U,S. Suffers Fr^fn ‘BrainTrouble Empty House Filled With Flames WASHINGTON (AP)—The General Account-*** OMlc* «sWL today mtar.alcuUtlons by both human and electronle brains war* partly »-sponsible for what it called a mult tail lion dollar excess cost of military aid to the far East. it ★ it The GAO, which earns as a watchdog over government spending, said It had come to this conclusion after Investigating nearly half a billion dollars worth of spare parts accumulate Jug in Aslan warehouses and at the Army’s Mg supply and inventory depot,in Japan-la Its report to Congress, the GAO said Its survey resulted In potential savings of about 1235 million In excess or useless spore 'pnrts. " ' Another GAO report Wednesday said'Improper wiring of a calculating machine had lad the Army in Europe to order $7.4 million worth In today's report, OAG accountantfcsaid the depot hi Japan.last year had ’’discovered” unrecorded material valued at $5d million In making its “first complete inventory ever taken” of military aid stocks. Meanwhile, the GAO said, additional supplies of ordnance equipment had been ordered. The alleged error was attributed by the GAO to depot officials. Their electronle calculating machine servants, however, were held accountable far errors in simple arithmetic that added .to what the GAO called a east over-supply > of items at the depot and to the cost of Foreign aid. In one Instance a machine whs supposed to record the.lssue of 46 items, not specified in the report. But the machine reported the issue of 111,146. ■ In another instance, the GAO said, the machine recorded the issue of 111,136 items to foreign countries, when the actual number , the Items, which were never issued anyway, were ordered at a cost of $177,990. SHORTAGES ELSEWHERE The GAO reported that this excessive accumulation tof stocks in some places had been accompanied by Shortages elsewhere, hurting the military aid program. 'in Korea, for example, repair of 31,000 rifles and several thousand Army vehicles Had to be held up for lack of parts that were available in “huge quantities” but unreported in excess In nearby countries, the oA6 ,aaISL—— . ★ ★ ★ The erratic practices of some aided countries were blamed for some of the confusion over military supplies. Thailand, for example, officially reported requirements for 3 and 12-ittonth periods. But the GAO investigators said they had found that the Thais habitually multiplied their requirements estimates so that they actu- TOTAL LOSS — Waterford Township fire-/ men battled flames in this empty house at 2665V Dixie Highway for more than two hours last ‘ evening. The unoccupied building, owned by fruit distribution center this summer. A passerby discovered the fire. Fine Chief Elmer Fang-boner said the building had been valued at several thousand dollars. The Independence fire The Weather t.B. Wuihc, Barts* fSinsit Clear, eoM tonight; fair, east tomorrow (D«UIU M Flit S> wrao VAA5J mW. A 33c VJAU W1U rCpiRCcITlcn LN IW gOl SUppilPK IOr 2% mOIUM. THE PONTIAC J William Feldman^ Detroit, had been used as a Department as PRESS sisted Waterford. Home Edition VOL. 119 NO. 218 * ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 Sfl ptrifC A880CIATBD PHB88 —“OP I nUfj.V UNITED' PRESS INTERNATIONAL 8* Leave Federal Court Governor Angered by GOP Veto . AP ratals* PLEADS INNOCENT — Teamsters President James R. Hoffs leaves Federal Court at Orlando, Fla., with his attorney Jacob Kossman of Philadelphia, after pleading innocent on 16 counts of mail fraud. Hoffa and Robert E. McCarthy Jr., Detroit banking executive, were accused by a federal grand Jury last week of misusing man than 5300,000 of union funds to promote a retirement deveiopMdMwettth ofnCape Canaveral, Fla. Both an free under 310,dlM bonds. Hoffa Pleads Innocent to Charges of Matt-Fraud ORLANDO, Fla. (jR — Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa, preparing for another legal bout with the federal government, pleaded innocent today to charges of mail fraud. Robert E. McCarthy Jr., a Detroit banking executive indicted with Hoffa, entered the same plea. The two ar$ accused in a 10-count indictment of misusing more than $000,000 of Teamsters funds to promote Sun Valley* Inc., a one-time retirement housing development for. union members. Hoffa spoke only once during the seven ^minute proceedings in U.8. District Court. When a government attorney asked him his namcA and age, he replied, “JamesL , *#*«•'*, r. Hoffa. 48.” d|Cockeyed Opfimists, Look at the Forecast! His innocent plea was entered |_ for him by his attorneys. •fudge Hosier A. DeVaoe gave attorney* for Hoffa and McCarthy until Dec. 1 to file mottons. He allowed the defendants their freedom on the same 111,MS bond* that were posted shortly - After the arraignment, Hofif picked up his subcase and left.the court. In a brief talk with n men, Hoffa said union investments (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) In Today's Press Bang! Bangl and temperatures coot tonight, I ‘ow near 38. Friday will be fair aad with a Ugh af 55. Saturday’s look Is lair sad warmer. Morning easterly winds l miles per hour will become northerly late this afternoon at 15 to 20 m.p.h. Winds will shift to i to northwest at 10 to 15 miles to-11 night becoming northwesterly at I I to 12 miles tomorrow. * * * || The low temperature preceding 118 a.m. in downtown Pontiac regie-I tered 48 degrees. The reading at Con-Con Seeking Solution to Row j j LANSING <£> — Michigan’s constitutional convention today sought a solution to its first family quarrel — aj jurisdictional dispute between two committees. At odds were the committee on legislative powers, headed by T. Jefferspn Hoxie (R-St. Louis) and the committee on-miscellaneous provisions and schedules, under the chairmanship of Claud R. Erickson (R-Lansing); Both claim that in preparation of the new constitution they have the right to deal with sections of the present constitution covering corporations, eminent domain, personal property exempt------------- toons; homestead exemp-ra ■ ai Reduce Charge Against Haase Youth Who While Playing With Gun Being Held on Bond A charge of first degree murder against John Haase, 19. who admitted staying an 18-year-old Pontiac girl while “playing around with a shotgun” Sept. 29, was reduced to manslaughter yesterday. tions and other matters. Wednesday delegates approved a 52 million budget covering everything from postage stamps to. pa electrical voting machine.' Salaries fee the 144 delegates, at SIAM • month each, swaA -lowed up mate than half of the toiialy at budget, adept* ■ plenary aeastoa. They totaled $1.08 million. Second biggest item In the budget was $329,306 for salaries for convention staff workers. Smallest authorized expenditure was 5400 for newspaper clippings of the convention’s activities. Erickson’s committee moved Into the disputed area first, naming several subcommittees to deal with proposed changes. Hoxie’s committee voiced quick objection. Frank Millard of Flint, former Republican attorney general and a member of the Hoxie committee, described the Erickson committee’s action as “the biggest power grab I’ve seen in a long, long time.'' ■ committee veined Its II major#) Wednesday with Stephen s. NIs-bet, the convention president. Richard Van Duaen (R-Bingharri Farms), chairman of the tee on rules and resolutions, sug-_ gested one solution would be-tor Wonderful weather will continue each committee chairman to make through Saturday with skies vclear a written outline of what sections of the present constitution should be considered by his committee. Flash WASHINGTON ft-The United Staton today launched a Scout racist Mended to shoot 4.5M miles Ugh and hack In a new study of mother earth’s pretec- sphere. I bonne I” the I The space agency aa-that the 18-tan tour-stage Scout Masted off at I>:M p.m. from the Wallop* Inland, Va., station of the National Aeronautic* aad Space Administration. Republicans Turn Down Federal Aid I Swainson Calls Matting of Financt Committees 'Sham, Mockery' \ LANSING UR—Gov. John B. Swainson today labeled las “a sham and a mockery of the democratic process** a meeting Wednesday in which Republican legislators, who control the state {finance committees, turned down his proposal to bring Michigan under a federal program. u ># The rejection makes the third time in recent nfonths, Republican legislators have rejected a new program providing federal funds for children of unemployed parents. v, -As a re*alt. then wlti he a* •pedal cental af the legtatatur* Oakland County Circuit Court ou the leaser charge yesterday after Ma examination before i Pontiac Municipal Judge Cecil A. MrCallum. ’ Judge. McCollum Mid the facta presented in the rase showed there was na intention or premeditation Haase’s part to murder Janet M. Olsen. 115 Euclid St. The dead girl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John V. Olsen. . was killed with a single blast from a 12-gauge shotgun. Her body was found shortly after midnight Sept 29 in Haase’s home at 191 S. Marshall St. Where a party had taken place earlier. Haase ran out Into the street and told two Pontiac patrolmen of the shooting. He told police he was jusf tryiog to scare the OI»en girl when tile gun went oft---- His mother, Mrs. Ivy Haase, s nurse at Pontiac General Hospital, was at work when the shooting occurred. Haase is being held in the County Jail in lieu of $500 bond. Proceed on Dam Purchase KEY TO LAKE LEVEL — County and township officials examine the dam at Lakeville Lake in Addison Township which will have to be purchased to maintain the lake level at a height of 952.3 feet above sea level as established by a Key to Setting Lake Levels recent Circuit Court ruling- Seen from left are Oakland County Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry, Addison Township Supervisor Frank F. x Webber and Robert G. Even, deputy county drain commissioner. million in federal 1 able to MteMgan for tito six month* starting Jan. 1. -The decision by the House Ways and Means Committee ’ and the Senate Appropriations Committee Wednesday triggered an angry outburst from Gov. Swainson. He had indicated he would call the legislature into special session only if majority Republicans Indicated there was a good chance the rp» Bolivian Uprising Folds LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP)—A leftist uprising at an artillery banracka near La Paz collapsed toddy and' the leader committed suicide asl police closed in, the government mnopneed. Now that the level of Lakeville Lake in Addison Township has been set by Circuit Court decision the Oakland County Drain Commission, is proceeding with the purchase of a dam that controls the lake, level. Acquiring the antiquated dam near Rochester and Lakeville roads will untie the first of many stringy that have been holding oft establishment of lake levels in the county. Owner of the dam which Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry ■aid w)ll have to be replaced, is the Dunn and Ben* Machine On. It la making $35,666 far the dam and Its half-acre rite. An appraisal of the property has been net at $8,$M. Barry admitted that the appraisal falls short of what the drain commission is prepared to pay for the property “sine# tn effect we are buying the entire lake.” Maintaining the level of Lakf^ ville Lake will assure surrounding property owners of an adequate: Once the property has been supply of water both for their j transferred into county hands a shorelines and the efficient opera- |new dain wm be constructed at |tion of septic tanks. The. problem of rising and dropping water levels has plagued lake front property owners, throughout the county for many years. Numerous petitions by the property owners to establish lake lev-1 els were stymied until this year new state law was created to simplify the procedure. The new law now eaabie* the To Gat Ax ’ Berlin expecting Red pup-i pet Ulbrlcht to be fifed -: PAGE XL Reject JFK? ^ Retiring dean defends ! Harvard policy — PAGE XI. New York Tampar Governor out in state talk-| ing to people — PAGE 14. I Skunk Shot by Farmington Police | f Health Dept. Reports Rabies Case I * ■ ■ * | Editorial* ... j Food Section - [ Markets ....... - Obituaries ... The first case of rabies in Oakland County since July 1954 was reputed today by the Oakland County Health Department’s Animal Welfare Division. * ,dr > The case occurred in a skunk in Farmington, said Dr. Frank R. Bates, division director, The stank waa shot by Form- al]' hunters be sure their dogs are vaccinated before going into the I'TV A Radio Pregrems .. $$ Wilson. Earl ... .....« ; Women'* Pages ......36-41 “this makes1,it imperative that Health officials have suspected a rush of rabies in skunks in the Oakland area for sometime hut haven't been able to get positive proof. HjjRD TO GET PROOF * ^ ,A wild animal must be discovered and killed during final singes of the disease and tests made immediately to prove rabies. Dr. Bate* Indicated this eaas •tumid qus*h (dens of Pontiac rabies rooid bo np only somewhere 'This cue occurred in a heavily populated neighborhood one block north of Grand River Avenue.” Grand JUver is the main street of Farmington. * Residents Called police - when, they, noticed the skunk running wildly up and .down tfiq street. 'We’ve eaWaseed the. area 1 ran- -find a* evidence yet af dogs or cate having contact with the stank, but there la a law la Farnatagtoa requiring rabies Ira-munixatton anyway, as the danger isn't too great,” Dr. Ratos said. “Humana are mostly out of danger because anyone In his right mind wouldn’t go near a skunk anyway,’’ he added, *• * '* He asked, however, that anyone knowing of any small Children (n the* Farmington area who may hav* .been bitten by a skunk recently to rail' the health deport-t or fiofice immediately. chases sack u that af the dam at Lakeville, assured that the cost will be repaid by township assessment* on bene fitting tax-payon. While the county is prepared to proceed with condemnation in order to obtain the dam and its site, Barry said he feels certain agreeable purchase price ran be reached instead. an estimated cost of 523,345, said Barry, ft w|ll be located approximately 20 feet west of the present dam and the .stream wilt be1 rerouted through it. The new dam fo expected to raise the lake level L3 feet above its present level. \, The Dunn company, which manufactures automotive parts, will have to convert entirely to electrical power. The 'firm has w getting a portion of its power frikm water flowing over , the dam,. The Democratic governor appeared before the two committees, at their invitation, to plug for the federal program, only to learn that the decision to reject it had been made informally before the meeting began. JOINT STATEMENT Moments after rejection was announced, Sen. Elmer R. Potter, R-BUssftek), and Rep. Arnell Engstrom, R-Traverse City, issued a joint statement explaining the GOP stand. “The program has too many drawbacks aad leaves too many questions unanswered,” they said. The governor estimated the federal grant Would save the state 54 million and local governments |6 million in welfare costs. Upholds ‘Earmarking' Claims Road Funds Fitzgerald Renamed Face Con-Gon Threat Director of IAPA A likelihood of disappearing state highway funds as la result of the constitutional convention vyu voiced Pontiac Press Publisher Harold locally yesterday by A1 Kaufman, executive assistant tft Michigan’s highway commissioner, John C. Mackie. Addressing the Inter-county Highway ComipJ|s$lod at the Botsford Im\ in Redford Township, Kaufman beseeched commissioners from Oakland, Macomb, Monroe, St. Clair, Washtenaw,* ■f 'r .'. 'rr-~r ‘ ■■Br ' ‘ I A. Fitzgerald was re-elected to the board of directors of the Inter American Press Association aj a meeting in New York City yesterday. He was one af 1$ newspapermen from North aad South America chosen, rix of whom are from the United States. The sow board members were Installed at the close of the organisation'* and Wayne counties to defend ,state highway funds through delegates at con-con. The funds are threatened by cqn- The Inter American Press Amo- ciatioft has membership of 843 pub- / ^ llcations, i and is dedicated to the SS to * St“ promotion and/protection of -free-jrortllnf ,0 J"*®** • of the press and. the peoples''j * * * right to know. j He was pinch-hitting in Verier- i. .....'■■■,. (day's talk for Mackie who had to sm«i*i-osOT mm nsau. *»cs«h break his commitment to speak. im p m* .The stale highway commissioner was admitted to a yesterday for a i his kidneys. Kaufman d as a minor aliment! « Doing away wNk earmarking raised In state taxes would go Into a common pool 'to bo dried out by the jegfetotaiVi at Loastag. J In effect, the state highway cfon-missfon would have no assurefloe that sufficient funds would ha available to finance it* ftve-yunr highway) construction* program*, (Continued on Page «, CM « m two THE PONTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAV.OCTQBKK 19, 1PD11 WW liliMr Dhminihg Moscow Warns West on Air Lanes IjKim TVm (AP) — Dtpio- Khrushchevs nlaialttu of hi* via* Dolan on the German pn jfe wiriTii arid today MoscowiDec. 3l deadline for Ma peace tlon. And In doing this. in effect, • Mat • note taaewtog • Snvtrtltrraty with Communist* Eut Or- he tottered against the , French an Bertha air corridow that many. Rusk said. •‘nay serve to Induce tension somewhat." I Bat Khrushchov's "general ah-ltvmtlb the American; Brttlahfcn^ ^ ■«» and Tianch Embassies to Mreij*™* If?™?®, "T 1 rc - ■—“* French view toht intensive'Western preparations nhw for East-West negotiations would appear to the Kremlin as a sign of Western] Dies of Injuries Suffered in Area Auto Collision Ia S-jmMid Southfield ma died yesterday to wnitom Bear moftt Hospital, ftagral Oak. from ^ injuries - suffered Tuesday when . SdVJ $250,000 Facility his ear coilided with another «* —— ' 12-Mile Rond in Southfield. To Build Store in Birmingham Englander Furniture Soys $250,000 Facili Will Open Next Year Fatally injured was Dennis W. RiuttSL, of 38105 Oakland vm" M Highway Toll in *61 Paris Police Check El Algerian Riot Try - -....— .... ___ I The secretary of steto mads a tinue its exploratory talks with lidwmsnTi aald ^ ®-point of playing down the itR I Moscow to aee whether* there am W^nMwteTwnii* theKrem- «*»* the AUtoo in their ap- possible grounds (or negotiations. IS any hderfcwnce with the P">«* *» <** ^IParis has been cooi to these talks. air traffic linking Cammunist-en-j — circled West Berlin with West Germany would be "aggressive action."—; Moscow was said to have de-clsred again its view that the air] corridors are only supposed to be ased for supplying the Western] garrisons hi Berlin. The Western powers regard the air tones as aj vital lifeline for &e city, to be meg for general civilian purposes PARIS (AP)— Reinforced pblicejthe suburb of Nanterr* said end otherwise without Red inter- checked a mob of 4,000 Algeriansfdead and 15 injured were counted.! ferace. ___ . that triad to riot through toejgomg SUP through ■J5W—?- ***.... ... t* tsf ||q Qet Job Aid MllNattit ~ Mm. John W. Fsuver. CTO FUrfhx Rood has boon named to tha lT-mombor board of diroctors of tha Birmingham Oom-mugjty Homm. The announcement wee made by Thebam H Wisnt, "president. said that Rialto was traveling east' on 12-Mile Rond near Evergreen Road when hie loot control of Ms vehicle, crossed the center line and 73 Last Vos* to Doto: tl I side by a car driven by Everett ! Major of Muskogee, Okla. Major is in satisfactory condition in the Royal Oak Hospital. | The accident occured at 11:18 1p.m. Swainson Acts Englander Furniture Shops. Inc. announced today It win build a $250,000 store to Birmingham, com struct ion to begin this rrjonth with completion (a the spring. ih' A ' Marvin I. Danto, president of the firm, said the one story contemporary style building witt be built at tha Barton Shopping Center on Maple Road, oast of Hunter Boulevard. Tha new Mratagham store trait gasmen of 1 company, (amoved to make way tor the Chrysler expressway. The building. 115 by 108 feet was designed by Highland- Park architectural firm of Theodore Rogvoy The Oakland County Chapter of the Red Com will conduct a Moodl' drive for the Birmingham area] Monday. A Moadmoblle wlfl be stationed S to 8 p.m. la the gymaarinm of Hofy Name School, Greenwood : Danto said the new store will [carry contemporary, traditional land casual furniture, "the same as at our Northland and Eastland stores. "We think this area Is prob- ing bennu Ois|«w mmvm " — HUIT nsnw» iiymicu .. ... , , .. Secretary of State Dean Rusk [killed and at least 15 injured, and dnWed by the OeeiM mob. •poke at a news conference^the police arrested 1.500 demon-! . r , . , . . . . r“ irET^rr War on Unemployment! — - r-.w.T’sjrd ^ £°inr ^ RrH —isk/sss . ^ .. .. «aid governmem in Tunis to keep up'aged to slip through by subway Ifor l ~ FSJZZ. wo.- "• **' ment because the Appointments to donate to the Birmingham Community Blood Bank can be made by contacting Mrs. Francis Rennell, 986 N. Cran- ™ « weiuntaarv iud^ lh^r demonstrations against new]*. on foot dying “Algeria fori f°r f***#r0* ^r0rrtS I*®?li^neVtiJTuntarroftoe '•«. Algerian workers ^ Algerians!' they tried to pa-1 . ' ■ . "The growth of the community | l address is «Hii|began grouping shortly after dusk rade but were quickly rounded up! LANSING m — Gw. Swainaon, from the business point of view no? awSSehere Ite* decUned'near *•* Round Potot.d> Ia JP^and hustled into police vans, that jmovtag to combat Michigan s high has ^ tremendous." .zruri^rtksr it makes the nn»ifeMe- * key tr>lfic intersection] chugged off to detention caters'unemployment rate, put machinery t*1* we*tern outskirts of greater *t a sports palace, a stadium, » motion today to obtain federal pEXHE — [Paris. StwWwlroftwi riot squads ipd [q g barracks area in sub-! to** Job training and re- training programs. The governor sent a request Cadet Missing at West Point {blocked their movement towardiurban Vincennes, a bridge over the Seine and aj AAA ^broad avenue leading to centralj There they joined more then jParis. 