61*10. 1 ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE entrsnee. Mt. Clemens St. n 613*4. 2 ROOMS. PRITATK BATH AND ent. PE 644<*. 1(4 Mt. Clemens 1 LAROE ROOMS. REASONABLE 12 school St.. 3 to *. PE 3-640* 1 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, separate ontranco, close to downtown. SIS wk. Corner 1*7 ssn- menU^^*^^lUng*ft2J58h*d.*^rt-Conter after I'p.m. WANT TO BUT UQUOR OR TAV-em Ucensc. Write PontUc Press Bex St. Money WanfeJ 31 warn TO BcmRow m.sm prom private party on ( room modem house on 6 acres on paved hisb-. way, all free and clear. Writ* lo Pontiac Pros* Bax *4. Wanted to Rent 32 2 OR 1 BEOROtMl HOME. CRRIS-yy ^^Uy, 1 email children. 2 ROOifSL WEST SI0E. PARTLY Fum. ill week. PE 4-80*. i Rbom, NETTLir decorated. Pvt. bath, adutta. ll S. Jtssle. CLEAN, MODERN, 2-BEOROOM bone. Bent must b* roasonabte. Phone OR 24(M. . 3-Room Apartment mu.- fum., *» to IIS wk. Rtf-eroacM required. PE 6S3M. RENTAL SERVICE Tenanta waltteg. CaU R. J. Valaet Rbatior. 3tt Oakland Avenue PE 62631. ] ROOMS. INCLUDINO UTTUTTES. M6 per montb. Ill Orchard Lak* Avo. PE 2-6763 3 ROOMS WELL PURNIBBEU. Kr week .. — imy^to^^^tor. 10^ Auburn, Comer of Edith 6 rooms ntwly doeerated. eomar tarraca, SM hast and garage. *76 par monlh Also, other tor-raoes^M mo. South EdlUi near Auburn. Inqulr* 13* B. Edltti or caU PE ^7S_________________ d llborglas i THOMPSON LAPSTRAKES DOR8ETT PIBEROLAS AEROCRAPT GLASS AND ALUM ; GLASS AND ALUM. CANOES ' r AND 10' ALUM. PRAMS ivii-s c s > 1: BOCK SAIL BOATS SPEED QUEEN PIBEROLAS i-----:-- JOHNSON MOTORS utimies fur- OATOR TRAILERS "chlldrsm'^ratt^^ »17.M torlals. WE RENT BOATS. MOTORS. TRAILERS PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 4030 Dixie Hwy. l4on Lok* Building Modemizatioi^ BLOCK, BRICK AND CE6IENT lUILD OR REMODEL. NELSON BUILDING CO. OR 3-»lSl. PHA TERMS ON OARAOES living room, 1 bodreom. bltehonoUe dlnetU, batii R garafo. Reloronces I PAUL OR AYES <»NTR AOTNO required. 176 per month, phone PREE ESTIMATES OR 4-1611 ^ *•**”--------1 Carpentry Work_______________ COLORED 4 rooms apt. prlvat* both end entrSDCe. Heat and hot water furnished. Newly painted and decorated. Close to downtown Chll-dron okay. Wright. FE 6-*441. CLEAN 2 BEDROOM* KITCHEN turnlshod. No peU. PE S-2t2g CARPENTRY. COLORED — Heat. HW, stove ai nlshod. Annett tec. E Huron, PB - Roaltors, 21 Cement Contractors CEMENT WORK BY PEDY-BILT. We are experienced, licensed, bonded. Osroge tloors. driveways sod pstlos our specialty. OR 3-6*1*__________;__________ CHOICE EAST SIDE. 2 BE room upper apartment. Prt. « trance, soperat* baaement. s furnace and automatic beater, sa-ra*e, *6* per month. Rolf* H. Smllii. Realtor. FE 3-7*M ; pressma^ng^Jl^illo^^ _____ j' ECONOMY STUDS ea S#c lsl3 white pine boards lie llo. ft. 2x4 No. 2 fir IM4 ft. 0(0 lln. ft. 2Vt TD casing . ....*7c Un. ft. 3tv TD base ......... 0*c Un. ft. Its — 2 It. St. sash .. 40% off \\ aterford Lumber Cash snd Carry 3*76 Airport Rd. '"™” Plywixid U0O.WU otock at all times ALL THICEN188E8 AND SPECIES Oet our nnoos before mU buy 1 aniT OR CAR LOAD Plywood Distributor 376 N. Cass _______PB 2-**3* Painters ^ Decorators MOWERS SHARPENED AND . REPAIRED 141* W. Auburn Rd. UL 2-10*7 iBet. Croaks and Llvsmolsl ACTIOSS PROM AVONDALE HlOH BOAT NUMBERS n.io 3 Inch — Pe- set 1* pieces MAOE-TOOROER STENCILS Pontlso Stemp h Stonell Co. Television, Radio and Hi.Fi Service MICKEY .STRAKA TV SERVICE DAY OB NIOHT. PE H2H, Plastering Service I Share Uving Q—rtere 33! «»iy pe 64*32 or | I christia^i woreino omL^-ro IJ i FOR RENT - SALE. 2 Bi& rooms, lake prlylleges, newly dec- orotod, plastered. MT 3-7S72_____ LOVELY 4 BOOM APkRTMENT. aUvercrost Bubdlvlstnn. OR 24235. LAKEFRONT Un>ER IN PRIVATE home. 3 room* and’bath, st ~ ratrifirstor, sU atuMlat and s»-rag* tumlshad. Newly daeoraled. Ho ehUdron. MS por asooth. PE ----- PE S- Monoger, 1* Bolmer 8t.. Ani PARTLY FURNISHED APART-ment. h rooms and bath P~ 6-7S2S. __________________ Silver Lake Apartments Now ovoUable - very attractive lak* fronts, atovq, refrlgerstoi •nd garage. AdUlts. Rotersnees C. (tempton. tnt OhUs Hwy. Floor Sanfflng ---1 TLOOB SANDINO-WITT THE FLOOR 8ANDEB--FE 6-372* PABULON WATERLvlX - BRUCE R. O. SNYDEB'pLOOR LATINO. Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad ^ That’s because of the greater selection of everything from automobiles to employment offered every Treie E 666*3 or OR 1- Trucks to Rent Dump Traeko—SombTraSor* Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 726 g. W0(»WARD m «4«n PE 4-1441 Pallw Ino'ndl' g Sunday THOMAS UPHOLSTERIHO 127 NORTH PERRY Sr. FE 5 8888 ----WAki utaourrnlNS----- 313* Vartaret. Album RNgbU :_________UL 62SM ___ TWENTY Far Srte H—tw 4»j wieoOTeiM l4r Sub Hm An nanuBB •B tmtiM. i. ut«l tT.n. OK > $300 DOWN mmMj hv< *At< « kcdiw cumct. OlMMd-ta pen.. pne* PAM. Mw wmi • Aabk WIW1 mtfu. vnlekMI IKNMM ■Bd apau> Rd.. Dddutadn. _ni4tt0 or m-dMd._________ NEW l'iS>ROOM RANCH IKHIBE i Aachor Box. oa Caaal ta Loko BA Clair. M a 41 with atuchrd m*m Ww-nu THE PONTIAC PRESS, TliESDAY, ^TULY m 1961 CARNIVAL 97 Dick Tamw Hagstrom A Home in the Country iA?5a“5AR?ii^^;*A- Oakland l^kefront | 3 BEDROOM FRAME, FUUBlfBO I LOWER LEVEL. 1h ' iATnB. i LAROS BRADT LOT. tl.H* I HAOBTROM. REALTOR $9300 CDBTOM BmLT OK VC LOT Full baaenral. oak fie Copprr pluablac. We de *i^:^ELi. YOl’Nt; gnasy' ~ nc A-THM: * wrarwm. iiTiof raws, ! $9,500 ISMtl Fin Build l-Bedroe«^rane^Wle| mi *'’t^** ^ ^ >rcb tik.lM. IRLANDB 4 BE& prtrlledea. Uriau . _. i ROOM liv fontiac or 1 f^nf'er FE ! ___FE 4.WM alien p ■ OXFORD O'NFTT IDT MAN BFECUL. U TOO ! V V I W I III_| patat and de aalaer repelri. ' *—■*.*—■ Basraiaet OU ________ I-a.sv Terms , ------------------ ---------------- — 1 bedroom iaedfm. I atdri. oUl ™ furaare. M.U0. HM da. »>« *** FE lAMl.______ Paul M. lones. Real Est. AMOCIATE BROKER^ looma «nb room for 3rd. Immr- . .... m.MB wRb MM 144 Frli^lla'BlVd FE MBBI| dia JL *?PJL I *d’ A OR 3ABU lor BtWlall ________ dOUB. McEmif7 Dr , M.1M PE UlMi estates T~n F^? •'» .L'^* *®,COLONUL8 - TRI - QUAD LEV. taU J.b«droom bnck atJW Meur. _ raNCH ROMES Frt. rr »r*« «T5'i Beath. park lUr reiMaiiU. Frlced ' at tll.iM taeladlad iMioeed M. r HOWARD T. EEAnBlI 00. 1^ krtfhrn uRb dlnto* ell "B.w L«>a Lake Rd. mile eaat of P . U?;' Orohard Lake Rd MadeU WEN Ilfs' efuS »»-! » raa^ »oM bar Ecooamical (ai ROCfliiSTBR - 3 BEDROOM roovenlrace Expertlj laadtcapedj lot. M X IM. eompletelp feneed BSww^ 1^^ Taka Ibe laadlord oft rear par-roH for ootr Ml* dean FuU prlre 4U.MB Call owi S^4i__________________ BT owner, nice I R( - BT OWNER. WELL BUIL room hoaic. RerrtaUoa rot baermeiU. partir nnUhed. hu m kltchea. 1 fir^acci Ft Btml. 1^ ear alUched parai lart* let wltb ucct. ta.MS. e> feA»r-mrl-BMB BMAU. 4 ROOlS*^ < lot. im Cberrylava. F atlUtr. Located 4 II appro ce. M.re t'tral nreplece Ryiii elvoUaum abUag. roe. uUlttr rm.. Id la. laadacapod ! B-TMT_________ BY OWNER 1 lorelr bomee oo beamlfullr •haded acrceae. UT4 Beott Lake Rd. FE 44^._____________ ’ OWNER k ROOMB. BATH. BLOOMFIELD 300 Kendry Excciairt reach, loaded with ci tom leaturee!l! Larie l^eere 1 1* per cent tern, leak tbu 4 battu. Wall to vaU carpettas. tUed kttehen wltb Bt. Charlee eleej cupboardi. Woader-fui epacteai careDec UtrUia. M mtiae Inna Detroit: Priea fM.NB. BRAND NEW l-BEDRO(M bl4crcl. butlUai, l b^ eatraaea foper wltb cIol— eUdlac flaat door* from recrca- Custom Builder WILL BACRI- OTt 4.81M_______________ TRAOic ].bedro6m-im.bm Larue Urini rm.. blf dlnlau or familr rm.. nice kitchen and Dooa. toed Heed bedrme. full bAaement. oU heel. Excellent lo> caUon. cloee to echooli and bui. Take modaet eubnrbaa home la *T; H. BASS, Realtor BFECULOINO IK TRADES Builder____ ^ FE P-Vy ^ BimtoSaim tliSs. ^ *in4»! TRI-LEVEL STARTER Model Opea Dallr l»-« p m,. No m«ier down, oa jour lot, filaat or our>. Ranch or IMP Commerce Rd Call M14PI1 O Flattler Bldf Ere EM 1A41I WEST BIDE, HEAT 3 BEDROOM BULD Toar jMaat or aura OR S-TBM BT OWNER. 1 FAMILY. I ROOMS femur. taefcea 3W B. Merihair' KT-n . flaeted-ln porch, car-lU baecmaut with roc-** n. uaraia. Cloat choolx and ebopplnt < WATERFORD TWP. Off Airport Road 4adreom,'faracf. hot waUr heal LARGE lot iMxlM. Imma poaeceelon, about ni to mot im WMeon. caII_W.. W.. WILL BUILD ON TOOR LOT OR OURB YODR FLAN OR OURB Bara j bedroom, m bath. fu.T ----- - lal te.ibow. Don McDonald BT owner - 3 BEDROOM brick, Drayton Fleln» area For delalU. call OR 3A144 3 BEDROOM BRICK 433 E MANi Held Cash to 4 per cent mil or . termi Owner. FE M*M___________ CLEAN 3 ROOM HOUSE COR--jT ner* lot Full baeement. near ttoreo, achool and F<>her Bodr M.BM. U130 down IM montn 333-1383, Pontiac ___ Custom-Built Home Bparloui 3-bedroom home. II moothi old, mart be eold. locatrd "0 !ar|e lot wltb walk-out bane-lent. oraplace, beautiful kitchen U. Fiiuldaire bullMai, 3^ -■----- carpeted, iMoot oubir wr bedroom r beaL manr other featurei Clil'.KOKLK HILI.S 3 BEDROOMS 2 .FI LI. BATH.S MULTI^E USTINO SERVICE llrlau Bath h„ ___________ . _____ Nice roomr kltchea with loade of ktolt-ta cupboardi BHuatad OB prirata road near abai^i caotor and lehoali Tutra It a oar and ban laraft aad ao all cr-clana faoced rard aU la^-scapad. Immadlato poaiat-elon OaU ux NOWI IdM DOWN THIS HOUSE NEEDS tome work tor x bath an the let and baie-ment fleer. Ite arartooktas Latui Lake aaS Mw U the time to look at thie one.. Ut priced at oolr I7.MB eo It wan t laet too toot. SYLVAN MANOR BUB Tbli dellghttnl 3-badroom brick oflere the matt. 1.3M*ia V of famUr UrUm with IS ca-ramle tda balBe TbU boiua hai praetlia. Space, auamr and loeatloa., and le priced ritbt at IlIJM. HURON I and clean e room, t .eipry home. 1 bedroomt. Ilrlnt and dtaUag roomt. Ntoa elea ■ kltctaan wHb buUt-tn brMk-fait Duok Vaetibula ei>-tranca. Full baeemeal and l?’3!rbSf*!nlfira$?r den epat Look Into tble one Dowir II H.MO It won't tact. • PRICED LOWER THAN,^ra-producUoo coat to thto nna 3-bedroom r a a c b borne There', a 33-foot kttehen. •paeirat llriat rova with wall to wan earpattau and full baeement 'Tba M to bl| anouih foe a forden. Banjul for Ill.MB. Tafme Ray O’Neil, Realtor a S. 'Tetofraph Open M pw. E 3-3118 ___________OW l-*» Waterford High roome aad bath, hardrood Uoore, plaeterad walli, modem kltcb-m VERT Al^ACrnVEI M.3M, fSlP price. Sylvan Shores LAKBFRONT! CONTEMPOBART —Roman brick. I roomx I't bath*, double garatc. Redwood beemed celUag. picture window wall, railed hearth fireplace complamcot thto 11x30 Urlng room. Jalouile eacloeed •un- modem kitchen. '^ANY"l3t'r528 THROUOHOUT THIB ROMS. Ix- ____________ ir grin. CALL FOR BROVriNOI Shawnee Drive L O N O. LOW. BEAUTIFUL RANCH BUNGALOW IN JATTIO BEIOHTBI Btobt room., 3S cer emic balbt. A drexm kitchen. • weerr reipect. Humphries celect oak floore weikindi’-FE tfiTM ANNETT Lake Privilfgfs — 2 Lots JttM a Mk- to beach. Uvtng rm. 14x34. pin* paneled lun rm., 3 bedreomi. bath and kitchen. BaifineBI, lat PA heat. 3 car garefe. Ige »h*a« trete. *IMI doarn I arger Kihhus — t entral Higli tied dUUng rm and kttehen oo tot floor, 3 r ' ^ bath on 3nc heal, and ge____ belt of condition o IIO.MB. term. North at City Limits Oarden •pace on thto 3Mx3*l '• '- fruit and berrlei. Koiind Lake I' rom to a year around home. I^andscaped Corner Woodward Are lot IMxtU. beautiful etew of tm. lake. Cui-tam built home, picture window la llTtag aad dining area, carpeting and drapa*. Ig* bedrma apaclone cloieU. til* bath. kllchen r-" CRAWFORD water front and dock. I1M4 YOU WILL WELCOME WEEKENDS. 3 room cottage with fireplace on Uke Orton. Waeher. ALUMINUM AND PEBMA-STONE ROME. 41 toot frontog* oa Lake Orton. 6 room* and mraga. Crawford Agency. Val-U-Way OOOD BUTS AND TRADES $LOa)BAR{;AiN Ve«. owner will lecrlflee hto I3.1M equity for only It.OM and taka over imeU balance at only 143.71 per month Including taaet end in»urance. U'l a lUce 3 bedroom bungalow^on' 3 lot* with a 3 car 3 BKDRCX)M.S-4190 ToUl mo»ee you In No other coat*. Bb*rp. Ilk* new rancho on a nice lot With lake prlTtlcgei. Fait poeeeeetan. M3 month ptui taxee and IniuraiKe K. J. (Dick) \ ALUET Realtor FI'^ 4-353,1 341 OAKLAND AVg OPEN I - * -I I. kwn WMAtm TAtamBBRABB “It 1 brought someone home that made that much noise. Mom would chase us both out!” For Sale Houses 49 VETS $40 MOTES YOU IN M3 Fin MONTH TOTAL 8 Rooms Basement 1877 Sq. Ft. $11,990 true. Ibe exterior to xU xluminum Oeorglxn Colonial xtyllng. Up- room ^Itonta ^ ^dl°r*' Dawnxtalre an 11x11 txmOy xrea! an lIxM ft. bonue room which can be need aa a hobbv nmm or to conTertlblt Into 1 bettroomt. •440 moxm you Into thto aUrtUng Bouxe. IM per month, include* prinelparialmeet. tnxsa, and h> auraoce. To lee the Qeorga Town, driee north on Joelrn, 4 mlloi aaet WaXon Bird. Follow tha Can-dlewlck Woodt ilape to model D'Lorab Building^. FE 3-1123. Fftr Sale Houses 49 HAYDEN CLARKBTON VILLAGE. Rere'e one l^e old whit* houaei Baeemanl with gai fur- nace. Attochtu. t-m car garage. Nice ram wHh aeargreen trae*. Cloee to* itorea, cburchea and echooU. Ob yael Small apartmant for tb* moCbar-ln-law or economr minded buyer. Onlr glS.m with tl.lOO dawn and on par manth. OOEY BUNOALOW. Lie* on Ih* bu* line In comfort. Large carpeted living room and ball. Threa comfortable bedroom*. Bright Ul*d bath. Handy kitchen and uUlltyT PIONEER HiaBLANDS Urge brick tamllr home ' ----- l>k bathi. Urge carpeted. DInl has breaklaat _____ . _ meat. New' ga* tumacs. Fared drive to IVk ear garage. Nice •bade and elttlng poreb. OILOM. Small dawn paymant to FJI.A. ____________________._. Furnace. Cedar Ulaad Lake 00.4N wMb 01.405 down. No rn'ortgag# cotl. Lower^owa payment If you J. C. HAYDEN. Realtor • •4 E Walton FE 04441 Open Evei._____Sim. 1 to 3 p.m. Haofstr6m .\JHomc in the Country iA?Sr8?RA’S‘‘igftt h sa^LLif «saD"jnR‘» Barnes Lake Front TRJOT THE BUMMER IN TOOR -- - — --TTAOE, H. R. HAOSTRCM. I oR?ac*"^"~ ... —------ahir * B-St BATEMAN REALTY MULTIFLB LISTIRO SERVICE LETS TRADE HAVE YOU SEEN Jayno Heights 1^8 TRADE ALMOST NEW ... IM W piue iMtarMTuMil lb* youni execuUve or pro- LET'S TRADE SAVE $1,000 !»l**el^^b5?*I new brick ranch with trimmings oo largo well located tot cloea to town. Thto one he* full baeement and even earpet-Ing Included. Fries reduced. NOW ONLY 515.5M with ap- -----lately ITI.S5S d- LETS TRADE TRI-LEVEL Only 3 yaare eM. ai all new hdmae. a TAKUma at All briek reer fiYsA**^ * .31 li,M0 dowiC VS? LETS TRADE GI's No Money Down icy Dt .. ... ThE c_______ __________ and toeatldn. Full baeemeitt. ni I. Only prietd yard. Clbaa 10 e^to^^^ to 3. DRMrrON AREA. Almi^ traRily daeorated ranch, ment and panalad racraa-room. Urge eoantn lot eloe* to school. A< MAL at 113.315 with only clot-mg coat to Ol'e. LET'5 TRADE ri*:altok FE 4-0528 FE 8-7161 37T g. TELEORAFH OFEN EVES Fur Suit Hottf 4» $39 CHESAPEAKE BAY MODEL 965 Carlisle 3 Bedrooms Faiftily-Size Kitchen Vanify in Bath OPEN DAILY 1-1 to 7 THE HUDSON BAY Basement Models $100 Moves You In SPOTLITE FE 4-0985 G.L s No Money Down L^^NO^FTOTTW ^u lly Ineom* located' on the Itortb eld* of Fontiac. Cor- apartment. fully occupied. Total prioa «nlv $15,458: ap-proxlmataly tIM doting eon*. Ora*i mantoly ir----- lyC. _____-tiff I FE 3-TlM For Sale Houaea 49 "a.”2'Slia.-£a7«S5: AiS.’A.”-' Qukk powweelon. Emt Mrm*. Call MraMcCartby. EM 3-5453. three fawlt - 5 lam* 3unlor. Her* to a real dml Iw sa. ss-'S TOR THE M_Af( - Who. ySg*»_y ^»rS15d"°A.*-2SS?rn*3‘Sif g;MAWai;iss?.«5S5 LIST WITH US -- W* hj»; and trad*.' WE .EtttLD^Ovar M year* al axparlene* Opan t-5. kulUpl* bating aarvie*. L. H. BROWN REALTOR 585 Etlaabatb Lakt Road E? TO 4J554 or FE 3-4515 _ G.I.S NOTHING DOWN North Side of Baldwin For only 55.M5 you can buy U.I. *«nrfy two bedroom In exeenani ego-oli ditlon. large living i atretmllned klto'— forced sir heat, el aad icreani. Its vi Bloomfield Township Thra* bedroom Colontal. dining room and 11 i 13 kitchen. TV rowm. full car garage. Only gll.MS. Nothing down tp OU. A Jim Jim Dandy Brand new earpeUag to ona of th* many taaturax to b* found In Ibto two.bedroom bungalow, fully Inxnlatcd. «,e beat. atMobed„ garaga x33 18x158 lot. OlfeW at I18.m. KAMPSEN Dorris WOODHULL LAKE. 133 feet r«iS.Wv^is the lake, m story bungalow, eompletaly todecorstod througbmit, tuU buement, ga* furnacs, itona fireplace, b uII t-la dlahwaa^ and man|^ otbVr aeUlag appdnt- GAKLANO LAKE. Large family borne, beautiful lgx3T living room wltb natural c COMPARE THIS with any. 3 bedroom lace brick, ranch atyle home in Roebeeter. Urge full baeement, M electric water heater, separate "'~ U'iS}. I Waterford area. Total dlbtng area, largc living with picture window, fin., largc lot. Gniy 315.5M on 5*' Templeton REAGAN WM T, ^e>y 3 badroom bom* with full baaa-mant. fss basL 5Sxl3S lot. paved drive csrpattM and drapat. ftymtato toclud* taaas an .qg batb brick and 1, wltb attached is- plumblM rougbad for H f5xl55 lot. Baeeller* --- hood. 51.755 dpwp, Warren Stout, Realtor I r: Saginaw Bt. FE 5-8155 O^ 'tli 5 p.m._____________ "BUD" 17 Acres Attractlea. ramodcled. i bedroom farm horn*, with 18 acrea fruit treaa. to lovely aattlng. Feature* 11113’ Uvtoi room, family alat kltchan. modern bath, oil beat and hot water. 3 car garage, tractor, new dog kennMi with eoaerato runs sulUble for dog ratotof, room tor riding horses. Prietd for fast 515.508. Be sure to $1,000 Down 3 bedroom home with lake mlnum* aiding exterior, paneled living room, automatic gai heat, deep lot. garden space, berries. Totol price, as to. 57.-If you^ra imndy^jrtth a “BUD” Nicholie, Realtor - 45 Mt. CItmena St. FE 5-1201 After 6 pim. FE 2-3370 SMITH School. 5 room t BREAE that rent habit with thto 3-bedroom bungalow for only M.755 on very reason-tbl* tarma. Completely re-decoratod. ga* furnace. Ige. decorated, vacant. Reasonably priced at only I1S35S A small down payment moves you to. >0 or Three-Bedroom Bungalow*. We have several bomM to chodbc from. In and o«t M town. Vacant. Rewly doMrated. caucus aimpa, all fanccd yard aad a IW-car garsgt. Montj^ ^ja^nanta of New Office 2536 DIXIE HWY. DORRIS * BON REALTORS I WARD’S ORCHARD: ! Six room, m story aiding haras with full baaement. Ftreplaca In Uvtog room, gas 55.555. BALDWIN-OAKLAND AREA: Thto ala room homo to available on O.I. Mortgafe. Equippe with new gaa forced air fur- paymant movai yon la. CaU aa today for further datalto. JOHNSON U YEAR8 OF SERVICE RENT WITH OPTION 3 badroomir large Uvtog room, dining room and kltchan. gas NICHOLIE-HARGER llVb W. Huron 1 FE 5-8183_______ SCHRAM HOYT ^ = Close to Lincoln Jr. DONEL80N FARE. 4 BEOR„-------- brick, m baths, flraplaca. New E‘^M£5'*By 3703 Coll FOR CCnXJRKD 1 baaemeni. garage, mo L. R. Middli FE4-tllg. ____________ TOR SALE BY OWNER. ____________ room. fuU basement, small down paymaat FE S-W32 BEDROOMS. •a. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, famUy >m. dtntog room, tlrcpuca. tuU scmenTlMS Wcllaaley Tarrsea Waterford HUI. Wat*--------- HUNTOON LAKE 3-bedroom brick. 3 llraplacas. 514.555. $3.880 down. OR >45tg S RtXMEBTER. 5 ROOMB AND baOl. gaa heat, newly decortlad. pSiaUred. Large Brick Ranch Loratad to Hammond Lake Ea-tatea. has picture window to Uvlnx rm with 1 way flraplaca, family rm. rac. rm 13x31 with adjoining patio, aaparata dining •pace, kltcjian with nook and lay "L". 3 badrms. !>• baths. 3 Ml "tara**'^*' WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC, Realtors 18 E. Huron St. Open Eventoga and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 TRIPP ban. dioaa to. A vary lovely home call now I 354 B. TELEORAFH ■^*ffl*FLELnmNOsfifyjar' MILLER CITY WEST SIDE batwaen Huron and Elliabath Lake Road. A bargain It wt ever aaw one. 7 rooms and bath wltb 4 good-sliad bedrooms. Oak floort, plastered walla. Pull baaamapt. Clean gaa beat. 1 car garage. Naadi dec-orating. TbUl price 55.5S5. E..Z. LAKE PRITILBOE HOktE ' BROWN BRINOLE BUNOALOW Rmutltol.........- Realtor 'ms'.U'hEabetli I.Jike Estates; CLARKBTON AREA Whtta ' frame with aww irons. Claa* to lake. Nice Uytng jm.. la* ktteban. 1 bedra . tSi SiiUi EUIROW t%ASS\ Raafiir.^ Wa^aymto' garage f dryer. Irlfiralor IxsbMb La MS5.56 DOWN - I Iloar bungalow nb High. Hardwood f! emr NORTH sniB — Nearly naw 3 hedroam one fleer ham* aa •harp aa a tack. Naw oU furnace. Water aertoDer. Anchar tancad yard. ToWI prlr* 11.555. Ubaral William Miller 1 Realtor 1*1': 2-0263 575 Weal Huron Street $i.(XX).Down 3-bedroom bungalow with 23-R. room up Full baaemeni. large lot. close to LeBaron School, total price ll0.3SS .on FRA tarma l\ AN W. SCHRAM RI*:ALT0K FE 5-9471 543 J06LYN COR. MANSIFELD OPEN KVENIT-------------- MULTIPLE I roNDATB MULTIPLE LWnNO BERTICB IRWIN CLARKBTON AREA ■■ ■ - - - ranch type geiuw wiku i-vi baths, full saraga. .............. 3-badroom --- ----- . ___ ............... full 3-car rjndMa 'in’VnT'l^a^ to traaa, big bairy pat^u | . ....d of alfalfa, ie I. ^chicken Plua I'AKTRIDGE AND ASSOC . REALTORS 15 W. HURON __FE 4-35 to hl-flt and totarcoua 'sUdiM glass wall! overlooking pool. Coramie Ula floor. Full buaamant, M wutar beat, attuebad ftotohad 2Vk-car garag*. Yard lanced and beautlfttfly landscaped. Lake prlv- SI*. Custom drapes and car-ig Included. A moat beautiful NORTHERN HIGH Nice 3-badroom ranch home on Arlene Street, briek front, built-in kitchen, c*’ “ - - “ ‘ WILLIAMS I bedroom brick I t-car aaragt also. 1 BELL OR TRADE 4-badtoom home with 14 halbs. 