11,000 of their countrymen arrest- i STARTS SHOOTING r*1 Tuesday night' when 30,000 ^ . . rioted for four hours. The govern- ] Between 1,000 and 1.300 were;ment today began deporting about surrounded for a time by the[1500 ^ arrested Tuesday beavtiy armed riot forces without ^ ^ugeria and said many more aerious Incident. But as tenskaLould follow. Military Academy Says [mounted to chilly, driving ratal, ___________ Ohio Youth r r ThreaiwiV Seven Weeks Ago man mid. TV police returned the! UJlI-Uin inieaiens WEST POINT. N.Y. (AP)—A Weet Print cadet who had been a standout scholar and athlete to Ohio has been missing tor seven weeks, the UJS Military Academy reported today. - State Highway Funds' Wltitam Balt Jr., administrator of the Area Redevetop meat Administration, tor a meet-lag here Nov. • to dtaeuoe the To Ask Approval (Continued From Page One) n._j f________1-____ Isaid Kaufman, hut would be forced OIDOna issue jfromyeer to yeer to operate with i__ (whatever money was made avaO-[ tor LOUnty noaas able by the legislators . TAX NOW EARMARKED A widespread search has produced no trace of the youth, Paul tt* Oakland County Board of] M. Weaver II, 18, of Portsmouth,!superiors’ and Means' At present, highway funds are *peM Committee will recommend the]rriaed through gasoline and weightr1**-board's approval of a S6 million taxes earmarked expressly ' The government has allocated HO million for payment of benefits to jobless workers undergoing job training and <4.5 million for a nationwide survey of training needs. Swaineon reminded Batt that Michigan has suffered serious unemployment duftng each of the poet-Worid War H business slumps. Eiitt per cent of the state's Work force currently is unemployed, be •eld. Because of economic troubles, 25 of the state’s 83 counties have been designated as redevelopment areas eligible for federal a Ohio. INTENDED TO QOT ■ z ” . ' j bond issue for county roa Officials said that he had approvements when the board several occasions said he intended Nov. 7. to resign from the academy. Aeademy authorities said he had told Chpt John W. McCbr-mick Jr., tactical officer, that he had expected mote of a college atmosphere and that the military regime gras more stringent than he had expected. Ttowewr. he appeared to have adjusted to the academy life in the week or two before he vanished at 9 a.m. on Aug. 30. He had entered the academy July 8 ■A A A. The care recalled that of Richard C. Cox, who disappeared bom the academy in U50. No ings from'his barracks room. When he had mined two 1 matrons, he automatically v marked absent without leave I a search begun. The committee agreed jester-day to sadsrss raising the msaey to general obligation bonds at the recemnwwdation of Oneaty Road M. Thatehsr. Thatcher had previoualy announced plans to spend $11 million improve 88 miles of county roads to keep pace with the state’s beeway construction. roads. Prepare la to de away with ear- desire to prevent the re celled “bankruptcy” of the state, each re menrred to if~ Under the present astern of earmarking, the people know where their tax money is being spent and can compare this with the results as they drive over more end better highways in the state, explained Kaufman, j He stressed the role good roads The improvements are to bcl***” “ >nd made on roads connecting into the nwirt *° *nduWr* freeway system within the county.!‘TO SAVE LIVES* As rrcommtndol, the bonds Added to this is the estimatr nould be retired ever M jeers ed 16,000 lhes that will be saved! e] through receipt of state gas and on Michigan's highways in the weight taxes. next 20 years if current develop- j . The balance of the total fH mil: ment te'«n?ed ^ Mid «•«*-lion would b^met by tax nuxde»jn*an' -jon hand and from payments by 12' Vice chairman Harold Traax I s benefiting cities, which also re-j of St. Clair Count) was elected | i j reive a share of state gas : and to succeed Ernest McCollum ao j I weight taxes. The Weather Full L’.S. Weather Bureau Report e PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Increasing cloudiness and bolder today with occasional rain by afternoon. High 55. Clearing and colder tonight, low 35. Tomorrow fair and cool, high 55. Sontherij winds 11-15 miles this morning becoming northerly 15 to 20 miles by afternoon. North to northwest If to 15 miles tonight and northwesterly 8 to 12 miles tomorrow. in mis Friday at 3:43 a. I'USSi WaSaMSay’a TcMatratar* Chi M Alpaaa M 44 Miami Beach M Albuquerque «« H Milwaukee N Atlanta VI «• NewOrleana - 54 II fjrewA .. * u Sairuke c. 2 SJ! througfoout | Oakland County Road. Commis-jsioner Hiland M. Thatcher was reelected to represent .the county on! the commission next year. ' V A A j Attending yesterday's meeting | | from Oakland County were State I Rep. Lloyd L. Anderson of Water-j ford Township; Willis; M. Brewer land Robert O. Felt,of the. county I road commission; David R. Cal-' [hour, county supervisor from Hun-! | tington Woods: and John C. Re-! hard, county supervisor from West! Bloomfield Twnship. jHoffa Pleads Innocent to Charges 7» 5 SFrancUco & 2 would be CUri.iled Hr S I i j |lun,u ita care is settiec BBSt U 8E& 1 I "The. United* States Page One) United States and affected •tiled. * States had made; ind to distort Teamsters' its,” he said, aid he was going to Mi-then return to Detroit. FILED | His attorney, Jacob Kossman of] j Philadelphia, said an appeal had {been filed in the 5th District Appeals Court in New Orleans from I U.S. District Court Judge Joseph | jp. Lieb's denial of motions | suppress evidence presented to] | the grand jury. "The government has net denied lining Wiretap information In I seeking the Indk-tmentu,” Rons man reld. "tee contend thts Is AT RoWu NATIONAL WEATHER — It will be cooler tonight from the -Southern Plains westward to the Pacific and along the coast, in the Plateau region and ia the Great LaJcM area. Tome rain and snow Are forecast for portions of Idaho and Montana and rain jt,expected on the Florida East Copst. ■ Megal” | The. indictment was returned, ! last week by a federal grand jury {investigating Haifa's activities in' the 1956-57 pm motion of the de-jvelopment located south of Cape | Canaveral. , Bay 111 Ytv TOBACCO NEEDS At DISCOUNT Tanfflri—Fri. and Sat. XeffreaOf Advertised Freeds CIGARETTES REGULAR an Par Ceitee Pies 9s Tew 1 KING tad FILTER A31 ... - Par Carton Pirn 9t Tax Z The furniture store will be the largest in Birmingham. Reds Weigh K's Speech MOSCOW (UPI) - Hie 22nd Soviet Communist Phrty Congress went into secret seesions today to discuss Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev’s glowing twtxlay report depicting a rosy future for the Soviet Union end world communism. Coaitlt. Cbeiterfleld*. Luektei. MS*| Up. Morris, Sente. PnU Mailt. KooU.I Wln»tons, Viceroy a. etc. Preiheatj ••••••••••••••••••••• Sole of CIGARS] 6c BANKER'S CHOICE | ’To'.*' 2» | 6c KINS EDWARD i T*.- 2» j seseeeeseeeeeeeeeeeee NewRONSON 'Typhoon' LIGHTER ] 1* Briar Bowl Pipes ; S1.00 Velee IAC ] Hot rMUUnt nylon Jl||* »t«m BnS InMrehAnt*- Oil , tbit briar bowl. Unit sseeeeesseoeooeeeeeeo All Metal—lofety llylo Flip-Top Ath Troy; Reg. 59c 39*! Styled M aimi; N N, tegtoqw ' —Main Fleer' $1 Holds ANY ELECTRIC RAZOR In LAYAWAY!. MEN'S and LADIES' ELECTRIC RAZORS The Pey in Birmingham Woman Gets Community House Post brook Rond, Bloomfield Township, sr Mrs. Jamas F. Murphy. ISO The Birmingham Board of Education will meet Oct 91 to award p contract for the constnictfaw of 1048, Mrs. Faavse IBs Me vs oemkj orretsd wtth the rerigre-tfon ef Mrs. Joke a O’Ftyw. whore hrebeni has here tratn-terred oet of the area. Active .in community affairs, Mrs. Fsuver ia chairman of the Junior Laague’s public relations committee and • member ef the Metropolitan Committee for the Target date for the ground toeekhw .ef the religious center ia nkt'spring. of 14 religious groups on the cam- motor, .to be built on Putnam at heads at* mM. The school board has budgeted 1815.000 for constructing and equipping tha new facility. Twelve construction bids, have bpen received by the school txwrd. William E. Slaughter of 32949 Bingham Lane it a member of a four-man lay committee raising funds for a $900,000 religious center building at Wayne State Uni-eretty. Alee serving wtth Slaughter. Itee Co., are Walker CWer, president at toe Detroit Edison Co.; Ivan Ladtagtoa, president of the Ludington News Service; aad Herbert J. Woodall, president of $29.95 NOREICO Floating Head 16” $29.95 REMINGTON 12-V Auto-Heme ]795 $32.50 SUNBEAM •555 AAedel 3 Blade.... i$9i $26.95 REMINGTON ROLL-A-MATIC 1595 $24.95 NOREICO Pllp-Tep Head 138# $23.50 RON SON MaHstlCFL 1588 812.95 SCHICK COMPACT Rasor...... 995 821.50 SCHICK 3-Speed Adiuitabl. ... 1695 831.50 SCHICK 1066 Model 3-Speed.. 1795 828.95 REMINGTON Wodd-Wlde Rater I995 $13.95 SUNIEAM er SCHICK tody Rotor.... 8“ $19.50 LADY RONSON SUPERBE Model 995 824.99 LADY NOREICO Double Hoed 1495 $18.50 Lady Remington 1962 Model Adjustable 1395 *1095 All brand new, factory guaranteed razors. Pay only the advertised price —No trode-IS needed. eettssstslsstss »eeeeeeee« R0NS0N Head Screen $1.30 119 Seller I for Model 66 * CH razors. Genui factory ports. , •ooooeoo#eeeeeeee fj 1 HORELCO Hoad and Cutter SUNBEAM R Comb and Cutter Si” 2" for models W-WL-140-G-GZ razors, eeeeeei Double Head RS A17> sb.oo H _ : Razor heads for] rmodelt 20-25 —. ] Whiskowoy. J1.69 DRISTAN DECONGESTANT TABS. Pkg. 50'. 1 s s ..n,# 89* ROLAIDS . ANTIACID MINTS thick ef 7S*s Ml ,.69* 39* FREEZ9HE CORN and CALLOUS REMOVER-Large ■ s • ..26* 89* MINIT-RUB SUPER MEDICATED Large Sire ess ..59* •149 BACTINE 1 NTISiPTIC ..96* 88 N. Seginew-.Wa/w Yloor TONITE • FRI. and SAT. ANACIN Tablets WO for Regular $1.19 pack of fast, fast Anacin tablets— for rallaf of hoadocho 79' PHILLIPS MAGHESIA .. .Cl* 89* LISTERIHE 'SSEf *145 HALO VXZS *2.39 PREPARATIOH H"TK?S?. s81#8 *1.32 CARTERS S5SS .. C6* ...411 ,69* *2.49 IR0NIZE0 YEAST SOPfiOML for AtMrtrs Foot 74c Value—Powder or Ointment. CORICIDIN for COUOHS $1.25 tire. 4 ost. AMs of syrup. Limit 2.. ■ .. zr^ PARKE-DAVI9.SIBLIN $3.60 Round of Bulk Ag Producer and Laxative..re Jt UP JOHN’S ALKETS $2.25 pack of 100 .. antacid tablets.....1 PHISOHCX mi PHISO-AC $3.10 value, combina- — lion treatment for acne, .re Sale! BABY NEEDS DISCOUNTS on BABY FORMULAS MULLSOY BARR’S LIQUID UQUD 45c Con 27c Can 37* 6 J11 No mixing or stirring, limit 12 cons. ■nnunv maua vniif bv ■ ivn • i mm TONITE- FRI. and SAT. HO DEAL DISCOUNTS 3-Cell All Metal Ftathlight Reg. etc Value |C 49c laaoaaooabK USALITE FloIRight BATTERY s10* {leakproef. steel jacket. U.S.A. mode.. Snap-Tite Key Case S9e F«ly# AAc BRUSH ft COMB Set 33* MAGIC BRAIN Calculator |C Sheaff er PEN SET sx.ee Mw 249 MEN'S SILTMORE' POCKET WATCH , 8.1.2 3 Value Wodchfor' sports. Unbreakable crystal. Fac .tory guaranteed- Plus 10% fed. tax. •eeeeeeeeseeseeesees GE Electric Alarm m 259 BIG OR BABY B6N ALARM CLOCKS Factory gueran-teed .alarm Slacks. Plus 10% lax. . 58.98 Luminous Models 5.99 98 N. Soglwow—Mule Vtaar I THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 THREE AC Spark Plug , and UXW Reach Lochl Agreement MILWAUKEE Uft —- Officials of tte AC Spark ptut Division tf General Motors and leaders of Local 438 of the United Auto Workers Union announced Wednesday night they had reached agreement] Maim, Germany; the cradle ofII | modem, printing, will celebrate the |j 12,000th anniversary of its found- -PHEASANT SEASON OPENS TOMORROW, OCTOBER 20Hv- a sweet treat for someone special! Shotgun SHELLS REMINGTON and SUPER-X ^Shotgun Shells 20-Gauge Box25’$.. 4 Nf fj SAT. 2 12-Gauge MV Bex25’$..4 1 .32 SMQIAL SHtUl u • S3.70 Sox 20 •.......3.1V a .300 savacc — - • Kao »o« 201..........9*74 • .30 0A SMEllS 4 0- J $4.75 Box 20 s......._3.M .• .301 CAUKR SHSU.5 « a m J $4.75 lex 20 s. . 9.04 ? 8mm SHIUS t M 2 $4.53 J« 20 i ........9.44 eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeo ineral Electric TOASTER Box of 25'». Ideal • t«r Minting nr tar- • gnt.pracltn. •, 16-GA. and 12-GA. SHELLS l lex of 25 iheNt. Fitid ° # load* fee hunting and 5J19 0 practice. Mk J eeaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee L Gun Cases j (r%< i $1.29 Value l CASCO Siftfle-Cootrol DOUBLE-BED Eleetrie Blanket v Famous H&R or STEVENS Single-Shot SHOTGUNS Regular $30.90 rnllar—choice of 12-16-20 or 410 gauges. Visible hammer, automatic J} M * • ejector, walnut stock finish, pistol grip. ^Mb» ALL PIRST QUALITY ®0?o rayon and 20% cotton with nylon binding; 2-year guer-ante# on blankets. Machine washable and moth proofed Choice of. popular colors. * ... V Coleman Stovos Udjco Deluxe ELECTRIC Can Opener *■4 maifo Sharpener INJW rake Doubl. burner itov M0T ' REMINGTON 870AP 5-Shot PUMP SHOTGUN $89.45 seller—5-shot pump action shotgun ■■V’4% on with Spgcial Remington Steel Barrel. Horn- marless, solid breach. m 4b Stuffed clown dolls are Ideal extra gift with a box of candy for the one you love. iWWift special ad)V Ideal for Hunting and Fishing Foul Weather Suits LPri. — Mat, [ Discounts Compare SIMMS LOW PRICES aid QUALITY Safari Yoa Bay! *0*0*0*0*0*0*0*0*0*0St**mm TONITE—FRIDAY and SATURDAY SUPER DISCOUNT SPECIALS GRIPPER, or SUP-ON Style — PLASTIC SIMMS CASH YOUR PAY CHICK FREE! ALL PRICES GOOD for TONITE - FRI. and SAT. Warm THERMO-KNIT EZ-FLO Seely Mixed White Outside Paint f Hog. $3.95 GALLON AM era For fences, bams, ga- #Cal« W K rages, boat docks, etc. # J Limit 4 gallons. 99 DRIKOTE Gray Enamel Floor Paint—GAL. $3.95-Porch and Dock d|e* •name) for wood or con-Crete floors. Battleship or light grey. mm DRIKOTE" VINYL" LATEX ' Wall Paiat—SSL. Regular $4.95 value—easy J4||d| to brush or roll on ceilings and walls. White and ^L' : 100% NYLON Shell ; MEN’S 6-Oz. Insulated Jacketed Pant Underwear Waterproof vinyl plastic panties for baby . . . snap-on or pull-over Warm THERMO-tNIT Child's Pajamas ' 2-Pc. COTTON CJT/T Baby Sleepers 11.50 Taloo Cr 07® Bottoms V |W Alt cotton thermo-knit underwear for warmth without weight. Men s long sleeve topi, ankle length bottoms in size S-M-L-XL. Boys’ short iloeve tops, ankle length bottoms in sizes 6 to 16. Hand washable 100% nylon .shed, air cell insulation, acetate polyester and nylon Wler'. In popular Foamgreen. (Other suit sets............to $12.66). effuS** Exterior and Interior Reg. $7.95 Gallon _ . Choice of .white and I deters tor exterior or in* terior surfaces-—no pool- , Ing, no blistering, no chalking. . ' W Worm QVliT WING Prevents Rust—Stops Rust PULL QUART SIZB—For exterior and intarlor motels ^4EA . . prevents rust from ~MWW' starting and stops rust from ^ spreading. ‘ WATERLOX MNISHKR Transparent Heavy Body Fiat 1.05 Fiat . . .1.20 Qaart 1.10 Qiart 2.10 Gallea 6.00 Galloa . 7.25 Staler and finisher for fine floors and interior wood surfaces ... rubs to high Worm fleeco lined shirts with zipper neck ond- hood. All sizes for 1st Qualify—Insulated LeatherBoats $13.88 "VQQ THERMO Insulated HOODED Jackets $9.00 Valua Your Choice PAINT ROLLER COVERS leother boots in black color, plain too style. Sixes 6 ho 12. Not as shown laced boots are guaranteed waterproof. Warm thermo insulated rubber. Sizes 6 to 12. Zipper end button styles. 1 choice of i colors. Plain and trim stylos. Best for thinning a P*,nts 4r,c* clean- • Limit 2 gallons, o teeeoooooeeeeeeeeeeaee Sof oi 4 Graduated Sires • 4-BUCKLE Hoovy Dufy Rubber Galoshes SS.98 Valu«»—now only American mod# rubber galoshes with 4 buckles. ^BJM Block in sizes Z to 1$. tr-regulars but guaranteed W^W leakproof. Values Dvratex felt * uppers, comp. | rmiMk S MATCHING RANT* • Sizes 30 to 42... . HUNTERS SUPPLIES SALE! ELECTRIC APPLIANCES CHILDREN'S WEAR HUNTING CLOTHES PAINT SUPPLIES BOXED CHOCOLATES WWHnoss'e lit Whitman's lit Milk Chocolate. Lb. .. 1’ * j Soft Confer. U. 1" Whitman's * teflA < Sampler. Lb *W Whitman's L Fruit-Net, Lb. .... 225 Miller HeMe M. Haviland. Lb 44* Milter Hollis Fruit-Net, Lb 169 S*** 6I< Brecht j Miniatures. Lb 71* Miller Hollis lit Buttercup Farm, 2 Lbs. I* Milter MeMit Buttercup Fprsp, Lb. . 79* Miller Hollis 1(0 Miniatures, Lb ■ Milter HpNie 1 Milk Choc elite, Lb. . WARM THERMO Mori SOCKS... 79* INSULATED 1 QUILT SOX 1 ,2S: HUNTERS'RED SNSPENMRS.... 9T m Miracle Fabric Draperies Combine Decorator Elegance w/fh FROSTED SATIN iWjMMI DRAPERIES by Carol* ||£ ! || ml *10" HI Double Width by 90"....22.99 ||||! U Igfcl Triple Width by 90“... * • C*34.99 * HBl Waite’s PERSONALIZED Christmas Card Shop NOW OPEN ON OUR THIRD FLOOR Friday and Monday Night B till 9 Uso a Waite's Flexible CCC Charge For It* first time, all the soft glowing highlights and worm, rich bulkinoss of custom-made draperies are available ot budget prices. Fashioned by Carole, these stunning window glomourizers display the same fine detoil you'd expect to find in draperies JfMting much more. Come in and see for yourself. Twg Beautiful Patterns: • Highland •Andeta (shown) Purple <*eW Copper Red AMERICAN MADE! UNTIL NOVEMBER 1st All of your favorite famous brands , Hundreds of styles to choose from Save 10% by placing your order by Nov. 1 st Draperies . . . Fourth Floor “Ombre effect"'... by Ciescill.. WHITE ORGANDY CURTAINS 25" LAWN SWEEPER Waite's exclusive KENTFIELD 'CUSTOM LEISUREWEAR" SPORT SHIRTS 24.95 Value • ^ jeon tXTKA LARGE ^1 a|00 HOPKR CAPACITY I siumytudular // S1KLFHAXI jf GIANT 25" SUSPING CAPACITY L, 36-Inch Tier f A SY-10-ADJUST ' SttttPING MIGHT FLEETWING DELUXE Middleweight TANK BIKE EtKlusively ours, this distinctive cel* lection of long sleeve Ivy shirts In pullover and coat stylings. Select your favorites from our large assortment. Including oxfords, broadcloths, choro-brays, in stripes, plaids, checks, prints, solids. S-M-L-XL MASSIVE 11“ SEMI-PNEUMATIC TIRES . . NO MONEY DOWN or $3.00 Places in Layaway! 1 Two-Ton* saddle •Whil 1 Adjustable Handle tors - • Roar L Chroma end enamel battery operated light 1 Rad far beys, blue for girls * M Bicycle*... Fifth Floor fme quality organdy curtain accented v i effect (3 shades of same color family), shades Of p nk, lilac, yellow and toast. Curtains ... Fourth Floor Deluxe JO" else ..' 34.95 ’ Self-propelled 30" sire ... . 19.95 US. Navy surplus... SHOE PAC" BOOTS ... wonderful for all hunting, outdooremonl Cost the government 14.95 Here's the perfect beii» for alt outdoorsmon! Heovy rubber one-piece bottoms with non-skid soles, leather uppers . . . stitched sturdily together. Black, sizes 5 to 12. Get X • . yours nowl GIANT 40" ALL STEEL HOOK AND LADDER TRUCK Mad# exclusively for u« by Fioldcrest GALAXIE" ENSEMBLE 24 by 40" $1 QQ bath towel IIVV Men's Wear, Street Floor 1 8.98 Valuo $2 places in layaway Surprisingly low pricod . . 1.29 Fingertip..................59c 49c 22 by 33" bath mat. . 3.99 pur exclusive Fire Truck made to lost for years of fun. Separate windshield, realistic wooden ladders, jeweled gun sights and clanging bell add to the fun and action of this sturdy toy. Safe all steel construction in bright, firemen red baked enamel. s girl will remember all tier Me i.. end mother may two herself. Spontaneously, you find your hand going ttie head that rods around like a real baby's. Newborn weight-balanced and snugly dressed in sacque, vest and Your choice of three i mum flowered prints to mix and match "With six . beautiful solid colors! For a ready distinctive decor, we also have matching sheets, blankets, shower cOrtolns and wostebaskets. Come seel Linens.... Fourth Floor Toys... Fifth Floor Sanded .. . ready to varnish, point or itain Guaranteed for a full 5 years! TLAND WH Automatic Dispensing RUG CLEANING FLOOR POLISHER SCRUBBER-WAXES-SUFFER BIG 9-DRAWER CHEST MEN'S NYLON HOSE Smartly knit in a narrow rib patter fashioned a full inch longer than mo* men's, onklets . . . these hose have the Wear guaranteed for a full $ years! ' Choose from 19 colors) , One size fits 10 to 13. Stock up^| at OUr low price! ‘ looking chest that if sanded, ready To varnish, point or stolid.' 41" long, 15" datp and, 34" high. And just look at the law, tow pricel .. Lower Laval An appliance that will eliminate the messy and hard port ot scrubbing, waxing ond ,rug shampooing! Wf compete with built-in automatic dispensing system, 2 < polishing brushes, 2 scrubbing, brushes. 2 wool fed buffing pads, rug shampoo unit and a sample of vanishing foam rug shampoo. Try M Housewares /.. Lower Level Street Floor TOtJK THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER IS, 1961 Health Department jS'Ssar'S* IT& Vi"!?. Vitamin Discoverer , - r Mil. mood, fwetiit (tan in Spain s Bull Rlngf* Neither the Pemjt« brothers noritscapes Falling Wall , _ In Incfnirf nlahafirc ! I micu.teia (APl-Tht Beaa-!^ W«s could be reached far I rqme (APi-The will almost P0| jfiqUisHGO RlQIltS to Instruct Diabetics • This tel. the Oakland County De-Mmm of Health again elV fin a nerles of dasnee for diabetica pad thdr tamibe*. I Then wiU be But dames. Each series will cansfct of five Ipxsobs taught by the public health itritionist and a public beahtt none. The Bret Mhs begtoi Nee. X W aari m ant «a Do* «. , MURCIA, Spain (AP)-The #w*ie*rMNe« c paper La Vesded (Truth i Itintil* chec*- ■ ROME (AP>—The watt almost;. I fail on Italy's Chamber o! Deputies.1 A lee of $2 wlU.be charged fblwednesday Princess Maria, Gab-| --------------~ “ . ;*« lawmakers did not leant ,, ^ _ •. those xhle to pay. Diabetic, mu« (riega. daughter of ex-King Umberto p|an 'Coinaroma' SltOW* fee 1L ****** W£T have the written approval of tbeirof Italy, wdl shortly malts her : P*N - , jentiet who dlecomed Vltemto B-L phyeician to aSend Referral forms debut hi bullfighting from horse- DEARBORN - Dearborn ,Cob>! The lawmaker. tobre told ***“ «■ "«M» **• are obtainable eg alt efflees at the back. The new^mper credited this Club will iponsor its Or«t annual Wednesday that workers htstalttagl Myt: 1 ”* T health ibipartginat report to Angel Peralta, who wHh"Colnarama' at the Youth Center an air condManbig plant In thg « was «vg my PMrP«* to his brother Rtffael — Spain's meat Buttdtag Michigan and Greenfield basement discovered one at tbl nMk> roort^1 **• n 'famed mounted bullfighters 'avenues. Dearborn The show will main walla had no foundation } Since 1936; ff million Ip royal- The paper said the 71 yearnbljlrt open to the public 11 ajn. to [Cracks had appeared In; it from]ties has been disbursed J*y^ the Granted Independence UNITED NATION^ « — Independence far Western Samoa was ratified unanimously Wcdnee- ■■■■■PHPMI*! m . -n.„ ^ „ ..............■PHI „ _ .■ jpiiar by Cmwnt'hamtpMv. The wortd’t heaviest bell is said ^ noeer said the 21-yeaiH>ldlbe open to the public 11 a.m. to I Cracks had appeared In it treat ties has been disbursed by the New Zealand will end lts_u-.N“i to be the 193-ton Czar KoUml.{princess been pan. Oct. 28, and noon to 5 dea.ltlme to time. Now a XKtnot fbundd-(Research Corp. of New York to trusteeship OWf the South Padflcj cast to 1733 in Moscow the fines of the Peralta, brothers Oct. 3. f that has been built. v , } universities and other nonprofit I Island group next Jan. 1. organlrstlnne tar research problems of nutrition. Dr. wUttaina, now retired, discovered the vitartiin after 26 years of research Into the disease, Jieri-best Proposal 70 DfodBna on Frooing Colonits UNITED NATIONS W ~ Nigeria Wednesday proposed a deadline,®* Dec. 1. 19N for colonial poswi to giant Independence .to ait Bmir territories to Africa. This rereU-tion. submitted lor lbs general. A»-sembly's debate on cnlntdplpm jlater in die session, la oai/fffft-ably mildew than a proposal by the Sovief Uniorf that would set an independence deadline for all colontaa at the end of next year. [AC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 FIVE with Lycra* Brat and Girdle* WHat it lighter Man Lycra? Why, luch things at butterfly wfhgs. What la mora controlling than Lycra? Nothing that man or naturo over concocted Why art Perme-Hft Lycra under- fashiona to different? Became of brat with Magic Inset* that guarantee lasting uplift and a Magic Oral Pantie that CANT RIOE UP—EVER! Brings a touch of springtime to foil! Swirl Wrap 'n' lie Cotton Exquisite gentle shades... in rich Majestic Mix 'n' Match Ileum ....................4.98 «e 6.99 Skirts.................. 10.98 t* 12.98 Sleeks .........................12.98 Jackets ................10.98 t* 12.98 Sweaters ................ 4.99 to 18.99 Fashioned for the woman on the go! 2-Pc, Wool Sheath Suit *12.98 A colorful border of tullpa sweep around the skirt of our newest Swirl. The fabric It e wrinkle controlled combed cot- Here's a wonderful combination of style and value . 100% wool two-piece suit fashioned lor the woman go. SHm, trim sheath skirt featured with e smart jacket. Yours in black or moan; sites 12 to 20 am to 22Vi. Brighten your fashion Ufa with a glorious array of sparkling separates in exquisite gantle shades .. . tquatont and kumquat. Choose from rich wool* In wonted* and doeskin flannel*, matched with easy care miracle fabrics. Sizes 8 to IB. Sportswear .. . Third floor You'll tread softly ... in the very newest ! IDRESS-UP FOR \ HALLOWEEN 'I PUN I HALLOWEEN The Young Point of Vitw in Shoes Casual good Quilt Top Pajamas • Witch • Dtvil • Pater Rabbit B Bugs Bunny • Mickey Meuse Solid color knit trousers pair beautifully with the quilted Avitco tap with embroidered Peter Pan collar. Choose lilac, pink or blue, sizes 10 to 18. Stacked walking keel. The reason these lovely shoes by Ufa Stride feel to wonderful Is exclusive Cusclno construction. So soft and wonderful you wHI want a whole wardrobe of Ufa Strides! Lingerie . , . Second floor Children's World . . . Second floor NO SCHOOL TOMORROW! BRING THE CHILDREN IN FOR THESE TERRIFIC VALUES! Boys' "Billy-the-Kid* CORDUROY SLACKS Girls' 3 to 6x and 7 to 14 DRESS SALE! CORDUROY BOXER SLACKMATCHING KNIT SHIRT 100% cotton fexcord corduroy slack* in the classic Ivy styling boys like best. Completely , washable. Wonderful for school. Proportioned regular and slim in Zlzes.6 to 12. 4 colors . . . save! Famous Health-tax iongies matched with polo tops of 2-ply combed cotton knit in all of your favorite color combinations. They never need ironing, and are tailored neat and natty for long lasting good looks. Sizas 3 to 6x. Boys' Hondsoma WASH V WEAR SPORT SHIRTS ORLONX SWEATERS HEAVY BLANKET SLEEPERS Heavy blanket sleeping bags with non-slip fast to keep them warm 6n cold nights. They can't kick this blanket off I Pink, blue or maize, sizes S-M-L. Terrific values i.n girls' pretty fall dresses! You save to one-half and more on flouncy full Skirted drosses with short or *A sleeves, you'll tike the gey plaids and solid colors, the lovaly Izce trims. Save! Smart Orion acrylic easy-care sweaters at savings! Choose from short „sleovo slipons and' long sleeve cardigans in red or white. Sl|gt 7 to 14. CHARGE THEM AT WAITE'S CHILDREN'S WORLD OF VALUE SECOND FLOOR THE PONTIAC PRESS \4 West Huron Street ' Ng&ara IMIIIII II.. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1961 babolo i ma mm mI r Mr. K’s Spiel the Usual Except for Bomb Threat Soviet Premier Nikita Kheushchiv rambled on fOr some seven and a half hoar* addressing the Communist pdrty Congress and for the most part the speech appeared to be more of the same. The Soviet Union leader becked off eUfhtly on the BerHa demands, bat countered with a new threat of setting off a 50-megaton nuclear bomb. ' ~Jk ★ . By leaving the door open if the West Is willing to negotiate it-would seem an one hand that be bad somewhat \ eased world tensionsX Yet this offer to negotiate Is covered with subt fuge because in meantime he lnt to flex Russia’s muscles by touching off his new super bomb. ★ ★ #. ' Also, in hie windy oration he harangued on and on selling the Communist type government. As could bo expected, he emphasized that ths capitalistic or democratic form governments are dead, and that eventually communism would take over the world. ★ ★ ★ The pattern of this speech seems nations that conveniently look t the other way when the bill collector comes around, but these two are especially noteworthy. The balk of the Arab states are refusing to pay their part of the coots on the Gasa' strip between Egypt and Israel. ★ ★ ★ There’s a provision In the charter; that suspends the voting right of delinquent members. Why isn’t it invoked? Why do we pay when others fail? These factors are further Indications of .the instability of the U.N. Uncle Sucker will dip again into your private little stockpile and extract a few more bob to keep the wheels squeaking forward. Voice of the People: ‘Extra Halloween Candy Can Be Put to Good For the past S yean I have put ads In paper* asking mothan g whan Halloween candy comm is and them is more than they can tolerate, could they think of the youngsters nt ths Osklaad County Children’s Center who are tmafato to go hogging. ♦ * * The fwwu“*1 Center la aua of the moat wlsteadiaf la Ms cars, but DOto thing* SMtet ho left out. Catena candy Id donated theoo yiuugatire do not got any. Oar cWMreu gat oa much It to itout ood. ★ A ★ F*ch year after Halloween. I ask parents to send ths unwanted candy either to me or take It directly to ths center. Lett year I sent out s hundred and fifty pounds of candy. It sounds Uhe a lot, but when you have several hundred children tt does not lest s long ttan*. Mr*. Lout* H. Landau MSI Gardner Oak Park KHRUSHCHEV The Man About Town Lesson by Johnnie Gould be Learned in Quest for Real Contentment Hard to Shake! David Lawrence Believes: U.S. Will Lag Until Tax Reform Thanks The Press for Featuring Home ' I want to thank The Press for featuring our home In Mrs. Odell's colump Oct. 14. Many people have driven by In the past two days and all my colleagues at school have mentioned how impressed they were with the coverage. This certainly attests the fact that the column is widely read., We have received both inspiration and advice from Mrs. Odell’s layouts. In this day when so much attention is paid to the sumptuous homes which represent a large financial outlay, it is gratifying to have had the prtv-lege of seeing our modest home featured. Mm Mataro T49 Fourth St. Happiness: What's usually right at hand, if you know enough to pick It np. He's about 12 years old. Just for some obvious reasons, we'll call him Johnnie Br^wn, and most of us can learn a lesson from him. His teacher requested the pupils to each write something about their home life, and has handed Johnnie's effort on to me. Here it Is: : have ten brothers and five sisters. . , „ .. . I i We have two pigs, a goose, a duck, few to pretty much follow the Soviet line. Mcktns, a big white dog TrUey, and That is carrying an issue just to the have a lot of fun together and we are all brink and hoping to make some gain very happy." force. They }a I I y sty away . Tram sack obviously love-hungry fematou. Men are more stimulated by girls who are devoted to great causes, such as the church or music or Red Cross, etc. Such women don’t show to the world that marriage is their only aim in life. Instead, they have many other worthy goals, of which marriage to but one. -So they immediately become more attractive. For they can hold their suitors off, and this Immediately enhances their rating as “date bait." Their independence and spunk then challenge men’s interest and stimulate more ardent wooing, so men beg them to accept their engagement rings. WWW. Always writ* to Or. Otorst W. Crass In car* of Ite Pontiac Prett. Pontiac, Michigan. tnclotlnf S Ion| 4 esnt stumped, tsU-sddreased envelope and JO cent* to cover typing and printing eoete when you tend for hit psychological charts sad pamphlets. (Copyright, INI) VMtosatlated Frees Is entitled •xcludvelr to the use for ripuhU-rotten of all local mwi printed In roSSr Wtt 523 it. UlUto a year: • United States tJI M i rlpttoas ptyable V \ ; mov* ,ttow«#n f om©*** 1 ehorocM* •CK«»9* him *?P ,uaroct»r» ^ BOYS', GIRLS' WARMLY LINED SNOWSUITS W«»» WlftW, GIRLS' COATS 'N COAT SETS WITH PILE LINING, SCARF i teuton corduroy with detachable rib knit collar and wrists. Quilt loden. 3-6*. OiRl'Si pile lined contrasting pants, bonnet. 2 to 4. Cuddle-soft 4-pi oca slaapaf ward rob* Two combed cotton knit sleeper sets with b plastic-sole feet, gro-feature, snap fasten- ^ ers. One gay print, one solid, 6 mo.-4 yrs. om Deluxe brushed knit cotton sleepers TOTS' WARM 9UILT-LINED POPLIN JACKETS E99 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 CHEAT NEW FALL LINE UP«. A HANDSOME ARRAY OF MAN-SIZED VALUES IN OUR OWN WALDORF SWEATER A peak selection of new patterns, colors, shapes You'll have to go Into a huddle over which to choose when you see this great collection of new sweatersl Ivory style, color and shape—smooth knit classic, bulky ski-types .. . cardigans, slip-ons, coat styles . .. high Vs and low Vs, shawl collars, crew necks/turtle necks! And the materials . .. wonderful imported Shetland wools, lambswool and Orion* acrylic blends, carefree shape-retaining Orion* interlock knits, 100% worsted wools. Choose your favorite In the latest fall fashion colors — solids, stripes, jaquard patterns. Men's sizes S-M-L and 38-46. Buy today for top selections—beat the rush on gift buying, too. *Jt«. TM. DuPont Co. Jamboree HEAVY WEIGHT WOOL-NYLON WORK SWEATER A99 ^ 'Charf. It* It's a really serviceable sweater In impeded virgin weal and nylon for the utmost in wear plus warmth. Intar-lock stitched, taped shoulder, double elbow. Navy or oxford; sites 38 to 46. Work Clothot Dept. 9.99 6.99 7.99 Shop modant • • • just say, “CHARGE IT” and fake up to 10 months to pay! ok cut# as Eskimos, all bundled s hooded jacket With pile and braid trim. Permel Plus* finish ir repellent, wrinkle and spot it. Terrific value. Girls' 3 to 6x. r.M: American CynamUt Ce. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday 19*99 Hairlock mattress for firm resilient support Posture-perfect, with M M go luxury feel. Heavy wat- I £L ■ •rproof fabric cover. 6 * ..." yr. site. Save 5.11. ***** Sava 5.11 on rag. 17.99 70-coil covered mattress 70 coils backed with Uta aa white cotton felt; laml- | J** noted waterproof print fabric. 6 year size. '■***• * Reg. 10.99 white cotton 6-yr. sise baby mattresa 42 strong coils bocksd M TV with white cotton felt. lominoted waterproof m fabric cover. 6-yr. site. “**** w DOWNTOWN AND ORAYTON PLAINS Shell love these fine wool winter togsl Bold tri-color stripes make the Orion* acrylic pile lining as colorful as it is warm; knit scarf matches lining to perfection. An outfit that brings stars to her eyes . . . makes her strut with pride as only the newest styling, latest colors and fine tailoring con oo. Just one from many styles. Coat and slack, sites 4 to 6k, 7 to 10. Coot only, sizes 8 to 14 'Reg. TM. DuPont Co. SALE! Kontwct, Serta, Baby-dri CRIB MATTRESSES RIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1>, 1W1 A Ride With Pilot Through Thick, , Firm Announce* Plan i to Enlarge Plants in 2 ‘ Michigan Cities 1 ROCKFORD CAP) - Wolverine I Shot A Tuning Cbrp. ha* u-> nounced u expansion program of i more than *800,000 at its plants in ■ two Michigan cities — Big Rapids and Ithaca. The sound of the great J-T-4 Pratt A Whitney engines — the aoond of 90.000 horses — filtered through the thick hide of the com- the right as he came “over the strikingly realistic *L3-milli Commit Bobby Driscoll L08 ANGELES (AP> - Bobby Driscoll, • onetime child foovit ■tar who had everything he wanted md nothing he needed, is starting the long road heck from e lovable youngster in sueh films i broker, Young. Driscoll was buuh •* "So Dear to My Heart''' and ned in 1956 to Marilyn Jeannel 'Treasure Island.” He has ap- Brush. They had three children.1 peered in 3o movies. * * * f jyh*t ..h>ppwwi to “My wiie\nd I have been sep- con Mn t certain, but he gave an for man than a year. «jlM»atton to newsmen outside 4 , rtuo^ffla. me cowtroom. tion. I just hope that someday i! ~"L*« *very£ln«- J* “M. will be considered fit to have •Working steadily with good curtody of my son." parts. Then I started putting all »l want to act again, ’ he con-ttnje in my arm. Itiniwd, “to' a credit to. • •* - myaelf and to my family, to pickj SALE ENDS SATURDAY! Sears complete installation I 1G-Yr. Guarantee 3-In-l ■frMHyflUM roofing Reuther and Meany to Assist at U.Ni Installed on Average 24x30-Ft. Home with Vs Pitch - it dimcGt to at m with united natkm the mat of society. - -Labar leaders 1 kTJES^SKLjS *-v If? LT i&tfZirz*'sus|S?v-* -5*. s ™ Us movie, career started npj mach exactty but I’m cer- tions General Asser lAO.see A TEAS |!fta coo*id*r*,>,y mor*[ US. Ambassador Once Driscoll was making merer*4" ,100,W0' | «*» announced t than $50,000 a year. He started'HUBT PEOPLE’ cl Meany, presidei acting at € la “The Sullivans" “During all this time I've hurt ,nd Reuther. ; during World War II. He won an a lofef people. Es^M-toiiy my p«. UAW. to assist tht Oscar at 11 for his role in "The rents, my wile, way children and ****1 problems. ‘ “ || “* “ myself. My parents are fine peo- The president 4 jpie. I've hurt them terribly.” points a delegation He is the only child of Mr. artd jbert and five alter Mra. Cletus Driscoll of Mar Vista,'sent tbs United Sti I Osllt. His lather if a real estate I Assembly sesslpns. ffS With beautiful 3-in-i pure asphalt shingles ’ jt on your roof, your home will take on now smartness immediately. They give depend* able all-weather protection to your family ffil and possessions. Choice of colors. INSTALLED SIDING Cboies of alaminam, asbestos, insulated or genuine brick end painting In many beautiful pastel shades. Nigerian Youth at MSU Baps Corps Training NO MONEY THERE’S MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE PORTLAND, Maine <*-*A Nlge-j rian student was quoted by the Portland Evening Express Wednesday-ad saying a group of Peace) Corps trainees bound for Nigeria are woefully Ignorant of conditions i In his country. 10-Yr. Written Guarantee Defective material! said workman-hip will be repaired free of charge within Id year* from date ef application. CALL FE 5-4171 for a FREE, honest roofing estimate Emeke Azikiwe, son. of Nigeria’s j governor general, is studying at! Michigan State University, where! S3 Pence Cwpsmen are being, readied for a.tour In his hems-) land/-He worked on the Express news staff for a short time last IWISO No-Line Glasses Yet! There’s indeed more than meets the eye because even though your friends look at yoer glasses, they cannot see any bifocal dividing line! Only YOU know Uwt you are enjoying clear, comfortable reading and distance vision with ■Usees that show no visible bifeeaL INVISO No-Line Classes art so assy to get used to ... and they can be fitted in all styles of “Personality” frames. and all the lectures they’re receiving art tram ram and worn Sears Has Everything in Tile PLASTIC WALL TILE 24eGeedTUe.19seq.fi. S4e Better, 26c sq. ft. Best, SOc sq.ft. Ceramic Well Tile ... S9e sq. ft. Tile Board, 4* a 4* 4.79 HomartCeiliog Tile, 44 sq. ft.... carton 8.7* Ha said there are 15 other Nlge-j rian students at MSU, along with a University of Nigeria professor who! is studying music. “Only on? of these boys has been able to even talk to the 33, and they leave for Nigeria In a| Two-Layer Vinyl Folding Door* Reg. 9.75 &** CHARGE rr 32xS0-in. sis*. Full-length fiber-board frame laminated to sloth-backed vinyl cover. Louvered Deers Available, Galvanised 4-in. Eave*Irough *8®" FLOOR TILE Asphalt,B-CoUrs..Sees. C-Coloro..7eea. D-Colo Vinyl Asbestos..J Oeea. Pure ViayiTUc Hamart Bobber Floor TUe. Sole Meed at . EYES EXAMINED • GLASSES FITTED JVo Appointment Nocewtary Building Materials, Parry St. Baasmont Dr. Clarence I. Phillips Optomotriwt beauty, protection with chain link fence, installed JUST SAY, ‘Charge it* OPTICAL DEPARTMENT SecMd Floor 1S4 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5*4171 The post card was intercepted by Nigerian Nationalists and used, in a campaign to discredit the! work of the corps. 1 innuars: ience. tine w v f, posts, top rail, loop caps, line hardware wsHIlT NO MONEl^DOWN Your children and pets deserve the best protection . . and David Bradley Chain Link Fence gives Just that Heavily * galvanised fabric gives longer life! Il4*. steel wire retains its tsutness. 48 inches high. Gates and hardware, terminal, end poets extra. Shop Sears tonight nntil 9 p.m.! Save today! Fencing Dept., Perry St. Basement HUNTERS — Save More During Sean Hunting Jamboree ■mgOHgM J. C. Higgins Automatic 5-Shot 12-ga. Shotgun Regularly IHIVV •1 U9.9& crcr No Money Down Fast dependable gas-operated action doe* the cocking, loading, ejecting. Just aim and squeeze trigger. Lightweight, amazingly light recoil. Walnut stock has checkered pistol grip, foreend. .28 Rifle, Bolt Action, Reg. 24.95 .. . . 19.99 Mauser Sporstcr, 7.5 Cal.............15.99 64.99 J. C. Higgins Lever Action Rifle ... 54.99 We have Ammo./or all Guns 6.69 Duck Decoys 77c 5.99 Gun Case 4.99 3.98 Hunting Parka . 2.99 5.98 J. ,C- Higgins Hunting Pants . . r.*. . 4.99 SALE! HOMART Gas Conversion Burner Ready for iastallation. Buy Now Save 810! Depend- able. Stainless steel flame spreader, won’t rust Safety pilot. 75,000 to 150,000 BTU Capacity. A.G.A. approved. Sears Installation as low as 8169. A , M Glass-Lined 1 Wf j , jii Automatic Gas B vi Water Heaters FURNACE *159 Regular $199! 80,060 B.T.U- Shorty Model AVERAGE INSTALLATION $ room house with both, all 1/lfiQ new basement duet work 409 LIFE-CLAD ceramic coated heat exchanger will last mueh longer. Oversiae blower and motor for air condi, honing. Filter-Minder signals dirty filter. High effieieney burner. Insulated Cabinet. Shop Sears tonita ’til 9!1 iso.ooaani «i7« ita.ooaam sato lao.oea art us* Plumbing and Heating Dept.. Perry St. Basement 12-ga. Pump Shotgun With Faat, Short-Stroke Action J. C. Higgins Bolt-Action .410 Gauge Shotgun NO MONEY DOWN Efficient, 30-gallon siae wa-tar haater. Glam lining pre-rants peeling, chipping, mat. Honor-Bilt. Save today! 40-Gel. sue, *T«ke-Wlib’ 65.05 Sensational low pries for this J. C. Higgins quality nth! 6-shell capacity—5-in. tube, 1-in. chamber. Cross bolt safety, brass hood sight Walnut stock. Low priced, self-cocking stogie »hat, excellent for be-sinners or a good second gun for inexpensive shooting. Automatic safety. Walnut finish hardwood stock. Sport big Goods,, Perry St. Basement "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money hack” St? A 'Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back' 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE $-4171 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE EXPRESS HALLER 6.00x16 3 Ihufs On Ilf! ALLSTATE TIRE SALE No Trade-In Required 15-inch Tube-Type Black 7.10*15.,....... t.18:9i* 7.60x15 ............... 21.04* •Plus lax—no trade-in rfqaiftd 14 or 15-inch Tubeless Black 6.70x15 or 7.50x14 ...... 18.84* 7.10x15. or 8.00x14........20.94* 7.60x15 or 8.50x14 23.94* • Guaranteed against all road hazards by all Sears stores from coast-to-coast, Canada to Mexico. • Allstate Guardsman . . . for safer starts and stops. • Strong Tyrex® Rayon cord for many miles of safer driving. • At these low prices have a new set mounted on your car today. YEAR Outdoorsman. 87. Rescued 50 in Lifetime Swiss j public WINDSOR, 6nt. » — James W. I lifesaving craft to the scene, 1 Grubb, Ptotnt fletoa National Park, called tor wtoateen and .rescued a mss toto saw at least 59 per-! Cl men sad a woman oft tie 1 sons from drowning during hi. life-j foundering vessel. Sms. died Tuesday at his home.j Qn Nov. 4, 1825. Grubb was re-j *“ lvas "■ [sponsible for a lifesaving opera- The tenner commercial fish. lion which saved (he lives of 11 [men an the freighter called Ula>[ and had twi af Point Pelee tor [ Those and many other individual M years. t efforts ran the number of j&ople Grubb’s lifesaving activities date , saved by prubb to mere than 50.1 back to before the turn of the cen- He wao also very active in com-: jury and involved many herdicimerriai fishing operations on the feats on Lake Erie when that bfidyjlake. to water was at its.roughest. . -------------i- -■ \ ,] On May 2. 