3-car ga''*t*' Bttnatod on largt let to West Suburban snbdivtatoo. Will sell on FHA or lake tfude. InSl^ WHAT TO OO VriTH TWO? S EKTRA 75 west Burt KAKM.S. FARMS 5. II. 40 15. w. and IM acre farms. All reasonably priced, srilh small down paymant. Lapeer. Attica. Drydtn. Oxford, irea*. Call as for mere details. If pou want a farm, wt have them; Peterson Real Estate ^iartrOTt - «3«lw< \ porch and taraia ~ I mUaa weet Watertord - tU.NO - I3.MM O^tERWMD R^L ESTATE WEBSTER LAKE QRION-OZroRD OaUfKuul S-hadraom and bath ranch on nicely ebaded lot on Laka Orion. Aluminum eldlaa and parma'Ctona etUrlor. L ibapad llTln* room with wlndowt afar-lookini lake. Larte klUban with dlntu L. RecraatiM room which gURllKM OpppftniUtlEK 99 A LDCRATITE RRCEMION-I ^yftT BUDGET YOUR DEBTS OONSO^An R1LU.no LOANS to (M wSt^ol^Sf bt.^Saa Financial Advisers, Inc. STATEWIDE Rani Batata Servlea tt Pntlao ‘LET’S TALK BUSINESS" to leaye tUU. Prhmd tor acUon. Hum; tor a real deal. Space Age Motel mjIonr'S” home With oTcr 1 aeree for as- PMIAlon. MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION SwRpa 4 price EZ terms. BUT SALE TRADE Barfdn Boust, tOl N. Cass at i^ya^ ra 3-OOa Opta U1 0 Drtaaar k Maytngs?**Sp*sedqusens. gts'l Metal 0 year erf^ complete. _____ tS: Dresser; to. Odd bedi and aprl^e. Sofa bad, 110, Rooe-ter and itnnd, oil. Oataieg t*-bit. OU. VanUy, 04. Maw furniture at little mora Wm uaad furniture prlcee. PEARSON'S FURNITURE U ORCHARD LK' RD. FE 4-7001 BLOND BEDROOM SBT. LAROB jultec. tow as |7t. ------------ -.rgatn Houtt 103 M. Caee. FB 3-0043._____________________ 01.M waak. Baria TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS {» TO 0500 __1. NBW_______,___ eludlno good rant# ond refrigerator. CXieap. E-Z terms. Bargain House. 103 N Cass, Fe 3-W43. ROOMS OF BRAND NEW PUR-nttura. davenport and chair, tables. lamps, bedroom suite, mattress and springs, vanity lampt, 0 pleca Slnetto. All for 0300 Fay-manta only 03.06 o wook. Poar-son's, O Orchard Lakt Ave. ROOMS OF FURNTruliri^r a-bad, refrigarator. olovat, and tables, washing machine and ate. 17 and 10 Hovey, between Cattagt and Osman. rV*Als"^t*S. hllAtfb ... .. — Pearson's —“ Lake Avs. W*Lt?j{3P -TTB ......loe ft. VINYL UNOLEUM. YD 00c "BUYLO'VTIEL. 108 B 8AOINAW 7 PlECE^lVlh HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 04711 OL 1-0701 PL 3-UlO n 3-3410 "FRIENDLY SBBVIci'' BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN PonUae — Drayton Flalm — UOea WaUed Lk., Birmlniham. Plymouth 0 X 13 FOAM ^ACkKO r608. $18.00, also tweeds and Axtnln- LOANS 014 X. Walton, comer of Joalyn ofoo BEN ^R FREEZER AND Need $25 to $500? See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7017 1185 N. Perry St, PARKIHO MO problem Seaboard Finance Co. LOANS $25 T6 $S60 On your signature or other aecui ay. 34 months to repay. Our serv lea U feat friamU andM^ TtaH our oOlca or pbeot PE M13l iHOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 H. Parry Bt- Comer E, Pike BAXTER **a«u?S.SrTONE 04 W. Lawreneo St. ”” ' " $25 TO $500 Sate**F?NANct co. CrodM Advteors 61A GET OUT OF DEBT PAT OPP ALL TOUR BHXSI WITHOUT A LOW ?§*o:______ City Adjustment Service FE 5-9281 l^om^old Ooods 65 tPARTMEN'T RBPRIOBRATOR, Lata modal AdmlraL Balanaa % Mr weak Deluxe waehar til, OM^^rantt Oil./ Sehlek'g, BY APPLIANCES EEFRIOERATORS, Haw . 01H.00 5M?*N^iaar““‘ l8;S 'VABHXRO,Rabutlt.. i 30 00 IB BWBEf>ERS. Maw . | 34 M IE PAMITo spaed ... i W.N it W. HURON n VlUO AdfoUAW....ITir a IK, DIAL. aUtch eewtuf machine. In lovely wood eoneow. Makea daeoradva deetgna button bOlai, mon» grame, bltnd hamt, without the uee of aUaehmanti. Pay 003.30 ATTENTION irry a large aelacUon of re-radloa and TVe. AU are —ntced at leaat 30 daye In ..-Ittog 01I.M-and m. We tUe trade-lni. TTi or other articles 01 value. Obel Radio and TV, 3830 EUaabeth Lake Road. FE 4-4046. Open 0 to 0.___ BETTER BUYS Justabla bed framea .... 04.01 lywood headbotrde .... 04.01 Innersprlnt mattreee ... 010.01 3 pc. bedroom auUa ..... 040.00 - - ----room sirito ....iM.M _______IM OUTPrmNQ CO. 4703 Dixie Drayton Plalni OE 30734 ipen 0 till 0:30 Mon. tlU 0:30 ED TWIN BOi, OFPldt DEOK. ebalra and eonfaranca tablaa. Oul plelura Iramas, misa. FE S-S007. sfi—'../^Tr—zxBrva/wwsra—BT=—cvac- _incHire iramee, miea. rm* a-awi. iuoaYfstRdCUiiil. dAK ht&, baby bade. FE 8-4031.________ Berry Garage Door Factory Seconds Avatlabla at aliaabla dlaeount 3300 Cola Street, Birmingham m 34303 MI «- BENDIX WASHER-DRYER COMB- laatlon. Elactrle •- "" Raaaonabla. OB 3 ftRAND~NEW Wr tura oBd mlsc. FE i Sale Musical QcjjOdi 71 BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR -By factory expert. CALBI MUSIC CO 111 N. BAOINAW FE 44333 EiFSRT 'miici'TUWIMb Siid^Ara nmvKE Wiegand Music Center ■ Phone FEderal 34034 CiUlTAR MONTli REASONABLE PRICES layaway payment plan EDWARD'S U B. BAOINAW Don Traimd, Boardhd 80 /---------------—-- »^fr4A!!°»7.T RSOI8TEREO LONO-EARED Black and Tan pupt. aaU or trade - 003-3003 after 4 p.m._ CONN UtNUrr ORGANS I have 3 floor modelf at a ireatly reduced price. MORRIS MUSIC S. Ttleiraph PB 3-0M7 lAerou from Tel-Huroni MAEE YOUR PIANO INTO AN Small uead Orand piano. pedal board or|an. mahqoa^^ Gallagher’s M 4,004. km MiBqsSAOmM “It's the old eternal triangle: Me, Herbie Ind the New York Yankeeol" Sate Hcuaehold Quods 65 WHIRLPOOL WASHER AND DRT-7 yra. old. 004. MA 4-3410. WA8HWO ^- ■EIOERATOR. biV lib. laWn BOWKII. wasiI- Ihg maeblhc, drteaor,'4b hod oom-pflu. Floor lamp. PE 34014. DININO ROOM TABLE WITH 0 chalre. China cabinet and buffet. PE 44743. 17" TV WITH STAND. METAL cese. 030. EM 3-0700.________ 17 INCH BtLViWTONB, «40. 13tk Inch PbUeo, |30. Mtw picture tubes. PE 04303______________ [odE 31 INCH CONSOLI -^*Tear %manty~ PRETTBR'S APPUANCT MIRACLE JdlLB CBM'nill For Sate MIscellaneoua 67 4sa Frwr-fBWt I ^ «>N PRIOIDAIRE AIR-COMDI-!?!>• tlcner. 0100. UL 3-3N1. El. 3 STAOE 1 yctr. 0134. Refrtgerotor, 030. 31 Inch - .. iURNrruRE^EivfNtrRboB. DlN- ________kitchen. 004 N. berry! | iE 3-Ow7 iiofbAIRE DELUXE FREEZER, ' SXO RUOS .............. — pounds Of food ASPHALT "HLE, cs. . _____ I l^AfTlC TILE, 99. . .............. •*« Crump Electric, Inc. Aubum*^Rd. PE 4.3S73 * Wa^E.^f4.U.^}i';.06PPER PREEZBRS-UPRIOHT. FAMOUS | name brahda, scratched. Tcrrtflc > iSic valuCa, I140.te while they lr-‘ I - “ -Nc phone ordre pleaee. Mleht Fluorescent, 3S3 Orchard L iT ’ FREEZERS—$148 Name brand freaMiti. All fait freea# shelves, handy door stor-aga, sealed in unit, new In crates. LITTLE'S APPUAMCB8 0317 Dlxls Uwy Drayton Plains Vb MUt M. WUUams Lak# Rd. 6aS RANbE. FLAT TOP/PLOR- ihini- csSSet. OUr’dresMr. III! lag cabinet; mlsc. MI voopio. HAMaTON ELEOTRiC CLOTHES dryer. 040. IM HUlbur^ West- ft rrfrifsrator. . condition. PB 4-4000_________ 43-UAL ELlC. HXATliR. |7t.0l, 30-gal auto caa beater. 440.04. Cob-Inet sinks and tltttnls, 144.04 up. Laundry trays and stand and iaucets. 031.04. Cash and carry. 173 04100 i'TiE WALT 8A1. 0140. r' JOINf. 17" CERTIPIED STEEL COAL fumaca with duct work. Oood eon. dltUn. Convartl^ to gaa reason LOVELY SINOERnBilriNO MA-chlnc. Deluxe cabinet with slg-seg for design, overcast blind hem. etc.. 431 balance or payments of 44.34 mo. Universal Co. Siliff.’Sf i AUCTION, OA 4-3001. I MAHOGANY DROP LBAl^ TABLE With 4 extension leafs, 4 ‘ " —' -‘•'-a cablnat. of our 34 years' axperlsncs. 4334. Including normal mstallaticn. O. * Thompson. 7004 M44 Wast BTU OAS irilRNACB 440. chairs 3-4737. Sew KENMbRE OAS RANGE with roUsssrlt and auto, burner, 4140. After 3:30 PT 3-7370. refrioerator. oboo COl foam''rubber pa^, ?3t. 1 irovE, apRiNos, chau ali-iag cocuola Singer ----. Capable of m onbolee, etc. Po loir 2 dceoretor lamps X U' reversible WOOL ruo, eaeatlant eondltloo, 030, FE 34003, 40 OgOB^ It" Admiral it;| Crotley S U.N 0 10 00 Il'J Motorola" ioirboy $130 04 14" Emerson i 00 u 60 seU to '^ONe 'fro We take tradai. Open Walton TV FE *3*3347 RCA Mubo radL. ........... 300-Ib. upHiitit frtaasr ., Norge uTcu.-ft. refrig. . “-irg* /•—---------•— nlth I pi N. Saginaw________FE S4iSli. air” CONDltlOim'.'YUaibAlHB '--- "* Thor Oladlron 10. Fhona 013- nd’^_____________ U# out of the way but_ f jriu'TissrNS^ m ' --- r trade dapt. for We buy. __________ and look around, 3 actaa at tri ^^T.'rVo 0 84 MONW% FAY a^a&^me^. clou-oute, oil _Revel DlStrlbutlat Co CaU 334-43M ACCEPT NEW PATllENt OP 04.B per mootb for almost new, dial control, tlf sag sewing machine m dood console. Button bolce, bUnd hems, does deeotaUve work withont attaeuneolc. Only 030.00 ■ " price Waites. PE 4-3111. bsajub M~6Biic W)6t b0Ai- E W 1 N O MACHIMEI. WHOLE-sslr to all. New, used and re-ponessed Over 74 modele to choose from. Pricei start Blnter PURNITURE. PIO-pump. ~^e?**?tymt.**lEM^34ToL A&TbBoBlLE AIR-bOMbmoNn; Soars. Uka new Q30 . 003-1000. BROKEN PLAT CONdBETE — ........ FE M043.__________________________ crock and,mpc and flttiiiis. I Brolbtrs Paint, Super Kan and Rustolaum. HEIGHT SUPPLY Step I 3-30ilO. ITEP8, — Splash block, door allls, ly caps, Pentlae Pre-Cast Oo., a W. Sheffteld. FE COLORED BAKED ENAMEL ALUMINUM STORM SASH Pull length Olaas Doori aluminum SnHMO - AWNTNQB No money down., 01 mo. and up. Deal dlraet with owner and save. CaU JOE VALLBLT Mow "The Old RolUbla Floqcer " portablas. . maot. Curt'i Hatchiry Rd. __________ STOVE AND REFRIOERitblt. 1 years old, OR 3-0037. SINOER SEBUNO MACBImIL ilKl new. In lovely coneolo with itg sag. Makee dealgna, ovarcastlni - 0 04 par month or My OuK 131.34. FE WOSTCI Used Refrigerators 28 W. Lawrence Used Trade-In Dept. SwlTsl Rocker .......... 010.40 0 pc. breakfast set .... fao.M Davenport and chair ...... S'** . 034.40 iS-JSSfV*'"-‘ Vanity, chest and . 3 pc carved aecUonal gOl.N THOMAS ECONOMY 301 Saginaw_________FE 34141 "ifltAOE OAS RANOB FOR ELB^ trie ranee B. B Mnnre Electrle Co., 1400 W. Huron._________ - USED REPRIOERATOR8 — tceondltloocd—1 year warranty - 410.00 and UF — FRETTER8 AFF^NCB MIRACLE MILE CENTER Apt. Siae fsa slave $10 H Sofa bed ...........« 41004 4 pc. badrm eulU 000.04 30" IM clove 030.04 3 pc. Uv. nn. suite . 010.04 lOJW^FIke FE 4-ltlI EZ tome TOUNOSTOWN BUILT-IN OAS eJok eablnel!’ *7***?^ display eabtncu with aiak and fOacsb. OOOO vslna for OIH. B. Bf^re BMetric Co.. IMO W. Color Your Cement Cement colors In h*Ddy 1 lb . 4 lb., or 0 lb. pace./ 12 beautiful landscape ehac H Ofchard Lake A For Sale Miscellaneous 67 factory reconditioned uprights. GRINNELL’S T g. Saginaw______ FE 3-7100 U N I N O AND REAntlNSTst-hour service aU work gur—' ‘*'c‘“/£Brtfu'Slc"?&. lit N. BAOINAW 'ns 44333 PIANO TUnInO-' OSCAR > USED. > radio. >. I3M6 nad I40.N. marrad. electric. W and bottled gae jr. Michigan Ptaoraacant. Bl , Orchard Lake — 10.__________ KITCHEN OINKS 33 X 31. $3410 value 41.01. OUghliy chipped. Toilets lll.N, Isvatortee -------- 014 04 Michigan Fluor/ Orchard Lakt - 30. Priced oc{ at dlaeount wholesale. Mlchigsn I______ 303 Orchard lAke — 43. LARGE OIL CIRCULATOR HEAT-tr. 414. m inch pump, h h p. motor lor a laka syetam, 4W. 4 In. baneb saw and motor, ii4. 7 h.p. Mercury outboard motor. !8v.«V,Sli{“^\iSS LUe. 974-lOTI.____ NOTICE ir powtr mow*r m m 8Myj>01 UskftsV drive 1 maot, 1407 DUla OR 3-7034. tractor. |U on r or Ullar. Lot good d«al._PrM In. Evane NEW AND USED OAS AND OIL furnaeas. For the beat buy call MA 4-1401. _________ OIL FIRED HOT WATER BOtLBRT OLD l^M DINNER BELL. . marble top tables. 10341 Oakhlll Rd., Holly. Btig (gii of OFFICE FURNTTUBE aSd"__________ chines, used desks, chairs, np-holsursd straight chain, ublaa. storage tiles, sste, work benrii. i offset prem. typawrltoTe, aaoing machines, cback proteo-tmri. OB 14707 and MI VlOW. Forbee Frlntlnp A Offlca Eupply. t>C«ER TABLE AMD"M6l TA- ble, too FE 04307._______________ PAINT Wrra KOTON, AVOID blister and peel due to moUture. Warwick Supply Co. stainless steel double SINN S3 74. GOODYEAR SERVICE JTORL 30 B Caee___________re 44123 siEF PROFkLLiD i&NlEAM power mower, s heevy duty hy- n. Makes beautllul Itches, lewi oo '„sca^._ete. Just by ly table, 043.10 cash or take on new account at $0.30 per month. CaU PE 0-0407, Capitol Bewlim “ 'er foe ennalntfnent ^ SINOER BLAkr nebdU Blfc-. luxe slt-sagger with blood etwlu table Balanced low at OT or wul If 47 per ;ar&“*i 4x4 H Pegboard ..... Il M 16xM 33-ft. Rock Lath . . 4 .M 4x4 Plasterboard ... 4134 4x0 H Plyscora .... 44.70 Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY 7440 Cooley Lake Rd. EM 1-4171 OpM^ a.m._l^l^p.m._^y DO IT NOW! Oteel Clothes Post . It 40 pr Field TUe ............11c ea. SURPLUS LUMBER & UATERML SALES COMPANY 4340 Highland Rd. (MOO) OR 3-7001 FIVE, i COLUMN CAOT IRON Radiator. 3-A-0-13 Sections; 410. Baldwin Party^Shoy^^^ OA 0-3446 Fouinoe45rS^~OAr>ORcfB air fumaeaa In crataa. Picked up, OIU. Aea Haatlnc and CooUng. OR 3-4404. _____________ ►rEE STANDINO TOllETS gi* ** Double Bowl —— ** “ 1" copper, 44" copper, 1 44" copper, i 1 pc. bath at__---------- White m colored Inds SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY 173 g. Saginaw____PE 4-3100 ' STEEL QUONBET 1 le shades „ „ ----- Michigan Bus. ■ ■r.. FE 4-1403._____________ THE SALVATION ARMY RED 8HIELO STORE Evarylbiiit to mett your naeds. Clothlne, Purntture, Appliances. Ill EAST LAWlEENCE I ft. lengths 1 ft. lengths I ft. coU .. PLYWOOD 44" BIRCH, 4xt ....... 411 *3 ■ - PEG BOARD 4x4 .... 4 8.44 pre ftn. mah. V-groovsd. 4 x 4 44 04 PONTIAC PLTWOCH) CO. --I BALDWIN AVE. PE 3-34U FORMICA. PLUMBlNd. ^Altfj;.^ ilMt, wtrtng. Open 7 daye, PE 1-4711. Mooumlm Supply. Ill W. Montcalm. _________ POLDiNO~WBXBLC^AlR. LtOHT weight. ExceUent condition 440. PE 4-3»3t. _________ f^L OIL TANK vrfTH OAUOE TO RENT re 3A411 ^KnoeF iewlng Center TALBOTT LUMBER BPS paint. OoU Bond paint. Dt Pont luclta no drip waU pahr Hardwara. plumbing, alaetriei supplies and full Une of lumbei Open 0 a.m ‘til 1:10. Sun. 0 to : 1024 Oakland Avs. Fe 4.a&fl USED rt*Rl*ACE*. tiOMPLBTB with controls, raM. OR 3-4033 WORS~BENCNES.bl01l WALDON Road. OR 3A033.________ WOOD FENCTNO, IF, CHEAP. X 04' metal bnlldlof. 7 x grsen canvass 014. Electric i tors, FarmaU tractor and aqi ---* 4140. FE 4-1007. MBchhwfy 1U preas. ’ iolnter. eetal stand and table cxtenalons. MU 4-3303. _________________ 3" MUTH BEND LATHE. 10" bertch lathe No. 4 Morpe taper Sale Musical Qooiis 71 You'U do better at Betterlv'a LIW BETTIRLT MUSIC OQ ....... Frl til 0 RAM TRXATfR Mimeograph 111, Btenotyp* BUactrie range 014, Retrlgai._ m Trailer lee eheet m.lo. Dodge Piael Truck 471. Bath tab. eliSh- £fi sSi^-&^*Las Bead st Oaoin Lake Jtaad. , — I ■ ■■ loAROB is I II a a III II S. SAGINAW OOOD. LAST YEAR'S HO R . _ hay. «^„bale. 3444 Oragory Rd., oiniriivuie.________;_______ For Sate L-lvestocIc 83 MORRIS MUSIC a. Taleirapb FB 3-0447 ----TO from Ttl-Huren) C 4-4317. Sate Oft1ce Equlpnwint 72 MEW CASH RUU'nR USED ’rTi;"t-'no7 chines, comptometers a tors, photocopy machlnei _______ dictating machines. Oencral Printing A Offlct Supply. 17 West Lawrencs St., Pontiac. FE 34)134. Hay, Orain and Fetd J The dollar you save la just as im[K)rtant as the dollar you earn. So be a winner when you a Detroiter or Pontiac Cnief Mobile Home from Hut-, chinson's. 1 SADDLE nORSBB _______Ph.Troian 4-0344._____ BAY-WELCH I*5n¥: LIOHT «??' ***<>• drive, im Hickory Lawn, RochasUr. After 0 p m;________________ CHOICE BEEFrQUAA'ilbt. HALF, __ elate. (M 3A4tS. BKoiS*BEnr~ lion, Ufht mane and tai uessee walker, BW 6-1401. small mare, cihLD sAsli'ine. 0334 Ferry Lk. Rd., Clarkstc- Sale Farm Produce 86 BEAUTIFUL RED RASPBERRIES. Yw^^plCk. 4.34 per quart. MAple “ tear. BLUEBERRIES. LATE Ready about Aug. 1. .... crop. Elliott s. OtUr Lake. CHERRIES ------- MONTMORENCY finest as always Picked or pick your own. Bring container. Oakland Orchards. SOI E. Commerca Rd. 1 ml. cart ol MHford. GOAT MILK. HEALTHFUL AND _dellcl^._UL Wisr_________ BKO RASPBERRMb, PE 34411. 1330 Ml aemens. RED RABPBERRnES, FlCK YOUR LAROB BELECTTON and 10' wroB I DITTONED USED I imMES AE LOW / STOP AT THE LOT WITH the "SPINNING TOP" Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. OR 3-1803 Open 7 dayo a woak THE TIME IS NOW! FOB US^TO PICKUP AND aBLL 0^* us^^aVi^^ HOLLY MARDfE'/A OOACT aALSB ”1310 BoUy Rd. HOLLY. ME 44771 _ Vacation tbaileiis PIxIa Trailer Seles and RgatOl Norih lApaar Road. Oriwi. I 13030 NEW NATIONAL CASH REOIS-Urs from 4100 up . New National adding maehloas from 100 up. Tha only laetorr authorised braoeh offleec in Oakland and Macomb County where jreu eao buy new or factory rebuilt cash reglitan. Ilia Matlooal Cash Reglatar Co., 403 W. Huron, Pontiac LE 14I3U. 31 s. Orattot, Mt. Clameni, HOw Clarkston. 0040 Radley ISA 4A034. You pick, 4.34. RASPBERRIES FOB BALE~»T _ quart. Pick them yourseU. 4114 Crumb Rd.. Walled Lake. BALE — CHERRIES, CURRANTS and raspberries. You can pick. ^LlvernoU. ^ mlla M. of Au- BWEET AND SOUR CHERRIES. 433 E. Walton. FE 4-3034. a^i7i.^t” Si^ SlWjB Equlpuiwit 73 3 SLIDING GLASS DOOR WALL caaas with lighting fixtures. 10 foot and 0 toU. 1 open lace 0 ft. wall eaaas. Sell all for 4110. PE 4-1043 or PE 3-7441 343 ^RTTNO R»"LE AND 300 Ssle Sporting goods 74 11 OAUOE SHOTOUN. g SHOT. ^i^tng Irons. LIks new. M 1 -’^OARAMD. LUCE NiWr BULMAN HARDWARE Brownfaif Ouas 3444 EUaabeth Lk Rd, PE 1-4771 OPEN DAILY 'TIL I; SUM, t * OUN8 - BOY, SELL, TBAl_______ Manley Leach, 10 Easter____ OUNS—ALL KINDS, BUY. BELL, trade. BurrAhell, 371 B. Tele- graph, re 3-4701.______ RAOBN UttRA-lR6HI. LI Sand, Qravel and Dirt 76 fhradded peat oi_____________ ed or delivered. 7 days a v 000 Loehaven Road. Tr 4-14 BLACK DIRT TOP SOIL, gravel, fill, beech sand. Delivered Teas OR 1-0330 or OR MS40. 1-1 TOP SOIL. CRUSHED STONE, sa^. srtvtl^ fill. Jjftt Conklin, “‘■tfJ.Vfig' RICH DARE clay LOAM TOP sriL J^yards lor 410 deUvarad. ICH BLACK ' DIRT,T0P SOli. 4Vk yds., 410 dal, PE 4-soot. SPECUL—WASHED BEACH BAND 40e yd. Pea Oravel, It yd—Road Oraval. SOc yd.-lOA Btona and Oversliad Stone. S3 rd. Fill Dirt, 10c yd. Delivery extra. AMERICAN STONE 0134 SA8UABAW peat, sand stone, gravel. YARD AND DRIVE ORADiNO SateJPam Equipment 87 3-FOINt HYTO ^(gBLTTVATOR BARGAINS ‘ARSrfNVEWRV^reiS IMALL WALEI—--------- fBACTORS, 1 EQUIPMENT. ARM TORS ALL ARB PRICED TO SELL. WE OUARANTEE TO lATISPY OR MONET REPUNOED. CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE. KING BROS. PB 44734 re 4-1111 PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDT— plow, r flex bitch, tandem. Use, harrow. Package price 41,440. Ml 0-7430. J. P, Bebell. 404 8. Evans-dale Dr., Blrmln^m, Mich. FRAZER ROfS^LEXS PAit¥8 1 ey^ent, 1440 Opdyl ~' JOHN DEERE Cf^BlifE. OOOD' MODEL 14 JO«N DEERE COf bine. Oood condition. Davis Ma-ebtpery. OrtonvUU NA 7-3303. John Daori. Maw Idta, Mayrath Oahl, HomsUU Dealer.____ WHEELHORSE BOLENS TRACTORS Riding mowers and tUlars. jpa-elal diseounS thU month. Free tickets to t^ drive In. Evans Stte Houaa Trallara 88 furnT'and Jdler vJo weekdays. FfTiim. ^ ------fkAhJii itiifTAU-------- 0 SELL, RENT O t Dial PE 3-0101. Auto Sarvlca AUTO CLOCKS car. Cyltndara rabered. Sack Auction Sates BIO HOME AUCTION SATURDAY, July 33. 10 a m. at 1700 Poutlac Trail, (Route M3U Highway, I miles southwest of Pontlsci If rooms of furniture, office equip. ment, refrigeratloo, books, dishss, mys. See more deUlls Usted Tbureday, Friday, Dr. and ~ ■ Haddock. Prop; Bud : r. ol 0-3140. B6cB AUCTION BALES Every Friday and Saturday 7 p.m. EVERY SUNDAY... 1 p.m. Sole Mouse Trailers 89 10 FAMOUS MAKES TO CHOOSE FROM Bee the latest 47x10 wide an_ the new ABC Deluxe Model >e quollty m/ >k from. I m er here today. Oxford Ti^iler Sales MUt S. of Lake Orion oo M-34 MY 3-0731 Wood, Coal and Fuel 77 slab wood or fireplace wood. 1 cord. 430 del. Alberta Lumber Mills. FE 0-0131._ 1 SILVER POODLE, 434, OTHER colors. Toy ColUss. Swapt Want .33 pMol. NA 7-3431. * Mtti^^perf * Rsa^abta. S"E 4 1477. *!^a?^iTr4-W._______________ AEC COLLIES.' 4 YEAR OLD FE-mala and 3 puppies, OR 3-4340 or OR 1-3741._______________ Bathing and Trimming For all breeds of dogs. PIcku and delivery service Black poc dies for sale. Call OR 4-1304. DACHSHUND FEMALE. RED. 1 yeara old. friendly, houaabrokn. 430. FE 3-3300.____________ DARLING KITTENB FREE TO good home l07 N. Perry.______ YEAR. GREAT DANE. MALE, wui aacriflce for I'll home. MU 4-4303.____________________ GUINEA Pt6s,_RABBITS, Alt _Pet 8hop,_44^iviUJams^ FE 4-S431 PCkODLES. AKC REOISTERED UL 3-4331 tWOLto. ' TbfS, ' itAdt*. browns or clivers. EM 3-4003. ■UREBRED BEAOLES. 3 MONTHS 010 EM 3-4347. _________ ’ARAEEET^ABIES AND SOME breeders. Cheap, FE 4-7033. PARAKEETS OUARANTEED ' ". 44.M. Walker's Bird House. Iri Bt.. Rochester. OL 1-S373. POODLES 010 ooirN "8 FE 0-3113 parakeets I OUARANTEED TO taUc. Canaries, ceges and sup-pllas. Crane's Bird Hatchery, IMO Auburn. UL a--""-* ALL NEW IN rONTTAC PORTA CAMPER CAMP TRAILER COMPLETE WITH KITCHEN CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES -- E Wa:ton_________Ft 4-4403 Jacobson Trailer Sales and Rentals All new models to travel trail ere. 13 ft. for oompact ears anu up. Reserva your trailer for va-cattona. Sea us for hltchss, parts and servlet 4IH WtUUms Laka Road. Drayton Platoi. OR 34001. UOHTWEIOHT if Wally Byam'i axeltlni TRAILER RENTAL WAYFARE by NIMROD 430 Per Week NEW 104' CREE'S BLEEPS 6 People MAKE YOUR RESERVATION TODAY -YDON'T DELAY! Cliff Dreyer’s Holly Marine Sales ME 4WI X TERMS "NDAY) HOLI 10 Holly Rd. M LLY, MICRIOAN BANK 3PEN DAILY AMD BUM briORT 8 MOBILE HOMES ’ 14 ft to 31 ft. Oem travel trail-e’s. Wolverlnt truck camper also home typa mobile homes. Complete Il ie of perts and bottla gat. Hitches Installed and oars wired. rE 4-»74.^_____________3173 W Huron THE NEWE8T-THE NEWEST Cree’s 10' Trude Camper with Marine Stool. Septic Tank, Pressure Water Atp-ply. and 13 Toll System Throughout I ON DISPLAY ALSO Complete Lina of tree Travel-Coaches 13yg’to29’ Start at $995 Wayfara Camyer by Nimrod APACHE CamMr . . 4340 TRAVEL-AIRE Campar, Holly Marine & Coach 14310 HoUy Rd^ ,MK 44771 HOLLY. WtlCHlbAN BANK RATES Open Dally and Sunday au*KS. ‘ - CUSHMAN ____________ anflna recently rebuilt. I ThU Eagle r‘" — MI 0-7130. OUARANTEED USED BlKliS New Schwinn Bikes. 