1905. when a ship!-,; u , . -■ , railed The Kelly's Island sank otf'wCKTS intention Uear **• (XiAm]S 0hio ap^J ♦to .Fttnriy ,fe. togsd planning is evident in a -see«!. saving nine crew members. ----.-—.-I Nine bthers drowned before he MRtgstBE NfiQgpBpP • Weterproof • Shock assistant • Anti-Magnetic • Swoop Second Hand • Expansion land • lead at Night • Double Guarantee ALL THE CREDIT YOU NEED WELTE IpgHg ; I > 1 THE PONTIAC * PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 SEARS DIAMOND JUBILEE “Sears Days” Event -ENDS SATURDAY ^^9 WHTIAC (j 0 JEWELRY C8. 25 N. Soginow Street IXCITING FASHION ACCESSORY ... ENCHANTING GIFTI Exquisite DIAMOND PENDANTS Styled an 5th Avaaaa .. . FaaMan Cantor af fho World Specially Priced far 4 Dents Only to# Prieto •» J11.9 J YOUR CHOICE Soma of the brightest stars in our collections of smart diamond pendants. Sot hi 10K gold. You'll bo proud to weor thorn anywhere. ®TM of Tyrex Inc. 24-Month Guarantee Guardsman Tyrex® Rayon 6.70x15 Blackwall Tube-Type Plus Tax GUARANTEED AGAINST ALL ROAD HAZARDS 12-Month Guarantee 4-PLY TIRE ALLSTATE Tvrex R Rayon 6.70x15 NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED Ask about the low prices of Nylon tires in all popular sizes. . • Not just 2-ply or 4-ply rated but a full 4-ply tire at thio low, low price! NO MONEY DOWN Ask an ALLSTATE tire salesman about Sears Easy Payment Plan. FREE ALLSTATE TIRE MOUNTING •& Roclu, Stones Spikes, Nails Holes in Road Broken Concrete " Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SIIOC VI SK VHS AND SM*. SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Pfattne FE 5*4171 Railroad Track Broken Glass Tulir-ly Blackwn Plus Tax plus tax ■ P.rrv Hr. ATTENTION TRUCKERS Hurry! Our All Time Low Price for This Nylon Tire *•50x16........ 25,95 plus tax 7.00x1$ ....... . . 51.95 plus tax • The perfect light delivery truck tire for all V4, Ml, or 1 -ton pick-up trucks • Deep treakl.and rugged const ruction gets this tirr through country road* and busy city streets. Try a act today! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER )9. 1961 THIRTEEN Airline Hijacker Is Found Guilty SALE ENDS SATURDAY! Boy the Best for More Starting and Reserve Power Price Cnt *4 Price Cut *4 Bh 36-Month 36-Month Guarantee Guarantee ttnntal airline* Jet alrfiner over New Mexico Aug. 3. Bearden was found guilty 01 kidnaping, obetraction 6! interstate commerce, and violating (be Federal Motor Vehicle'Theft Act. Court source* said they expect Bearden to appeal la Ms own behalf. He has 10 days in which to file the motion. The prosecution asked lila imprisonment for Leon. Cody, cannot be confined beyond his 2Jst birthday, ft*. 13. MB. Vaa 19.95 200% more starting power; 04% more reserve power than oar "Good” batteries. 30-Month Guarantee 30-Month Guarantee Defense attorney Robert & Pine asks for a verdict of innocent by reason of insanity for Lean Bearden. CTOS. EXAMPLE As an example. Pine pointed to Bearden’s withholding until Ms trial the claim that government intelligence agents were responsible for the hijacking. Bearden testified Tuesday that U.S. intelligence agents had threatened to put him and his wife, Mary Ruth, 31, in prison if the hijacking wasn’t carried out. 12-Volt Woe 18.95 64% more starting power; 17% more reserve, power dun our "Good” batteries. I Was 15.95 120% more starting power; 43% more reserve power then oar "Good” batteries. CUIUGS — Lee Deaver (right), 4, gives a bug to Martha Burt, 3. after they were chosen as Mastsr Montgomery and Miss Montgomery in a citywide beauty contest for tots fat the Alabama capi- 18-Month Guarantee A88 (F exc* Was 11.98 Our "Good" battery . . . thrifty and enough power to handle regular needs. 24-Month Guarantee 12-Volt 12-Volt Batteries Fort 1955- '61 Chev., Pontine; 1956- ’61 Plym., Dodge, De-Soto, Chrysler, Rambler. Price Cut *2 12-Month Guarantee Regular *26.99 to *32.93 Plus Power CRAFTSMAN PORTABLE ^ELECTRIC TOOLS MMk jjjjgfe 3 DAYS ONLY IrnuS iigx^ II r YOUR CHOICE 6-Volt Batteries Fon 1940-’54 Chev.; 19$0-’53 Dodge; 1949-’50 Oldsmo-bile; 1950-’55 Rambler. Get yours todayl 6-Volt Was 9.95 Our lowest price bettery; will handle avenge starting and lighting needs. Free Batteiy Installation NO MONEY DOWN On Seers Easy Payment Plan BATTERY GUARANTEE If defective and will not hold a charge: (l) Free replacement within 90 days. (2) After 90 dnye, we prill replace bettery charging only for the period of ownership. Charge is based on the regular price lees trade-in, at the time of return, prorated over number of months of guarantee. Sale- Priced EACH NO MONEY DOWN Just say "Charge It” on Seats CHARGE ACCOUNT Craftsman Industrial Rated H-in. Drills Develop ^EP, Sara S10! For tough job*. Precision ball, needle and sleeve beariagi. Double reduction steel gear*. Geared key chuck. 3-wire cord, adapter. Taken all Sean drill accessories. \ Craftsman Eight-in-1 Sabre Saws with Handy Edge Guide Save $7.00! Does die work of rip, crosscut, coping, jig, scroll, band, keyhole, hack saws. Makes its own starting hole. Edge guide for straight lines, circles. Industrial Rated. Protects Chrome From Rusting Sears Price 1 88 ALLSTATE Robber Heater Hose 8-FL I« Chrome Allure gives a protective coating without reducing taster, won’t pod. Riron-knit. Kniil* heal, oil, pim ■ad San-frets*. Shop toaiaht util 9 o'rlork! * SPECIAL! ALLSTATE PERMANENT ANTI-FREEZE Craftsman Orbital Sanders Removes Dust as You Sand Save 12.93! Rugged for wood or paint removal; light for overhead use. Join pick np hose to vacuum; whisk up dust a* you sand wood or remove paint. 3-wire cord. Industrial Rated. Craftsman High Speed Heavy Duty Reciprocating Sanders Save *10! 37 square inch sajtding surface and 14,400 strokes per minute give wood a satin smooth finish fast Doable arc sanding action.' UL listed (Industrial Standards). Thrifty Methanol \Anti-Freeae Scars Price 88 \ <**w» Coatsias fuB - strength mrthan pure aad aadUated. Special r inhibitor. 1-g.lloft. SAVE! Sale- Priced 147 GALLON Charge It holds your choice in Layaway ’til Dec. 16th Herihnwe B#L. MMe Bmemiul ALLSTATE Anti-Freese Proved better by Sears laboratory than four other leading national brands: (1) lower frees* point, (2) higher boiling point. (3) better Resistance to rust, corrosion. Get ALLSTATE! Shop Seers tonight until 9 p.m.! 'Save! j 15xl7-ln. Sturdy Bench k’S.**:.0”....5* 'Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back’ ___SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE ! Phone FE 5-4171 SEARS ^ DIAMOND JUBILEE FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PHESS/THTJRSBAT, OCTOBER 19, 1M1 Mgr Land fci White Home ip 1965 Rocky Feels Out Trend in New York Stdte ALBANY, N T fUPIl - QbV, Nelson A. Rockefeller Is working. on the 'first phase of a political campaign that might, If all. wd&Jand him in the White f At prtiMt, tee »)«mM Rockefeller la tooting at On local level «M a syutacn el “satnra-the" team to carry Me message the pMpk Rtaghamtoa. Rochester tod In 1998 Rockefeller wa of the upstate cities in with farmer Gw, Averell Hint-Last year, Sen. Johft F. Kennedy lost only one of the four large upstate qities to Vice President Richard M. Nixon—Binghamton by 567 votes. Kennedy carried New York State by 38MK while Rockefeller won It three years ago by 573,834. ANSWERS QUESTIONS The governor’s saturation tours include 30 or 40 scheduled steps In o two-and-a-half-day visit to • speaks, of the state’s improving economy, fallout shelters, more state aid lor schools and no tax increase. * A A . After his talks, lUcgelefler ItoMs a question and ■ sower see- the pirssnol to state, national Mi world altahtOy The governor usually rephrases ts audience’s questions in a simpler form and asks Jf that is what is’intended. He thsthpoceedo to give a detailed answer. Rockefeller is at his hast in small groups where his quick smile and friendly greeting work for him. A pat; on the back, a firm handshake and a few words complete the picture. A . . A, .A The saturation tours wind up with a town hall-type meeting at which the governor and his cabinet are available: for quests pencil between hh'index and midfingers and thumb when he lean designation la the California gubernatorial race, has givea such ■ pledge. Rockefeller’s reply to the pi tion raised on several occasions \f "Politicians get into more trouble taking poatitSM or anticipating HH before they get to them.^ as a Strong telling point at tfeo Republican National Convention la ML It ate* wtfl ilntrnalaa Rockefeller has been naked If hf a pledge to serve as governor for a full lour years If re-elected in 1962. Nixon, who hapji announced hfk bid for the Republi- Giant Fertilizer Factory Is Going Up in Pakistan KARACHI (UPl) - A $53 million fertilizer factory using natural gas will be to operation by November to Sylhet, East Pakistan. Two hundred Japanese technicians and 6,000 local woAert are tolling oa a round-the-clock basis to finish the project, which to expected to prodoc* 117.000 teas of fertiliser annually. [WKC’S 33rd BIRTHDAY ST SALE! *4 ■^Anniversary Sale Another Frigidair§ Exclusiwl PATENTED 3-RING “PUMP” AGITATOR! Bothoo d—p dirt out without bootlngi from Frigidaire U and WKC... Lowest priced washer you can buy that «SQAK3* AUTOWATfCflUy! TRAM NO MONEY DOWN FRIGIDAIRE MATCHING ELECTRIC DRYER Ixduslva “Flowing Heat.” No Stoop Nylon Lint Scroon on Door. “No-HoatM Cyclo lor Fluffing And JUST THINK... You Get This 3-Piece CHINA LAMP GROUP For Only JH. » with any $39.95 purchase or NO MONEY DOWN-BUDGET TERMS Can N Usod as 2 Soparato Bedsl 8-Pc. Maple Blink Bod Outfits MNMmHIM Outstanding vatao st this torrtik tow *58* rteh asapla finish. With A csmfurtablu mnttrassos, 2 rasitiant steal springs, ____________ ladder aadgaard rati. R0 MONEY DOWN Luxurious Comfort and Boaufy a Restonaire Hollywood Outfit MM Mm DM, Raitonolra Innarsprlng mattrats far real comfort and yaari at sarvisa. Oax spring on trim lags. WnshaMa plastic upholttarad haodbaord In ambassad ____ button-tufted offact. If" wlda. NO MONEY BOWK All Nylon, Foam Padded 7-Pc. Sofa Bod Grouping Daluxa Sofa Bad and matching ( lounge chair In durable, Alt* j NYLON fabric• plus team paddod, ravarslbla cushions. In addition you got 0 bland or mahogany occasional lablai, 3 modarn tobla M0 HOMEY DOWM 8-Pie. Modern Deluxe Bedroom Tho swita Insludos large double drascsr, mirror, roomy chest, book-coca bad plus Sarta Innarsprlng mattros* and box spring, 3 featitar pillows. >177" NO MONEY DOYfil I THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19,1361 ONE COLOR FIFTgfcX YANKEE'S Oral NEW STORE.PONTIAC SALE ITEMS ALSO AT 51 $. SAGINAW STORE FREE PARKING! •SELF SERVICE! WITH PLENTY OF WELL-TBAINED SALES HELP TO ASSIST YOU . .. and MAKE YOUB SHOPPING EASIER! OPEN.DAILY ’III 0 WM.4SC1VDAYS 10 A.M.’tll 6 P.M. GRAND OPENING BUSTERS! Jumbo 400 Count Puff Facial Tissues 19 In whit® or colors. Jumbo 400 count box. Limit 2. OVAL LAUNDRY BASKET 88 Oval laundry basket. VA bushel size Assorted Colors lEGETULEj STORAGE BIN Assorted color plastic. Stocks' easily for extra storage room in refrigerator. See Tbn PLASTIC SHOE BOX 31 clean as well °* closet: Limit 4. Metal CARR TABLE CHAIR Seats covered with textured plastic. Chip . resistant enamel finish. Folds easily. Limit 4,' Famous Make First Quality NYLONS Full Double Crotch TOTS' TRAINING J 25c VALUE Women's PANTIES PANTS Famous make, or dork. seam. Sheer nylons. Sires 9 to II. LIMIT 2 PAIR Rayon acetate briefs. Dark tones or pastels. Lace panel fronts, or solid* Sizes 5-6-7. I - ' E MmxM First quality cotton. Elastic waist band. White only. Sizes 2*4*6. VALUES to 75c Man's Cotton ARGYLE HOSE Thermo Kbit UNDERWEAR f / THE PONTIAC PRESS, THVB5PAY. OCTOBER 19, Wl SUCTEEX BOTH STORES CELEBRATE YANKEE’S In ami • PERRY STREET at MONTCALM Famous Make LUXURY best THIELS LAMES Values to 1.98 ELECTRIC BLANKET Ethylene glycolvase. R ust preventative odded. Limit 2. Strip* and ch*ek pottems. Thick Hiirzty »*rry. Amrtii colors. Man's 6-Ox. INSULATED UNDERWEAR HUNTING COATS SOFA PILLOWS 9.95 Value Bright red combed soteen. Quilt lined. Heovy zipper front. Slosh pockets. Sizes S-XL Upholstered BAR STOOLS METAL \ / FOLDING TABLE t*fM. Sturdy long wearing material. UNIVERSAL STEAM or DRY Mr.- and Mrs. POTATO HEAD LAZY SUSAN PAINT SET SNOW CONE AAACHINE Complete paint act. Water colart. Feeterin* s Lazy Sesen S*M» Lighter t* cook with. 60-ounc* copocity. Lustrous mirror fin* Mattels Famous Talking Doll 'CHATTY CATHY" "DignityH 50-PC. Stainless Steel SILVERWARE SET 14.95 Value Com pint* dining Mfrict for ^ || 2 8. Superbly fashioned. Beau- ^ Hfully designed for long Fully Assembled, U.S. Manufactured SCALE MODEL CARS Values to $2.00 mu jb Fully assembled scale MU MM C models of U.S. Menu-factured con. Exact Id scale—Levicar, Falcon. Seyt 2 different soyingt — just pull Hie cerd end she is odereble. Beautifully dressed end little freckled fee*. PERRY ROAD at MONTCALM 51 SOUTH SAGINAW 51 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET FREE COMIC BOOKS and CANDY for the KIDS Accompanied by One Adult ! Women's Cotton Woinh'i Circle Stitched DUSTERS SLACKS SPORT SHIRTS Embossed cottom with Mt ill iImvm, Gay pat-tern* «n4 practical (tyia*. Hurry and leva. Size* S-M-L. Women’g Lace Trimmed DRESS 1 SHIRTS HALF SLIPS Ferfect quality.* bad ford cord and polished cotton. Assorted colors sizos 29-42. LINGERIE SMASH Acetate tricat half dip* printed pattern^ on white ground. Loco 'trimmed horn, M-L-XL. Value* to 2.99 Mm's Chambiay WORK SHIRTS JEANS 1.69 Value CARCOATS w> a 11 Boys' Flannel SPORT SHIRTS Choose from slips end gowns. All nylons, all flannel, or nyloniidd acetates. Walt* or full length gowns. Sises 32 to 42. Buttons or sip front, hooded $ and packets. Bedford cords 1 and cotton poplins. Novelty trims. Solids and plaids. 1 Sisas 3 to 14. I LADIES' TENNIS OXFORDS Girls' Colton SPECIAL! CHILDREN'S THERMO BOOTS The Latest in Ladies' MEN'S CHEVRON SOLE OXFORDS HATS MEN'S 8-INCH HUNTING BOOTS Youths', Boys' end Men's 4-Buckle and ZIPFER BOOTS SIRES 3-3 OPEN DAILY UNTIL 10 P.M. -r OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A. M. UNTIL 6 P.M. DOOR BUSTER SHOE SPECIALS! LADIES' SHOES , SAVE V ON. HUNTING jBOOTS CHOOSE FROM POPULAR STYLES Men's Insulated 12" Full Lace / PETER r GUNN'S GUM DROPS SPATS MEN'S WORK OXFORDS With Resistant Soles ANKLETS 6" 77° Triple roll bobby sox. Reinforced heel ond toe. White only. Sixes 7 to 11. • SADDLES Jb 0 STRAPS V § LOAFERS ’ a WING TIPS Bills' Flannel Lined SLACKS |imt or CBtdvrByi Warmly lined Ithwiwif pecks Sixes 7 to 14. Bites 7 SUBS 10 IB 17 thru 14 Women's FLANNEL SLACKS Weehahle printed flannel caprls. 7034 Rayon, 3034 acetate. Gray i prints. Sisas 10 to 18. EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER It, IfrH Allies Must NOT Give Up West Germany pmorrow, With "Sav.Galore / / It Star majestic staircases aiid. huge,] lufeh-ceOinged rooms, still bears bullet scars inflicted by the Ger-1 mans in World War II. j But it is a measure of a chang- j ing world, that in the office; presided oyer by Foreign Minister] Maurice Couve de Mumlie one thought takes precedence over all others in ahy consideration of the) Moscow-generated Berlin crisis. That ll that etcme r hat may i the West Gerasaas mart rrmala This single dominating thought I was the basic factor behind formation of NATO and the Common Market. ‘ It has been a keystone of President Charles do Gaulle's foreign poKrv. And it was fat these sante Interests that West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer placed European unity even ahead of Gentian re-, unification. Aad it is that unity which Khrushchev now. using Berlin as • symbol, Is determined ta de- . all at sensational savings You'll Got Them Today! || § ■ everything you need now in men's and boys' apparel Expect the Biggest Clothing Values at Pontiac's Oldest Clothing Store EXCEPTIONAL BUYS ON NEW FALL SUITS AND TOPCOATS These are more than mere Ideals. For the French take ttae-j practical view that a prosperous West Germany, confident of its AH lies, is one thing. A West Germany without faith in! Its Allies and Its economic structure threatened by a creeping to-| talitarianism would be another. Tn the latter case, the West Ger-; mans might very well make their own adjustment to communism and Khrushchev’s battle would have been won. W HY JOHNSON W ENT This was the thinking that dom- j inated the decision to send U. S. j Vice President Lyndon Johnson! hurrying to West Berlin after the Communists threw their wall j across the divided city. It aim was the factor which j MEN’S SMART WOOL SUITS ALL YEAR-ROUND WEIGHTS ANNIVERSARY PRICE »4375 jrond new suits from America's ©utstandif believe your ayes! A wide selection of ns Come early for, this one! Here makers — priced so low you'll hi styles and colors. All Wool Sharkskin Salts and Imported Topcoats ANNIVERSARY PRICE No where elsa will you find values like these! All ore made to exacting specifications —a!! or# this season's newest fabrics, patterns arid colors. AH wool worsteds, worded flannels, herringbones, cheviots, tweeds—to mention just a few! • Hint Beet Germany along the ! autobahn te Went Berlin. But these were temporary steps j which in no way eliminated the j basic weakness of Berlin's milM tary and economic position They cannot be- constantly repeated for the sake of German morale. Therefore. In the eye* »f the French, whatever negotiation! Fine Custom Tailored Suits, and Imported Fabric Topcoats Truly the Wonder Buys of the seoson-a mognificent selection of handsome n fabrics including Imports. You'll f*nd topcoots tn-owvide range of comfortable weig \V«c6lors,ond patterns .. .suits iajusf obout. every wonted shade. ANNIVERSARY PRICE Imported Sharkskin Suits. Velour and Shetland Topcoats fabrics from the finest mills, crofted by the finest makers! Beautiful hand tailored models that were mode to be sold for much more—in a huge selection, deliberately underpriced for this aventl They won't lost long at this price, so come edrly. $22 Million in Orders Starts Motor Show i LONDON IB — British auto films reported orders of more' than 22 million pounds ($61.6 mil-! lion) in the first few hours of the -animal motor show Wednesday. I Mint orders went to Feed of 1 STS Hard Finish All Wool Sharkskin LookI S70 Hard Finish AH W ool Sharkski TWO-PANT SUITS TWO-PANT SUITS round weights. Che' Ha|y. Princess Alexandre formally] opened the show to the public five1 minutes behind schedule She had' been held up in her chauffeur-driven auto in a traffic snarl; around the Earl's Court Show Gen- i ter. Warm Winter Jackets Boys* Winter Clothes Slock Up Note When You Can Save So Much, Look! Worm Quilted, Lined $10I AGES 12 TO 20 Boys' Sherpo Lined { Ultra Sheen Jet Jackets The princess- toured the show to see same ol the 357 autos on vie.’. ■ She went first to the - stand of! Vauxhail Motors. British subsidi-i ary of the American General Motors, Inc., and spent some time! inspecting the firm’s 1962 range. Other models which attracted! rflyal attention were the new Jag-! uar Mark 10 and the .new 90 m.p.h. l Mini-Cooper. $2495 $3495 CORDUROY JACKETS Worm Pile Linad, Vinyl BLOUSE JACKETS $45 Sport Coots foment brands. Smart patterns in new mid weights. Specially priced for this event. Boys' Warm Blanket’ Linad CORDUROY JACKETS Famous Haggor Slacks All heid finish, made with Acrtlan Acrylic to held their shape. They're wash ‘n wear, tea, Look! Worm Quilted Linad, Wool ACCOUNTING ond Related Subjects PBI offers Professional, Higher, and Junior Ac* counting courses that in* elude financial, adminis-trat ion and general business subjects. Accounting is the second fastest growing field for man. Business success goes, to those who prepare for It. Day A Evening Program* Bulletin available on request Worm Blanket Lined Corduroy GOAL COATS Famous Ha; Wool worsted « CRtASf retain* tl ly, Choice of color iar Slacks 1 PERMANENT FAMOUS HAfiGAO SLACKS Bays' $6.95 Robert Bruce WOOL SWEATERS - Extra Special! 96*95 Men's Long Sleeve K^EtlCrttl WUK* TO flMtia Cat*** month* 7.J 150 NORTH SAGINAW-Next to Sears Extra Special! Let It Rain! Let It Snow! 7iaa_^Aei6 ft ? 1 — 1 Imm/l umnbwn Jnmu /mrnWO * CHOICE COLORS TK s / Exit** Special! Boy* Long Sleeve | Zip-Out Pile lined ALL-WEATHER COATS **£**». ^ Three-Quarter Lengths g | Open Friday and Monday Nights 'til 91 $2.95 and $3.95 Rob Ray $198 1 ^ KNIT SPORT SHIRTS A J T THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, mi nineteen SHOE REPAIR COUMN SPECIAL! Par Wmm, buMlIha HALF SOLES OM.iMO.k $2.50 Velwe t£Zm With Coupon Only ADRIAN—Sx hundred Adrian in the dtjr. Lawrence A. Harvey, executive vice president and chair* man of the beard, will be a guest. So will other top Harvay officials. James J. Reynolds, assistant Protection and Taxes BRUNSWICK, Ga. m — Bomb shatters may shield you from atonic radiation, but not ths Brunswick tax collector. The city S. S. KRESGE'S meat. Harvey will pick up some of the slack once the plant gets into production but renovation ant modernizing work will reqidre many mere months. 11 EssrlaM FrL 9:30 am. to 8:30 p.m. $49 Ladies' Wool |AQ $ CASHMERE COAT At. Cm Bmek to $49 Frt. 8:30 pm. 11 Horn Salat Frt. 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. 5.99 Pinch Pleat $Q PRINT DRAPES 4® Coat Bitch to 5.99 Friday 0:30 p.m. It Bam Ante! FrL 9:30 mm, to S«3P p.m. Special! Our 59c Q $1 Flannel or Percale 4®^* ■ Got: Back to 59c yard Friday 8:30 p.m. The coni polyp, master builder {tike animal ns bigger than a of coral lie*, fa a simple, tuba-[head. . 600 Adrian Residents • to Welcome Industry JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED •HIGHEST PRICES PAID-WEPICK UP FE 2-0200 something about It. SOUND BATTLE CRT When the plant was offered for sale by the U.S. after it was vs* cated by Bridgeport Brass, a salvage firm was high bidder. City officials, the chamber of commerce and hundreds of private citizens sounded s battle cry of “Jobe not Junk.’’ The fight went to U.S. Seas. PWltp Hart aai Patrick Me-Ns mars. It went to Rep. George Mender. It finally reached the Broadest at fee Catted States whs siged the G8A to find a user-buyer tor the plant. Harvey’s purchase price was IlM.M higher than the final Junk bid. & Keith Linden, Harvey vice president, says that the Adrian facility will be developed to its AP FhaUfmx LEI KISSES judge — Vice President Lyndon Johnson had n kiss for District Judge Sarah T. Hughes when she became the first woman to sit on the federal bench in the 100-county Northern District of Texas. She was sworn In at Dallas Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Joe E. Estes. The vice president referred to her during the ceremony as a “good, gracious and great lady.’’ MOW EXPLORE ANEW WORLD OF WORTH at your Chevrolet dealer’s one-stop shopping center! Discovering your kind of car juit couldn’t bo simpler in 12/ It bob Uko four eon full oImo, by mil meant consider the beautiful now Jot-omooth '82 Chao-roleti. Fourteen models to choose from. It you like your eon trim and sporty, then one of the nine now Corvalrt. And, If In-between $Ue to your the ... you eouldift koto come to o hotter place. You eon pick one of the brand-now Chevy II modolo each built u new way tor u new kind of modern, basic tranoportation. WUh oo much to ehoooo from, yoofro auto to And loot the the, the model and the worth yarn went.. .in ono easy day od your Chevrolet dealer’s. The values are up — no increase in prices on comparably equipped models. MORE? SAVE S<$ AT GEORGE’S Winter Clothing ’13 CHEVROLET IMP ALA SPORT COOK Han's e one sad only! Folks look twin *t this Impale herdtop end still think it’s e soft top. Isn't that the sweetest styling trick of the year! Of course, ell the plush roominess, Jet-smooth silldnen, extra-ecatty performance, extra Impale refinements are here Just BS you went them. You'd expect no ion from the top of thu Chevrolet line—or more from the top o{ any-........lSou * line. So why pay more? THI NEW CHEVY I 100 MOOR SEDAN '« CHEVROLET MOOR BEL AIR STATION WAGON Here’s e new-sized ear as spadcue as many Chevrolet station wagon fever is delightfully recent full-sized models inside. Built to save you contagious—and here’s one easy-loading reaeon, money on service and maintenance. Fenders bolt Sports a spunky standard Six or V8... optional on for easy Axin’. Choice of thrifty 4- or 6- extra-cost V8’s up to 409 hp. Keeps its good cylinder engine in most models. And those look* (front fenders, for instance, have new steel new Mono-Plate rear springs ride satiny smooth, underskirts to resist corrosion). THE NEW CHIVY B NOVA MR WORT COUPE Hero’s a heart-stopper that’s not a budget- ’43 CORVAJR MONZA CUIB COOK _____________________ ________ - _ If you want sports ear spice on a budget—this •topper. It’s the aoon-to-be-availabie Chevy II one’s for you. Conrmire have a perky new look hardtop. Front bucket esata are optional at extra for '62. sporty new interior* Mid bigg* new cost, along with plenty of other options end brakes. They climb, corner and ding with accessorise And .there’s a snappy Chevy II road-rally reflexes (what with that 4-wbeei inde-convertible coming to Join it soon. pendent suspension and the angina in the rear). See the fSt Chevrolet, the new Chevy H and ’6t~Corvair at pour local authorised Chevrolet dealer*s MATTHEWS-HSSGBEAVES, IN. <91 OAKLAND at CASS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FKdaral 5-416)1 11-HOUR SALE FRIDAY ONLY 9:30 AM. TO 9 P.M.... FOLLOW THE CROWDS $99 FVRSTOUS FUR COATS *59 $149 GENUINE | SQUIRREL STOLE *88 $.99 BEAUTIFUL FEATHER HATS *1.99 It Ham Mat Frt. 9xSO mm. to 0:30 p.m. $25 LADIES'WINTER $*■ S' LONG, SHORT COATS 19 Gan Book to $25 Frt. 8:30 p.m. 10.99 LADIES' KNIT DRESSES *5.00 II Hoar Sate! Frt. 9:30 a.m. to 0:30 p.m. 5.99 ARNEL 11-20 $099 LADIES' DRESSES & Cats Back to 5.99 Frt. 0:30 p.m. ORANGE BLOSSOM.'.. WHITE UNIFORMS' *3.88 5.99 Messed Event Maternity Dresses *2.88 11 Ham Salat Frt. 9t30* $12 Reversible 8-20 RAIN W SHINE COATS Cam Book to Sit FrL 0:30 pm. $^88 10.99 PlAYTEX GIRDLES *4,88 3.99 LADIES* SLIM SUCKS *1.59 4.99 LADIES' ROBES *288 II Bam Sale! Frt. 9t30 a.m. to 0:30 p.m. 10.99 Ladles' Quilt CAR COATS Coos Bmek ta 10.99 Friday OtOO pm. $088 39c LADIES' TRICOT PANTIES 25 s 11 Hour Sale! Frt. 9:30 a.m. to 0,30 p.m. $1.00 FIRST QUALITY gftl* SEAMLESS NYLONS lltF Coat Back to $1.00 Friday 0:30 y.n. 2.99 LADIES' NYLON SUPS *1.69 3.99 LADtlF BETTER BLOUSES *1.88 SmUlFrl. 9*30 to 8:30 p.m. $288 99 Ladies Slacks Better 5.99 Frt. StSOpm. CORD SUCKS I II HamSalal Frt. 9:30 a.m. ta 0:30 pm. 5.99 Wed Plaid I LADIES' SKIRTS Coos Back la 5.99 FrL 0:30 pm. $£88 2.99 BOYS'-OIRLS* UNED JACKETS *1.69 | 2.99 GIRLS' ORLON SWEATERS II Ham SmUirrt. POO $7 GIRLS' WARM 3-14 CAR COATS Cam Book to $7 Frt. OtOO pm. $499 2J0 TOTS* WARM SLEEPERS *1.99 II Bam Setlal FrL 9:30 am. to 0:30 p.m. $11 BOYS; 6 to 16 $f|99 Parkas—Suburbans <90P Cam Bmak to #11 Frt. 0:30 pm. 2.99 QUALITY Birdseye Diapers *1.66 111 Horn Salat Frt. 9:30 mm. ta 0:30pm. I $1 BOMS'Lined 16-14 Vinyl Coats Cam Book to #1# Frt. 8:39 p.m. $|488 1.39 TOTS’ CORD CRAWLER etoliNy 111 Hoar SaUt Frt. 9:30 a $8 TOTS 1-PC.2to4 ] SNOW SUITS Gam Bmek to $0.0? FrL Oi30 pm. $500 UNDERWEAR *1.29 3.99 MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS *1.88 11 Ham Salat Frt. 9:30 mm. to 0:3? p.m. 16.99 MEN'S QUILT $088 WARM JACKETS © Cam Bmak ta 16.99 Frt. OtSO p.m. 39.99 HUM BETTER SUITS *24.88 II HamStdal Frt. 9:30 mm. ta OtSO pm. 4.99 Man's Famous NAME PANTS Cam Back ta 4.99 Frt. OtSO pm. $£57 19.99 MOTS HUNTING PANTS *10.88 04.99 uttn HUNTING COATS *16.88 111 Hour Salat'Frt. 9:30 sum ta OtSO pm. 6.99 Heavy Warm $Q 77 Cannon Blanket 4® . Con Back to 6.99 Friday 8:30 p.m. I 1.69 PtakT Blanket 99* 1.99 Nylon Rog. 88* GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE - 74 N. SAGINAW MAR HUOOM ran md stamps TWENTY tmuksuay, octubkh ip, im CINCINNATI * r*\r *17™ WALL C0YERIN6 , ^0* Run. Ft.a The ancestors of today's Bretons fled to Brittany, France, from Cornwall, Ireland, and Vales during the 5th and 6th Century Invasions by Angles and Saxons of Great Britain. CUSTOM INSTALLATIONS FREE ESTIMATES—CALL FE 4-5216 INSTOCK: SFECIAL 15x20 BASEME1 Gold Seel Ttwgien, THIS T .m Armstrong's Palatial, Testarra WIEK w ******* 62 Laborites Protest K's Planned N-Blast London (API- Plenty of Free forking In Our Lot Rear of Store FE 4-5216 THE FLOOR SHOP 99 SOUTH SAGINAW The Spirit of Sweetest Day ■MO-15 K l! r.50-14 “vr.v l *taw(fc*v»amphnM.| MSmsSi Cordovan “PRIMHJJR” Non-Skid Triad Sweetest Day k a day dedicated to Che remembrance of othert your way of "remembering” may be a long postponed letter; a special weed of praise or encouragement, an unexpected gift to someone who will be glad just to know that yon remembered. You will be surprised at the magic that lies hidden in even the smallest trifle of unselfishness. Try it—and make Saturday, October 21, a real adventure in happiness. monufachirsrt I "Rida Stobilizars" built Mo tha tread... 450 of i thorn ... hasps fka troad opon to provida tha tafost non-ildd traction 1 and iteoring I Haro’s wintnr driving tiro safety at Its bottl Cordovan "TRACTION MASTER” SNOW Tim A Brand Now WOflTRt TIRE—not a retread I—Improved Sopor Nylon —2 ply—same quality at on now 1942 original equipment! Adwrily ihangac than 4-ply rayon... this meows top performance and snfstyl Tough, Mggad troad that'll puR you thru the roughed going. •Vo Mm* SMm are phn Sod Ihn sed peer «W She Asm yoer ear os Oe Sweetest Day Give Sanders Candy ffscossory On Cordnvnw "Traction Master" Winter Tires famous “EVEREADY” list Pries ot $125 GeL SWEETEST DAY 13 8ATURDAY, OCTOBER l2let Adds thousands of |ss-*«ving miles to plus lift «nd lives you UP TO 40% GRfATIR VOLTAGE AND i INCREASED POWER! i | X^cisHy important! Pttssun locks* tad leak-proof construction! AVAILABLE ill 2 TYPES o HI COMPRESSION — Engineered specifically Pavilion Chocolates A favorite old name—but an excitingly different amort-ment! Nougats and caramels, peanut clusters, and orange and pineapple in cream will vie for your favor with coconut delights, cherry nut royals, regents and many more. 1, 2, 3 and 5-pound boxes. Please specify your choice of dark or milk chocolate costings. for finely-tuned demands of today's high compression engines, a OIL-FIRING — For older can or those with Burbanet Chocolates Make someone happy with luscious Burbanet*; every piece a masterpiece of tha candy maker’s art! Sanders very finyt assortment of selected fruits, nuts and creams, all with extra-heavy coatings of dark sweet chocolate. Tha centers include almonds, pecans, walnuts, cherries, pineapple, dates, fruit creams and many others. 1* 2, 3 and 5-pound boxes. Ifond no wf Ported ronlocomentt ter B9BQ9EBBS for Otov.'40*54; Ford, '40-53j Ptym. '28-55, Dodgo, 6, ’33-55, More. *47-53, Nadi, 44-55, Steda. '39-55, I '56-41, Plyra.'55-61 ;Dodgo '58-411 Dooeto, '55-61, Hudoan, '56-5/, More., 56-61, Pont., '55-41, Nadi, '56-57, Ramblar, '56-41, Steda.,'46.611 Willy,, '5S-6T, lark, *40, Falcon A Volant, '4041,(245A 29NP) Visit the Sanders Department in your nearest National Food Store 685 East Boulevard * 1249 Baldwin near Ypsilanti 2375 Orchard LakeRd. (Sylvan Lake) • 3415 Elizabeth Lake Road (Waterford Township) 8040 Cooley Lake Road (Union Lake) A And a Sanders Store in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center, Pontiac 11S:; No SAGINAW °ST WINTERIZE” NOW! PRESTONE J & R AUTO STORES THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1961 TWENTY-ONE Harvard Dean Defends Admission Policy CAMBRIDGE. Maas. (API -j Harvard’s retiring dean of ■Ions says President Kennedy and both Roosevelts probably eooUl not have entered Harvard wider a more selective sdmlsston policy. The same thing applies to Henry Cabot Lodga Republican candidate for vice president a year ago, former Dean Wilbur- J. Bender says la Ms final report. one or both of these have been denied admission Harvard under a top one ; cent policy......... "If we push this point % Ml pvt • i pftey- ot Harvard OaOege, foe university’s uadsrnteUe school, directed sdmtsstow policy for eight jrfers. DEFENDS POLICY His fins! report defended bis policy against critics and aaid be eiui not at all sure he would sup-I a so-called top one per cent y—restricting admission ‘ ■ of topmost rank le ability. In his reference to the Harvard graduates who reached dm White House, Bender said: *1 might point out. In pawing, that two of the four major candidates for the two top positions in the 190ft presidential campaign were not only Harvard graduates and horn Boston; they were both Harvard sons and private school graduates end thus included to tbs two groups which have been whipping boys of some of the tnoef vociferous crities of present admission policy. “I have not examined their ad-hut it ia » preceding Harvard graduates in the White Hone*, FDR. and | sort. I. do net believe that the TJt. would be admitted to or country, or Harvard, baa been would want to attend an academ- the worm because of tie Harvard-icsUy elite Harvard. educated presidents (and aena ‘PROBABLY MO* and Cabinet officers), few “The answer Is probably ns, un-|whom have mads brilliant sea-Soricsl and foolish as it may damic records at Harvard.'' be to discuss a question of Uriel As an per cent policy, Bender suggested a top five per cent policy to tnchide a variety of personalities, talents, backgrounds and career goals. ‘Does Harvard want a student body selected solely on the basis of apparent relative academic promise, selected, that it, on a single-factor basis, or are there other considerations, largely nonacademic, which should Influence selection, and if so, what are they and how much weight should be placed on them?" U.N. Group Fights to Stop N-Blast UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) —The United States and its West-! em Allies mobilised today for an aamult on the Soviet plan dimax its nuclear weapon test rise with a 50-megaton Hast. A ' to ■ w . ■ The forum was the General Assembly’s top Political Committee, which begins debate on-proposals nuclear teat ebpkirion moratorium after defeating Soviet efforts to have the teat issue blanketed into the general disarmament discussion Infer. e * Tbs committee debate was expected to bring repeated calls for Moscow to can off the aaperbomb explosion, the United States and Its Allies hoped fee debate would mamba! sufficient antitest opinion to force the Russians to re- Kremlin to reverse its decision to touch off the giant bomb before the end of the month. The tin-nation committee wound up two weeks of wrangling priority Wednesday night with two rounds of balloting find stg- U.N. members over the Soviet announcement by appealing to the trifled defeats for the Soviet Un- Rep. Phillips Crashes Plane Near Port Huron FORT HURON (II — A smell, private airplane piloted by Rep. Harry ^hilllpa, R-Port Huron, crashed Wednesday night as M in for a landing at tbs St. Oatr County Airport near here. Phillips waa not injured and was able to walk away from the crash. The lawmaker was returning home from Lansing. He «aid the motor of Ms Cessna IS ' he same In for a land plane atmck a dump of time and oaad over. PtriUlpe was flying alone. OAST TV O’ VOTES The committee voted 83-10 with abstentions to list as its first Hem India's proposal for a voluntary moratorium on nuclear testing. The Soviet bloc and Ofoa The committee then approved a cast the negative votes. U.8. move to debate along the Indian plan a U.S.-British resolution ca&ing for a (.treaty to end testa under effective international i delegate Arthur Dean said ontrol. the United SUtea opposed giving This vote was 54-13 with 2i ab- India’s moratorium proposal top stentions. The Soviet Moc, Cuba, bUfiag but added his government Mali, India and Senegal voted no. I had no objection to simultaneous HUB NO PURCHASE NECESSARY With Coupon Only SELF-SERVE DRUG STORES FREE 2 WEEK SUPPLY Of Thrifty's Multiple VITAMINS ADULTS ONLY WITH THIS COUPON Most of. the abstentions came from nations that took part In the recent Belgrade conference of ao- debate on it and the U.S.-British Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin attacked the dedsionB mid asserted the debate could have no “positive results.1 Zorin insisted the nuclear tea e should be considered only within the framework of ‘general and complete disanna- lasued its appeal Moscow during the special Political Committee's debate on the effects of atomic radiation. Swedish Delegate Valter Aman said Sweden's proximity to the test area had increased concern of countrymen over the Soviet blasts. Zorin and U.S. Ambassador Ad-lai E. Stevenson met tor the sixth time to discuss appointment of an interim UJL secretary-general. But Stevenson, mid they still could not agree. m s hu ia* ■ m mu. rwur at replace it rel JNU Mow If tl« Time Lay-Away Now for Christmas lacy Credit Terms PARK JEWELERS r NORTH SAGINAW ST. OPEN AM ACCOUNT TODAY PEPSODENTsl 49c tog. $1.19 I f PERTUSSIN L :OUGH SYRUP U 70* I JERGIN'S R... ti.oo PERTUSSIN ||M»i«iw»Ci»om...Uf || [gflfliH 67* ALL U-40 Rm. 39c 100‘s Odd Child's Aspirins. jw Rm.S1.19 M's nOC 98c PRELL LIQUID SHAMPOO 7-OZ. BOTTLE SPECIAL, ONLY AU.U-80 INSULIN 1" 73c 1 Sgr'l&L 7Q | CREME fu 1 Transistor4 QQcl Batteries For VV | 1 lsr» 11"01”” 1 81 31 Amphofol Tabs.. 89c Mennen Baby Oil 66c ZBT Baby Powdtr 49c Doan's Pills....54c Broifto-Quinino.. 86c Excodrin........93c 1J kUIsenIte M Dmtura Claanser M liXvoRis 59* II [iReg. 89c 1 iMentholatum. n 100 BAYER 5-GR. ASPIRIN 100 TABLETS LIST PRICE 73c 49c “o TAMPAX s®* 51-09 PRESCRIPTION s~| 4895 Dixie Highway I r PRES 148 North Saqinaw St. Quilt-lined SURCOATS OF EXCLUSIVE "ARISTOGRAIN"* LOOKS like leather! FEELS Mm leather! if it WERE leather it would toll for TWICE THE PRICEI 11 88 “Aristofrafn"* with X-97 finish has New PLUS Features; e Fully washablel Repels wind, water! f Resists splits! Resists tears! e Keeps its natural softness in any weather! Hip-length model with kntt cottar. Tan, black, loden green. 36-46. Save ovor QUALITY TAILORED COATS OF LUXURIOUS WOOLS o saxonies and tweeds from AmerktTs top mlllst • set-ln sleeve models In now shorter lengthsl HISS'S WHY PRICES ARI LOW AT tOBIRT HAU We sell foe cosh only! 24 95 comp, value $35 IN PONTIAC 200 N. SAGINAW STREET COMPLRTR ALTERATIONS FREE Pure wool fabric tailored for perfect fit Exceptional low price .. . meant b-i-g savings for you! Cray, thrown and heather. Regulars, shorts, longs. IN CLARKSTON-WATIRFORD 6460 DIXIE HIGHWAY OMN SUNDAY 12-8 f.M. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING k iBsyrr-yyp- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER IP, 1961 Walter Ulbricht May Get Ax to Appease Western Group B. [of the will of concrete and barbed| East German papan admft|and to Mm atmosphere of AattaMHa an unreccnetructed SUUnlat laonaUty toff In ihtSortat m- haa serious difficulties wire ha threw acmes Berlin to more and more openly that there oppression -to East Germany. I HU regime paM Up servlet tolpire but never made the new Boa own party aa a reeult A«iat lla vigorous oppaattton to the waB Moscow-trained. Ulbricht at «|KkiMhohfV,a shoUtai of the "portolBrttoe to Wm O—ay. BERLIN UP) — wiw-h and epeech aider bennerttoea pro- ora apade-I chief of atato maid dto-appear Bon the arena to aa effort to make direct nefottotiana with the bat German regime more palatable to the Weet. nr AT UIBBKHT The Berlin Kacht-Dapeadee aald the removal of the deadline “cannot tome pat Ulbricht to A wary The Went Berlin newspaper 1W- dealt Ulbricht a bitter blow to his Kremlin speech Tuesday by abandoning the Dec. 31 deadline he had act for signing a peace treaty with Eaat Germany The peace treaty to the main toatiwneut tor Khraehchev's threats against Weet Berlin. With It the Soviet Union threatens to Mm over to the Beat German Bade control of the Western Aims mutes to Weet Berlin, farcing them to negotiate with the Boat Germane they have so tar refused to recognize or fight their way throagh if the East Germans try to block their traffic. ♦ A A **A peace treaty before the end of the year” has been the keynote of aO East German propaganda far months. It seemed almost aa though Ulbricht had staked his Ulbricht apparently has been tiyfag to force the Kremlin's hand. Western observers mid Khrushchev** speech abruptly put Mm back to Ma place, and like a true puppet he accepted the new fine without any sign of hesitation. WPLOMATg AMUSED Western diplomats listening to the speech by Khrushchev were amused to notice Ulbricht planting his master like craigy after every period and every comma,” the West Berlin newspaper B-Z. reported. lUbricfat'e chained Onmmmtot with Mayor Willy said Khrushchev could afford to drop Ms deadUae without losing face, bat Ulbricht was so committed to It that the announcement of the new line marked a Mack Judge Opposes Reapportioning of Legislature OOLDWATER to-Circult Judge Creighton R. Coleman of Battle Oeek, a former state senator, says the Mate constitutional convention should retain the present .apportionment for ‘ the Michigan {legislature Coleman ezpreseed Ms views constitutional issues to a speech last night at the annual convention of the Michigan State Grange. Be aald ha toveied a tear-year term teetaad af twe tor gevut-aar. Be aald he weeM make the efBee af a 1 also would have the highway commissioner appointed either by the governor or by a board,” Coleman said. At aa earlier session. Grange Master William J. Brake said he favored keeping the office of state highway commtotoner elective. ! Brahe aald be favored a state1 Income tax to provide necessary revenue .for the operation of schools and government services. arrested in TABS — Hands placed behind their heeds. Algerian demonstrators arrested to Paris march up subway stairs. Demonstrations and clashes to the French capital resulted from s can by the National Liberation Front to protest a curfew imposed on Algerians in the wake of increasing Incidents of violence between Algerians and Europeans. PRE-WINTER SALE Men's and Boys' Wear at GREAT SAVINGS! 25% to 50% OFF!, SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! SPORT VEST 100% Lamb's Wool Sep i* $099 Fatee m0 SPORT COATS Drastically Rsducsd *14« !|fi« Continental PANTS COSOS $3W LEVIS IRAND NASSAU FUNNELS $595 Pep" SWEATSHIRTS lot the Game ftS# Setae . $1* Navy Crey WMi 100% WOOL SUITS and TOPCOAT SALE! Sove Up to 50% All Wool Worsted *2995 All Wools UO Votee $2495 GREAT MONEY SAVING EVENT—BUY and SCORE a PROFITABLE TOUCHDOWN Tuxedos Rantad—Prictd Reduced 25% CLOTHES 71 N. Saginaw Sweetest Day Cards by American Greetings 10‘ »o I1 THICK WOOL PILE $J|| TEXTURED WILTON * M- |i Hw«;wel|M wool pUo toituroO Wilton aodo for w by Mulaad. A bold nbo tract effect In Bcifo, Almond. Bolft Moresque. Canyon Oreen. Mode to o*U for M M Offer If limited to delivery of aof color to nUMENT$£|| THK PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1061 Ne°rt>y TWENTY-THREE DETROIT IB—Three youths whu hmt * H-ywold mm death • routine up to SO Recorder's Judge John A. RJeca sentenced the three Wedneaday after they Pleaded guilty to second-> Tht three ware ,*•**»*• for Mrs. Richard (Anna) n*y. n,*ms. at win ha hi Oak HU Cemetery. Arrange-*re by the William P. Davta carrying a mandatory ! trace. Bat At prosecutor’* office agreed to the second-degree plea. the youAa. who said they took $1M tram tee walled of Qyrill B. Ptaey, who Is survlv*d-by » V Floor Tile, many colon, per VINYL YARD GOODS ALL 1 ST QUALITY .... HEAVY DUTY, INLAID LINOLEUM TILE, 9*x9-. IF •ach MICA VINYL LINOLEUM COUNTER TOPPING... W SPECIAL CERAMIC WALL JjjC^ THE. Largo Color Selection ■ WE HAVE A COMPUTE UK OF PuPONT LUCRE PAINT! Ceiling Tib LATEX PAINT-AN Criers. Filly Overoetoad. Reg. S6.9S-Close Out.... 15 B*RWRt pJJ* -ft*111*1*** •* oR.kwtoioHenri PtosMc and Ceramic TU# end oil types ef i Fleer TMe-eR uacondlWeriolty gverentasd. PURE VINYL 9"x9" . J« El. GENUINE FORMICA Close-Out Spattur Pattums, Is* Quality..... COUNTER TOPPING (lot Quality (Otac^Pot.) PLASTIC FORTIFIED RUBBER TILE M Frw-Aferikg Specie! 