414.O4 up ~ arlctt s Bike end Hobby r 30 E. Lawrence. PE 3-7I4 0 W. SUverbeU. 000 ASSEMBLED CONVERTIBLE. 4400. 071 Pleacaat St., Blrmtog- ham, alter 4 30 ____________ (i'DM-CRAFt. SHELL LaH -VACAflON traHUSQ Salta and RenlaU 13. 14. and 17 ft. Apacht Oboipgra Car top tpaca vans—drawAlta sad Rteas bltebaa, ovarloadsr braka Rent Trailer Spacu 90 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR POH tbosa who want the ba^ gTsIT lou. trass' etmtat pauw. eta. One milt cast of Oiriord on Laka-vllla Road OA t-lKD. PRIVA'TE AND MODERN YkitL- Woodland Lake Lots 00x140. SmaU dowa payment. Free dttd to rallred fomlly only. Beautiful 41 aert park. I iwlm-mtog beaebas. Ota, aleetrie. Tela- GOOD bSED TIRES KUHN AUTO ORVieB ■ _ W. Huron PE K13U OUARANTEED USID TIBE8. k** ** .uuuSil* ED WILLIAMS 8. Saginaw at Rasbura 93 ^te Motor Scooten 94 Jt CUSHMAN BAOLB. E**^'-lent condition. OL 0-14to. 'k cu8HiiaN~ic^Dc. 6d6b eondUton. OB MOtS,________ ILB. LAKOB nil. New fires Pries 0140. For Sate Motorcyctee 95 Roy's Harloy-Dgridwm Saleg 101 W. Montcalm________PE I-3W1 HARLET '48, P.L.H. OOOD SHAPE ■“* Miller St.. Boehtstor. For Sate Bicyctea 96 FOR BALI BOY'S AND Ona‘8 BI-—■- J4 - nng Jg'. rsbullt. 1047 Boats and Accessories 97 U FOOT RUN-ABOUT,CONTROL8, motor and trailer^J^^43^^^ hall, easy to sail. OR 3-7644. 14 FT, RUNABOUT. obOlTSeleN-dttion . . . newly patotad. SISO SS3-3004 after 4 p^m^_______ ii-FO^ ALUMlffUM BOAT dfitl trailer. 1“ - —— ““ — FIBEROLAS BOAT, horsepower Evtoruda motor, it-tor tilt traUar, Ilka new. sAo. SS3-343S.____________________ . INBOARD OR OUTBOARD- 17' CHRlaCRAFT RUNABOUT, SS H.p. A-1 ahape. FE 34131. 1030 Lake Angelas Shorts._________ IS FOOT INBOARD, MERCURY conversion. Call after 0, 0S3-3I40. 30 EVINRUDE ON U P ment. Stormga, dockafa tod turanet tUl May Iftl ,oa Dat River. FB 44717.______________ iiW4 JOhNWJM 34 HORSKkjindi; very lew hours/ Phone FE I4S34. 1446 MERCURY MARK 30. If horsepower, QUO. FB 44113. lots JOHNSON 34 HORSEFO^C WE SELL AND 8KRTICB •"sns 'ssi^'-sjfsr ifTJXv.vravsii n Delly h Bundeys — I41S W, Aubara Rd —------- (Bet Crooks aad UeawsISl Acwoes FROM AVONDALE EEWI All New in Pontiic ORADT WMITB L “ AQUA SWAN AL.,. WErrkROI>BE,VEHOI I ■1..; TWKN.TY-TWO THE PONTIAC PllESS. TUESDAY. JUI.Y 18. 1961 Accenories 97 ' AMAntAM Iteapton *« JOBl______ GASOW ■•Dr j* i*" Boat Discounts Dumm's CNION LAU li Pnloii U M m BOAT INBUIIANCS Sid* UMd TnKks 103 IB tiuctob^wIBK- Track MM._______________ , TOB WCKOT8, CHinrT AMD MrnaUaaal. Beaaomr Car*, a BOTCB M>OOb' RAto Al^ a*r. Good IrauBeitaUM. OR baby to deal wm DAWSON'S BALES _ ■npatce L»kr _________^HA MIW rULLT EOUTPTED U rOOT aI.D-1 minoai Boat. M h p. JoBbmb — TUI l»d UAllcr. IM HtJ4.____ FACTORT tURBCT »' FIBER i!u fiiAlas boau. aurht twMr-fm. rrfBlar »1M r Jur , OlaMo craft. Cenwr DlUt ' ' aad Waiioo. ' SLitPS AMO II Fantaa RB . Fenten.! SAVE DEMOS I%1 CHEVROLET CORVAIRS Pickups and Panels I Matthews- Boat Repair MateriaU Ui iC? YV O AND AUTO* MATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSO* LOTELT MO MONET DOWN. A*wmt pajskanU al IM.TI par ■a can cradil Mir . Mr^ Fart* at MI «-nSB. Harold Taraaif. Few. » MmCK I bOOR HARDT^ LaSabr*. tSSSS ar an aid car and take erar pajaanU. '« Ford cwrcitlbla ISN tnU prica FE S^. AdklP* D»*d Car*. CLASSIC liS] BCICE SEYLAfeE camrarUSlc. stint condltK^ wua wbaau. ate. SLocum 1-Mlt aftar T p at__________________ ST BDICE SPECIAL. EXCELLENT candlUon. Automatic lru*mta-, «lan. radio, hcatar. OR S-I3ST AT BCICE "super. HARDTOP all potrar, radio and hratcr, tTN SconoBT Car*. » Aabara sFse^^ on* e«nar. drnalloa, paver *wer-Ini raa*. m l-UM_______ iij-*«!l*STl»ab Laka. JISI Oar NEW FIBEROLAS RiTNABOUT complele 1* Eelnrada. MSS' Hargreaves FIBBRGLAS FAINTS ------------ HARDWARE WTINDSMIELDS' CONVERTIBLE TOPS w. tef^iJ SSi“S*da B. TRUCK DEPARTMENT OAKLANo’^Mi^^E^Exemra Oakland at Cass Ml 8 Boflnaa______FI SAldll FE, 5-4161 SEE r----- - - sS?1 Trada jm CRIS.^MAN ROCHESTER _________pL J-STH________ -U CHEVY. OObo TRANSPOifTA- tlon. m Bavard______ • CHEVROLET IMFALA S-bOOR hardtop. VE ------ ----- MeCuBoeh Yov^ oand^'marinb ExoiiWOBi "El Camino Sales” SEA RAY BOATS JoinuoD Motor*. AUar TraUai U*ad Boot*, klolor*. TiaUera. KESSLER Aula a Hartef, IS N. ~ OXFORD suit. IM Auto Insuranc* 104 ^^^.Check this rate! SPECIAL r W Lena BUr BIUm. trsH.r^ u $37 FOR 6 MONTHS kMv^hTrdivare " ““ 3*S« AUBUBR RO I ^ Bnif ia.9 DT. l.S44i' 91.M0 mEDICAL PfS?-5P.? >±!---11.000 DEATH BENEFIT .10.000 Untnaurad Motonate COMPREHENSIVE (flra. tliaft, tU) COLLiraON lOlOO dadocUblt) ROAD SERTICB 8TMI Wt Bay and Bell Imported Cart We Have a Lot of Tremendous Buys on New and Used Rigs! MERCURY MOl a I»ALXR Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sport Center 11310 Holly Rd ME 4-0T1 OPEN T DAYS A WKIK HOLLY. MICHIGAN BANK RATE8 Transportafn Offered 100 I ENOINE AIRUNER. NON.8TOP-Los Anieles. Ban Francisco, Ban ---- *71.50. Hawaii. OM 00. New - Miami, 044. Ferry Wanted Used Cars 101 California Market We need '00 Pontiaca. oWe. Balcki and Cadtllaea Also iharo 'f '** and *if model* AVERILL’S MM Dlxlo Hvy. mOH I FOR LATE MODEL : AS 050 F iumTiom HELP I HELP! HELP! WE NEED EXTRA CLEAR USED CARS RIGHT NOW! •TOP DOLLAR PAID'' Glenn’s Motor Sales Ml W. Huron St PE 4-TITl y-TUgSK ■Ajr..----------- A GOOD OEAL-JUNKS-WRECXa- PONTIAC WAETE. WE NEED CARS! Especially late modal Pontic- . CadUlaCB. OMemoMlos. Balcka, ^onolets. For top do”-- “ ttheso model* and othera ..- M & M MOTOR SALES !«L ■U PUT Mb OORVEitTiaLB:. TOl> aBnpe, 0050. MU ISMT. M TR L ncEPnONAL. ] oWer. II Spokane,___________ 'M 8IMCA PLEIM CIEL ROAD-ater. Whlt« with rod leather trim, bucket eesu, Fenced trsnamle-sion. ll.ON. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8 WOODWARD, BIR-MINOHAM. MI FTO5. For Sale Cara _10(i CLOSEOUT SPECIAL SALK ItU Cherrolet Bel Air I cTltnder. slick, 11.150 IIM Cherrtdei 310 5460. INO Cbeerolet 110. ■ Cylinder, aatomatlc. 1350. 1066 PontlBc hardtop. IS66 DeSoto Hardtop. Automatic. IN.6I. 154 Old* Sedan. AulomaUe ON.I 1»54 Bulck Fdr Sedan IN.50 1054 Pontlaa S-Door IM.50 154 Cherrolet convertible OIM! lOM OMC >k Ton Pickup im 1053 Ford FDoor • Cillndrr. stick. IN 50 1051 Mrreury 3-door. $00 1053 Bulck Convertible. |0S irrolet 3-dr. IN 1053 Ford 1 . Movln* QUEEN AUTO SALKS III Booth Ballnaw___ 1055 BUICE SUPER. 0305 Bupertor >uto Sale* 550 Oakland OLDSMOBILK 1000 SUPER H (X>NTERT-IBLE^ LOVELY. LIXE NEW CONDITION WITH POWER STEERINO. AND BRAEE8. RADIO. HEATER. AUTO-MATIC and WHtnZWALLB. $2795 1-Year Warranty Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 Used Auto Parts 102 OO-OM CHETY ______________ - , Chevy bif valve heads. 5V'5T Chevy eompM* Interior red sod' ahito, roUed aial pleated Naufa-h)^e. FE OAIOO. FE 4-OTlO,_ iCiodMSrnONXD t bTn s m i s-; I, gaBcrat^, ■toltars. HASKINS PICNIC OF BARGAINS SALE ■5t PONTUC 4 DOOR SEDAN. Uflrt^aul - ---------- ---------- ‘M CHEVROLET Impala 1 '00 FORD 4 door aiatton i with Fotd-O-MaUc tranimL. alon. poser stecrint. radio and beater. Bolld silver tlniah! HASKINS OINWAY'S AUTO MART •53 Chee.. eUck coupe. IS5 '5T Roinblor. «(|l trade, 54N. ‘54 Bulck. very food. »M4. 'll Ford, 1 dr. etlck. 0105 Till Cooley Lk. Rd. Ph. 3C1-T355 74 BUICE CONVBnRrfiEE AND to PaeUrd hardtop Others 135 up. Etcoomy 'Cara 33 Auburn "CADILLASa. -53 TO 'IT, HARD- Per Sale Cars 106 ? MARMADUKB By Anderaoi: dk Lccming trim M.4M, NORTH CHEVROLET CO, llOO 8. WOODWARD AYE^ BIRMINOHAM.. MI FITM. ■risdmr6iaere«^r:::rBii LakesMe Joto MA QA333 after’ 0. CHEVY. 1 o6oR. RADIO so°Mgs4?=*\>oiwr™a PAYMENTS OP |0.M PER MO. Cali credu Mgr. Mr. Parts at MI FT50A Harold Turatr. Pord. —its* ■50 tiuOMPH. LIKE NEW, SOOb mUea, radio and heater. IMS. Economy Cara. 33 Aubura__ ST CHEVROLET. 1 DOOR, STAN-dard 0 Buck. Very clean. 1 ----- .vu ]ggg onkview. Dray- ^Ift. eic. 500.6333 and Renter. WhltcaalU, Vlaaher*. ONLY 4,000 mUes. 03.IN. NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1000 8 WOODWARD aye. BIRMINOHAM. MI 1000 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINO-HAM MI F3T35. Cara. 3 Auburn. •50 CHEVY ~5*PALA CONVkRTl-ble. nil While, powyr atrerln*. bntkee. ahnry. 01.000. OR 3-^. IT CHEVROLET BEL AIR %■ door. 0 eyttndcr. poweriUde. radio. heaUr. aoua and white ^ lah MM. NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1000 A. woodward. BIR- MINOHAM. MI F3T35.________ HOT CHEVROLET tlniah nnd In bcautUul a with white wall urea, oaocc i4o 3350. 01,1*5. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 1958 CHEVROLET 3-door with radio and bea , . nutomntte transmtsalan. whlte-wnll Urea. tl.lOt. WARD, BlRinMOHAM. Ml F3T35. eertni and brakes, radio, beat-whitewalls. Dark kreen and * ‘e flnlah. *•••«• ly. Taka ovarpaymthl*. prleato owner. Catt PEMSTO aftor 1:31 iiS3~poimAC a-i oondition 111 Eait Blvd. N. er ^»«0»3. •irTfeOTIASTcAtlDliA A-t>b61t. VI. bydraaaaUc, radio, beater, wEltawaU*, Peralao Sand (Inldi. •l.**»^ NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1*1* woodward, BIRIANO- HAM. W F3fn*^______ ______ l*~PONTIAe~tiM. OR Finest pio-up collection in dogdom! For Sale Cars 106 $1060' SCHUCK FORD M34 at Buckbora Lake LAKE ORION_________MY >-MU ■M PORD SPORT COUPE. BLACK-red interior, fully equipped. Prl- — heeter, Stoi^'ai^------------ Blue Interior. $1.308. UL 3-3366. 1313 PfHlO, 3 CfilNDXR 3-DOOR, rndlo and beater, power ileorlog, no money down. Lucky Auto Bale*. U3 8. Sntlnaw. PE 4-3314. INI FORD, 3 DOOR. RADIO. HEATER AND FORbOMATTC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aaaume payment# of $3$.T6 per mo. Call Credit M$r., Mr Parka at 30 4-7500, Harold Turner. Pord 36 FORD CONVERTIBLE. AO^ er* CTe^’ViS’ 5u iStevlew.'^ 1955 FORD 3-Door hardtop, radio er, hydrama"* *— power Drakai John McAuhffc, Ford 031 OAKLAND_______FE 6-4101 IRD. '57 PLTMOtlfH^DB.. wm nnADCe. FE 0-M13. 1*54 FORD, COUNTRY SEOXM, RADIO, HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSi088ION ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aesumt pay-menta of 017.M per mo. nil Credit Mgr. Mr. Parte at MI 4-7600. Harold Turner. P—« 0. R nnd C Rambli Rd. EM 3A1M wells. $34i. NORTH CHETTROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD, BIR-MINOHAM. mi 4-3736.____ FISCHER BUICK USED^RS 13 MONTHS WARRANTY 704 8. Woodwnrd. Birmingham Polish pord. prepect, 0300. FE 3-3030. Saturday. 1*60 FORD VI. LIKE NEW. BODY and motor perfect. Interior real Clean. 3073 Knirick. Keego Bar- •50 FORD 3 DOOR, CLEAN raB-feet condition. Exealleirf buy. 51.300. 1130 Alht. OR 3-3701. S^ au?8 BALES. 171 B. BAOINAW. ■50 FORD,. 4 DOOR. HEATER, POHDOMATIC WHmE W^^ LOW mil37a6e. absolutely NO MONEY DOWN. Astnmt pay-menta ol *3310 per mo. C^ Credit Mgr. Mr. Part* at MI Superior Auto Balei 550 Oakland '4 MERCURY 4-OOOR STATION yagon, power brakes »nd eteer-Ing. clean, quick aale. *375. 3M LARK,'61, NEW 0 CYL. 3 DR., HEAT AND DEFROSTER WlflDSHlELD WASH-EBB. ACCESS. EIT. WHITE TOTAL DELIVERY PRICE ll.UO Mazurek Marine Sales B. blvd. at WOODWARD 1956 PLYMOUTH WAOON $295 1957 CHEVRdiLET 3-DOOR $795 - 1954 LINCOLN, SEDAN $345 1955 BUICK 3-OOOR HARDTOP $595 JEROME Motor Sales Money Saver 1957 FORb 3-Door 7U eofttie With Pord-fl Mttic tranamlaalon, radio am heater, and real sharp $795 BEATTIE WATERFORD FORD DEALER At the stoplight In Wr— OR 3-1291 WILL ACCEPT NOTICE herebs known That at any the publtahlng of thla 1050 Ford. SERIES untry Sedan MODEL. Bill Spence Rambler ^S^Mal^. (MU) CL/^MCaroN sUtion IFV74— :* ba 'wlS55y‘ ^alrlane Country 0 pataengr- ‘ ■‘~ 8s!rial . _ ___________ be liquidated for the balance due of $W Thla c--------------------- by taking ovei of 03 70. Abaoli_,______________ ed until first paymeat It made late In Aufuat Ukl. The balance dae may also be padd oft In raiih If preferred instead of takini over payments. DESCRIPTION Color: Black and whtte Interior: Very clean black and Thla car Is being stored by and can b* aaeo at King Aato Balea. . Uquldatloh Lot, MIU 8. BAOINAW. to PoBtlae.. I block sairth of Auburn Av*., anytlma froa I a.m. to I p.m. dhUy except Sun- “ Special - I960 POaNTIAC Calaltoa *4toor, radio am er. hydramatlo traosn_. power brakaa and atoei^^^ PONTIAC ’ RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. QeMiens AND Corner: Cass and Pike FE'3-7954 For Sale Cars 106 1*57 MERCURY 4-DOOR HARD-top. llk#^ new. 3000 luU price, no mousy down. Lucky Auto aates. 103 8. SAglnaw, FE 48314. 1*50 MERCURY, 4 DOOK SEbXif. RADIO AND HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. WHITE WALLS. VERT CLEAN CAR. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Assume paymanta of *14.75 per mo CsU cradU mgr.. Mr. Parka at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner. Ford. •M OL08MOBILE M HARDTOE solid black, 1 owner, Buperior Auto UXtt^m OakUnd HEATER.'hTDRAMAIIC. ABSOl LUITELT NO MONET DOWN. Assume paymanU ol $30 75 per mo^ Call credit m$r.. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500, Harold Tumar, Ford JLT.Y SPECIALS UM Pmitlae Catalina Sedan. By--------- —idlo, beater. A 1-owner US* Pontiac Catalina Sports Sedan. Hydramatic. radio and heater. Tour '51, ‘53 wtU make low down payment. $l$t$. U57 to°^Iau"'*whUewaU*’ A Uttle leml Tour''51, '53, '53 will Butke down payment. Haurit Pontiac Sales CLARKSTON M-U ona mile north of U.S. 10 MAple 6-5550 Open-Jloc.. Tuea., Thura. 'Ul I p.m.. 1*50 OLD8MOBILE M 4-DOOR hardtop. AlR-CONDmONED. Power ateertng, b lack finish Om. HORTH CHEVROLET CO. ioM 8. woodward, BIRMINO- HAM. 50 4-3735.________ ■41 STARCHIEP. MUST SELL, 0300 ml loaded. *3045, OR 3-3733. U54 WILLTB. OVERDRIVE t .. ---Pontiac. Nice ....... A150 ___HamWef; sharp . ■ *335 Superior ‘ ‘ “ ' "* ' N convertible. white top. full power. 'M Bo Title engine, patllal custom, n ). UL 38403 after '58 PLYMOUTH WAOON . *37 a month Lakeside Motors F 313 W. Montcalm It MI 4-7500. Harold Turner, Ford. DEMO Rambler 0 Paseenger Station fon, loaded. 700 mllea, eavr *** R & C RAMBLER Oammarce Rd.____EM 38165 PLYlfOUTH ’55. MOTOR •55 PONTiAc"^BFnAiri35ooR. ’61 PONTIAC WAGON Porer. 5*3 W. Iroqnol*. PON'nAC. STAR CHIEF, door bArdtop. auto, traasmtael— whitewall Urea, very clean. $$50. 603-0030. After 4. ifa-lflOg. ’$* PONTUC 3-IXXm HARDTOP Power brake# aad eteerlng. E-Z --------------------------------------- BUY AND SAVE! •57 PLYMOUTH .... •65 PORD ........ '54 OLDS -...... •50 OLDS ........ •6* PONTUC ...... •64 OLDS ........ •86 PLYMOUTH ...... $306 •56 MERCURY .... $306 ■01 BONNEVILLE.SAVE $000 •01 BONNEVILLE . SAVE $000 ■47 DUMP TRUCK . |2*6 '60 PORD tk TON TRUCK . . . $600 •65 PORD % TOn TRUCK ... $4N RUSS JOHNSON LAKE ORION MY 2-2871 MY2-2381 Birmingham Rambler MODEL CLOSE-OUT SALE €BLER, 3-door, at tble price! 1301 RAMBLER American convertible. iWe are etuck with U of the above mentioned articles. Wc are willing to part with them at —^-------*',3*7.U ) 4-door srtng. 1 Wo have 110 cars In stock we Intend Birminjgham-Rambler Woodward Kuth of U Mtlo Road Just 0 min. Dom downtown p—*•--_________MI>»00 OLIVER BUIGK ’58 Renault .... ’59 Renault .... ’60 MG ........ ’59 Renault .... ’60 Renault---- ’60 W’illys Jeep ’58 Plymouth .. ’58 Opel....... '57 Buick ..... ’60 Goliath ___ ’56 Chevrolet .. ’58 Renault .... ’60 Chevrolet .. ’58 Opel ....... ’57 Buick ..... ’60 Buick ..... ’59 Ford ...... •59 Buick ...$ 745 ...$ 845 ...$2095 ...$ 895 ...$ 945 ...$1195 ...$895 ...$ 795 ...$895 ...$1095 ...$395 ...$ 795 ...$2195 ...$ 795 ...$ --...$2295 ...$1395 $1945 \ Mercury.$1095 OLIVER Motor Sales 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 I PONTIAC 3-OOOR HAM. Ml 48736. I960 RAMBLER American Wagon, radio : heater, whitewall tlrea, ai SPECIAL New *11 Car, radio. . htater. I1.4N.10. Ilt.ao down. M5.H par TaND C RAMBLER 8UP3CR MARKET 3-4165 1146 Commerce Rd. 1957 RAMBLER Thla If a super 4-door. Ivory top, red bottom. Radio, beater, over-drive. A nice clean car with Birmingham RAMBLER Offers: UOO RAMBLER 4-door Cuetmn sedan. radio, beater, white slde-walU. 0 cylinder. Pull price $1,046. 30 months to pay. New car rata. 1160 RAlfBLER 4-door aUtlOD wagon. radio aad heater, automatic. U MERCURY 3-door hardtop, full lower, special paint. Former Mer- 1360 RAMBLER Super 48eor leden. sold it new. FuU yrice $1,306. 150 FORD Falrlane 500 hardtop. Jet black, beautiful ttree, big engine. Rune beautifully. Pull price 1056 FORD 0 ,r«P!SSS 1063 PLYMOUTH station wagon. 115$ DODGE 3Kloor, V$. antomatle. juao. Moor, ve, automatic, runner, good tranaportstlon. ltS5 CHEVROLET, Sdoor, V$. nine $1$S. 1150 CHEVROLET Bel Air. 4-door —“---------VO. standard trane- prleo $505. Irlane ---------. ..andan Very sharp. ^$305. 555 JEEP afatlon wagon, condition. PuU price $5*5 SPECUL Birmingham Rambler ...odward South of 15 MUe Road Just S min. from ^-- ---- DRIVE A MILE SAVE A PILE! New Dodge Dart $1946.65 -SMALLTOWN LOW OVERHEAD 3*.00t 10LB OUARANTEB DODGE-CHRYSLER-TRUCKS HOMER' HIGHT Small Town Trades: doer. $.«yl. Radio ........... *U*6 I*« Nadi Rebal. Odoor $TV CteSMl M>WTVI TONIOHrS TV mOHUGHm •:M (8) Movit (oont.) (4) Brokm Arrow (7) Ntwi, WoKther (B) Popoy* (9S) in the Window 4:11. (TTNewe •:tt (I) Weather ■ «!» (8) Nawp, (4) Newa (7) Reacue | (M Qnlek Draw McGraw (86) Notea on Muslo 4:40 (3) Newa Analyata . (4) Sporta 4:tt (8) Newa (4) Nawa 7:44 (3) Divorce (3ourt (4) Look up (7) inoeua on America (9) Movie. “Double Wed-dint.'* (1937) Beautilul, etll-dant New York burinaae-woman la tryinx to run ata-teria love attain. William Powell, Myma Loy. (86) Inquiring Mind 7tW (8) Divorce Court (cant.) (4) Liberty BaU (7) Buga Bunny (9) Movie (oont.) (86) National (Soala 4:44 (3) Father Knowa Beat (4) Uberty BeU (oont.) (7) Rifleman (9) Movie (cont.) (86) Oueat Tnveler 6:M (2) Dobla Olllla (4) Alfred Hitchcock (7) Wyatt Eatp (9) G.M. Preaanta 9:44 (3) Tom EwaU (4) Thriller (7) Stageooa^ Waat ' (9) O.M. Preaenta (cont.) 4:M (3) Playhouaa 90 ' (4) Thriller (cont.) (7) Stagecoach (cont.) (9) Jake and the Kid 14:40 (3) Playhouaa 90 (cant.) (4) (Color) Special (or Women. (7) Alcoa Preaenu (9) Newa Mill (9) Weather 14tl4 (9) Taleooope UAW Mil4 (3) Playhouae 90 (oont.) (4)Spa^ lor Women (cont) (7) Mike Hammer (9) Loon Emri 14141 (9) GoU Tip MtIO (9) Sporta Ui44 (3) Nawa (4) Nawa (7) Mr. and Mn. North (9) Nawa Utu (3) Weather (4) Weather (9) Movla. Starlight Theater: "Mad Uttle laland." (Eng-lirii; 1986). In aequ "Tight Ltttla laland,’ little domain ot To^ la Mckat baaa la to be tpm. Jaannla Caraon. Utl4 (3) Sporta (4) Sporta lltSI (3) Movie. "The Attain o( Suaon." (1946). RemaritaUa gfrl managoa to be dltterent ^woman to each of (Our men who love her. Joan FOntalne, George Brent. Dannie O’Kaafe. 11:14 (4) (Color) Jack Paar. (7) Movie. "Can’t Help Singing." (1944) Girl aeU out frr Wait, agalnat wlahee of father, to marry captain in Cavalry. Deanna Durbin, Akim Tamlrott, Thomaa Gomef. TV Features By United Preoa Intenattanal FOCUS ON AMERICA, 7 p.m. (7). Report on the Unlventty of Chicago’! cancer reaaarch hoa-pital. DOBIE OnXD, 8:30 p.m. (3). (Rerun). Doble (Dwayne Hickman) helpa Maynard (Bob Denver) get a Job in a aurplua gooda atoie. THRILLER. 4 p.m. (4). (Rerun). A 19th century writer-painter plota murden of hii wife, mother-in-law. invalid elater-in-law and rich uncle in order to Inherit fortune. PLAYHOUSE 44. 9:30 p.m. (2). (Rerun). "Tomorrow.” William Faulkner'n atory of man’a devo-^ tion to ideal of love and hla deep loyalty to a woman. Rlchanf Boone, Kim Stanley. SOfOLE WOMAN, 10 p.m. (4). (Rerun). Dramatized documentary about problem of unmarried an uho repeatedly backs away from marriage. (C^lor). JACK PAAR. 11:30 p.m. (4). Jack’s guests: Phyllis Diller, Virginia Graham and Oiarles Doman. (Color). Iil4 (3) As the World Turns (7) Lite of Riley UK (4) Faye EUzabafli (3) Amos ’n’ Andy (4) (Qrktf) Jan Murray (7) Day In Oourt (3) House Party (4) LoratU Young (7) Sevan Kays 1:44 (3) MlUionalre (4) (Color) Young-Dr. Moloo (7) Qatm lor a Day (9) Movie 1:94 (3) Verdin Yours (4) lYom Thaaa Room (7) Who Do You Tnwt? (9) Movie 4:44 (8) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstano 4iU (2) Secret Storm 4:14 Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Adventure Time 1:94 (3) Movie (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Jfdumy Ginger (9) Lomwy Tunes and Jlngies (86) Discovery 1:14 (7) Lone Rai^ (86) Ariiericons at Work 1(44 (86) News Magazine Iil4 (9) Newa............. 4:14 (3) Medltatkms 4:14 (3) On the Farm Front 7:44 (3) News (7) Funm 7:44 (3) Felix the Cat 7iM (3) ’Today on the Farm 7:44 (3)B’wanaD(m > (7) Johnny Ginger 4:14 (3) Captain Kangaroo 4:14 (7) Movie 4:44 (3) Movie (4) Ed AUcn 4:44 (4) Dr. Brothers 4itt (4) Gateway to Glamour (7) Hair FashionB Today 4:44 (7) News 14:44 (3) I Love Lucy (4) Say When (7) Jack La Lanne 14:14 (2) Video Village (4) (Ocdor) Play Your Hunch (7) Jackie Cooper (9) Chez Heleoe 14:44 (9) Bttlboard 14:44 (9) Junior Roundup 11:46 (2) Double Exposure (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Gale Storm (9) Romper Room U:44 (3) My Uttle Margie (4) Concentration (7) Love That Bob! WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 14:44 (3) Love of Ufa (4) ’Truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage (9) Myrt and Doris 11:44 (9) News 18:14 (2) Search for ’Tomorrow (4) (Color) It Could Be You (7) Number Please. (9) Susie U:44 (2) Guiding Ut't U:46 (4) News (2) Charles Boyer (4) Journey (7) Seven SUr Theater i9) Movie 1:25 (7) Newa Graham Finds New Tensions: Confusion, Fear MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPD-Evangrilat Billy Graham said Monday'night he sensed a new tension in the nation which could have important political results. 