9x12 LINOLEUM RUGS $£|B# First Quality, Large Selection . If You Don'^ BUY From US, Wo BOTH LOSE MONEY! ALL TILE AT f^Mm^ PONTIAC’S LARGEST CARLOAD PRICES! FE831H B C TILE OUTLET toss WEST HURON ST. PONTIRC ARMSTRONG DEALERI ANY POCKETBOOK**- You got the... BEST DEAL from... Jp 7Vi-Inch Rarber Scissor* 4-inch Blunt Pocket Scissors 7-inch Household Sheers 3V4-lneh Nostril Sclssc 6-inch Housshoid Stioars JVHneh Bent Cuticle Scissors inch Housshoid Scissors 3%-lnch Straight Nsli Scissor* 3Winch Embroidery Scissors ★ USE OUR FIRESTONE LAYAWAY PLAN FOR YOUR TOY and GIFT SELECTIONS ★ fire$tone SPECIAL PURCHASE Forged Steel Limited Time Only Ic par • Choke of • 10 style* B pairs for • Nickel-plated, highly polished. • Marfa of tough forged steel that can be resharpened. TlWtOflt Brings You A NEW CHAMPION4 TIRE incorporating features never before available at such LOW PRICES 1 NYLON 121! m m esSHn «S y* Comparable Low Prices on AU Sixes Compare the modem precision-blsded tread design of this tire... compare its Safety-Fortified nylon body ... com-isre the extra mileage of Firestone aCOAIDlIU Of CONDITION lubber-X... make any comparison you want, with any othbk tire..;you’ll find that doDar-for-dollar this new Firestone Champion can’t be equalled! Just say "CHARGE IT" Uae your credit at Firestone | where your dollar buys MILES more 146 WEST HURON SEE US FOR SPEEDWAY PROVED TIRES * our QUALITY is UNMATCHED ★ our PRICES are always LOW *9 DOWN *g A WEEK n 2-9231 ,A % THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOfeER 19,1961 TWENTY-FI*& (Adrsrtkenewt) (Advertisement) (Advertisement) Double Your Dividends Three year old twins, Peggy and Laurie Stelt, daughters of Mr. arid Mrs. James Stelt of Mary Day Street, decided to empty their banks in favor of their account at Pontiac Co-op Federal Credit Union. They will get double dividends on every dollar for in addition fo/the 4% .current annual dividend, each dollar deposited, within certain limitations, is matched with a dollar life insurance at no extra cost. Most credit unions have sirrfilar benefits. Treasurer Ronald Wilde reassures them it's the smart thing to do. Do-It-Yourself Financing Why Do So Many P They teem to violate all lam of economics. They pay good dividends yet make loans more freely and at lower cost than other sources. What is their secret of success? A strike had shat down all the automotive plants. Jack Morris, idled for seven weeks in suburban Detroit, faced the prospect of losing his home. Several yean before he had bought his house on a land contract; now unless he could repay the balance o# $780 within two days, he would lose it and all he had ^previously paid. With $780 he would be able to phy off the contract and get title to his home. Jade tried desperately to borrow the money. Hie friends, pinched by the strike, didn't have it to lend. The banks wouldn’t lend it to an unemployed auto worker without collateral. Someone suggested the credit union at the strike-bound plant. The credit union treasurer pointed out that, to take title there would be dosing costs and a lawyer’s fee in addition to the $780 balance. AH in all, Jack would need about $1,000. j To bis surprise tbe Mm was fronted later the same day and Jack paid off the land contrast, taking tttla to hla house and putting an end to a nightmarish situation. He repaid the loan after ha returned to work. PLANS EUROPEAN TOUR A Credit Union Family Nears Retirement Whan Ed 811k retires from OMC Truck te Coach Division nasi year, ha will also mark nearly a quarter of a century of aenrloe as a volunteer official of hla credit union. /During the past IS yean, ml has served in almost aBvoluntary capadtlea at OMTO Employees Federal Credit Union Including committee member, board member, and president Ha has spent planning at i tour which "Who could hava battered twenty-five yean ago that people of modest means would be able to tour the far woman of the world. At I1 that time it was dona only by tbe vary wealthy. Now It la an experience that many of us can hava If we save and plan ter it," The credit union has meant many things for the Silks over the yean, it meant meeting new people, making new Mends, buying cars and hmnahoM items, a daughter's college education, bel- Durtng the yean they hava seen their credit union grow front shoal foimiMMdask drawers to the new large $400,000 credit union building which la currently under eon-struction at Mt ft Woodward Avenue. One of Ed’s proudest credit union experiences came last year when he was named chairman of thd building committor, chanted with r*—"r"r the new credit union headquarters. Recently, Ed and Margaret SUk Five Ways the Credit Union Can Help Your Family v rth generation in their sonal satisfaction of being an im-QlfVC iCredit IMsa. portent part of an organization Mm started wham where people were able to help lather! Rebert C. Can-; themselves tar establishing habits * ene ef the charter! of thrift and by meeting their own lit Union members M credit needs with dignity and salt- non. fin helping an Idea and a i few dollars grow into tbs eighth and one-half million dollar insti-l; l to Spain, Portugal, Italy, ~8wltemland7ffirmany. Luxem-lgium, France and the British Isles, bringing them back tune for Christmas 1MB. They recently sold their home, furniture in storage and are making their temporary real-Williams Street apartment. . A feeling of mixed emotions la experienced by Mrs. Lawrence A. Beernut. mi Wanamaker Street, as aha receives a double insurance benefit from lUahard Probyn, Treasurer, Body Crafters Federal Credit Union. Last spring. Just after making a credit union loan to purchase a station wagon for his family of 10, Lawrence Beemua suddenly died. The credit union’s loan protection insurance paid off the entire oar loan and tbe modest savings account wag doubled—matchad dollar for dollar by credit union Ufa savings insurance. Four-year-old Busan, youngest of 0 children, statute beside her mother. Credit unions an everywhere. There an credit unlong in tbe White House ... the Senate . .. the House of Representatives . . . th* Army ... the Air Farce . . . the Navy... and practically every governmental agency, Including the FBI. There are credit imkma in all kinds of off ioes, factorise, churches, clubs, schools, stores In country town* and crowded cities throughout North America. Thera are over >0,000 active credit untecs in tha United States today—LSM of them in Michigan. But what’s the attraction that eauaea some 13 million people to Invest over 9 billion dollars of their savings In them voluntary organisation# called credit unions? Fast Growth Calls for Expai insion or 1 per osnt per month of the unpaid balance. WHIN YOU HAVE. TOO MANY DEBTS . .. There's nothing Ukt a fresh start. It money is tight and bUte are pest due, ypuf family should oarefuBy consider a "consolida- Mrs. R couldn’t betters it, whan JOIN A CREDIT UNION your obligations to one loan and one monthly -payment (usually at less cost, too). , WHEN YOU TEACH CHILD BEN ABOUT MONEY ... Use the credit union to show children how people can manage their own money lntelUgsnuy. Explain tbe importance of tha aetata, if they aro eiigibis. Children, grandchildren, brother* and sisters living In tbe same household with a credit union member are eligible to loin. Your credit union is A family institution. Your credit union Is owned by the families who use it. It is not concerned with commercial invaStmanta, not business interests, but onhr the personal Diiuter-Dtnce Will Highlight Area Credit Union Week Activities .The ' County Credit Union Chapter will celebrate International Credit union Weak Saturday evening, October 31, with # dinner danse at tha new 300 Bowl In Waterford. Over aoo officials and guests from the county's fl credit unions art expected to attend the affair. Ousst speaker for tb*.evening win be Two Credit Union Buildings Are Now Under Construction The now headquarters for Chief Pontiac Federal Credit Untotol on JoslynAvenue looms In the baotatround aa President Ocrdon Rice points out some features to Binding Committee member Harold1 Oltne. Boheduled for completion early neat year, the now building is located on Joalyn Avenue. stated OMTO I square » wM have ite ted In a clr- I LAST TIMK TONIGHTOpu 6:10, Star* 7 P.M. nvt...untow mu now Edgar Allan Pbes RrANDTHE 'M PENDULUM Show Starts FEATURE . . Irobert mm MYRON Ill EH WflCK hR Rrtrosseb ^ 3WCV CARROLL „R06ER1 ROSSEN Onsm*Scop£ STARRING VIMOENT PRICE - JOHN KERB -BARBARA STEELE-LBANA ANDERS Tin Greatest Terror Tale Ever Told! " COME EARLY—SAVE MONIY BRING AN IARLY BIRD COUPON PONTIAC DRIVE-IN THEATER TWlCKTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, QCTQgKE 10, IBM Cemwl HpgpHal Blue Cross Charged With Fraud To Favor Mo6re DEtMfT < AP) - Redford Gen- Mind Receiving Hospital, wee ersl Ifaepltal here has asked dr* celt Chart fcr an eider to halt the Michigan Hospital Service Cross):'-from '‘conducting further businqi to hospital services. ‘ The-suit, filed Wednesday, accused 5p*ue Cross of fraud, false •dvarMng, restraint of trade and . price 0dng. ■ A Bfte Cross spokesman denied the rijrgae sad said the hospital did art meet qualifications. hospital, formerly leased from the rtty el Detroit la lose by five istaspolMs phy sMaae far live year* at KNM month. Tho hmse stipulated that fee hospital provide a M hoar said that after the osteopaths took cd, "a great ded al that is beeadee Clarence R. Charest, president of the board at Redford General over the hospital Blue Cross gave It accreditation on a nonparticipating basis. This meant, he aoid, that Blue CtoaR would pay only RS a day toward hoapttal coals that anxxmt approximately to *4Q day. Charset said the hospital has uncollected lees of 5150,000. He add- of Blue Cross." the hospital charged is Its suit 1st Blue Class refused to pay subscribers or the hospital an effort to defraud the public and defrauding of Its (Blue Cross’ • Mm •Fish •Was ; OR 1-0*40 Cs**f.Oo» C«fh Ssrvics BEETBUHGEB drive-in 5194* Dimie Hwy. Ohio fudge Ask& Sterilization of Retarded People ! EAGLE; tast Tim** Tonft* WILLIAM KM HOLDEN-NOVAK -PUIS- n CLEVELAND, Ohio (UP1) - A proposal to permit compulsory sterilisation, of mentally retarded persons was made here Wednesday night at the opening of the Ohio Welfare Conference. gech a law eaa he sans undid with adequate safeguard*. Juvenile Chart mod Probata Court Judge Holland Gory of laaeu-sald to states, to- Ford May Close Down Due to Ohio Plant Strike Announced candidate lor chair-naan of the Oakland Granty Board of Auditors Robert £.. Lilly declared today that he is not opposed to currant chairman Robert Y. Moore as a candidate lor the newly-created post of county budget (Bractor, DETROIT (4k—Despite a new national contract and plant working agreements, except at me factory, Ford Motor Co. today faced the threat of a shutdown of some assembly plants within a week. Ford and United Auto Workers Union bargainers broke off their attempts to reach a local-level working agreement covering some S,S00 employes at a key stamping plant at Walton Hills, Ohio, outside Cleveland. At Chrysler Corp., top-level negotiations were in recess while bargaining con- ’Society needs this kind of tow, . .. ___._____ to protect itself against {he grow- j tinued on the SUb-COmmit-ing burden of mentally retarded tee level, whose children also will be defoc- The unkm accused Ford of to-*■" be avN. sisting that pay fates of 435 jobs * * ! be reduced 5 to 15 cento an hour ’From this group come a large st the Walton Hills plus*- K sold number of those who have to be all other issues had been settled, cared tor on relief roUa or in to-} ^ propmtag that stitutions. | anyone’s par be rut,” Ford said to a statement. "Sense el our employes at the Ctevehad stamping plant are receiving pay la exeeoo of rates negotiated lor the work they are doing at Cleveland, aad for com parable work elsewhere la the company. . A six-day wildcat strike at the j Walton Hills plant closed several fjpjfiFord assembly lines a year ago, a— and both die company and unkm .^ agreed continuance of the current strike there would have serious Legislators Like W5U Fees Plan Civil War 'Orphan' Has 100th Birthday APPOMATTOX. Vs. (AP) , an ceie- ( anniver-| effects within a week on newly * * restarted assembly of 1962 mod- Her father, Edward Burge, was] els. battle of Gettysburg.] ♦ + + a soldier who fought j Ford began rolling new models battle. Her husband died off the assembly line Monday for at die age of 101. (the first time in 14 days. ANY WAY YOU FIOUIIE IT-- x You Get a Better Deal From John McAuliffe IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 62 FORDS * Galaxies * Falcons -• Thunderbirds Come in and See Them Today! '61 Model Clean-Up • DEMONSTRATORS • FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS • NEW FORDS Sayings to 100 ilohn McAuliffe—FORD 6|0 Oaflriand of Cast FE 5-4101 I Mile North of Pontiac on US-10 Proposal Would Raise Tuition if Government Agrees to Match Funds LANSING W — Legislative budg- rider a new plan by Wayne State University to increase student fees if (he legislature will come m with matching money. Eeoasmy • min-------------- greeted the proposal with surprising warmth Wednesday when Wayne State officials outlined It to member* of the Home Ways and Memo Committee aad the Senate Appropriations Committee. They asked university rep. Two Men in Area Named to Posts on Safety Council Robert E. Lilly Wants to Be Chairman of County Board of Mli f Auditors Twa area man wen elected serve on executive committoaB of two sections of the National Safety Council. The efoctkm took place at the National Safety _____ which opened Mopday and ends Friday to Chicago, 111. Wank a. Dwyer, US Bay T dM art a o creating tho abide by tho poSey and support Moore If he booty rnrtgoo from tho hoard of audRan,” aald Lilly- The budget director’s port was created by the board of visors when it met Oct 2. Moore, the dean of county officials with 31 yean service, has tended his resignation from the board of auditors. He stated at the time that be would be willing to aorva as budget director. His resignation, however, will have to he accepted by the board of supervisors before he to an eli-candidate for the new port, since he still has a year remaining to his present term on the board of auditors. The board’s chairmanship is one of eeveral poets to be filled by appointment of the supervisors Nov. T. Lilly wiB be seeking reappointment to the board at this time. His return to office will be necessary if he is to be a candidate for chairman: IaNN ARBOR (AP)—The National Science Fesmdetta* has awpdod the Urtvondty of Michigan a *60.-600 grant for remodeling Its psychology rsssarcti laboratories. Iha grant, to b* matched by foods Iraqi U. of M., will bd used for alterations to (he existing labor-that wiB aUow for SO par cant more research working space. the executive committee of too 00., Detroit. Kenneth S. Hedges, 2895 Warner Drive, Green Lake, is newly elected chairman of toe mechanical safeguarding committee of the Industrial conference. Hedges is corporation safety director of General Motors Corp., Detroit Do< '61 Year's First Citation Given Hungarian-Born Ear Specialist STOCKHOLM, Sweden qh 2 ?27** If you plan to buy a sturdy cabinet, ever, In your life* time—THIS IS IT! Universal, the world's largest manufacturer of sliding door • cabinets offered us the op* portunity to porchase a thousand perfect-quality decorator cabinets—at savings that astonished our. market-wise • buyer. We jumped at the chance. And here they are—the cabinets AND the savings.! A Style for Evory Decor! A Cabinet for Every Use! 'H Storss 200 Racordt L Eft Compact Nr-r Ifl l| tonal Ns p «y Sarvas of a If/ 1 11 kw_L. - l j|L | |i| rttgro ewno or if yj.. BookcoM | End Tabto 1Tlf > i M El Spoctous Bavsrogo Cobinat IL 1 Jf TV or |ton f | || Stan4 nr ifipi e Superlative Quality, Record«Settfng Savings e Superbly Designed with Double Sliding Dears e Hardwood FrOmies with Hardboard Side Panels e Wood-Grain Finishes, Gleaming Brass Fittings a Each Cabinet Is 24" wide x 18” deep by 22W* i us* THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1MI ■EIGHT Sentence Commuted . WYNNEWOOD. Okie. (AP) golfing centers. The big emphasis at Port St. Lade will be m golf , with a third course to be added \fmPaVMSt tTMBflS * W aMMtoTdapnd^ ' ; CT ” O ing on size and the Una of the yeai* The Port St Lucie Country dub While the owner is not to oe> began operattom early this year, cupancy. the air-conditioned home* The Upcoming fall and winter sea- would be handled by the develop-oon will too how weB the 3S0 ?r who would undertake the rent-homes eo far completed will rent, ol through an advertising and pro-There eventually will be ljft In- motion program *and who would vestment homes, with the whole provide maid service, tom eup-property including a half-mil- P^f* and other operating necessl-lloii-dollar clubhouse — valued at 0% 124 million. 1 ----—-------— • May In FoiW» experiment will be a hit. new YORK (UPI) — A recent Chick Herbert, former PGA nationwide survey of 518 forest champion and Ryder Cup team! products companies indicated that captain, heads the professional Imore than 50 million qcreo of their ■taff at what -is expected to be-iwoodtonda are being uoed for pob- Rcnled in Qff«Seaoon DR. HENRY A. MILLER Optometrist • 7 North Soginow Street Phone FE 4-6842 PORT ST. UUCI£, FM. (UPI -A Florida ' vacation home that "pays for itself* and eventually becomes a retirement property is The remainder of the year the furnished home is put in the hands of General Development ■ Carp., which rents It to touriato and travelers coming down U.S. Highway No. 1 along the east coast Florida real estate development. It’s Port St. Lucie, a magnifl- Open Fri. Evenings—dogad Wed. Afternoons The fun starts now...during rEATHRR DANCER — The fellow with the feathers on top ifefase Mendez. The 12-year-old descendent of the ancient Zapotec fiipans at Mitla. Mexico, takes part in the famous feather dance at Wo ancestors. The students make the costumes as a part at the cptricuiuin of the Oaxaca public school system. The gigantic (either headpiece and coetume date back to the 12th century. IfyA Has Electrically Powered Car KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)—A faderaJ agency operate* . a ear that use* one-fourth of s cant worth of fuel a mile. The fuel: electricity. ' "We fill It op every night Just by plugging It la,” asld a spokesman for the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) which to experimenting with (he atoctrically-powored ear. The car, named the Henney Kilowatt, cost $4,400. But TVA says the Henney would coat $1,500 If man produced. isl. “Our Henney lent ready far genera) nee,” the apekee- Join the parade to meet up with BigD ... at your favorite tavern or store! ; “But we're working on It and maybe soon It’ll be the : ideal family second car far abort rune to the store and tak-! ing the kida to school.” * : the Henney, which haa a Renault Dauphlne body, sips around at speeds up to 40 miles ah hoar. One “tankfuT lasts an average of 35 miles of driving. . •The car to powered by 13 heavy duty 6-volt batteries. “Thcae are recharged by simply plugging them Into a regular 110-volt outlet, similar to outlet* found in every home.” the TVA man said. 'The agency said In the Tennessee Valley, where electricity Is cheap, or in other such areas, the car will use one-fourth of a cent worth of electricity a mile. In other areas, ths-co*t may be three cents a mile. “8hould battery operated can and truck become popular,” the spokesman said, "they will use substantial amounts ot electricity. This to one reason for. TVA's Interest. Battery recharging is likely to be done at night, when other electrical ••Widces "are low.” ' , / Fun week is here! So head for the signs of Big D..*.Drewrys Beer. ..at your favorite taVfern or store. Here's where to find the one beer that's always just right...never too heavy...never too light. ..Drewrys Beer! Drewrys exclusive brewing process keeps all the refreshing flavor in... sweetness out. Lets you enjoy glass after glam with no full feeling after. Enjoy tbe wonderfully satisfying flavor of Big D now daring Drewrys Week. Discover the big difference in Big D and you'll stay with DrewYys Beer froip now on. More Flavor. Less Filling, More Fun! Yon get all three only from Big D! At Save 'Plumbing! YOU DON'T NEED CASH! 3-PIECE KATE OUTFIT Whitt tr Colon — 5 Ft. Tab, Wash Batin, Cleoat, "A" Credo Chtonio Fittin,. loo. HUM atuMm.% raaaoptAB 6 Cel. Pluf-la Typo Electric SAT Heater Off -Pad Factory Caoreatoo AUTOMATIC CAS WATER HEATER romis <48.95 WW 2I>32 Doubt. Comportment KITCHEN SINKS iMinkoi Steal . .$29.95 COPPER FITTINGS **fWiTS You get all three only from Big D RftASS SUMP PUMP it*. <49.95 $32,95 .INSTALL IT YOURSELF—WE RENT YOU TOOLS t72 S. Saginaw n 4-isii n 5-2100 Open Monday - faterday f to Sit9 — Friday I ’HI $ FREE PARKING ON WISSEN STREET SIDE • , • THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY. OCTOBER 19. 1961 ' PONTIAC. MICHIGAN TWBNTY-NIN^ Lake Authorizes Planning Study for the title of Unit* Township. They are IS, (left); junior Lyn Student Dance to Aid UF BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Ii effort to help tbe Pontiac Area . United FUnd Drive that opened here today, the student council of Brandon High School will sponsor a UF Dance tomorrow night in the high school gymnasium. ady football game and will li until midnight. < - Highlighting the program will be the coronation of a UF queen to be picked from four candidates, each one cHoaen by her own high school class. grader Marian Thompson, 14, 211 W, Seymour Lake Road; 10th grader Diana Spencer, 15. of 2621 Granger. Road; 11th grader Lyn Shaver, II, of 2485 M15; and 13th grader Karen Morse, 17, of South start right Flint -m mm Vying for the crown are Sthi quel . _____ . . _ *HH ■ £'■■/* I vo,p* "tty be purchased at the M>Nf Prirp’ rouadl members AREA IILlpipfe* MSU Crowd bn March; Seven Get Disorderly A ret) carpet will lead up to throne where the queen will crowned. She will receive a < from Council President Randy Krug. TO GIVE TABULATION The queen also will have the honor of presenting the tabulation Of the dance proceeds to the ares fund drive chairmen, Mrs. Charles Pangus and Samuel E. Evans. rization .study, utility sti ippUca-jlation Irban tential been plai m by i T by dates uall filing will rthq. tudy. first phase of the study program two weeks ago aad requested the planing firm to antantt'te It an alternate schedule. Program to Join CD Telephone Relay Call) Wednesday to Set Pace! The request was made by the council ip the hope of obtaining more tangible remits during the| first year of the tentative 2-yeari for Safety Instruction program, ...........———.— ---------------------------------- . NO GUARANTEE j ^ telephone alert message will Applying for the federal gov- be sent through civil defense net-j ernment grant does not commit the works to Colorado Jieadquarters city to participating In the pro-|Wedhesflay as a demonstration of gram and neither does it guaranteeiefficiency in our warning system. the aid will be given. The califs to highlight a safety *______________ n._____w*.......... 'program 9 30 a m to noon that Avon Players Open Tomorrow day. sponsored by the Oakland' federal government would TAMING THE SHREW — hit musical may be fun for sot a little suffering is involved. Take , for example this scene from the Avon Players' forthcoming production of “Kiss Me Kate" ia which Kate, portrayed by Adele Carraher gets a walloping by The total estimated coat of tbe *“» «..M . -M* |“ „,y OMMtee l*,™toni „ „ _ Service Council, at the Health Cen- pa, 71 per rent aad tbe etty tbe !(pr 1(m) N Telegraph ^ 1 A civil defease film from hi ga* BeH Tetephem The' revised 'work schedule for „ . the first year includes the pr^s-j T_. aration of aerial photographs and1, Will Stage 'Kiss Me Kate' ROCHESTER — The talents of dramatic »r high remedy ve-Shakespeare, Cole Porter and 45\ hides la Its 14 years at ex- > maps, an existing land use study, economic base and population studies, and a study of Walled Lake in relation to neighboring communities. 1 The Brandon Township goal has Ibeen set at 31.880. to be raised EAST LANSING (API-What one) State, Go," and "Rose Bowl-Rose before the drive ends Nov. 2. The observer described as "Rose Bowl Bowl" as they marched more than goal was announced at'a^kickoff fever" has hit the Michigan State 3 milqp around the campus on a luncheon today at the; high school. University campus. balmy, spring-like evening. .★ * * ’ A crowd of male students and students nt tipped af the home Jerry Olsen, Pontiac, twill be coeds marched across the campus) ^ ^ PnMtnt K h,,: Jockey at the dance. for about two hours last n£ht. Hk||||lk]| (o)d ^ ntndrnU he —--------______ gathering momentum and picking] «happy to ^ your Pn(hu. Other projects undertaken the first year would be a natural resources study, street and traffic Sneakers wilt1 include Ileslie Slk area singers and dancers will bel Isteuce. U*rfc. ___ . Ks .. . U1 1—1 A tJnn Plnimra I _- vemale, Michigan stare "University, and Betty Maltbjr, safety chairman of the Michigan Horn# Economic Extension, PARTICIPANTS blended when the Aron Players ^ theme of the musical is preeent their first musical Pco-j baSed on William Shakespeare' "Tuning, of the. Shrew,” It mis play the leading rales in the plot. Then he has daunted it with such lilting melodies as "Why Can’t You Behave,” "So In Love” ... . .. _,____I the story of a father’s exasper- Tbcy "■ Pl ating task of trying to find a tern Broadway hit, "Kiss i Kate, Southfield Mayor, Council Meet Today ^ be appeared on tbe Couple S«tS NOV. 15 os Date for Marriage p students as it progressed. Seven students were arrested for disorderly conduct, Including . ^ u|vd (he|n (0 "J** *?" ”... Spartans in Saturday’s foothill AUBURN HEIGHTS-A Nov. 25 Washington Si.. nirMua, jgame with undefeated Notre Dame date has been set for the wedding lAMtag police snu. j—and to keep the rally orderly. 0f Patricia M. Hiller and Clifford The youths pleaded guilty in mu- Herman Johnson, a promising r st. Pierre whose engagement nicipal court, police said, and were sophomore halfback, led the march js announced by her parents, Mr.-fined $10 plus costs or 10 days in part of the way, land Mrs. Raymond L. Hiller of jail. All ted indicated they would ★ ★ * . ;u)20 Avalon pay the fine. The rally started at a few oft- State police were- alerted, but campus paternity and sorority \not called into action. house* and picked up real steam nnnwa « * group of men’* dormitories (T^OWD GROWS where dinner hour had just ended The crowd, which frew from a ^ 4M0 hundred or so to several thousand,1 chanted. “Beat the Irish,” "Go, The crowd marched on several \ , , dence kalis, bat found the stu- Farmmqton Unit I ***• ****** ■m**r*™ Y. _ __ I or bouse mothers. Expected to OK The prospective bridegroom I SOUTHFIELD—Mayor S. James Clarkson and City 'Councilman meet at noon today in an attempt to iron out their differences over Gerald Easlick, former city assessor. The council bas threatened Clarkson with a lawsuit over bln veto powers, that have assessing consultant by the enun- . . ... — u_ |------- - - : . ... .band for his sharp-tongued older Othersi who give talks are tomorrow and^Saturday.nighte pnd daughter nis more popular Elmer Harmon, member of the Oct. 27 and 21 at Central Junior, of Michigan Citizens Highway Safety | High School. many suitS Action Committee, and Mrs. Her-j curtain time-is 8 p.m. all four] * *' man Trost, vice president of the; nights Oakland County cooperative Ex-tension Council. The council urges safety chair-] * men and anyone interested to at-| tend, Mrs. William F. Bergemann, publicity chairman, said. .Cole Porter has set this play production marks the within s play and entwined i first departure from I personal lives of the acton who Ohio Minister Elected Leader of Mission Unit Power Shut Off in Troy Section ITeamster Strike Forces Delay in Street Paving MILFORD - ,A $38,000 street Electricity and 'N^\in*nT# “ * . i .. _ I been scheduled to begin early this Order ] month has been postponed until Portraying Lily aad Halo to Adele Carraher. one of tbe start of the recent “Red Stocking Revue." Petiuuhto and Fred era ployed bp Roy WinsMp. The two other principles are Jo Anne McVeigh ami Alan Miller of Royal Oak. Rounding out tbs large c«et are talented singers and dancers who will be featured both In specialty acts and chorus routines. Disconnected GRAND RAPIDS (UPIV — The [Rev. Dr. William C. Nelson of Akron, Ohio, was elected president I to Make Repairs , ___„ ________ of the United Church Board for village Manager Oliver Thy-' c*m>“ Chapman Jr. World Ministries Wednesday J ^ _ Residenls in the south.[ ter my'tbe taajor project ted ' Dave Keens, veteran af many Players productions both behind and -In front * the footlights. to the dheetor. Ho Is assisted by fin, James thorp. The aets for the 17 scenes in the fast-moving 2-act production are designed by Foul Stratton Jr. Musical director is Mrs. George Rote, choreographer. Mrs. Robert Halback and producer, Mrs. Nelson was elected- at the 152nd Stage producer is Tracey RaaeHe If no agreement is reached,!annual meeting of the board, of Mr. end Mrs. Raymond Clarkson said he la contemplating i counter-suit against the Beaty-Beutler Nuptials Zoning Proposal FARMINGTON — A toning o nance amendment ttet would daoaify half-mile otretcheo bn both sides of Grand River Avenue Wto light Industry to general commercial is expected to be adopted fix the City Council early next month. The council has already fjv*« tentative approval to tbe prop0* al and probably will net on It at the fiov. < council meefing. ac-( cording to City Clerk Treua The rally ended at the Jenlson Fieldhouse where the MSU band] was practicing and students joined in several choruses of the MSU “fight” song. Other students arrested were: William D. Grant, 21, of Bethes* _ ____ Thomas C. Rowe, 21, of Flint; Robert H. Thompson, 19 ol 'Dearborn; Alan P. Hacjcstedde 19. reland; Ronald A. Hinch, 18, N. Y.; and Russell W.l Kelle\ 19, of flentley. Being considered for re zoning on the north side of Grand River is a section 260 feet east of School Street to a point 300 feet east of Lakewa? Street; and on the south side a stretch 610 feet east of Grove Street to 475 feet east of Brookdale Road. The change was recommended by City Manager John Dinan because the zoning was not compatible -with other Grand River Ave- Ex-Congressman to Talk arBig Beaver To Hold Rummag* Salt ROCHESTER—The Woman’s Relief Corps, auxiliary to the Grand Artnyi of the. Republic here, will spoeaor a rummage aale from 9 s.m. to 5 p.m tomorrow. The sale will be hi the Avon Township Had, Fourth, and Pinf streets. Repeat Vows in Church WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-, and Mrs. Vyroe E. Beutler of SHIP — Four Towns Methodist US1 Coomer Hoed Tbe bride-Church was the setting Saturday groom Is tbe see of Mr. and Mrs. evening for the wedding of Janet Harmon Beaty Jr., of tMM' Kay .Beutler and Hannon Beaty ‘ Highland Road, Highland Town-111. Rev. W. Cadman Prout per- a kip. annual meeting ot xne ooaru iwsteni *rcti°n of the city were! with Bob Lucia as stage carpenter which was founded in 1810 by New SntefS "*p Michigan Road B.dldero As- *"d-Jackie Kleinath, house man- England Congrogationaltet. at the ^ be8t teaspoon finely grated 1 e m o hi 3 cup* sifted flour , French Canadian Pie rtf* &F jkta, Cnamy, Unciout ’ W tetwpoon growl QUEBEC, P.Q.tCan. f,tU~uM°rr mar8aiI"e iThis recipe for sugar pto is from a 2 eggs ^ !Quebec agriculture ministry publt- 2 tablespoons frozen orange Juice j cation. “La Bonne Cuisine. (Cpna-(undiluted) dlenne-Francdise *f ’ Sift together the flour, baking Line an 8-inch'pie plate with pas powder, salt and cloves. Cover with % inch of W" {butler and sugar; beat in MMsugar and grated maple 'flfliar thoroughly, one at a time. Beat!mixed together. Pour 3 table-jin "orange Juice. Gradually: stir In spoons of cream or milk over *u-' Dour until combined, Chill thor-igy Dot with tiny pieces of hotter, joughly. \ If desired, add a dash of nutmeg Knit about l4-thcti thick (work- or cinnamon Cover with ‘ppatry tag with one quarter dough at a lattice. Bake in a prtheatod fOtb - time) «a a prepared pastry data Idkgree oved until pastry Is brown | with well-floured stockinet eov Cool. Serve with or without ctgam. MARfSliEJMTO — Grandmother made'them lor afternoon tea and to'please the children. Motiier taadcthetn when she needed dessert in a hurry. You can make them now Juki because these crispy lemon flavored "cookies’-? taste good and are easy to fix. If any ire left, store them Jto an airtight Container. cup sugar Marguantes can oe atorau tor aev- - . . / ■ 1 egg white end days In a closed, airtight con- .tO Cheese Sandwich j Preheat oven to 300 degrees Yield: 18 to 30 marguerites. | Grilled tropical cheese sandwich (slow). Place round buttery crack- "---------——~r—--------'. jin colorful, gala, and festive for aj era on cookie dteet. Blend cream1. .. , ^ . .. .TV snack or a Saturday lunch. For of tartar, nutmeg and lemon rind1tOiy-TO»mOke Wine J*Hy each-sandwich, spread two slices! 'into sugar. Beat egg white until Excellent With Game jof bread with butter or margarine stiff but no dry. Slowly add sugar fug. prepared mustard. Top onei . . mixture to egg white, beating con-, Here’s an easy wine jelly recipe.|«#-the-bread slices with a tajjje- 1mh»ii dusters of Flamelstantly until meringue makes stiffjTwo cups of Wine, in top of double’spoon of drained crushed pine-rapes with wedges of «harp'end glossy peaks. Drop about a j boiler, mixed writ with 3 cupsjapple on cheese slice, Cover pine- ’ lor a »a*'» and very tasty I teaspoonful of the mixture onto.sugar. Place over rapidly boiling apple with another slice of cheese, Tokays tucked into school [each cracker. j water for three minutes or until and the second slice of bread, j km art- an ideal noontime.! Bake in slow oven until margue- su^kr is dissolved, stirring con- Spread outside of bread with! r the children. And these toes are golden brown and crisp tojstantly. Remove from water and butter and brawn on sandwich grill rapes, low in calories yet!touch, about 30 minutes. Cootjstir in hatf-bottle fruit pectin tm-er pari. Garnish sandwich with aj ONtyPUM VANILLA WES TUB TRUEST, RfCHEST FLAVOR it quickly, briefly and top with a well-seasoned sauce. Mustard is but one suggestion. GOOD VEGETABLE — A whole head of cauliflower, cooked with a fear of its moat delicate leaves, is a vary attractive vegetable. Cook Crisp Cauliflower Bettered by Sauces BumflHfc “Don't cook 'til you see the I Serve bver hot cooked cauliflower whites of their eyes!" ought to be! Yield: 3/3 cup. j the good rook’s slogan when pre-' Dev,led Haro Sauce narinc criufiflower. No matter no* ,, • . TT , Sy and briefly you’ve rooked. 1 ’ I***8**0"* but,fr * it the extra heat of keeping cauli-j flower warm tor overdue family or] tablespoons flour guests can ruin the flesh, nippy! J ™P mU* j flavor of this execeUent vegetable, j f* «»<* deviled ham | ft takes between *) and 23 min-; • ground black pepper1 utes cookie time for a whole head. , teaspoon M (emon juice I of cauliflower. Cook it in enough ^ or margarine in a' Mb**** “T saucepan.- Sir in flour. Blepd fn head. Ox* uncovered for about 5 \ mUk ^ and rook over moderate mUwtos Then rover and cook: ^ heat until medium thickness. Re-| ^ from heat and add deviled tendsar. TUrn the bead once dur j ham pspper and lemon ing cooking time. !juJce Hatt wr hot cooked; When cooking flowerettes, use lifresi, cauliflower. Yield: Approxi- !crinkle slightly, be crispy oh the! Great for game, beef or poultry. I curt*. fine foods Sales Days: Thursday, Octebor 19 thru Wednesday October 25 including Sunday, October 22,1961. boil ah additional 5 minutes, or ^, • . . until ertap-tender. A teaspoon of V fg I 66Dr0lGS fresh tomcn Juice in the rookirg rv,vw vwivyiuiw water keeps the cauliflower beaufi-i s nnJunrraro fuiiy whtte. __________________an Anniversary Don't be afraid to aadercosk ' rauiiltower since j Uiis year, lltt. marks the 275th in wiadi. thinly itioeil ind- nun- ' > rated briefly in French dressing, enni'ersary of the first nee, Serve sliced cauliflower arid small harvest in America. Rice was, flowerettes with a well-seasoned brought to Charleston in 1688 by dip. It’s good nibbling, too, ^ Captain John Thurber, a New El« weight-watehera since a cup of| bri tine master who wa< raw flowerettes has a mere A),~ , i calories. homeward bound from Madagas- j Whether you like to serve cauli- car. He gave a small bag of rice flower whole or broken up, there jaboBt a pecki to Henry Woodward. first settler, who was with which to dress up this cab- _________ bage with a college education,’’ as an adventurer, explorer and Plan- Mark. Twain catted it. From the t*£_________ test kitchens of the Untied Fresh! Woodward,found that rica was a Fruit and Vegetable Association Mural foe the Csj^towtends. come these sauce redpts, all peiv WtihinM ywf».this first bag m fectiv delicious over cooked cauli- nee Seed had firmly established; the plantation tradition and way of lllfo in firaitk Aimlitea Thm nlanfo. COFFEE 9 lb 99* .rfS: tan *• All Grinds Del Monte *• WHOLE KERNEL CORN # CREAM STYLE CORN • SWEET PEAS Miiia C 303 QQc Matching cans 09 MTTY CROCKER Proving Mix BETTY CROCKER Instant ai«„ Frosting lYlIJi OH MONtt nNCAfHI Grapefruit Drink California Cling PEACHES SLICED—HALVES OH MONTI HUE IAKI Cut Graan I The culture of rice gradually) spread westward until in the 1880 s lit reached Texas and Louisiana, .jin the early 1900's it spread to] |j Arkansas and Mississippi where { I the chief domestic rice production I: of the nation now takes place. I [ The U.S.A. will harvest more' i than 5Hbillion pounds of’rioe this! ,|year ... all having its beginning! |Jin the littte bag of rice seed , j planted near Charleston in 1686. j I Rice is America's most useful! food. D€l MONTE Catsup.. . Ml MONTE Seedless Raisins DEL MONTE Borden' S American or Pimentc CHEESE SUCES Firm — Fancy— Golden Ripe ntUIT COCKTAIL BANANAS Large 16 Slice Package Special at. . . Sesame Seed Is Toasted for Bread Kraft Macaroni and Choose Dinner Herbs and seeds add interest-! Writ j mg 'flavor to a quick bread. { Sesame Herb Bread P*d . j tablespoon sesame seeds 1 j 3 cups sifted enriched flour I Ik cup sugar pep- ; 4 teaspoons baking powder I 1 teaspoon salt *4 teaspoon powdered marjoram j "•“•j 2 teaspoon celery seed 2 eggs (well beaten, 1 Ik cups milk H, cup shortening (melted) end Toast sesame seeds under broil-! wt w ufdd well browned, stirring oc-; )1L( (-Hsionally—about 5 minutes. Sift; together the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt and rnturjoram. Stir! in celery seed and two-thirds of the! - toasted sesame seed. Mtg egg* with milk and melted 1 shortesing: add to flour mix-i tare, stirring only until flour I* { moteteaed. Pour into g reused , ™ " ionf pun (about , by 4|j by S inches) and sprinkle with re-1 ipalntog sesame seeds, cut Bake in moderate <350 degrees)! oven for 1 hour, or until cake tes-j [ter inserted in center comes out] 'clean. Cod 10 minutes before turn-* mg out on wire rack’; turn right j to side up. Serve warm or cold wfthl the butter Blue Bonnet OLEO SAUERKRAUT U.S. No. 1 LOUISIANA mm yams Betty Crocker ■■ CAKE yKC MIXES AWev. Chocolate—White—Yellow Honey Spice—Lemon Velvet Sweet Potatoes FROZEN FOODS Morton's Fresh Frozen . LARGE FAMILY xPIES^I suit Tuni oaf of wuc'eP*'' ^ Pineapple French Toast drain TO empty saucepan add the; TT sugar, sqy sauce and. peanut oil; Here’s a weekend breakfrikt treat! warm over very low heat; add! that is delicious‘especially when! beans and toes with seasonings.ill’s served with crisp baron. Beat! Reheat if necessary. ,Hakes 3 serv- 4 egg* until light. Add 1 teaspoon! ing*. « .salt, teaspoon cinnamon. 3 ta*j '. .n»— ■— ■ blespoons Sugar and 1 cup of pine- j Next time you make a sauce:apple Jude. Beat yfcsrfl. Dip 8 slices' from a can. it tart rad cherries, lo# bread in this mixture and fry flavor It with a dash qf almond: gently in butter or margarine until So Good Frtsh Frozen liPWWAVi. WAlTOft HVP. HURRY ON DOWN, FOLKS, AND CORRAL THESE GREAT FALL VALUES Fresh—J.9on SPARE RIBS 39. Armour’s Campfire THICK SUCH) BACON 2A99f PRESSEL’S UTS. No. 1 HOT DOGS or RING BOLOG V 39 NA VWtb Grade "A” Fresh CHICKEN LEGS 39l Grade “A" Fresh CHICKEN BREASTS With • hb mm ■ 45 • Attached ■ mm lO :— jj0™*1*®?.,, LARGE ^gli^EGGS iw49« ‘« Campbell's ■ TOMATO SOUP ® 10‘c DIME MILE , ,b CRACKERS .to,' 19 THIRTY-'! HRKK THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER IP, 1961 FRI. and SAT. SPECIALS | Open Friday Evening ’HI 9 P.M. APPLE FOLD-OVERS — Invite the neighbor* In for dessert or ask them to come home with you after the Friday night game. Serve squares of pastry filled with e spicy apple mixture and topped with cubes of sharp Cheddar cheese. You can have these Fold-Overs frozen, ready to pop in the oven Just before serving time. The pastry in this case is made with bud. Kosher Style CORNED BEEF BEEF ROASTS Filled Pastry Squares topped With Cheese What dessert could be more typically autumn than apple pie? And when you serve it with Cheddar cheese, you score a double hit. Instead of serving die traditional apple pie or tarts, try Apple Fold-Overs for a different twist.Served slightly warm, topped with cubes of sharp aged Cheddar cheese on colored picks, they're wonderful with coffee or tall glasses of milk. Any variety of pie is only as good Os the crust. Remember that lud was the shortening used in making goodies In Grandmother's day. Because of Its high shortening power laid makes the tender-est flakiest pastry ever. Keep the lard at roem tempers tare, as lard straight tram the cabinet shelf blends with the flour quickly tor a dough that’s easy to handle. Aho, WITH COUPON PNOM 10 •PRCIAL BAQS—GOOD ON 1B YOUN NR XT PURCHA8EI _________ To make it temptingly easy for you to right on tfu tiy Robin Hood’a wondarful new method See coupoi of baking without sifting, wa’re offering Because you savings on your next purchase. Sim- quality an< ply go to your grocer’s now and buy any through n size bag of Robin Hood Pre-sifted Flour. sift again 1 Your money-Muring coupon it printed . you actual The only flour that promises you Boneless 4 apples, pared and sliced J/3 cup sugar % teaspoon rfrmamon 6 teaspoons butter Place pastry squares in shallow; pan. Mix apples, cinnamon and sugar and fill centers of squares with Vt cup of apple mixture. Dot with butter. Fold pastry up and over filling, overlapping points at center and moistening points to seal. Bake in 425 degree oven for about 25 minutes, until Fold-Overs are browned. Serve with cubes of Cheddar cheese on colored picks. Makes 6 Fold-Overs. - RUMP ROASTS THE PRE-SIFTED FLOUR too nrach water, which is the caase of tough crust. To keep the dough from sticking while rolling the pastry, use a floured pastry cloth and a covered rolling pin. A ribbed white stocking with the foot removed makes an excellent rolling Pin cov- ditWra**J MAKE MIX For quick pies and tarts, try making up your own pastry mix and keeping it ready on the cabinet shelf. .Make up one pound of lard with fe cups of flour and 3 teaspoons of salt' into a dry pastry mix and store it in a glass Jar for instant use. It’s convenient as well as time-saving. The easy Five-Minute pie crust Is never-fall,, beginner-proof. Just try for yourself — it’s a winner every time! Apple Fold-Over* Five-Minute Pie Craat: 2 cups unsifted all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon salt 2/3 cup lard % cup water Sift flour and sajt. Add lard These Prices in Effect October 19th thru October 25th—Open 7 Days 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. HEN TURKEYS Fresh Dressed—Oven Ready MICHIGAN U.S. No. 1 POTATOES