'HMte was aa element Ih aCeoss 1 video kctreu. Dorothy ------- JT Nocturnal Dyer 4« Scottlih •becpfolde 41 CaU’i S3 Roly 15 AdmUiUter IS Zluded St Cubic meteri IS SUtehee alreeh DOWN 1 Created I Arabian suU r“ r" r r r 1 II 11 IS IS u IT II It Hll 1 a 8 fr 3T ■r ST r 96 u II II 44^ U IT u W K IT n Jl sanaed oaywbere Mat we have been In the UMted States,” Dr. "me ooiild have "There ie something at the grass level which I have never fell before>-an uncertainty, confusion and element of fear u people look to the future." ★ ★ ★ Dr. GnJiam completed a record-breaking upper Midwest crusade in neithboring St. Paul Sunday. The attendance of 309,000 peraons was the largest fur any eight-day crusade the evangelist ' ducted. A total of 6,682 persona, or 2.1 per cent of the total attendance, made "dedsloni for Christ." Red China Action Held Up by Group WASHINGTON (AP)-The Senate Foreign Relations Committee deferred action Monday on a resolution to put Congress on record again In opposition to diplomatic recognition of Red (Mna. and its seating in the United Nations. it * It Chairman J. William Fulbrlght, D-Ark., said Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, R-U., Senate minority leader, principal sponsor of the proposiEd, requested the delay until he can consider revised language under study by the committee. Dirks«i is in the hospital lor treatment of a stomach ail- ment. Spike Jones' Show Satire in a Circle By FRED DANZIO NEW YORK (UPI) - That Jones boy. Spike. Always Opened his new summer CSS-TV Monday night singing About how it’s coming to us live. TTwn, as the show ends, the announcer throws in the punch line. ’’This program was prerecorded.” Does that make it a live prere-^ corded show or a prerecorded live show? But that’s not the potait. There was a larger area ol disappoint-meat. By promising more than It was ready to deliver. Spike’s BAITUNQ FLOOD—TWo men help a woman In swirling flood waters with the aid of a rope stretched acrou the street In Poona. India. Another man clings to iron grating as he keeps AT PbbMsi rope above water. At least 50 persons were drowned and 100,000 made homeleu when the rampaging .river swept away an incompleted dam and inundated the city recently. Goldberg Deplores Slum Delinquency WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ub Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg said today Juvenile delinquency In alum areas Is "potentially the most dangerous condition In America to-■Ay.*" ar Goldberg told a special House subcommittee on education that "If we eonaldcr that by 1968 we will have 40 per cent more under 30 years of age in oi force t)um we do today. It Is evident that it Is not a condition that is scheduled to go away.’ WASHINGTON (AP) - The Army apparently Is preparing to He said that in.May there were more than 800,000 youths out of school and without Jobs. He testified in support ot an administra-tlon bill designed to stimulate local measures to deal with delinquency. Democratic Candidates to Appear at Forum FERNDALE - Candidates for the Democratic nomination for delegate to the constitutional convention from the 6th legislative district will appear at an open forum at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 1 Army Preparing^ Missiles for Gas carry chemical warfare gases deep into an enemy’s battle zone. Thla waa Indicated by a new regulation listing supply reqiansi-bUltles o( branches ol the Army which Included among the itenu lor "guided chemical agent." it it By Army definition, a chemical agmt Is a aoUd, liquid or gas which "produces lethal. Injurious or Irritant effects.” In (MToductlon or being perfected is a wide variety of chemical gases. TTwy range from the tong-manufactured asphyxiating gases, now,In modern fbrm, to the ao-ealled "nerve gases” capable ot producing either death by paralysis of the respiratory system or temporary incapacitation by psychological or. other effect. A while family ot missiles is in the Army’s arsenal capable of the Femdale Public Library. 222,dei,verlng gases. These missiles E. Nine Mile Road. ranges of a The meeting is sponsoretkby the Tew thousand yards tor close-in Femdale Democratic Club. I attack on a battle front to the Tbe longer-range missiles carrying, for instance, an Inciquicit-aUng gas obviously would be uae-ful for tactical purposes, including softening up-an area behind enemy Unee preparatory to a paratroop drop. Modem arms for ground troops have been given a prkxity recently under President Kennedy’s program aimed at improving the capability of conventional forces distinguished from the nuclear striking power ot the Air Force and Navy. how studiously TV’s prime theme “satire” looks (or new ways to travel In old ruts. Spike Jones has an Inventive, satirical mind. The writers tor the opener, Mel TolMn, Don Hinckley and .Sheldon Keller, are regarded as tops in the business. And, with their talents combined, what target do they harpoon? (tood old “V,. that’s what. Now, TV is always fair game and spoofs about It are usually good lor a few mild toughs. iTs when they start going around in cirdes that I begin to suspect that the satirists are copping out on the everyday non-TV follies that lahaMt our worid. EARLY OB LATE So ’”The Spike Jones Show” comes along and fails to break out of the vicious circle and stir the Juices. If you want meaty satire on TV, you’ve got to go with the eariy-moming or late-night shows such as ‘”Today” and "The Jack Paar Show,” when the Premise Players or Second Oty improvisers pay a visit, or comedians in the Peter Ustlnov-Jonathan Winters mold are turned loose. Or watok the reUgtoua shows Sunday momtag. TbeyTl get a rlee out o( you. I^e Jones? It’s a tidy Aow. It came on with a promising touch u a penguin Here, a Ouno-Uke sUhouetts was Aown climbing to a stool on a raised ptottorm. He toppled backward, vase over roae petal, befoiu he could sing a note. * * ★ This blackout wu the show^s highlight. ’Two variations on it later on only served to bhtr the vividness of the first offering. Waterford Board to Get Report on New School A complete report on the building progress of the new Water ford-Kettering High School wiU be presented for dlscuarion at Thurt-day’s 7:30 p.m. Waterford Tbwn-ehip Board ot Education meeting. ♦ ♦ ♦ The 32.5-mlllkm senior Ugh school is "right on schedule,” ae-cording to Supt. WiBtom A. Shunck, and will open Sept 5. Members of the pemomel, build- be named by board president Eldon Roeegart. StotE to G«t 300 Mibs of WhItE Road Edgar LANSING IB - Some 300 nllei of Michigan higfasrays win have new white lines atong tbelr edgw this sununer, the State Highway Department reporto. k it it The agency leys the new edge acclaim than any other proj^ in the traffic division. The lines help define hitfiway edges at night and during bad GOP Loader to Speak stage to signify the nonpeaoock black-and-white itatua of the program. A take-ott on Perry Como’s "Stog to Me" TV segment wu funny. Miner, a New YortP congressman. wUI be the featured spaakar at the Kent (bounty annual R^blioan p(^ nic Saturday. Miller to expected to outline hit plans for waging the 1962 electiou campaign. More Citizens Build Shelters as N-Build-Up Keeps Climbing LANSING (» — After years of apathy, Michigan home owners are taking more interest in building nuclear fall-out shelters in thetr basements. 2 Boys Drown in NJ. PENNSAUKEN, N.J. (AP) -Sylvester Johnson, of (tomden, N.J., and MSton Nixon, of New York, both 11, drowned Monday lUght in a lake after apparently ignoring a shouted warning to stay out of the water because it was deep, poliee reported. • Sr 10 Regard 11 Clumsr bodU 13 CleaniUif » Tblnti don* 34 Cruitacaan 35 Rabbit 35 Small liland 30 OrMk Dies of Cancer at 55 MUS(X)DA, Wis. (AP) - Allen . Franklin, 55, a pioneer radio, broadcaster, died Sunday of 4 Boundary 0 Hebrav aicetle 33 a 10 Japanew outcaatt 40 Anelant PtrtiM 40 Afrnh 00 Puu * h-53 Auric.. 04 Ddnce atep Tociay's Radio Programs' catw (100) wwj (ISO) wxfa (mm) wcae ectabillty” of home shelters are other factors. Gov. Swalnson to setting the pace. A shelter adequate to ae- chUdren, as well as himself, soon win be erected In the basement at the spacious brick house he has leased in Lansing’s ontsUrts. "There is no doubt that people are really getting Interested in this program,’’ said Walter Nunlmak-er, state civil defense director. “In the last two weeks alone we’ve had 279 imiulries at this <^:ce from people wanting information on how to go about building them. ”Oit staff isn’t able to keep up with requests from people want us to inspect shelters they’ve built to see if they are up to standards set by the Office of C^I Defense Mobilization.” Do-lt-.vourself concrete block shelters put in a corner of the basement are by far the most popular, Nunimaker said. They ran be built for 450 or 460 and used for such things as storage, fruit cellars and home offices. “Such a shelter, of course, is no protection against a direct hit, but there is every indicatidfi that it would protect against lethal fallout,” said Swainson, the formal head of the state's civil defense organization. SURVIVE OR NOT In a nuclear attack, a I can Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars are especially to-operative In promoting the program, he said. Nunimaker estimated there are at least 10,000 home shelters ig Michigan "and possibly thousands more that have been built more or lees secretly.” * * w Some people, he said, don’t let their friends and neigdibars know about thrir Shelters tor fear of being ridiculed as prophets ot doom. Others dem’t want -crowds ot less farrtghted neighbors rushing to their homes for protection if and wlieti nuclear war breaks out. TINA Miss., Walter Bailey, supreme vice president of the Ku Klux Klan, said he wired the mayor of Chicago that the KKK offered its help “in every way possible.” Bailey did not elaborate He also charged Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy ‘has turned his back on the white people of the nation. 'ITierefore, it is the duty ot the white people of the nation who are opposed to integration to form a solid wall of car out of the garage expertly, which was all right—except that he’d Just backed it In. Tbat’a earl, brother. shelter could prove to be the difference between surviving and not surviving," he said. Nunimaker, who was appointed to his post six months ago after several years as head of the Gogebic County civil defense organization, has paid special attrition to the shelter program. Since the start Df the year, he said, state and local civil defense groups have distributed between 75,000 and 100,000 booklets giving detaUed instructions on how to build shelters. ♦ Veterans groups like the Ameri-| FENCE Mokt Ployfimt o SoftHm* For ■ UfellgM of Frolocflaa PONTIAC FENCE COMPANY OR S-6S95 ‘■TOCa IJ3CAL rSNCN OKALSa" SONOTONE House of Hearing Free Hearioff Tests Ftm roithw al Rmt at Biaimg "Opaa trot, by AppetohMsf 143 Oiddand FEderal 2-1225 rONTIAC, MICH. AIR CONDITIONER SWEET'S RADIO Wki AmiANa RCA Color TV SALES and SERVICI B«x Tmt tv n«B A TmSbMm CONDON'S TV re 4-fiM AwM (M At Jackson, Miss., City Judge James Spencer convicted % “Freedom Riders” on breach ot the peace charges. This brought to 244 the total convicted since the riders century-(dd segregation laws May Attack Fatal to Fire Chief PUINWELL (f»- Long-time [ Plainwell Fire Oiief Charles Anderson, 69, died' Monday after suf-ferbHt a heart attack while directing a crew at a gr^ fire. He had served as chief since 1946. INTERESTED IN A NEW WASHER, DRYER. TV or STEREO? BUY MOW! Ist Payment in October Just East of Tel-Huren Shopping Centar Open Every Night 'til 9 ILECTRIC COMPANY 42S W. Hmtam ». ........................Ill TiyENTY-FOUlt Police Surprise j Harlem Gang AfTMt 23 After Teens Seeking Revenge Beat, Shove New Yorkers • NEW YORK (APt - A hfravily untd gam: of about GO Hariemi Negro traKagera stalked Into: a ndally-mixed, middle-incoinei Bronx neighborhood Monday night loDking for a revenge fight. ne self-at^cd "Harlem Lords" j dUnI find it. Two gun-aieldingj XMe aguad detectives leaped into; thdr path and collared 23. About 35 others lied. * * * As the gang plodded toward the area in which it hoped to find ' a g)^ which had whipped it in aa earlier fight, it shoved and ponuneM citizens who happened to be in the way. One man—John Healey, 20-re-quired two stitches to close a head wound which he received ’ when he was pounded to the pavement by the gang. ALEST %>UrE Tdepbone calls from pedestrians alerted police to the gang's movement, and scores of police in pstrol cars were dispatched. IMtectives Arthur O'Connor and Ronald Reis with guns drawn, approached them from two sides. One kniffr-wMiling youth lunged' at Rela, bowttng him over. But the officer jumped to his feet, his gim still pointed at the group, a* ♦ ♦ At least 35 youths defied wam-i ° liip not to move, and streamed|-off into the night. Minutes later, eight police radio cars' screamed up and the remaining 23. ranging in age from 14 to 19 wm: caught. t * weapons taken from the gang Inetoded U knives, 15 pieces of pipe, five baseball hats, a chain.! a billing book, several cluba andj two garbage can Ude—apparently! for use as AMds. | 1961 larks, Hawks Are All Sold Out SOUTH BEND. Ind. » - The, Studebaker-Pickard Oorp. said | Monday iU entire line of 1961 Larks and Hawks is stdd out. THE PONTIAC gRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1961 \ ^1. maatks ahead of orders beiag i reeHved a year ago,”, oald L. E. Mlakfl. vice ptetodmt of mar . kadng. "All Studebaker Larks and Hawks have been delivered to our < dealers," Minkel said, "and show-1 room shortages have already been reported in several markets." S-P ended production of. its 1961 models June 23. Wants Midnight Snack, Finds Full Refrigerator VENTURA, Calif. (APl-Bmer A. Powers went to his refrigera-i tor for a midnight snack. | He opened the door and there was Boots, the family cat. His tail was standing straight as a flag pole and was frozen stiff. * ♦ * "He wam't really badly hurt," said Powers' wife, Billie. "Today he is aa frisky as ever." How Boots ever gcA into the icgr predicament remains a mystery. 84 years oM... yet he's caBed young In a village in Israel, Samuel Dorenbaum it known as "Young" Dorenbaum! Tle’i 84, and always sundt when he works. ... "It keeps me fit,” be says as he earvea beautiful chessmen of ollvewood. The twilight years of "Young” Dorenbaum are happy and pi^ucthre ... now. For .SO years he was a woodcarver in Rumania, then spent four years in an immigration camp with nothing to do. l>ansfeniKl to Shaar Meai^, a village for fhe aged, Samoot was overjoyed to find a woodvrorking shop there. Said when he aaw it.. .“Now 111 be nil right.” Usefttlneaa for Samuel Doren-banm was made possible by Ameriemu supporting the Overseas Aid Program of tbeir faith. While this case is Jewish-all three faiths-ProtesUnt, Catholic and Jewish—maintain extensive prograau that provide useful work as well aa basic food, «lc*hh»g, shehor, educatioa, farm toola—to the millions in need thiue. They offer the only hope to iitemlly millions. Next time Sue niked to support your ’a Overseu Aid Program, remember the story of “Young” Dorenbaum! Give generously. Test observer records completion of “fidl throttle” acceleration trud as car, piled with Super Shell, kits fiO fttiles per hour. 5390 acceleration tests prove today’s Super Shelly with 9 ingredientSy can give your car A all the power you need for top performance Shell test crews run convoys of cars through thousands of tests. And they turn up some surprising facts. Helpful facts, too, for anyone who wants a smooth-running engine with all the power it was built to deliver. A61 sedan idles quietly on a straightaway near the Shell laboratory at Wood River, Illinois. The unk is filled^ with Super Shell. HM‘TiillThrottk’’Tc8t Suddenly, the driver presses the accelerator against the floos board. The sedan shoots down the toad. When the car’s speed reaches 60 miles an hour, stop watches dock the elapsed time. How long did it udte? Did the car accelerate smoothly? Was there any indication of ahnomud combustion? These are a few of the questions that Shell’s eseperts will ask. To make sure of theis answers, they will turn the sedan around and try the same run again. Wind and weather cgn make a significant difference in, these tests— and Shell engineers want a true average. A fleet of ten Shell test cars gets more than 5390 acceleration tests in about six months. And each car will travel at least 10,000 miles. Why so many tests? There are certain times when you iwwst have top performance. You may be pulling onto a busy highway. Or dimbing a steep hiH Or passing. Those 5390 acceleration tests help certify today’s Super Shdl for top performance when you really need it NOTE: Next time you’re on a flat, straight stretch of deserted road, try the "full throttle” test. If ymir car falters, or if it seems to "run out of engine," give today’s Super Shdl a chance, One of its nine ingredients is new improved TCP. ’ITiis remarkable additive can help restore up to 15 per cent of lost power. Top performance is measured in many ways by Shdl scientists. Here’s one of the ways they tert Super Shell’s mileage ingredient, Platformate: . A half cupful of Super Shell, with Platfc^ate, is carefully fed into the fuel system of a conventional car. The car is surted, accelerated and held at 30 miles per hour until it .runs out of gas. 'Then, the same amount of gasoline without Platformate is poured in —and the test is run-again. In repeated tests. Shell engineers have found that Super Shell takes the car an average of 48 feet farther per hdf cupful. Thai may not souikl like much. But in 100 miles of driving, dut 48 feet turns into,2Ii extra miles. A nice little bonus. SpecU Hot Weather Ncad Shdl scientists also.test Super Shdl for top perfonnance in all kin^ of weather. In summer, for examine, they make sure that Super Sbdl’s Hot Weather Blend fights htt weather stalls. Try a tankful of Super Shdl’s Hot Weather Blend. You can then be sure of top performance-even when h^hways side. ;\ ' Hora ara tha 9 ingradiants in Supar Shall-and what thay do to givo your Oar j^p parformanca #1 is TCP* for power, mileage, and longer plug life. #2 is Pentane mix for fast warm-ups. #3 is anti-knock mix to resist all kinds.of knocks. #4 is Alkylate to control “high-speed knocL” #S is Butane for quick starts. #6 is "cat-cracked” gasoline—for power. #7 is an “anti-icer”—added ip winter. #8 is gum preventive to keep carburetors dean inside. #9 is Platformate for extra mileage. At SheU, 1997 9cientist8 are working to make your car go better and better The Weather H.l. WratlMr BarMa faryait Cluuior of akowera ' THE PONTIAC VOL. 119 NO. 138 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PQX^AC, MICHIGAN, TrESDAV. JULY 18. 19G1—2^ PAGES TyGoes *Home* in Quiet Dignity Warns Khrushchev Humphrey Asks Berlin Offensive by Propaganda Urges Kennedy to Push Election Information to Iron Curtain Lands WASHINGTON (AP) luaa, wroM ine louowmi 1 AtUot* hMplUl alter editor of the Con»t“ -“— •--* pubUiher of the newtpapi^r. McOlll. publUlier and columnUi ol ti toltowlng tribute to Ty Cobb, wb lengthy lllneaa. MoOlU » By RALPH MctilLl. Fubllaher, Tbe Atlanta Conatttutlon ATLANTA UP -» All his life Tyrus Raymond Cobb was in competition with life, but chiefly with himself. ★ ★ ★ For perhaps a dozen illness-plagued years he had been trying to go home again. He could never do it, and it angered him that here was something with which he could not come to grips and have it out. It was not like going out behind tbe grandstand with Billy Kvana, the umpire, or Into a Dallns hotel room with Buck Hersog. Try as he would, he could not find tbe old dream In the hills of North Georgia where he was bom 7f years ago. But he made it at last. He went to that mysterious eternal home on the sunny afternoon of July 17 just about the time the ; players of his day would have been taking the field for hatting practice. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) 1960 Fringe Benefits Cost GM Half Billion Mercury to Soar Midst 80s Again, 1 Rain Possible i Temperatures will soar into the: 80s again Wednesday. The weatherman said there’s a chance of afternoon or evening showers and a high of 86. The mercury, is expected to drop to n low of M tonighl. Morning westerly winds at 1 mile an hour will become 6 to 0 TT ^ lonlght and south to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,!southwest at 8 to if miles tomor-D-Minn., urged the Ken-J'^" nedy administration today’ "The recording in down- to follow up its Berlin notejnegS.^^^hc^iTmiJne^e^ m?d* with a propaganda offens-j'ns at i p.m. was 84. ive on Soviet positions in Easter Europe and the United Nations. Humphrey, the assistant Senate | Democratic leader, said he has •personally urged President Ken-i ^inedy to coordinate allied informa-I jtion services behind a drive forj Tree elections in Iron Curtain! ; countries and against the Soviet j 1 demand for three-way adininistra-| jtion of the United Nations. i Astronaut's Dress Rehearsal ;PonfiactoMove f on 2 Projects Water Contract to Get OK; Urban Wrecking Bids Asked Tonight Humphrey dcHcrilicd Kennedy ; as apparently sympathetic to Us I Ideas but said he had received I* Speaker ; Two moves of importance to j Pontiac are expected today — 1 final sanction of the water pact Sam Ravbum of Texas Mid r'!.'’ launching of the after a White House meeting of Program- Demorm|ic leaders today that | * Common Council was the Beriln slluaUon was not «o K've leady assent to discussed.” ‘ j™** 35-year contract with the De- -I . 1 u since the step I th nk we^ d take the play ha^ already been okayed in prin-; »* hours before he was to begin! Saginaw Street buildings in a see- his medical checkups and don hisf r***" across the (arib- ond contract later, according to 20-pound space suit. ' oean for the past three or four Robert A. Stierer, assistant city: The postponement on the ad- ***.v*-” WASHINfiTON (Vi — Secretary manager and urban renewal coor- vice of a special loam of U S. | * F * f’^mmerac laither H. Hodges diualur. Weather Bureau experts came asj TTie weather hitch developed as; *’"*‘1 today personal hicome ad- In all, some 300 structures arc something of a surprise since allitechnicians and scientists were! '“"‘’•’•I by $.1.3 billion In May to scheduled to be acquired for clear-1 predictions up to 6:30 p.m. had I preparing to resume the count- ■ annual rate of $416.7 ance by the end ol the year. A been optimistic. ^down which would have led to' billion, few have already been knocked I -k -k it it it ------ I f. days in the Oakland County Jail!/^p|fjs Xa||(s Secretive appeared doomed today even be-j How does an astronaut’s family or 30 days if the fines are not! ifora the opening session. Katanga|feel after getting keyed up lor the paid. I MOSCOW (UPI) — The United President Moiw Tshom- big day he's to be shot into space Orchard Lake police apprehended I States and the Soviet Union kept **^’*^* known from Elizabeth-land then finding out therell be (iUATKMAi.6 tV-Poiice today ' arrested an undetermined nuni-! ber of persons officially de-, seribed as revolutionary conspir-; ators after a giinftght in a resl-I dential seetlon ol Guatemala. No The average wage rate for GM employes was 61.S7 an hour. GM said its current average straight time rate, Including cost of living, Is $2.76 an hour. The firm said GM’s hourly rated employes averaged $3.4g an hour, Including fringe benefits, as of last April. TO REVIEW PROGRESS GM also said it wants to review with the UAW the progress of its employes over the past l3 years under the wage formula pioneered by the auto firm and the Union. GM thus planned to make its first response to a long series ot propi^s submitted by the IJAW since the start, June 28,® of bargaining on a new contract. “We will make a few proposals of our own as to changes in the' national agreemnt.” said Earl R. Bramblett, GM’s director of labor relations, following a discussion yesterday on demands at the plant level. The present three-year contract, which expires Aug. 31, carries a wagb formula dating back to the 1948 agreement. It provideB tor an annual wage increase of 2% per cent, or 6 cents an hour, based on productivity and ties wages with the Gbvmunent’s COM of living index. There has been speculation that GM, Ford and Chrysler would Uke to scrap the formula in current bargaining talks, particularly the roM-of-living escalator. But the Union says the companies, have given no indication of such a tao^. the men after watching them cutting too dose to wafer skiers on the lake yesterday afternoon. Market Slide Slows LONDON (Jt — The severe slide in stock exchange prices slowed today and there were modest gains in some sections. The market was extremely sensitive, however, and business was on a small scale. • Washington. In th(> white brick ranch-type house at II .Slon.vbrook Lane, Newi port News. Va., Betty Moore Gris-America’s Echo 1 satellite will ^is wife, was noncommittal declared over-all winner of the annual Chirago-to-Mackinar Island Vacht Rare. their di.sarmament talks under ^iOe Monday that he would not a delay? wraps today but there was no in- ®**'’®'^-dication they were doing any bet-' ter in Moscow than they had in CrKcs h. ■Y.., h... 2 Million Latins Strike I reckon that’s (he best they can! wcalher and! BUENOS AIRES (UPD—Two nesday at 2:01 a m. 89 degreesj"®" Postponea. j ^ .. jmillion workers went on strike ANN arbor a new $325,-.above the horizon, and at 4:06 But her plans remained on- Like Betty Grissom, the father;today in a show of strength against two U. S. Army reser\’e center for a m. 66 degrees above the hori- changed. She and sons Scott, il, and his wife Cecile will be inithe government, but the massive Washtenaw County will be dedi- zon. moving nor(hea.si on both and Mark, 7. will be glued to the jfront of the TV set when blast-off!walkout failed to still the life of rated here Oct, 7. oeca.sions. television sc( when the (line ,(ime comes. the city. _ _ rtiiicriva s rA-no i saieiiiie win ,, ' ■ . To Dedicate New Center be visible in the north .sky Wed-i^°"*^^"'^*** in Mitchell, Ind.. Dennis; i short, graying rail-, ^aup of CHicago. today roadman, sighed softly when he heard of the iwstponemenl. “Well, that just means another: day to go through." he c.xclaimcd.' “There is no reasoa for a crisis over Berlin. If one develops it to became the Soviet Itnion Is aMempfliq: to Invade the basic rights of others.” ■Die notes were delivered In Moscow Monday and made public simultaneously today in Washington, London and Paris. The one here was given out at the White House as a reply to a memorandum which Soviet Premier Khrushchev handed President Kennedy at their Vienna conference June 4. THREAT CONCEALED All the world will plainly see," the United States asserted, “that misuse of such words as ‘peace’ and ‘freedom’ cannot conceal a threat to raise tension to the point of danger and suppress the freedom of those who now enjoy It.” The warning was coupled with an offer to try to settle the crisis (Continued on Page 2. Cbl. 9) 8 in District Bid to Help Alter Constitution I Editor's Noto; dld«t«« oppeortns l_ dor's primary ballot I lor Oakland County's i storirs are brief afcetcbes of bt... publican and Democratic candl dates. Further articles yrlll be rui prior to the Sept. 12 scueral elec tlon. Because there's no oppositloi (or the county's senatorial coorcoi By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. When Pontiac voters go to the ■onstitutiona] convention primary polls next Tuesday, they will find Mx Democratic and two Republican cahdkiates seeking to represait the 2nd State Representative CMs-trict (Pontiac). As in similar contests throughout le state, there has been little public interest expressed important vote. George A. (Joogasian, lawyer. Leslie H. Hudson, for______ ______ representative ' mary lover may choose bet w e Dick M. Kirby, union busines.s L. King, attorney. futurej T. Boice Purdy, marketing staff campaign for a «*al In the (all lAve., must outdraw .Smith, who! Ing the eonipany as a buyer a supervisor for utility firm, convention. holp^ reorganize his party's or-j purchasing su|>ervlKor. state Those pulling the Republican pi i- His work as campaign director Esnization at his former residence Robert C. Smith, teacher. to believe Mm. Gladys Neldrett. state edu ! King, si. resigned bis post as • Democratic city “is about as ripe catkMial leader. ; staff assistont for the county ® Republican victory. Carl O’Brien, former employe! GOP committee to devote lull >rman> . BERUN — Western diplomats Mid today that If aiwther lOO OOO-150.00# workers ftee East Germany, the Osmmunists will have to shut dwn their fartorles. have “ " ■ ““ ■ *“* ! qiMwted aaylam la West Berlin , betneea midnialil 8atnrday and . short * Thl* mined In nearly IT.M the total of refn Went Bertla. Refugee officials said East Geri Western officials say the Ei mans fled to the West last w«*- German regime already end at a rate of mote than one|l«1.000 skilled workers fled »:niit Oer a mmutc because they fear their' The officials said psyx'ho^.cally "J" West Berlin escape route may be the East Germans are on the verge "“■> J"? »• shut off by a Soviet peace treaty of another revolt against commu- aU-time record for one day 1— - ------------— r is 3.120 refugees on March 2. 1953. * * * Lower Saxony Station officials in Hanover said Monday that special Western allied commercial planes are being chartered to flyl out the refugees jamming West; Berlin. Says He Caused'37 Blast Whicti Killed 296 in School The refgees are ridin OKLAHOMA cm\ Okla. _A fLyear-old ex-convict said today: Mmight s I Soviet and Communist East <^r-; man armed forces have set up a Police Lt. I G Purser, who ar- military ring around Berlin, rested Benson Monday nighf for : sources close to the Bonn Defense questioning about a robbery, said Ministry said today. “^■‘he is convinced. Timnsm Jim W-hitley. Rusk County. Tex . ktel school supenntendem. checked old; The mformanU declared the for recoids and found that Benson had Communists have about 67JOO la b«m enrolled as a pupU in March troops and more than 1.200 tanks Hhi ;i»l. three years before the ex-;^««oned in a girdle 30 mUea out to a plosion. ! > Whitley and Sheriff Pete Gibson said they would go to the London school, built alter the explosion to investigate further. V . .r-'ir-' The Day in Birminghan Medical Village Hearing Slatefi in Beverly Hills BIRMINGHAM - A public hearing on a proposed 1500,000 medical village in Beverly Hills will be held Aug. 7. At that time ollicials of Medical Village, Inc., headed by Dr. John M. Burger of 1775 E. 14-Mile RohdL-will present their proposal for land use at the comer of Beverly and Soud^eld roads. Hm oocporaHon Is WsUng a lonliig chasge of one aeetloa of the property, a IfT-acre parcel, from paridag to efUoe-prolesaloB- Phms call tor file project to have from eight to 10 one-story buildings, separated (ly malls, gardens and! patios. ' Because the medical village 1 rompletely nonretall, village coun-1' cUmen have voted to bypass the g , ^ usual procedure of sending the pro-> Waterford GrOUp HeorS bids will determine whether any of the Improvements will be deleted from the program. WUliam C. AUee has been elected chairman of the Birmingham . Recreation Board, auoceeding Mrs. William Jackson. Named vice chairman of the board was E. Ross Hanlon. Marcia Hughes wap appointed clerk and Patricia I. Husemann wu named deputy clerk. Chloride Plan !>;0ffered Board SEARCH FOR \1CT1MS-Firemen and other rescue workers use a huge crane as they continue their search for at least three persons believed buried under debris after a section of Philadelphia row houses collapsed Monday night. AF PlMtafit The houses dropped into an underground creek used as a massive sewer. One small child was found alive more than three hours after she uas buried. Ballot Applications fo^ Con-Con lagging side the city. So far the Commuahts h>ve given M olgiM of wapptag the ring shut aroOiid the city. Bat M kelps add psycholsgtcal pres-sore la the eorrent SovI t dip- The East Germans also are building antiaircraft rocket bases in two rings around Beriin, one 25 miles and the other SO miles from the city center, the sources Some of the bases, containing Soviet rockets, were reported already completed and manned by East German soldiers. Four were dug out alive, and practically unhurt. One of them, a 6-year-old girl, lay under the tons of rubble for nearly three ut h Wukxeitfd Conner * Township and city clerks report Benson Mid he w«elc< number of applications for absentee balkrts for the coostitu-before tne e^i^io^ie ng conventkm primary is lag- ^^*au*7****^ ntmi to An was to run »» Saturday's 2 p m. deadline d™** nearer. i d^the^K^I ^^nA^ me itf The city of Pontiac, with 37.000j Homes Co//ap$e;ToCanvassU.S. 3 People Missing Militam «itv • . ^ icv r^ii. , posal to the village planners. The public hearing on the lone change request is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the village offices, Birmingham architect Minoru Yamasaki probably will be selected to {dan a multimillioiHlailar center for goverpmenf, arts, edu-; cation and recreation in Regina, 'Sask., authorities there said today. I Final approval of Yamasaki's ap^ .pointment is expected, they said. I within two weeks, i The architect has offices at 1205 IE- Maple Road. PHn.AnFl.PHTA UB—Four row >laay houni allrr the collapse houses built over an antiquated! wMeh rocked the neighborlHMd, sewer line collapsed Monday night j firemen searched the rains lor burying seven persons in the! the other three. T I to Find 2 Trapped;, in Flooded Cave Seek Con-Con Bid r. i (Continued From Page One) ORLEA.NS. Ind. (I’PIl-Rescue crews regrouped their forces ^ T' gas {upes. I didn’t really intend to kill anybody He Mid his sister and a cousin i BimitTglum reported BS and were killed : Bloomfield Hills S5. • I am ready to go to Ihe elec-j expected a rash of ap flic chair.” he Mid. ' ■>„ 'J™";: “ undewOPPd sol know how serioasly to take offices*blocked their Hudson tHMING BACK the story. liflocllve t'apt. Jack ^ p m trapped cave ex-j Hudson, who operates a hard- MuJUnex said; ‘’U could ht»« for registered v-oters wish- ware store on Baldwin avenue. ■ ■ * * ♦ making 0 a flooded pas-!“^ The three missing are Wayne Daniels. 9: Jesse Robinson, 70, | who is blind; and his wile. 55. Birmingham City Manager L.R. JFK Calls Meetings ■ . • r t e- rg meniber advisory committee of the Joint Chiefs of Staff;South Oakland water Authority, nnd Wuritv Council i Manager Robert Ken- ana oecuniy v.ouncii ^^e oi>- erating committee of the South I ThP th«* missinv srs Wavne Oakland Incinerator Authority. WASHINGTON - President Ken- ----- nedy called a meeting of the Joint I Bids on »n estimated $58,000 road n w w i Chiefs of Staff for today and the, improwment and bridge painting Rescued were Waynes lather. |N^tonal Security Cot^il ^ ^erly Hills wlU be Ernest Daniels. 35. and his other j Wednesday to canvaM the nation s| taken AUg. 3. chlltoj K»n«n. 11. Chj^rylj-«»ry i;Mhe S.. * ^ me RusseU^62.^ ^ ^ n,ujtary | estimated by village officials. The It was lltUe Cheryl who lay bur- »‘“dy. Kennedy ^ed the Penta-| led so long amid the shattered 8®” another look at mill-' n UI’ plaster and splinterod. twisted;h«T pouer. particularly of a con-HuleS OH FUDllC wood that had been her home in!^«>‘'ona* ‘YP®. "»re than a'Week, ^ West Philadelphia. Firemen, us-jas® WOlkeT S POy QS ing a giant crane, tore away the' The WTilte House Mid the re- i^ii* ’ f debris, uncovering the child, ai^j view should be finished by late lUOn-COI2 L/IlICiai LANSING (F>—A public employe, who is a delegate to the state *!stitutional convention must give up ing absentee ballots. Nation's Weather 4_[)aY Sjerra Blaze Fair and Mild, but Some Rain The state troopers and ‘ spelunk-ers” (cave explorers), who gathered at the mouth of the uncharted , limestone cave, clung to hope they Blots Wood lor 6,000!:s'Vor„ j jdeep within the bowels Bv The Assoclsted Press FRASaSCO plonng below a Southern Indiana in the warm and humid air which i® '^e Kings Canyon covered most of the eastern halfif'PiPPd by more fire fighters - comoanions escaned of the nation. lyestcrday. including 550 Indians Light rain or showers during flow® in from Arizona and New the night hit the central plateau,'Mexico. sections of the Rockies, the north- ^ ern and central Plains and from' The big ground force was being ' southern Louisiana east, norlh-laided by 11 tanker planes oper-^ eastward through the Gulf Coast ating from Hammer Field in Fres- [ and Atlantic Coast states. .Stormy no as the total acreage left wealht'r poundi-d a section of'ruins climbed to 17,000. Little Falls, in the Mohawkj It was the worst of nearly 1,( Xon-Con Aides "Named by GOP comeback Valley of New York state. Strong Pacific forest fires which have! winds disrupted {xjwer and tele- burned at least 100,000 acres phone service and toppled Uees California and another 15,0 and chimneys, .acres in Oregon. since he was defeated in 1958 in a bid for Congress. The Sh-year-old former Waterford Township clerk and city su-pervlMF prepped for his congres-slonsi try fur lour yesrs us Ihe city’s representsttve In the Houac of Representatives. Visiting factory gates and hopeful of upsetting Hudson's political rebirth is the man who replaced Hudson, of 361 Gailogly Road, Rep. Arthur J. Law, another city mer-diant. laiw, however. Is not running. He's pushing hard for Uoogastan, his political protege and son-in-law. I The 25-yearold son of a Pontiac ! grocery owner hopes to be admitted to practice law in Pontiac alter Ihe takes his bar examination in September. The June graduate of the North-jwestem University law schod plans to tackle another assignment in the words of one rescuer, find- this week, ing her miraculously alive. [ The actions followed Soviet de-l FIRST QUES'OON niands over Berlin and Russia's. Cheryl's first question was, “Did decision to halt a reduction of its^ , w u„ politics my brother get out?” militaiy manpower and increasesalary if he d«s iwt Committee to A S S i S t > September - the general elec-A n wi * campaign against the winner Area Party Nominees of the King^mith runoff. With Issues, Research minor bruises. The Daniels and Robinson homes, brick and two storigs tall, way at 11:15 p.m., fi^inglng the occupants into the cellars and dumping furniture and heaps of rubble on top of them. The elder Danieli was watching televtstoa He mM he heard a funny noise, started upstaini At the same time the loreiiart of an adjoining house fell away, but Jesse Steward, 61, who liv^ there, got out safely, along with two children and two visitors. ★ A A At 4:30 a.m., another neighboring house collapsed. Imperiling firemen and rescue crews. But by then the ocupants of that house had been evacuated together with No t(H>ics of discussion were nounced for the S p.m. session with the Joint Chiefs of Staff a session ai^uoced belatedly. But the military' review obviously was coming in or attention. And Presidential Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said, “I understand the study is one of the things to be discssed Wednesday’ afternoon when Kennedy brings the National Security Council to the White House. LpMAY PRAISESS B7* On Capitol Hill, Gen. Curtis Le-May, singing the praises of the supersonic B70 bomber, told Con- Proposal for Streets Near Dodge Park No. 4 ing t the dust of car* going to and from . Dodge Park No. 4, a group of area residents last night proposed a new type of dust-layitig operation to the Waterford Towi^ip Board. AAA Headed by Howard Mudge, of 1321 Grinnell St., who is the president of the Cass Lake Highlands subdivision association, the repre-' sentatives presented a plan in which all the property cwners are assessed for chloride treatment. The township’s policy is to pay one-third of the cost of the treatment. After a prolonged diM-usNlon on Ihe operation of a privately owned dump, the board deckled to laHie a peimit with reatrlr-tlons to Norman Wilson, 7286 Pontiac lAke Roud, to have a large hole on hla property filled. Wilson indicated that the hole would be filled only with scrap from the Baldwin Rubber Co. Ten inches of soil would cover the scrap daily. AAA Board metnbers touched lightly on the proposed charter township issue which voters will decide at the Sept. 12 election. A full report with questions and answers will be made at next week’s board nfeeting, when financial consultant Louis Schimmel and the planning commission meet with the Township Board at 9 p.m. AAA Mrs. Dorothy Olson, township treasurer, was appointed to the Recreation Board as a representative of the Township Board. Adams held today. A ' A ___________ ' J® pay anything In the form of j gratuity or some form of reward," iWest Tells Russians Adams said in an opinion asked by. ,, Chester Wozniak. D-Ham- || ^,|| Jjgy ,p An elected official who is a dele-1 gate may collect his salary even (Continued From Page One) by negotiation on the principle of if the work of his office is done entirely by an assistant and employes during the convention, Adams said. Such public officials cannot waive their Mlary rights during the convention, he said. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND tTHNITV - Partly eloudy and Chanrt* of aftemunn Nhoweni. High 84. Fair tonight lov row partly rloudy, chance of aflcniooi 8 to 12 miles ch *S ■ I After the six Republican stitutional convention nominees iare chosen next Tuesday, they I will have a 40-member county-wide committee upon which to draw for issues and research material. County GOP Chairman Arthur G. Elliott Jr. has named American Motors Corp. official Malcolm R. Lovell of Bloomfield Township chairman of the special commit- Members from Ihe Pontiac area are Raymond L. King, in»5 Dudley Ave., and Robert C. Smith. 14 Williams St., both con ■ con candidates; Charles Twker. 197 l^iUier M.; Charles W. Harris, AT7 Moore St.; Coun-citj'‘»i «! *> Clerk Reglater Hanlel T. M 7«! ^“T***y *4* troquols Mrs. Harold FI. Macllnn-|f aid, 411 Flliubeth Ijike Hoad; and Alg(‘r f]pnnrr, 8 I’tlca Road. Elliott said the committee will •T «•! n 51 II attempt to pinpoint major con-con u Tt issues for delegates and develop education and information programs to keep voters abreast of convention developments. Other committee members in-I elude Dr. James C. Covert, Royal Oak superintendent of schools: Thomas B. Adams, president of I Campbell Ewald Co. and member ■of the Wayne State University j Board of Governors: Di B. Varner, I chancellor of MSUO, David R. Calhoun. Mayor of Huntington Woods; and Raymon L. Baker. R-Berkley. same desire Is Mrs. NeMrett, 64, of 82 Mariva who believes her years of work with the national and Michigan congresses of Parents and Teachers, the Michigan Youth Commlssloa jsnd League of Wom-Voters qualifies her as a delegate. Mrs. Neldrett, who'll receive an| award at the State Fair in Sep-i tember for her education leadership, pre{>ared a report last year for the White Hoilse conference. It was on the achievements, trends and problems oif education in Mich-iRan. KIRBY HOSPITAL TRUSTEE A 4.Vyear-old agent for the Detroit, Wayne, Macomb and Oakland Counties Building and Construction Trades Council, Kirby, of 91 N. Edith St., is a three-year member of the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees. He lost in a recount in I960 fo city commission. Campaigning for Cun-Con hi the April election, Kirby waa a member of a roualy coordinat- gress he feels bomber production I should not be cut off now. |Trailer Gets Loose, The new Air Force chief of surf jRaHIS IfltO Police Cof gave his personal vl^s un^r questioning by the Senate Ito- ^ enM Appropriafions subcommlt- ^ *‘‘‘ land smashed into a state police Kenney's budget calls for ,no patrol car parked alongside Eliza-. . ... . new bomber funds in the current Ibeth Lake Road in Waterford about 600 other persons living although bomber de- Township. liveries will continue well into 1962.; AAA LeMay {«it his personal opinion { John M. Sheck, 26, of 3170'Frem-on the line, in opposition to thejbes St., Drayton Plain#, was tick-President’s while the administra-|eted by the trooper, not in his car tion worked on revised defense but who mw the accident, for driv-plans of its own. jing with a defective trailer hitch. the Mme block. All these homes were built over 91-year-old sewer line running from the west edge of the city in ilgHg course to the Schuylkill River. self-determination for the German people. Similarly) the British and French notes left the door open for negotiation, AAA France declared that the Soviet Union cannot unilaterally alter the present status of Berlin, including the occupation of West Berlin by the United States, Britain and France. Specifically France rejected the Communist contention that Berlin is properly part of the territory of Communit East Germany. The British note rejected the Soviet claim that conditions in Beriin could be changed by the signing of a peace treaty between the Soviet Union and East (Germany, as Soviet Premier Khrushchev threatens to do. Ty Goes *Home* in Quiet Dignity At PhsUtM and thunderstorms are fore-and Central Plains and the Upper may occur ovcf the south-the Northern and Central Plains Find Long-Lost Qharter ASPEN. Colo. (Ft- The long search is over for Aspen’s city charter. Cbuncilmen found It and other documents, miHing about 80. years. In the courthouse at Gunnison. Aspen was in Gunnison county, instead of Pitkin, when it was incorporated In H81. I O’Brien, 31, of 477 E. Montcalm St., is the treasurer of the Pontiac Democratic Club and served as a county delegate to late conventions. The candidate it a former ploye of the purchasing administrs-tum department of the Ford Trac-tof It Implement Division in Birmingham. His education wt Wayne State University and Henry Ford Community College. Out after the uomiaalioa, a inaUag Ms first attempt at politics. Is Burdy, <2, of 90S Lladen M. He is a marketing staff supervisor for Michigan Bell Telephone Co. He was graduated from the University of Michigan and holds a law degree from, the Detroit College of Law. At one time he was a newspaper reporter. (Continued From Page One) END t)OME8 PEACETULLY He died in a coma-like sleep, and the end came peacefully and with quiet dignity. There was no torture of pain, no gasping effort to breathe. The greatest baseball player and competitor sports has ever known went home as quietly as If his father had come and token Mm In his arms and carried Mm away. Others are writing about records. They will endure. When he retired after the 1928 season he had a share in, ar owned outright, 90 major league records. •k -k -k Others could do some things well. Cobb did everything required by baseball in superlative fashion. Go to the books for them. He was the game's one fiery genius. It Is the man who Intereots us most. The fires which had flamed in Mm for nsont of his life had been slowly banked in the years of rMirement. Doctors marveled at him. He would not quit. He had cancer of the prostate and diabetes. His physicians would keep him in the hospital for a few weeks and greatly improve his condition. THEN HE'D IJEAVE And then, without notice, he would put on his clothes and leave. He would go out and try to find whatever it was he sought from life and then illness would drive him back. I4uit December the twin diseases began to gain. Now and then he would come buck in something of a diabetic coma. Not too many weeka before he dfod he returned to Ms distreused doetors In really bad oondltloa. He brought with him more than a mUlion dollars wralh of negotiable bonds. These he placed In a table by his bed. He then placed a pistol on top of them, undressed and delivered himself into the care of the .nurses and the medics. *T}',” saM Dr. Hagh Wood, Mo chief phyMclan, ladicsl-Ing the hoods, "tbrae thiags ;nUght bf kaocked on the floor, ni just put them la the hoopitol safe.** "All right." Mid the sick man, fighting to hold onto con- i in the Jace of the diabetic trauma, “Maybe that would be best.’’ WORSHIPPED FATHER We will never know what drove him. He worshipped his father, who had been school sup«Hntendent and state senator. The father had been killed at ’home when mistaken for a burglar. Young Ty was away at the time, This loss always haunted him. A few .vtMirs ago he asked a few persons to lunch at an Atlanta hotel to announce his educational foundation. The tall, gra,Ting man dabbed at his e^es with a napkin, pushing up Ms^ rimless glasses. He talked of his mountain forebears whq. In bygone years, never had much chance at education. He wanted his foundation to help needy boys and glris. But there waa a typical Cobb touch. They had to have toughed it out one year on their own to prove th^ were eligible. k k k Tears slid down his' face. “The Cobbs cry easy,” he said, somewhat apologetically. And this was a strange thing, because Cobb and tears had never been associated. If tMs lonely and tadtarn man, who eonM be 00 gentle and compasMonate, and yet who conld battle with Mo Hats ar at baseball with a ferocity wMeh made men afraid, might aot have wept many ttaneo la the secret hoars of Bight. Cobb and Robert W. Woodruff, with a cwnpetitive spirit to match, were friends when both were clawing their way up. It was advice from Woodruff which early made Cobb financially independent. It was Woodruff, too, who mellowed his latter years. COULDN'T ESCAPE SHELL People liked Cobb. He kn^ it. But be could not escape from his shell save on rare, wonderful occasioDs. ■A' k~k Now, at last, weary arid old, be has gone home. And people will remerifiber him for his gentleness, his charity and the recortis in the book. ^llWMAN Here are some things to r member when slimming'. ★ ★ ★ 1. If you have a lot of weight to lose, say 15 or 20 pounds or more, break it up in your own mind into small parts. Don’t think. Oh, I will never do it! I have so I many pounds to lose." Aim at many pounds in a short time, and forget the rest until you get ,to it. This is why my Nine-Day Reducing Diet Is so helpful to women. If you have only 5 to !• pounds to lose you can do It In nine days. If you have much more to lose It gives you an encouraging, flying start. 2. Steam baths do not ^uce you. They will decrease your ht, but this is a temporary water loss, not a loss of fat. ’There is no way to avoid calorie counting if you' want to lose pounds. ★ ★ * Alcohol (whisky — gin) is burned up rapidly and is not stored fat but is is fattening because it supplies tnergy which would oth- FLY TODAY See . . . Traveling by air saves time ... so does using AAA’s Complete TRAVEL BUREAU Serviee Also Headquarters for: O Foreign Documents and Road Guides O Auto Shipments, rentals and purchase O Guided and Independent Foreign Tours and Cruises 76 Williams Street FE 5-4151 Fine I pholstering by TOWN HOUSE 2045 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 8-4198 SUMMER KNITTING CLASSES THE KNiniNG NEEDLE 452 W. Hi’ion FE 5-1330 Never has the glowing suntanned look enjoyed such widespread popularity as in recent years. Time for sun basking is included in the daily schedules of even the busiest homemakers^ Above, household tasks completed. PratUc Pr«H rh*U Mrs. Thomas Zielinski of Garland .4 venue. Sylvan Lake, suns and keeps a watchful eye on her three daughters (from left) Carrie, 3; Wendy, I; and Vicki, 2. Tan Right and Avoid Red Face By MAROAKET BROWN Striking suntanned legion these days. Whether the golden glow comes 11 Jypp proximity to water, from a jaunt to Florida, backyard | which reflects 50 per cent of the sunmng session or lotion bottle, iguns rgyg. the effect is the same — the tawny, lasses are taigets for countless! Girls with sensitive skin, tor admiring gazes. example, on the first time The much-touted bronzed he- ad\1si-d man image appears to be “fading” into the shadows as the golden girls step into their place The cosmetic company has pre-.and after 3. there is practically girls are P**^ " tanning which lists recommended expo- no tanning action. If you’re vacation bound, naturally the location you select will make a difference in the sun’ intensity. Old Sol is far stronger water or snow than in grassy areas and is much more intense at high altitudes. * ■* So if a trip to the Rockies is on your summer schedule, stay safe in the sun; and we’ll see you In few weeks done to a golden in the sun. The suntan fad apparently bv-; ^ ~ gan among coeds who frequently ^ i i i S'rbSSharon Smith Honored lions in warmer dimes. Now teen-agers, working gals and homemakers are sun worship-! August bride-elect Sharon Lee Mrs. Verlyn Dawson. Mrs. Roy pers, too. Familiar sight on a Smith opened shower gifts Satur-, Kemp, Mrs. Philip O’tiuin, Mrs. " ---- ---------------day evening at the.home of her| Xerpenning and Mrs. James lionle. drive along any residential street this summer is the young mother sunning while kiddies frolic in a i nearby wading pool. |BE CAREFIT. A few words of caution about suntanning, however: Both health I and beauty authorities warn than itoo deep a tan can cause the skin to be leathery and unattractive. Strive for the topaz tone. It’s most fashionable and flattering. A well-known tanning lotion manufacturer who, incidentally, wisely suggests that young women try muacle toning exercises while basking, reports that most people fall into three skin type classes whleh Influence their tanning ability. Many blondes and brunettes have "normal ” skin which tansj rapidly but also sunburns readily. Sensitive complexions, freckled I faces and redheads, of course. I burn easily and tan slowly. ”rhen | there Is the "resistant skin'’ which; tans quickly and sunburns slowly Mrs. Virgil Hamilton of Mad-j Avenue, following an evening of lawn games. . Also present were Mrs. Deloy Mre. Layton W. Smith of BtelbyjBrown of Yale. Mrs. Frank Poole Street attended her daughter’s'of Birmingham, Mrs. Gary Kipp shower with Mrs. Robert G. Fer-jof Rochester, Mrs. Milo Brown of guson of Dover Road, mother of City. Mrs. Donald Ferruson Robert Fei^son, bridegroom-elect. 10* Milford and Mrs. Harry Welch ^ ^ Wayne, Places were also marked for ] . Marlene Smith, Mildred Welch, | Bowl 'Em Over One reason why so many are bowling enthusiasts is thdt bowling fashions are practically irresistible! Culottes with matching lops, one-piece knee-ticklers, blouse and skirt combinations — which come in luscious colors and fabrics — are all easy to launder after every strenuous bowling ses- Aim at Semigoalg IFirst Lose Pounds Gradually Onedialf of the d^ically m I people In the United Statee are under age 45. erwiae have been supplied by food, of sugar has about 20 calories and niua more food la stored as fat. a baked potato about 90. SKlPPOrO’S OUT 4. Many studies have shown that the moat successful reducers divide their allowable calories between three meals a day. They do not skip one. dses, breathe OUT-^hea you bead over'aad IN at you raise your trunk. This placet less stralu on the heart. 6. Men require more calories, even wrben reducing, than women do because of their greater stature. If a woman is on a thougand-a-day calorie count, the man In the family can usually reduce just as successfully on 15 or 1600 daily. So, if you are usuig my Nine-Day Diet, lor instance, and your husband wants to reduce also, add 500 qr 600 calories to his food intake. Lucky him! NO kidding 7. Don’t kid yourself that you are reducing just . because you leave sugar out of your coffee and do not eat potatoes. A teaspoonful fee, you can afford the i tato It a splendid item on the reducing diet It you do not dunk It In butter or fry It. Try utlnc salt and pepper and a bit of garlic salt or parsley with a dot ol butter. Usually when a woman says, ",t] cannot understand why I do not lose weight. I haven’t had any sug-| ar in my coffee or a potato in weeks", she is eating a lot of things she should not eat. She is either fooling herself or does not' understand calorie counting. I * * * ' If you missed my nine-day Diet and would like to have it, send! ten cents and stamped, self-ad-1 dressed envelope with your request! lor the booklet. Address Josephine; Lowman in care of The Pontiac i VERDA’S BEAUn SHOP "PtmHHwiiti That Sirtisfy” COMPLCTE BEAUTY SERVKE Vsrds Stuart, Owaar (Csmsr Avon A|S. Buildli PHONI H 2-0961 Alwayt GOOD COFFEE RIKER rOUNTRIN 37 W. Huron Our New Location is 70 UnTETTE ST. Notional Life^ Accident Insurance Co. 338-0451 2 Showers Given for Bri(de-Elect Marsha Ann Stapp. bride-elect of Alfred W. Harwood, opened gifts of linen and bathroom accessories Sunday afternoon at a tea in the home of Mrs. New-land Begole of Milan. Guests, were Mrs. William Arm-ktrong Jr.. Mrs. Robert Armstrong, Mrs. James Armstrong and the senior Mrs. William Armstrong and Mrs. John Black, all ledo, Ohk). -Great-aunts of the bridegroom-elect, Emma and Katherine Hert-ler of Ann Arbor and Bertha and Mary Hertler of Saline among the 18 present. College friends of Miss Stapp brought kitchen'gifts to a tea Saturday afternoon given by Mrs. Allan Rentschler of Saline. The guest list included Carol Amoe, Port Huron; Mrs. Gerald VanDyke, Detroit: Judy Mieras, Midland; Jane Ann Russell and Marianne Lynch of Ann Arbor and Jeanette Qickle. ★ ★ Present at both affairs Mrs. Mell D. Stapp of Inverness Road, mother of the bride-elect, and her fiance’s mother Mrs. Webb S. Harwood, also his grandmother Mrs. William Harwood, both of Saline. I Bridal Shower I Held in Honor j of Corel Duffie [ Mrs. Raymond Eklwards of Cassj^ Lake Road honored Carol Duffle ^ at a bridal shower Saturday eve- ^ ning. Doraia Edwards was cohostess. Guests included the bride-elect’s mother Mrs. Qyde Duffle and Mrs. Wayne Lenger, mother of the prospective bridegroom. Gifts were opened from Mrs. Harold Hoffman, Mrs. Charles Yockey, Mrs. Harold Francisco, Virginia Brandon, Mrs. Ted Mack-ell, Mrs. Maurice Shelton. Mrs. Alfred Langervin and Mrs. John Godsell. Also attending were Mrs. Mildred Duffle and daughter Diane; Mrs. Clifford LaFaber, Mrs. Lewis Meacham, Rohima Curtis, Mrs. M. D. Thaxton and Mrs. William Hempton. A Sept. 2 wedding date has been named by Miss Duffie and Gary Lenger, whose parents reside on Seward Street. {^Custom Reupholstering^ Elliott's Furniture Co. of Waterford has the necessary experience to do a fine job of rebuilding and reupholstering your furniture. Over 37 years in the business is your guarantee of quality. new machine is now able to* manufacture butter without chum-; ing and is said to be highly satis-1 factory., | PERMANENTS a j „ Complete with Halrant and Set Jk /I Wo Appoiainenf Wecessary FK 5-80M ^throUl LOUIS SSS” i 18 West Huron—2nd Fldor Next to Buckner Finance 4 JULY SALE Summer Cottons 5 to 15 Half a lemon on a shelf of the; Dark-haired and olive skinned folk! refrigerator will help to absorb [fall into the latter category. odors. JULY SALE f REPEAT ;ciA DOLLAR SALE of Fabrics DRAPERY FABRICS—1200 yar 1 the eight-hour wnrkiiig day In favor of one of six hours. n’s heat wave week Monday with the nights In the streets or parks ini DISCOUNT PIKES APPLIANCES-TV TIMM'S ELECTRIC AWIO DISAPPOINTMENT WHEN TfU TOUR! Burglor Likes to Report All About His Business GRAND RAPIDS (U>I) —Po-Mee psndwvd today the qUMtioa •Mhe barglar who Nkea to bread- le’s a fellow kaowa as Mark », Bight before teal, wafted MarqaUtee Rrewa. SS, be bad Queen, Prince Entertain FOUND EXCLM»«VKLY IN THK NEW 1901 MOBIL TRAVEL GUIDE TO THE QRCAT LAKES AREA This new 888-page travel ency- can decide at a glance where to dopedia gives you eyfwttMM stay and.eat—and what to es-information about more than pact when you get there. 2,500 holds, motels, restaurants and reaorte. Hrn an hard-to-get facta about priosa, quality, service, cuisine, atmosphere, when open, EVERYTHING! LONDON in — Queen Elizabeth :and Prince Philip were hosts at, U farewell lunchiron in Buddng-| ham Palace Monday for Mrs. j Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, retiriiqc Indian high commissioner in Brit- ain. During the past few months every establishment listed was personally INSPECTED by a team of travel experts and RATED from betkr thm emrage Taft ahare to gh—HM to are and dtl The Guide pinpdnts thousands of fasdnatuig places to visit-gives facts about landmarks, local hiatory, hunting, fishing, sute and national parks —and indudes lisu of camping, boating, hiking and scenic sites. Now on sale for only $1 at most Mobil stations. Drive in for your copy todayl 150 €. 42nd St.. New York 17. N. V. INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE INSURANCE Thatcher, Patterson & Wernet 711 Community Notional Bonk Bldg. ' By BEN PHLFAiAR Dodge is 178,000 back of I960 and « Automotive Writer jPootiac is 148,000 behind. The DETROIT - The auto industry other* ^ »>y lesser margins, eili build its three miUionth car TRUCKS LAO, TOO of the calendar year this week, two| ^.^e gaps probably will widen in months behind the production pace j^e next lew weeks, since the 1961 of 1960. „ models will be closed out slightly; i Ust year the manufacturers vrere the 1960s. passed the three million mark on May 19. So far, four cant are running ahead of last j-ear’s figures, f'orvair ban been ahead for quite a spell and' now has a 44.0M Of the It nttjor track produc-era oBly International Is ahead of tost year’s pace. Total track , output Is down 145,DM units so ! far this year from last. The downward trend also is evident in Canada although not sol Comet has a 20,000 lead, al-drastically. All five United States j though last year it didn’t go into manufacturers also build in Can-production until mid - February, ada now. and their total output at Uncoln is almost 5,000 ahead of a the end of last week trailed 1960i year ago, and last week Falcon, by about 21,000 cars. i pulled 3,000 ahead of I960; the first! jn the United States last week! time it has surpassed last year. 127,153 passenger cars and 23,126; The standard Chevrolet is lag- trucks were built, a sharp in-' ging 322.000 behind last year, crease from the previous week. I which We Answer Your Phone! 24 Hours A Day No Recordings — No Gadgets AUCAIIS ANSWERED By ExperiMced SfcrttariAS For Less Than 4« per hour TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE, INC. ISW.Lawrenct FE 4-2541 4 holiday. 3 shortened by the July State Foreign Car Sales Up 33 Per Cent in June LANSING Uh-Sales of foreign cars in Michigan rose 33 per cent in June over the previous month. Secretary of State James M. Hare reported Monday. Foreign car registrations showed German Volkswagens leading with 851. up 246 from the May figuTO. The French Renault Tnore than doubled to 410, from 189 the previous month. The English Ford; totaled 110 in June compared with 86 for May. Michigan Marshal Out ; WASHINGTON » - President i Kennedy Monday accepted the I resignation Harry Jennings as U.S. Marshal for the Western District Of Michigan, effective July '15. KYOUR Hom ms Hove BIG BEAR Build You . GIANT ROOM ADDITION Roa^ Only Exterior Completely Finished with Windows arid Ddors For os LitHe os No Monoy Down UiiHi Sopt. *l(Fi ■ ^ Maafk USE IT FOR • Bedroom • Family Room , • Kitchon • Utility Room • Dining Room • Extro Storogo FKVISHED Exterior ond Interior Completed with Heot, Electric, Drywoll^ Flwrjng For OS Little os . No Monty Down / No Fdymonts ' Until Sopt. rywoii, nooring *241 FE 3-7833 BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. 92 WEST HURON ST. “If we can catch up to the United States in per capita production of meat, butter and milk we will fire a powerful torpedo into the foundation of CAPITALISM” Mr. Khrushchev knows that American agricultural efficiency is the cornerstone of our standard of living. He knows, too, that in the struggle between freedom and communism, food is ultimately more impwtant than missiles. In spite of intensive efforts, however, critical food shortages still exist in Iron Curtain Countries; and Khrushchev himself admits that the Soviets lag far behind the United States in agricultural efficiency. American farmers represent only 9% of our population, yet they produce abundant food for all of us. In Russia, on the other hand, 45% of the population must work the land in order to grow barely enough food for the country’s needs. What’s more, thanks to farm efficiency, our food bill takea only H of our income. The average Russian worker must spend li his income just to feed his family. The difference in remaining income—what remains to be spent after food, clothing and shelter—makes the difference between our standahl of living and Russia’s. Amwican farmeri are few in number but th^ contribution ia great: to our standard of living and to our prestige in the eyes of the world. MICHIGAN MILK PRODUCERS II S S 0 C I A T I 0 N r. THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY. JULY 18, 1961 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. 'Instant' Resetve Force Army Goal, Says Official CAMP GRAYLING (A A. Rdbem. a apecial atsiaUnt to the Mcretary of the Army, laya the Army wants a ready reserve lorpe that can be dej^oyed in matter of weeks. * *■ w Robens, special assistant tor reserve forces and ROTC affairs, is on an inspection tour of Camp Grayling, where Michigan’s 46th Division is undergoing its annual two-week sununer training. He said the Anny waaU at least two Nattoaal flaard divl-stoos ready for aetioa within three weeks of being moUHsed. ‘"nie day of deliberate mobilization is past," Robens said yesterday. "The accent today is on readiness on mobilization day, as shortly thereafter as bunuuily Robens noted that in World War II it took one to two years to train a guard division for overseas duty. During the* Korean War, in which eight guard divisions AREA NEWS TwaMen Die After Accident Victims of Van Dyke Crash Were SK Clair Shores Residents WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP Two St. Qair Shores men whose car overturned Sunday on Van Dyke just north of 2S-Mile Road died yesterday from injuries suffered in the accident. ★ ★ * Romeo state police said the driver of the car, James M. Herron, 36, died at 7:40 a.m. at Community Hospital near Almont. Parish Bazaar at Orion Set for Two Days ORION TOWNSHIP - The two-day annual bazaar sponsored by the guilds of St. Joseph parish will be held Friday, 4 to 9 p.m., and Saturday, 2 to 7 p.m. A fish try will be served Friday from 4 to 6 p.m. The guild presidents who are chairmen of the affall- are Mrs. Arthur Keefer, St. Gabriel Guild; Mrs. Robert Green, Immaculate Heart of Mary; Mrs. Rouke DeBoer, St. Jude; and Mrs. Vernon Shea, St. Theresa. The church is at 705 N. Lapeer Road. to be In serious condition when they were rushed to Community Hospitol following the accident. A witness told police she saw their car apiRxmching behind her vehicle at about 7:30 p.m. Sunday. She said the car swerved off Van Dyke and onto the shoulder of the road. Officers said Herron pulled oul in a wide arc to pass the witness' car, then attempted to pull back on the road and skidded off the pavement to the right side. ★ ★ Herron’s car, less than a month old, hit a culvert, flipped in the air and snapped a utility pole into three pieces. It also uprooted six jack-pine trees before coming to rest upside down. ★ ♦ A- The vehicle was totally demolished. Police estimated it traveled 60 to 70 feet in the air before crasMng to the ground on its top. Hie two men were on their way to a cottage at E3k Lake, Lapeer County. 2 Avon Area Men Get Prison Time for Check Deals Jackson Prison terms of to 2 years were meted out yesterday to two Avon Township men who were part of a bogus check passing ring. AAA Sentenced by Circuit Judge Stanton G. Dondero were Burton Hodgson, 24, of 3185 Eastwood Road, and Billy J. Short, 33, ol 3100 Crooks Road. They pleaded guilty June tS higher chai^. They admitted Issuing checks without haling aa Bcoonot. Two other men involved in the ring e^ier were sentenced to Jackson Priam. AAA Short was on parole alter be-Ing sentenced two years Ago to 1% to 10 years for being the fifth persm involved in dm attempted holdup of the Father A Son Market, 856 Oakland Ave. AAicijorettes in School for Baton Twirling Twenty-five members at the Land O'Lakes Majorettes Corps left last night for a week-long baton twirling scbod in MUwau-kee, Wto. During their stay at the Milwaukee Clinic the gMs will attend classes eight hours a day. The majorettes, directed by R^ Hess, wete accompanic(] by grotto of parents. served, nine months were- needed to train them. The services reorganizatim plan . itipoaed by President Kennedy calls for bw National Guard division, at full strength M 15,000 men eat^b and with the latest equipment, ready to be deployed within three weeks. WANn S MVUiONg The President wants another two divisions ready for action after five weeks, and an additional eight divisions ready in eight weeks from mobilization. There are 27 National Guard divisions and 19 Army Reserve divisions supporting the nathxi’i standing defense force. "Every dlvtslon wiU be tbor-m«hly evaluated" during the made te the Anny by November as to which wiU be the top priority dhlskMia, he added. In a national emergency, divisions would be called up on a basis of priority, with the higher-rated oes going first. Roben s^ he was “terribly impressed by the spirit and quiet efficiency" of the Michigan guacds-men as they moved into the field yesterday for lour days of day and night training. “The degree of professionalism made me mighty proud of the National Guard," a^ed Robens, colonel in the Army Reserve. Slate Bid for Independent Bloomfield Twp. Library By JIM LONG WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - A'bid to make the township library an independent operation will be made next Tuesday when voters here are asked to approve a millage increase. AAA The five-member library board, headed by.A. Finley France, explains that unless a one-mill tax hike proposal is received favorably by citizens drastic cuts M already reduced standards would be neces-saty. The tax increase, which would cost taxpayers $1.84 for each $1,000 of assessed valuation, would provide approximately $50,000 for the operation of the recently opened $100,000 facility on Orchard Road. The lundii are required, ac- tbe building open at least « |,it necessary to tighten the hours a week and to provide ad- ' minlstrative and technical aid, including a qualified head Ubrar- strings of the library board. The township now Is appeaHng a county tax alloeatian of 1.46 Currently, the library is operating on a 24-hour week and the library board is maintaining and directing all activities at the new building. NOT ADEQUATE The library service now offered ilPnot adequate to meet the standards established by the Michigan State Board of Libraries and consequently the library is in danger of losing 2.000 hooka borrowed from the state as -well as state aid. A a” A The standards were met for a short time in the last fiscal year and the library received more than $800 in state aid but the financial SB Its ahare of the total u ooauty mils. The township is in a financial strait as a result ol meeting its required payments to the county for its sl\are of the Farmington Interceptor Sewer. GROUNDLESS FEARS Supervisor John C. Rehard said today, however, that the fears indicated by some library board n»m-bers that the library is in Jeopardy of closing its if the millage proposal is defeated are groundless. cording to the board, to keep | condition of the township has made Area Police Make Mercy Errand Civilian Defense Worker Now at Parents' Bedside Bambi the Deer Loves Being Babied Boat Club Sued by Sylvan Lake Group Reportedly Had Used Residential Area for Storage of Trailers Protests that the Sjdvan Lake Qty Council failed to enforce a zoning ordinance which was allegedly being vkdated by the Oakland County Boat Gub bore fruit yesterday. The city sued the private club |n Grcuit Court to keep its boat trailers out of a lot zoned i residential. At the same time and in the same court. Judge William J. Bfeer refused to continue a temporary restraining order prohibiting the club, of 2336 Ferndale Ave., from using the residential im for storage of the boat trallera. The Jodge «Hdcred a suit which had been started by a Sylvan lake oonple placed on the calendar for Immediate trial, “because this Is not a new problem and both sides are entitled to have their day in court." A motion made by the club to dismiss the lawsuit started by Bernard and Gloria Barach, 2370 Pontiac Drive, was denied ^by Judge Beer. He speculated that their suit might be heard next month. The new suit signed by Gty Manager Earie D. Knapp, filed by Tom T. Reese, attorney for Sylvan Lake, asked the court for a temporary and permanent injimction to stop club members from using the same lot in question for storing trailers and cars. They say the lot Is toned res-idebtial, an area in which only a home can be bnilt, according to the city toning ordinance. Judge Beer set a show cause hearing for July 31 when he’ll decide whether an injunction should be issued. He would not grant a temporaiy order. At a lively council meeting last week, residents demanded the city enforce its own zoning laws. Song Wfiter Divorced LOS ANGELES (APl-Flwence Gilbert divorced song writer Ray Gilbert Monday saying he showed her no affection and continually stayed out late without explain-nm why. She won 1300 monthly alimony. Hiey married in I' New Yorker Head Quits new YORK (ft - Stephen B. BaUford has announced'his resignation as president of the 'New Ymlie* maguine, saying "Fm mt mad at anyone . . . Fm 1." Botsford is 41. DEAR BABY DEER-Bambi. a l-month-oM baby deer dearly loves his friends Christina Masini and Anna Chipukites, especially at mealtime. He was rescued by Seth Monroe who lives near the Proud Lake Recreation Area, Little Fawn Escaped Pack of Dogs when a pack of wild dogs drove the fawn into a wire fence. Bambi will spend his first year in a safe enclosure at the park until he is old enough lo know where he’s going. LAPEER — A mercy errand by ( police from Romeo, Center Line and Detroit allowed a civilian defense worker stationed in Germany to be at the bedside of his seriously 111 parents yesterday. William A. Shaw Jr., S2„ Iran leal condition this morning at Lapeer County General Hospital. Her husband also is seriously ill with pneumonia. By REBA HEINTZEL.MAN Bambi, a beautiful baby deer, is being treated more like a “dear” baby than an animal in a soft, straw-laden enclosure at the Proud Lake Recreation Area near MH-ford. However, this was not always so. One month ago, the BtiUness ol the Monroe fence line and were Monroe consulted A1 Masini, the snapping at a tiny baby deer en-snarled in the wire fencing. AAA The fawn’s nose was cut and hie legs bleeding. ’The deer had outrun the dogs but its endurance was geme. Alter Monroe got rid o( the dogs. barUs«( of a pack of wUd dogs. StartiMl neighbors for miles around heard the noise and one —Seth Monroe climbed out of ’The dogs had come to a halt at conservation park manager, and the two decided that the tiny at the mercy of the dogs if loose, so it was taken to the park. AAA Masini and his park rangers literally worked day and night in an effort to save Bambi — a name he qp:-?lully disentangled the half- selected by the Masini children, alive IJlhr and tenderly carried it: The veterinarian kept close inside. A veterinarian was called watch on the deer's daily progress the wounds dressed. A broken hind leg was set and after a mild sedative, the baby soon fell asleep on a soft pillow. AAA Because the law prohibits per-»ns from keeping wild animals. Michigan Farms Call Trees a Major Crop LA4ISING (UPI)-Forestry has been a major occupation since Michigan’s earliest history but came back into its own only in recent years. Hie major boost for trees as a farm crop began 20 years ago when the national tree farm system was established. Michigan, « I the Fife Causes Damages Exceeding $300,000 HOLLAND (API - Officials at Conrad. Inc., today totaled losses expected to exceed $300,000 from a fire which ruined nearly two-thirds of the Space Age Test Materials manufacturing plant. known f the world. Joined the' tree farm movement In 1»49 to become the Mth state to partlelpate In the program. Eighteen tree farmers were among the initial Michigan members of the system, which was introduced in the state by the Michigan Forest Industries Information (Committee in cooperation with the Department of Agriculture. Last month Michigan counted 790 certified tree farms totaling 1, jl24 acres. This placed Michigan cause of the fire, which broke eighth in the nation in the num-last night in the engineering |ber of farms and 14th in acreage, drafting section of the one-! a A A it lay In its safe, well-protected new home. Soon the fawn was drinking milk (it prefers skimmed to homogenized) out of a 32-ounce pop bottle. The veterinarian donated his services as did the milkmifn, the milk. AAA From a mere 5 pounds when it was rescued until now, Bambi has continued ,to gain weight and at present tips the scales at a good solid 20 pounds. Only once has the little deer tried to escape. When it was about 3 weeks old, someone left the gate to the yard open and Bambi got out and strolled down to a nearby swamp. This w.-as where the searching park rangers found the fawn — mired down in muck up to his neck. Presumably, Bambi was embarraared that since then the deer has been content to “stay put. ” When Bambi is 1 year old it will he allowed to once again roam the wide open spaces. However, Bambi will be released I another park because the romantic Masini says he knows of a “cute little doe over in the Highland Recreation Area — just right for, Bambi." to the Lapeer County General Hospital by a relay ol police cars. Shaw’s mother Mrs. Verne Shaw, 52, of 260 Borland Rd., Imlay City, suffered a heart attack Thursday night. He obtained an emergency leave and flew from Nuretaberg, Germany, to Detroit only to find that he would lose valuable time in Detroit waiting for a bus to Lapeer. Shaw called Detroll police. A shuttle service was set up and he was transported to Van Dyke and 8-Mlle Road by a Detroit aquad car. He waa picked np at tte city limits by a car from the Center Line state poUoe post and rushed to UBca. Romeo state police took him on the last leg of hit journey from Utica to Lapeer. Officers at the Romeo post said the trip from Detroit to Lapeer, a distance of some 75 miles, was covered in slightly over two hours. A A ,A Mrs. Shaw was reported Ih criti- story cement Mock structure nearby Holland Townahip, was not imme^ately determined. One Hblland Township fireman waa treated for a head injury and smoke inhalation. Food Stamps Being Used at 72,400 a Day DETROIT (API — A daily average of 72,400 in federal food stamps has poured into.food store cash registers since .the stamp program began in Detroit July 7. ITie pilot program, under way in seven other areas of the coun-tiy, reftlaces the direct distribu-tton (rf surplus foods'by the government. DaaM J. Ryan, head of the eUy weHare departmeut, said aboM $SMW of ate daily total has heeu speal by families aa- This week 103 fanners will be added to the list of Michigan participants in the program when the annual tree farm d^ication is held Thursday at Carney in the Upper Peninsula. Marking the dedirsHon and In honor of the 20th annlversnry of the movement. Gov. John B-Kwainson proclaimed this week as “Tree Farm Week" In Mleh-igan. “While we have an adequate supply M wood fiber for today': needs, the real challenge will be in the future when our population is expected to reach 275 millioni.. _ . said A. F. Koller. chair-r™^ man of Midiigan Forest Industrie*, current sponsor of the system in the state. Under the Utter two programs, recipients pay far some cS the stamps and receive a government bonus of additional stamps. They receive an avenge of 610 in stamps for 16 cash, Ryan said. The program 'smoothly, Ryan said. Sewage Plant Open on St. Clair River SARNIA. Ont: (B-This city** new $3.8 million sewage treatment plant began operating yesterday, diverting raw sewage Which was dumped into the St. Oair River in the past. Hie /oplant will give primary treatment to sewage from about half the city. Hie entire city will be served within three years. Some sewage from city areas not reached by the new network sewers now is disposed "The per capita use of paper and paperboard, already 438 poaods anmiaUy. wW coattime to rise," Holler said. "We are now ON the threshold of a great new dMnleai pradaofs wfll be man-n wood . . . (and) The tree farm program, Koller said, is designed primarily to give public recognttkn to woodot owners who have demonstrated an out-abtUty to grow repeated tree cropa and encourage others to manage their timber. To Head Hiram Walker DETROIT (B—Jack Mustek of Detroit has been elected president of Hiram Walker, Inc., American marketing division of the international distilling firm. A native of Chicago, Mustek started with the company as a salesman, then was made vice president and eral sales manager. Oil Industry Is Leader HOUSTON, Tex. (UPl)-The oil industry leads Ihe nation in c^spi-tal investment—164,000 per employe compared with abwt $15,• 000 for industry in general, according to Humble Oil A Refining Cb. ’ Ordered to Take Child to Court Jackson Pair Refusing to Give Up Hanna, 7, to the Father JACKSON (UPI) - A 7-year-old immigrant child is expected to be returned to her father today after a writ of habeas corpus was issued against the child’s aunt and unde, a Jackson couple, who have refused to relinquish her. The little girl is Hanna Herbs! man. She came to this country in 1956 with her father, Max Herbst-man and her brother Ludwig, pow 13. Their immigration was sponsored by Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Erwin Shiftan of Jacksoh, the pair who refused to turn Hanna over to her father. Hanna was left behind with the Shlffans by her father when he went to New York looking tor work. In New York, Herbstman remarried and found work. He then returned to Jackson for Hanna. But the Shiftans refused to relinquish the child. Herbstman then sought the help of the courts. The Michigan Supreme Court ordered that Hanna be returned father but the Shiftans refused to comply. AAA Herbstman returned to Jackson Monday with a Detroit attorney, Hioihas L. Poindexter, who immediately asked for an order from Circuit Court Judge John Simpson demanding Hanna’s return to her father. AAA The order was read to the Shif-tana at their home here but again they refused to comply. Mrs. Shiftan said Hanna cried when told that she might be leaving her Jackson home. The writ of habeas corput Milford Principal Is Named to Board MILFORD — Gerald Rasmussen, former Milford High School principal, has been named to a three-member state board to compile and correlate a statistical study of Michigan’s public school system from kindergarten through the 12th grade. AAA Rasmussen, who is a graduate student at Michigan State University. was appointed by a joint legislative committee for the statistical analysis. Hte other two members, Jack Ryder of Cassopolis and Bob Hel-lenga of Ravenna, are both former school administrators. Picnic Planned by Collectors of Antique Cars SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Antique-car hobbyists from all parts of the state will converge on Hcdiday Park here Saturday for the annual picnic sponsored by Auto Enthusiasts International. AAA The picnic will be held from 10 .m. to 6 p.m. Dinner is scheduled for 1 p.m., followed by special events at 2 p.m. Highlight of the day wUI be a elasslc car rodeo. The park is located on 22-Mile Road, about miles west of Van Dyke (M53). Refreshments will be furnished and no registration fee charged to drivers ol special-interest cars. SfalftaBs to appear In tho Judge’s ehambers at • ajii. today with the Chiu. % Poindexter said if the Shiftans did not appear a warrant for their arrest probaMy would be the next step in the case. Shfftan is the maternal uncle of Hanna. His sister (Hanna’s mother) died in chUdUrtb when Hanna was bom seven years ago Its hardly conceivable that the tewnshlp board would let the H-hrary shnt down operation*.’* "I imagine the township board would share proportionately with the library whatever it does receive from the tax allocation board," the supervisor added. AAA “We’ll just have to dig down deep for funds, but even then the board could never meet the budget asked this year by the library." " A A A The budget presented this year by the libraty board was more than double the 196(V6l budget of $25,000. The funds sM ased not only to opernte the new building, which Since the library’s budget ran out in April the township has provided $2,000 monthly for the operation of the service building. Library board members said that taxpayers are now paying one mill tor the construction of library but next year is the last lor the three-year building levy. „ AAA (^estions regarding the millage proposal will be answered by library board members Thursday at ah open house at the library, 5080 Orchard Lake Road, between 7 and 10 p.m. Park Visitors Ahead in June Huron-Clinton Director Notes Kensington Gain, Says Others Up, Too During June, attendance increased at the three major parks of the Huron-ainton Metropolitan Authority, Kenneth L. Hallenbeck, director, has announced. AAA Kensington Metropolitan Park, covering 4,500 acres near Milford, reported June attendance at 305,-000 in 1961 compared to 290,000 in 1960. Lower H n r o n Metropolitan Park, covering npproxinntely Decorating to Be Topic at Newcomers' Meeting R(XUESTER - The monthly meeting of the Newcomers Oub of Rochester, formerly the Planter Club, will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday at Woodward Memorial Library, AAA * Guest speaker will be James Reynolds of Pixley’s Home Furnishings Store. He will talk on home decorating. question-and-answer period will follow. SHARON LEE MeWETHY Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Mc-Wethy of 2275 Richwood St., Pontiac Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Sharon Lee to William E. son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer B. Clark of 2216 Richwood St, Pontiac Township. No wedding date River n June attendance nt S80,088 in IMl compared to 232,000 in Metropolitan Beach, a 550-acre park along Lake St. Clair near Mount Clemens, reported 207,000 vi.sitors in June 1961 compared to >9,000 in 1960. A A, A ■ Other parks of the authority include Hudson Mills Metropc^tan Park, covering 600 acres northwest of Ann Arbor; Dexter-Huron Metropolitan Park and Delhi Metropolitan Park, all three along the Huron River northwest of Ann Arbor; and Marshbank Metropolitan Park, approximately 6 miles west of Pmtiac with entrance on Hiller Road near tha junction of Commerce Road. AAA Hallenbeck said that while no attendance records are kept on the number of persons visiting the smaller authority paries, more persons probably used all parks this June because of warm weather. Frances Muir Duffield Engaged to Earl Clark AVON TOWNSHIP - The eti-gagement of Frances Muir Duf- ‘ to Richard Earl dark is unced by her parents Mr. and Mrs. Alexander M. Duffield ol 6081 Winkler Mill Road. AAA The prospective bridegroom is the son ,(Of Reid Clark of Toledo and the late Mrs. daric. AAA An Aug. 19 wedding date has been set. Collision Kills Flint AVsn FLINT (AP) - Tommy C 69. of Flint was killed yesterday in a coUiskn between a tnMk and hie car at a Flito inteiaectfoa. The truck driver, Wayne OwcM. 31, of Flint was not haUL ^ ■ „ , I ; ■ '■■■■■ . V THE PONTlAt: PRESS. TUESDAY, JULV 18, 1001 >■( Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths' OtlMIE Bvm Service for Irimie Bur*. ». of 365 Mariborough will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Sim km Church. 920 W. Seven Mile Rd. Detroit. Burial will be in Whitej Surviving are four daughters. Chapel Mennorial Cemetery’. Mrs. Hilda Phillips of Grand Rap-Mr. Burz' body is at the William kfo. Mrs. Zora Webb of South Bend. NVMtEYOl mTECTiM yom mmc? No matter how you try to protect your home, you can never be completely safe from the many Ims-arde that ----- aace policy yon can now BOW liability, many other perils. See ns about oar modem Homeowners pol-i«y today. H. W. Hittenlocher AgtBCT 311 Ribr BuiMhif FI 4-1551 Vaau Funeral Home, 4375 N. Woodward Ave.. Royal Oak. Proprietor of the Burz Bar for 15 years, Mr. Burt\i a member at the St. Simion Church. ! Besides his wife SanfSre. he Icav'es four daughters. Mrs. Ann ;Gilrace of Highland Park. Mrs. Leontina Fekett of Youngstown, - 3 Ohio, Mrs. Minerva Popp of Royal ' Oak and Mrs. Irene Metes of Pontiac; three sons Irimie Jr. and Nick, both of Pontiac, and U. Ool. Alexander Burz; and 13 grandchildren. . ' Mr. Burz died Saturday at St. Joseph Merry Hospital after a long illness. DONALD M. FAR.MER ROCHESTER - Service and burial of former Rochester resident Donald M. Farmer, 43, was to be held in Burbank, Calif., today. Mr. Fanner of North Hollywood, CalU., an electrician at Lockheed Aircraft, was electrocuted while at work Friday. He is survived by his wife, Mari Pat; a daughter. Dana Jean; a son. Donn; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Farmer of Rochester; a sister, Mrs. Leola Oak of Pontiac; and a brother. Howard of Rochester. ! HC.NRV HAOM i SOUTH LYON - Service Henry Hagni, 94. of 505 E. Uke was to be held 2 p.m. today at the Phillips Funeral Home with burial in the South Lyon Cemetery. Mr. Hagni died Saturday following an illness of six week& PROTECT YOUR FCM That boat ond occessories represent a big investment. Ashore or afloat you should be protected against fire ond.theft, domoge to other boots due to collision and other hazards! Liability insurance due to per-sonol injury from booting accidents should be included. Marine insurance is well worth the low cost. Coll us. HEMPSTEAD Ind., Mrs. FSsie Huffman of Ann Arbor and Mabel Hagni of Detroit; two sons, Walter of Howell and Alton of Grand Rapids; 14 grandchildren and S8 gr^t-grandchU-Iren. MRS. CHARLES HAVERSHAW SOUTH LYON - Service foi Mrs. Charles (NelUe E.) Haver-Shaw, 84. of 125 Detroit St., will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Phillips Funeral Home. Burial will be in the South Lyon Oentetery. Mrs. Havershaw died Sunday at the home of a daughter in Ann Arbor following a heart atUck. A life-long resident of the area, she had owned and operated the Havershaw Hoapital in South Lyon tor 90 years, discontinuing its operation following the death of her husband In 1949. She ia survived by three daughters Mrs. Mildred KimbaU of Pontiac, Mrs. Bessie Sweet of South Lyon and Mrs. Blanche Carey of Ann Arbor; a son Nile of Chicago; a brother .Wilbur Nugent of South Lyon; 11 grandchildren, 26 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandson. WILUA.M L. HERSHA TROY — Service for former area's^ resident WUliam L. Hersha, 87. of 1048 Haynes St., Birmingham, will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Price Funeral Home. Graveside service will be at p.m. Thursday at Boyne City Cemetery. Mr. Hersha died yesterday after a long illness. He was member of the Macabee Lodge in Bus^esiM Rezohing OK Expected ioT Third Tradlei Park Good Demand Ups Grain Future Prices CHICAGO lit — A good general demand boosted grain futures prices all along the line In initial dealings on the Board of Trade. July soybeans, long under fairly heavy pressure of lu]uidation, led the advance with g^ns running to more than three centa during the first several minutes. Wheat and rye moved up a cent or more in spots, com and oats fractions. Brokers said the strength in soybeans started with heavy buying by a commission firm and that it had attracted active short covering after -the gain in July reached about two cents. Crain Pricss MARKETS The following are top prices covering sates of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. QuoUUons are- furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of TtiesdaF. Detroit Produce raurr CiwrriM. av««t, ll qt.. —V................... CafnoU,' rtd, IS qt. RMpbcniM. tq.pt.... jptrawbtnlu. rtacp. It qt. i«t. rtd ....................... S.M ----xs«, cuilr. bs...................1.M Cbbbai*. iprout, bu.................. ISO CabbM*. aUiMlbrd vbiKty ............ tJt Boyne City and a former Delta I County Deputy SheriK. ; Surviving are three sons, Lyle of Troy, Frank of Ellsworth and EIra of Detroit; a daughter, Mrs. Ona Sinunons of Birmingham; 27 grandchildren; 26 great-grandchildren; and two great-great-grandchildren. MARTIN T. KAROiER UNION LAKE— Service for Martin T. Karcher, 82. of 6515 lAlden Drive, will be at 2 p.m. to- 1 morrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. A second service is scheduled at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Thompson-vilie Congregational Church, Thompsonville, followed by burial Jibban. iCoUblU, Dr. Joseph W. Moore, president of the Pontiac chapter of the Na- Eic»roU.“K!‘™..V.','.\V.15 tional Association for the Advance-BoSqi*'do...........' " ment of Colored People (NAACP), db». will talk about last week’s national jujSU; pu. convention at 7 p.m, Sunday JJJ* ..... fellowship hall at Trinity Baptist IRomSIiM. . i ts Church. Dr. Moore, pastor of the church, said the program has been called for all members the Pontiac chapter and guests. Dr. Moore was one of approximately J,500 delegates at the convention In Philadelphia. He said he would discuss such convention topics as'lntegration and the freedom riders movement. FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIES ond ACCURATE QUPTATIONS CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO. FE 2-9117 818 Community Notional Bonk Bldg. Thompsonville Lodge, F&AM, died yesterday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital after an illness of several weeks. He is survived by a son Martin H. of Union Lake, two sisters and two grandchildren. MRS. AIXEN E. KENAGA HOLLY — Service for Mrs. Allen E. (Cora) Kenaga, 91, of 2Q3 Sherman St., will, be at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Dryer Ftmeral Home flowed by burial in Lakeside Cemetery. Mrs. Kroaga, a lifetime resident of this area, was a member of the Holly Presbyterian (3iurch the Pamona Grange. She died Sunday at Pontiac General Hospital after a short illness. Surviving are two stepdaughters Mrs. Albert Barnett of Keego Harbor and Mrs. Harold Jumisco of Femdale; six grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. Give Securities ...the Gift of Golden Opportunity Birthday, anniversary, graduation, weddirig, whatever the occasion .,. A gift of oeeuritiea will be long remembered becauM eecuritieu can provide lasting value... offer future growth potential... reflect care and consideration on the part of the giver. A gift of $ecuritie$ can provide youngsters with an awareness of how stocks and bonds contribute to economic growth and industrial ei^ansion, while providing a foundation for a eecure financial future. A gift of aecurities may be the start of a second income for relatives, friends, or employees. A gift of BecuritieB is always a welcosne addition to the portfolio of any inveator. WaUing, Lerdien’s registered representatives will be happy to assist you with the eelection of gift eecuritiee, small or large. Drop in to our nearest office at your earliest convenience. Or, if you prefer, you can {ffione ua at any time for complete information on the wide range of eecuritiee available. •TOR IN OR RHOMB US SOON Wading, Lerchen & Co.* D*c.........l.blH Mm ..............Ti cueui Mar.........lty»- OUL May ........J.NH July ........... 1 nW Kbbll Com— S.P...........1.30^'LMki l.UVi Dac.........1.14Si( U7h Mar. luu.! l.Jl Mav i:5ii I'S^leartiay, curly, doi'. beb*; 'P........• “ Potatoci. Maw, bb-lb........ RadUhn, rtd doa. bclu. To Talk Sunday About NAACP Big Convention gSlrlhr; 1 Turolpa, bu. Women Hospitalized Following Collision Two women were reported in fair condition at William Bcau-m«it Hospital today, following a two-car collision at the Orchard Lake and 13-Mile Roads intersection in Farmington Township yesterday. The driver of one of the cars, Anne Marie Winter. 28, of 25894 Dumas Court, Farmington, has a head concussion and one of I passengers, Donna Hubner, 31, Wichita, Kan., received cuts and bruises on her head. The Winter car wan traveling west on IS-Mlle Road when it collided with a northbound vehicle driven by Frederick Gardner, 19, of Mill Oxford St., Market Leans to Downside Unless strong public opposition developa at the tost minute, city intoaioneri tonight are expected to approve resoning to permit a third trailer park within the city Poultry and Eggs lalUy live poultry: d Iryeri 1-4 1 DSTBCIT ZOOS DSTROIT. July 17-(AFl—Prtoei ^ per down by firit recelrert dellvertd to Detroit, looie In JO down (umeri grade (Includini White—Grade A jumbo 40V^-M: extra large 37-40; Urge Mt.-44: medium 31-30: >maU 33-36. large 3 a 31tb- Mi imxK9 mrai 1 33-34. Cbecka 34-37. Livestock DETBOrr LIVESTOCK DETROIT (API—Cattle 4000—Moderately active; opentno lalee iUufhicr I » centa lower. weIgbU IIM ...______up 30-00 ccnU Uwer; early aalea beUrra ateady; cowa and bulla ........ to high cbolca 1000- ....... ateera 33.00-34 00: moatly ebolee 000-1300 lb. 33.30-33.00: good 31.00-13.70; aundard 10.00-1.00; cbolca helftra 000-1000 lb. 33.00-33.30; |ood and cholee 10.00-31.70: uUllty and aUndard 17.00-30 00; Uttuty cowa lOAO-lO.OO; oannara and rattera 13 00-10.00 Hoga. 700. Steqdy; number 1 an 100-330 lb. 10.20-11.00; number 1, 3 3 100-340 lb. 17.00-11.00; 2 and 3 370 lb. 16.70-17.10: mixed number 1 3 and 300-400 lb. aowa U.70-14.70. and 3 400-000 lb. 13.70-1330; rial . 100. Staady; prime realera 33-30: good and cbolca 30-33. Standard 33-17 —” and Uttuty 11-33. Sheep. OOt. Mot enough dono to I quotationa. Both Gardner and his passenger, Thomas Cashman of 2365 Doleman Drive, West Bloomfield Township, were treated at the hospital for minor injuries and releai^. Also treated and released tvere two other passenger’s in MisS Winter’s car, Mrs. Alice Jerore, 55, of Livonia and her 21-year-* Hon . . .137 M Mtu MAM 77. 31* Monebn Ch ... 62 '* • • « ! Moat Word .. 37. • 3 Slot Wheel ... 13. ’**' fr . R4 Bell * Hovel Betb Steel . Boclns Air . Borden ... Borg Wbm . Brut My ... Murrbjr Cp .. Mbll dorp ... Mbt BUc . Met Cbsb R . Mbt Dblry ... Mbt Oype . Cbmpb Soup, 110 Cbbe A Ob . . M.1 8S!f ' 5 PfKr S i Pheipe d ' ! I, J Pblleo ........ Jj’, Phlll Pet .. q : ' *3 m Ref Pbp . " n sebrt Roeb . Utidsfwood' ——Olivetti TYPIWRITIRS — ILICTRIC, STANDARD AND PORTABLES ADDING MACHINES AND CALCULATORS AND OFFICE SUPPLIES Czclniir* Anfoorifod Oaotor JONES TYPEWRITER Seles and Service loss W. Haron St. Greet Lbkei C-------------- ------ Bell A Beerlnq ..... ______J Refininq .......... Olln Mbtbleeon Cbemlcbl . —- ihet Co. ■ ■* Preep Sul Pnieh Tre “-Bbk .. .. . tonem l3 6.0enXlM . , South Pbc . SouRt .... I SF^'s^b^d: 31.4 ll.S!OenMUU ... 13 11.4 Oen Motors . .46 4 46.6 Q Tel A Tel . ropbet C< ‘ ~ — nockvcll b>»uu>iu ............—— fToledo UUon Co.............. 31.7 23 OVER THE COtnuTEB 8TOCHS ■rbe tollowlnf ouotbtloni do not net _ etsbrUy represent bctubl trensbctloni a but are Intended bi b fuld- *- **" ■" proxlmbt trbdytnq rant o Olllette..... Ooebcl Br .. Ooodrleb ..; Goodyear ... Grab Paige . GtAAP ... GtNoRy ... ! AmerlcbD-Marlettb Cb. I Detroit Mobile Homei I Slectronicx Capital .. ; Eleetronlce International . 36.3 ; Pioneer Plnanee Shatterproof Glr — Taylor Pibre ............ Tra nx. Oai Pipe Line ____ Vernon Ginger Ale ........ Wlnklemans Wolverine Shoe Wyandotte Chemical MCTCAL ITMD8 BAKER ond HANSEN IiiBiuict Conpuy INSURANCE -ALL FORMS HOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY IS 13.34 ___ 17.W 1136 isto UM 16.46 30.06 Af filiated Fund ..... Atf mated Fund ........ Chemical Fund ......... I Commonvealth Stock .. Keystone Inconu K-1 ... Keyttone Growth K-t .. Inveitort Growth _____Inveiton Truft . : Putnam Growth ........ TelevUlon Blactronlee . ! Wellington Equity .. . I Wellington Fund ...... *Momlnal Quoutton>. The spadefoot toad of North I America breeds ip temliorary pools I created by heavy rains. The tiny I toad eggs may hatch in a day and half. PhoM PE 4-1868 , 714 COMMUmn NATIONAL lANK ILD6. PONTUC ll* 60.4 ‘3.1 " j TwenTTCen ]l3 11.3 133 I swift A Co ... ]g'4 Tcnn Gai — I ftrs; 114 Tektron . . .. 5;i ■nmkRBear ADTSaTISEMKMT FOR BID8 _._led bldi will be received tar the underalgncd at the VilUaie RaU, VUIafe Wolverine Lake, 1P7 Oleniaiy Road. lUed Lake, Mich., uaUl July 34. U61, 6;06 p.m., U.T.. at which place and ir they wU be publicly opened and read, for oortbln labor to be perform^ on the new propoced TUlaae RalL The following iklUed tradex vtlf bx tnyolved: HxxUng, Plumbing. Palntlu, Carpentry, Electric, Maionry, Hot Rooflni. Pro-poial mnat cover the enttre labor necea-•ary tor the complete eonxtruetlon ef Uut partciular portion of tha building outlined In the plana and xpxclflca-oa on flla In tba abora offlea. Plana _J apedfleatlona may ba axamlned at tha vm^ Office from l:M a.m. to 1:06 -.m. Monday thru Friday. The right la raaarved to reject any or -It propotaa. valve any Informality In the proposala received and to accept any propoaal which the TlUage deema to be moat favorable to tha utariat of tha Village. The auccaaafal bidder wlU ba reqiUrad ) praaent aatUfactory evldenoa of • ig dona work of a ilmllar DnltAI 1 Unit Pi Ui »u"nT.. ;:t* • ” q ww8 Mot i • jji Woolworth ... 7 • S i Tale A Tow . 3 { TngatBhAT .10 ■ Zenith Had ...It American Stock Exch. Plguraa after decimal pointa an ctghtha Tt Craole Pet tonam Am El BondAS p Tb Ca .. 14.3 n 10.7 Leonard R .. . 14.7 Mead John . U.t Mohawk Alrl . 34 Pacific Pt Ltd 11.3 163 Page Her . . 16.4 Sraotone .. .. 0.7 Btd OU Ky . 413 Technico .. (Compiled by The Aaaociated Preti) Induat Italia DUl Stocki 0«a. 8. Barry AssHtotw COMTIMEMTAL CABDALTT OQ. Mn Waat ■naw M., PE 4-6llg y.M6.4 1363 :iSl iii! News in Brief Barglara biakB lala the Sylvaa Lake Shopping Gentnr BloomflekI Tow|idiip and Etide <100 cash from the Lake .Center Drugstore, it eras reported to Pogittoc state police yesterday. MarWriiSlaa, n, b* US Imm-bury St., reported k> Pontiac poUcg yesterday tet she returned from vacatfon to find her home had been broken into and her 880 wrist oratch and mounted .22 caliber pistol Ml I ____ 6 FDR HT, aerial number OPI4W1SS461. win ba aold at puimc aala at Woodward Ardmore Sarvlca Statlim. 33660 Woodward Avanua. Pamd^. Idlch-Igan. that addrtax being where vehlcU U atorad and July M. 1 I 800. aey at Woodward Ardmore Senrlca SUtlim. 33600 Woodward Avenoe, Femdale Ml^-Igan. that addrese being when t^ vehicle U atorad and ma^ be inerted. PUBLIC SALI At 6:66 a.m. on July It. lOdl. a 1667 Alpha ConverUble. atrial number U6M6047 inil ba aoM at pubUe talc at Woodward Ardmon Samoa Station. ---- Woodward Avenua. Peradale. I may ba i July 17. of a ilmllar natun. JESSIE K. JOBmON VUlaga Clerk VUUt* of Wolnruie L^c July 17 and M, IWl NOnCB OP PUBUC HSARIRO _.jy Council of the City of Sylvan Lake. Oakland County, Michigan. “RBOLUnOM ,r meetloi of the City City of Brivan Lake, held ......—________1 on the 13th day of July. A.D. 1161. Moved by Councilman Ollion. Supported by Councilman Clark. Whereta it appaara that ceruin eaw--icnta have fallen Into dltuae and the Council deema it advitabla to vacate, dlacontlnue and aboUab the aame, and urbereaa the aald eaaemenU an within the City of Sylvan Lake and arc de-acribed generally ai followa: 1. A Mrlp approximately 306 feet In length by T feet In width (Pontiac Drive extending toward MaplevoodI and bound-north aide by Lota 7. 16. 11 Hock 33. Sylvan Lake Imnrove-itloo SubdlvUto No. I (^ ________the aoutb aide by Lota 313 316^1van Lake SnbdtvUion Ho^ 3 lenftTSy 1 ....---------------— tendl^ toward Garland) and bounded on the wt by Lot 13. BlOek 33. Byh^ Lake Improvement AaaoclaUim Subdlvl-tlon Mo. Z and by Lot 313. Sylvan lAke Bubdivltlon No. 3 and on the eaat elde by Lot 13. Block 33, Sylvan Lake Improvement Aaeoctatlon Subdivlalon No. 2 ■ Lot 113, Sylvan Lake SubdtvUloa north by Lou 33 and 6. Block 3( __ _________ Sylvan It Aaaoclation Subdlvl- ____...._________a the lauth by LoU 33 and 6, Block as, of Sylvan • - meat Aaaoolatloa SiAdIvftI Now therefore, “ *■ I It hereby 'reaolved ROW inerexorv. m that Auguat 6. 1*61, — z^r- p.m., Baatcra ORandard Tima, at the City , i RaU lor tha City of Sylvan Uke, ‘ i date, Unw and place vbw aU int. ! nartiex arlll mact and tha OouneU will • Cu oX----------------- dIneUaaa ________ 13. tU M a vaoattag prMedara fallswed saY adherai ~. Be It fwmar rma^ Umt the terMn-baim dMlaMI and datarlbad pareS^ and lSrm2!WrRa5!!lSu-S!r“^ and barthym dlMontlasad. ROSAURD July' 16. It. ABE. I. •.''isoT mission, created a new zoning classification eiqirealy to ban new trailer parks. Now the planning commission has rtoommenilcd that the dty permit the camp site to have the special classification. RSPORT OF CONDmOM Community National Bank of Pontiac of PonUaa M. la tha Stale aif Idlehlgan, PubUahS** ** '*''*‘'‘*‘* ^ epmplroUar of lha eurraney, under aac-tlon Itll, ua. ravlaad atatutaa. ______________________________ .J7.606.6I Loana and dlacounta (ta-cludlnt 613,616.63 over- dralUl ..................... 37.606.169.63 Bank premlati owned ........61.6I3.666.61 furniture and flkturaa ........ 331,466.60 t.316366.31 Beal aetata owned other ‘ 166,761.36 •36,631.33 ----. 6M.6M.i63.34 iB> Total demand da-poalU ... .6M.63i.m.41 (b) Total aavlnga dep^U . .6U,IM.420.63 Other UabUlUaa .......... 2,144,176.36 Total UablUtlaa ........ •T.67S3M.I6 CAPITAL ACCOUNTS C^tal Stock:^^ total par . .'6S.666.666.N 3.666,MO M Bnrplaa .................... S.OM.OM.M Undlvldad proflU -. John P. Nlggeman. Br. Vlca Preal-dent. of tha above-named bank do hera-by dtclara that thla report of oondlUon U true and correct to tba beat of my knowledfa and ballet. ^ JOHN P. MIOORMAN. Sr. Vice Prexldent Wa, tha underalgned dlrcctora attcat tha correctneu of thla report of condition and daclara that It baa been ex-amlneii by ua and to tba beat of our knowledge and beUef la true and correct. ’ A. C. GIRARD Death Notice **• **•>• niiMiB SR, 366 Martboreuih: ate M; beloveci huaband of Banlira Bure; dear father of Mra. Ann Oilracc, Mrs. Minerva Popp. Mrs. Irens idetet. Mra. Uontina Fekett. Lt. Col. • Alexander Burt, Irimie Bun Jr. and Nick Bure; also eurvived by 13 grandchildren. Funeral aervlca wlir be beld Wednaiday. July 16. at 10 a.m. from St. Simon Church. MO W. 7-MUa Road, Detroit, with ft. George Lupu officiating. Interment In WWte Chapel. Mr. Burs will lie In state at the WlllUm Vasu Funeral Home. 4376 N. Woodward, Royal Oak. k^HBR, JULY 17. IMl. MARTIR T., 6616 Alden Drive, Union Lake; age 62: dear father of Martin H. Karcher; dear brother of Mri. Alta l^ney and Mra. Helen Burd; also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral lervlee will be held Wednesd», July li. at 3 p.m. from tbq Ooneleon-Johna Pu- iday. July 30, at ! Thompaonrille —lurch. Interr la Cemetery. , . DalJa Marlin; dear father of Mrs. Fred (Norma Jean) Barton and WtllUm L. Martin; dear brother of WUliam D. and Louts Martin; also survived by four grandchlldran. Funeral serv-Ica will ba bald Wadnaaday, July 11, at 1:10 pjn. from tho Huntoon Funeral Roma with Rev. TorotU officiating. Mr. Martin wlU He In atata at tha Runtoon Funeral Home,_______________________ FENNER, JULY 16, IMl. MAROA-ret Foreman, IM Malta. Drayton Plalna: age M; dear mother of Mrs. TFUUam (ElMta Bunnell and Sheldon Foreman, ninaral strvlca Walter Tseuwlsaan ol_______.. termant In Oakland Bllla Memorial oardma. kira. Pwinar wiU Ue In state at Coau Funaral Boma, Drayton Flalna. ________________ M/vinu mmm ad one who la 9 on July It. long for &a a iM Lovno MEMORY OF 6B- JilS «“lM6’‘“ ^ JuMjJheught Bt iwaat renaa- Fonertf Dirwctora COATS DRAYTON PLAINS Donelson-Johns _,FUMBRAL BOMB Uaaisnad for PiwaraM” iPARlBSJ5kMM 6fiApto, Voorhees-Siple BBAUTIPQL LOT. “—‘ —'—