All Purpose Not Frozen LETTUCE California Head Basil Is Always Boon to Tomatoes 10^19 Grade 1 Skinless These marinated fresh vegetables may be served instead of the usual salad. Tomatoes sad Green Pepper 4 medium-size or large tomatoes 1 large green pepper Vt cup salad oil 2 tablespoons cider vinegar % teaspoon salt K teaspoon cracked pepper Dried crushed basil Wash tomatoes and cut out stem ends; slice fairly thin. Wash green pepper and cut out stem end; remove .seeds and membrane; slice into fairly thin rounds. Mix together the oil, vinegar, salt, pepper and a few pinches of basil; pour over tomatoes and green pepper; cover and chill at least an hour, Opoonliy small amount of marinade over top of vegetables once or twice. Makes 4 to 6 servings. PASCAL CELERY 2,29 Florida Seedless Grade 1 Large STEWING CHICKENS BOLOGNA1 CARROTS CABBAGE "BUY THE PIECE” Ring Bologna. ..3ft FRESH DRESSED Not Frozen Home Grown polhh Sausage...3& Price Changes Subject to Market CaadUoas Blueberries Are Surprise Under Cake Hickory Smoksd Hickory Smoked laan Meaty CENTER CUT Hickory Smoked PORK SAUSAGE 2 69 PORK STEAKS The original German version of this dessert is made with apples, but it doesn’t suffer from this changeover. Blueberry Auflauf Frances 1 tablespoon butter H cup firmly-packed light brown sugar H4 cups blueberries cup sifted flour V» teaspoon baking powder 2 eggs (separated) ;A % cup granulated sugar 4li teaspoons cold water 1 teaspoon, grated orange rind and H teaspoon vanilla Spread butter over bqttom of a deep 9-ineh pie plate; sprinkle with broWn sugar and blueberries. U.S. Choice ROUND STEAKS Young, T.ndsr • BEEF HEARTS TONGUES Country Fresh—Grade A Bring Your Own Container ROUND BEEF VEAL ROASTS BOILING BEEF SISTERS SUPER MKT THntTY-FOUB THE PONTIAC PBB8S. THURSDAY, OCTOBER It. 1WI 11NITED CT0RE5 / HUS BROTHERS COFFEE Choice of Grind MU DAlCfc Ihurfc, PH., Sot., OCTOBER 19-20 >31 This Week’s] BONUS Kleenex Tiesnes.. .;5.n mm ImICHIGAN Fresh Creomery j butter TABLE KING WHOLE KERNEL CORN CREAM STYLE CORN - GREEN BEANS PEAS — WAXED BEANS KIDNEY BEANS TOMATOES 8 £ M®® Hills Brothers : ■ w Iseeteset MERE ^ 1 10* KOTEX. .3i1 100 liioiaiii vvi i kk Jar w w 1 Reg. 12 s- NBC GRAHMS. • > lb. box 39* TB* Center Cut PORK CHOPS El 10 oz. Pkg. PORK LOIN A ROAST End ■ m FRESH YOUNG PORK 4 LITER ....,■ it ■Ulb. TABLE KING TOMATO JUICE 46 oz. Can e> Pet Ritz Large Family Size PUMPKIN PIE PETERS SKINLESS HOT DOGS'11 Wo Reserve the Right • to Limit Qvontities... None Sold to Doalers or Minors * IN OINGflLVILLE GINGELLVILLE SUPER MARKET OHO BALDWIN AVI IN LAKE ORION L$. SUPER MARKET 331 S. Mm|, kb Mbr BOR end WINS IN WEST PONTIAC FELItiE QUALITY MARKET 238 S. TKLIGRAPH BEER-WINE-LIQUOR IN AUBURN ftflGHTS VILLAGE SUPER MARKET 3342 IN DRAYTON PLAINS TENUTA SUPER MARKET 3S1S SmNImi N Wefceo BEER and WINS A c 1NITED f*T0RE I H ft V \ THIRTYnFlVg THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 Cranberries Lend Rosy Hue to Meal Cranberries were known by the •airly colonists M craneberries because they grew on slender, curved stalks which reminded them of the crane's neck. And everyone will crane their necks tb see the delightful new treats you can make with these tart, plump red bits of goodness. Black Beans Blend With Ham Bone 1 package (14 ounces) black beans 1 meaty hambone 1 large carrot (and) 1 bay leaf 2 tablespoons olhre oil \ 1 large onion (finely chopped) 1 large green pepper (finely chopped) 1 Urge clove garlic (crushed) gelt end pepper (to taste) 2 tablespoons (about) fed wine vinegar Soak beans overnight In water to cover; dreip. Turn into e kettle with hambone, carrot, bay leaf and 6 cups water. Bring to a boll; simmer until tender— 2 to S hours or longer — adding water, if necessary, to keep beans covered. Remove hambone, carrot and bay leaf; dice ham meat and the carrot; return to beane. Both family and guests will love the versatile and economical little berries in sherbet, ice-cream, relish, jelly, salad, pie, pudding or muffins. They can be frozen easily so the u. S. Department of Agriculture suggests you buy a lot while they are in plentiful supply now and in the weeks stead. m Iamb for etow and you’ve *«. « cape el mgar, l stick daft lor the most discerning four- ■ tew whole doves not only cooks the meat to a mmta ** b#rri“ "* •** it «i«o gives the other ingradl* Chill and spoon Into a bowl to flavors which you add 2 cups chilled plne- -....... ' . : apple juice end 1 cup chilled lem- on juice. Add ctyb soda or gtoger-Cardamom flavors Danish pas- ale to suit your taste and garnish (X- ' with trait or mint. UMgfiy symbolizes flit plentiful foods found in crested a your market during the fan seam . .. foods met. Sin •udl as fresh tomatoes, onions, carrots and groen tender dt baaas. Combine these vegetables with meaty ents a ch Stew Smells Heavenly and Tastes Even Better Meanwhile teat oil to a skillet and lightly cook onion, groan pepper end garlic ip it; add to beans with salt, pepper and vinegar. Reheat. Serve with rice and finely diced onion. Makes 6 serving*. U. 1 No. 1 Michigan ALL PURPOSE SEALTEST VELVET BRAND VAN CAMP'S PORK BEANS Sprinkle broiled chicken with crushed tarragon just before re-moving it Horn the teat FRYERS ttviifs! DISCOVER THE NEW PLEASURE OF rca Victor SUPERB MARK SERIES U.S. Government Inspected TURKEYS 2& COLOR BANANAS APPLES NKKMY SMOKED PICNIC STEAKS Compbairs BREAD Ike ntst beautiful color TV you’ve ever sen! This charming Cariy American beauty paints every ralnbow-hued scene with the realism you gat only from RCA’s new High Fidelity Color Tube. Enjoy Glare-Proof viewing, MNew Vista" Tuner picture-pulling power plus the Mo-nko brilliance of S Spotter Panoramic sound I , MIIPP nBBp your WW FREEZER NOW IS THE TIMI TO PILL YOUR FklUIL MARKET CONDITIONS ARE GOOD. DON'T WAIT—-PILL YOUR FREEZER NOW. Wt WILL PROCESS AND PACKAGE PREE! 1 WHOLE SIDE OF IEEF.lb. 49c Come in-yoo have to see It to believe it! £££ oil Hiatc shows in COLOR 9CE weakly on RCA VICTOR TV at Fraytr's or in your own homo... ONI WEEK FREE TRIAL prism cue CARROTS 5« n* USDS EYE FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS! BIRDS EYE iAc DINNERS .... 49 . FOOD CENTER 706 W. HURON IIIR — WINS — LIQUOR MEAT PIES APPLIANCE M9 Orchard Lain An. CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS ! PRISM j GREEN 1 BEANS 1 13** LARGE, CUSP J READ 1 LETTUCE 1 10° * JO-GAL. GLASS LINSD HOT WATER HEATER *59* || BAMBOO 9 LEAF RAKE PLASTIC KITS 2r 45* MULTI- TINI LEAF RAKE m 59*. FELT WEATHER STRIP Oil• 17-ft. Pkg. teU METAL QQC WEATHER SMI STRIP lr W W| INSTALL GLASS 1 IN ALUMINUM OR WOOD FRAMIS 1 COMPLETE UNI QP COPPIR TUBING | ond FITTINGS FAY-BARKER j HARDWARE 79 S. SAGINAW ST. W# (five Hold** fad Stamp * m Lean, Misty, End Cut PORK AAg CHOPS 09*. Yeung, Tender, Steer Beef BONSLKSS ROLLED RID fill* Lb. ROAST 09 Center Cut pork 70c CHOPS .. . . 19 ib Yeung, Tender, Steer Beef BONELESS ROLLID RUMP 70° Lb. ROAST 19 Freeh, Leon PORK OAc SAUSAGE . . .09\ Young, Tender, Steer Beef SHORT RIBS a0(u. tf BEEF ... £9 Young, Tender PORK ACfi LIVER a Sliced FRESH, LEAN GROUND AAn BEEF 09*. Young, Tender SS 29*. Sliced CHEESE LOAF 2 - 55*. Yenng, Tender ST 39*. I Be. end under OLD PARM PURE PRESERVES 2-49* i 1 Yeung, Tnndnr, Steer inn# ROAST 3fc SPAM ^39* THIUTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PEE8S, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, A Meeting Writ ilrl Mnwo Arriving at rename \*uy tuo jor me jirsi pnase oj ,«theater party arm (from left) Mr. and Mrs. Addison K. Oakley of Cherokee Raid and the Ralph T. Nor-tells of Wenonah Prime, City Club members and ttorir guests were whisked to the newly remodeled fisher Theater ning. Play was Choreography and costuming were irtg to playgoers. • 1 1 V Q: I was invited to spend last weekend at the house of friend* who Hue to foe suburbs. As I have no ear | took the train out sad had expected nay hostess or some member of her fondly to be at the station to meet me. Thera was no one there attar waiting about 10 minutes I ( took a taxi out to the house. It waa quite a long ride. Shouldn't someone have been at foe station to meet me? A: If your hostess knew you were coming by train instead of by ear and also foi of year arrival, die have had someone at the station. * * Q: I have be« foe wedding of a mine who is n brother of my steady friend. I have known the for many years; in fact have grown up together. As my boy friend is t< in foe wedding party, will pleas* ten me on which of the church I should ait at foe wedding. I understand my name was on both wedding hats. A: Tell foe usher that yon are a friend of both the bride and groom and ask him to seat you on whichever side is foe least crowded, i * * * Q: Isn't it very bed manners ' for people to walk three or four abreast an a dty street? t This monopolising oil1 the side-| walk is a pet peeve of mine * and ha my opinion it is not only had manners but very lacking in consideration of other people. I would appreciate your comments on this. I A: It is bad manners and Inconsiderate of others to walk three or more abreast unless foe .sidewalk is so wide that to do so can not inconvenience anyone. - ♦ * a Q: I have. , just recently | moved into a large apartment house with twenty-tow how doorman service. I would 1" ' to know if I am expected to tip him after each service he [ performs lor me, or just how is this handled? ! A: Most people tip foe men ! In an apartment house aV-Christmas apd perhaps if fo^y go away for foe summer, again on the day they leave. * * . * Fbr the correct procedure of a second marriage, send ten cents in coin and a self-addressed. stamped envelope to The Emily Post Institute, «k» of The Pontiac Press. Mothers Club Sets Program The Pontiac Young Men's Christian Association Mothers’ dub invites all mothers and interested women in foe greater Pontiac area to attend a preholiday program at the YMCA Monday at l:4!>-p.m. "Holiday Decorations” as presented by Mrs. Mary Hardy, Home Economics Agent of the Oakland County Cooperative Extension Service of Michigan State University, will include new ideas and the fundamentals of seasonal decorating. Reservations are not necessary but would be appreciated by the YMCA. Arranging last minute details for the semiannual rummage sale on Oct. 26 at Christ Church Cranbrook are (from left) Mrs. John Albrecht of Fairfax Street, Birmingham; Mrs. Frederick S. Strong III of Vaughn Road, Bloomfield Hills; and Mrs. S. J. Gillen of Chewton Cross Road', Birmingham. Doors will open at 9 a.m. Sponsoring the sale are Episcopal Churchwomen of Christ Church. Womens Section Adopt Him, Abby Advises Unwanted Boy Is Deserving By ABIGAIL TAN BI REN DEAR ABBY: Fbr five years now we have taken on the full responsibility of ow son's illegitimate child. ■k-k-k The mother of this child i> very irresponsible, and left foe child with me sines birth. My son and this girl have' been going together since the baby was born, but have made no mar fiage plans for the' future. They both date other people. The child sees his mother occasionally, but is confused about who foe is because I am foe only ‘‘mother" he has known, although I have him call me Naims to let him know I am not Ms mother. ADOPT HOC CHILD We are the child’s legal guardians, cem is that this child should have a happy, normal life. Please help us dear up fois mem while there is still time. HEARTSICK NANNA DEAR NANNA: To be honest with you. I think you have another child to raise. Why don’t you ask for a legal waiver on the boy from both parents, adopt him, and give him foe normal life he has coming to bin}? k .k k DEAR ABBY: I like a kid and hf likes me. He jg„ U and I am 16. My father says fois kid looks like a "wise guy," and he won’t let me go out with him. I think this Is very unfair as my father only saw Him once for a little while. 'Can you help me? SIXTEEN DEAR SIXTEEN: Parents have been known to misjudge people, hut they usually are correct in their first impressions. Take your father’s word for It, and be a "wise gift." HUSBAND FORGETS DEAR ABBY: This might petty thing to complain about, but It means a lot to me. My husband doesn’t remember my birthday, our anniversary. the children’s birthdays or any of foe smaller occasions, like Valentine's Day and Mother’s Day. He DOES remember' Christmas because there is so much advertising about it I don’t love him any less for it, but I can’t help' feeling a little hurt. ★ dr * Don’t ten me I should be glad he doesn't get drunk and chase women. I know all his good qualities, but I wish he .were a little more thoughtful. When he forgets, he feels guilty and apologizes. I never mention how hurt' I am, but I hate being — "FORGOTTEN” DEAR "FORGOTTEN” Don’t sulk in silence. Start your own "advertising campaign” by tending your husband little reminders a week or two in advance. You will be "remembered,” and your husband won’t feel guilty because he "forgot.” i Several Hundred to Help at Christ Church's Sale Several hundred women in more than 20 departments will assist an expected crowd of 1.500 buyers at the semiannual rummage, sale of Christ Church Cranbrook on Oct. 26. The sale begins at 0 a.m. .k k * Many regular salegoere will be in line as early as 6:30 . fo foe morning with people camiiqt as far a why as Kala-mazoo, Ffht and Mt. Clemens. A snack bar serving coffee and doughnuts or milk and sandwiches win be available to buyers throughout their wait. _ k k k , Rummage sale proceeds will be distributed by foe Chris-turn Social Service Department of foe Episcopal Church-women of Christ ChUrch in helping Oakland County social ■ service agencies. k k k Money from foe sale helps purchase shoes, blue jeans and underwear for the clothes closet inventory which is available only to cases recommended by such agencies as the Child Guidance Clinic. Aid to Dependent Children, and the Unwed Mothers Division of Michigan Children’s Aid. PROVIDE PASTIES Monthly parties are provided for residents of Oakland County Medical Facilities, and Thanksgiving and Christmas baskets are distributed. Also benefited are such agencies ax Polio Center. Planned Parenthood and foe Oak Park. Settlement. Big Brothers of Oakland County, Family Service, C a m p' Chickagamt for Boys and Holiday ^iouse Camp for Girls. ★ ★ ★ Services include knitting for various institutions, mending at clothing distributed in con-junction with social service agencies to supply needs for” low Income families, and making cancer pads tor the Michigan Cancer Society. The women also give hours at volunteer work in hospitals, homes for foe aged, family visiting and other institutions where classes are organized in music, weaving, ceramics, horticulture and other crafts. ♦ ★ k Cochairmen for the sale are Mrs. C. Robert Weir and Mrs. 4Jack U. Klarr. Serving as adviser is Mrs. Edward T. Ben-net. Women Plan 'Quiet Day' Deborah Circle of the Oakland Park Methodist Church met Wednesday at the church. Mrs. Clayton Gillies was welcomed as a guest. Mrs. James Wellington and Mrs. Raymond Coombe presented the program "I Am the Church,” k k k -Mrs. Frank Martin was named chairman for a quiet day at the Church beginning at 10 a.m. Oct. 30. A tour of Christian Literature Sales is set for Nov. 16. Mrs. Joe L. Wagley of Hammond Street will be hostess for the next meeting. ter field Road, Birmingham and Mrs. C. Robert ‘Weir—of Cranbrook—Road, Bloomfield Hills. Dresses, hats, men's suits, boys' and girls* clothing, everything from beds to bikes will be on sale. Tagged and polished like new are chairs to be offered for sola at the semi annual rummage sale at Christ Church Cranbrook on Oct. 26. Picking up articles donated by women of the church are (left) Mrs. Jack U. Klarr of Ches- Cassini Parades Styles ‘ By. GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) — The designer whose creations fill White House closets brings curves anew to women’s fashions in his spring 1962 collection. Oleg Cassini is the designer's najne. Much of his fame rests with the boost given when Mrs. John F. Kennedy chose him as her "personal" designer after the presidential election. ★ * k It was a new Cassini personality at his fashion opening Wednesday afternoon — apparently because of his role as -chief designer for the First Lady. k k k But it was a familiar Cassini “look,” as the designer tossed aside all those relaxed, overblouse silhouettes which have reigned in the past few seasons in the fashion world. He revived what used to be called the Cassini trademark-curves. The Cassini personality long has been famous with press and buyers as one of madcap antics and doubleentendre remarks during his fashion shows. Wednesday, Cassini, emceeing his show as usual, kept reminding himself aloud, "bade to dignity.” FORGETS DIGNITY He forgot his dignity only once — to do a perfect imitation of a mannequin parading through a showroom, flat chebt thrown back, pelvis pushed forward. The imitation brought down the house. ★ ★ k - The Cassini clothes also brought applause for their stress on bustline, waistline and hipilne simultaneously. Wide insets of fabric at the waist fitted snugly, helped show the curve of'foe figure above, and bias cut of fabric on many daytime and late day dresses gave a clinging line to the whole costume. ~ k •- k k One dress which the designer called "just crazy enough to be sensational'' probably trill be copied all over the fashion market. It was a late day dress, in red crepe, fitted for a two-part role. The basic garment was a sheath, but covering it like a coat from shoulder to hem were tree-swinging vertical strings of fabric. Held in with s belt, the dress looked dignified enough for a diplomatic reception. Unbelted, the dress was something out of a Marilyn Monro* movie. Six Pages in Today's Women's Section Dinner and cocktailf preceded the play. Many City Club members entertained guests. Diners (from loft) were Bruce J. Annett of Sylvan Shores Drive, Mrs. Clarence Knechtel of Romeo) Mrs. Annett and Mr. Knechtel. Several suck parties 4 year are on the agenda at the City Club and are gaining popularity with the members according to manager Howard Hildenbrand. f wmam THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 THIRTY-SEVEh Speak Marriage Vims During Candlelight Rites la • candPeHzht ceremony Sat- to LaVepns D. Letnenger before Rev. C. George Widdlfield. The reeepOoa la Waterford by parents of the bride, ttei CW1- , ford ■>—wyerde, !■> IMi AvmmBi Waterford Township. The brume— b the sea of the Aim * honeymoon to northern Michigan, the newlyweds «fl| five The bride** hoop-skirted gown of white Chantilly lam over taffeta —a styled with portrait neckline ontttned hi seed pearfc. She wore a chapel veil of silk illusion held lw • aeed pearl tiara, and carried American Beauty race*. std of honor, wore yel-■ over matching taffe- Barbara Kaye Groqae, Rochester, and Mary Lou . Hubbard, Connie Ana Green and Gloria Jean Farrier, SO of Hillman, appeared in aqua chiffon over taffeta and carried yellow Unit Nears Program by Students Foreign —ftango students at Stayne Mata University gave a program before the Pontiac Branch, American Association of University Women, Monday seeing in the Community Service ki tiding. Introduced by Mrs. Philip Lockhart, second viee p were Alfred Tadros, eag Sorority Holds Model Meeting Officers and chairmen of EpaDon igma Alpha Sorority gave brief utHnaa of tbair duties before the nkm at tho annual model meeting Monday evening at the **900 Harvey Schroeder, lira. Jerry M. Strang, Mrs. Weston Meier and Mrs. Ralph E. Allen, sponsor. » Peaehealles feeas w to'majoring In Ma-» briefly oa their Mvn tad—ry, risrstlna. pal-• aad government. *■“*1 the social chairman Mrs. Ervin Bartel, were Mra. E. J, Wllczak, Clara Gaylord, Mrs. Olive Burr—, Mrs. lioyd Walt, Mra. Morley Newman, Mrs. Gsnrga Cheal, Mrs. Ray ADen. Mrs. Clifford Christianson and lb*. Join Mrs. Dale Hilla of Petoshcy was Mrs. Joseph Gerdes, Mrs. Dele Girdler, Mrs, James Newport, Mrs. r recent trip to 'with Ma year's mm “GeMtag ta Duplicate Player^ Announce Names The Wednesday Duplicate Club met at the Etas Temple for the weekly tournament. Tied for first plica were Mrs. James ft— and Mrs. Earl Huskier; Mrs. Dan Mac Phereon and Mrs. Lester Hamilton. Other winners were Mr. and Mrs. Russell H. Dragsdorf; Mrs. Gordon Longstreth and Dr. Lorraine Willis. Scout Camporee ~**^ *+*»**» at Howell Set by Northridge Unit Atteyidaaos win be drawn from troops in Ftmdals, Pleasant , Meta Royal .oak, Tm, Madison Boy Scout troops from Nosm-ridge District will gather at the Charles Howell Scout Reservation, Brighton, for n pone,*’ tomorrow through Sunday. ■ Flvo mala eveafo are ached Mod for Saturday Including fire building, pancakes, cooking, nr Big Beaver. General arrangements for the Fall Camporee are under file direction of William Button, Royal Oak. chairman of the activities commit* tea for tha Northridge District. | in the world during the Age of Reptiles. Tim first ones were Uttle Insect eaters, many of them living in Sunday’s program features a trees. WHILE SCHOOL IS OUT .. I shop la I r Jr. was B brother. Ushers wtre Robert Gronxo, Rochester, and the bride’s —fins Wayne and Dwight Beauregard. Atlanta. Rad roses worn at the shoulder accented Mrs. Beauregard’s grid brocade taffeta sheath dross. Mrs. Lelnanger chose mint green lace over taffeta with hunter gresn no* c—criw and corsage- of yellow Donee Club Invites Guests Saturday The Myk Btapimi Square Dane* Ctab will have Ed Farr of Detroit as caller Saturday at file Pontiac Township Hall on Opdyke Road from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Robert Schneider, president, Weston intermediate square dancing to come. Dances are scheduled on the first and third Saturdays at-the Township Hall. Dem Womens Unit to Meet Tuesday The Waterford Township Democratic Women's Chib will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the “300 Bowl” an South Casa Lake Road. ' ★ ,dr * Host eases for ths evening wUl be Mrs. Earl Schwalm, , Mrs. J. Leo Cooper, Mrs. Frank Molina and Mrs. Robert Newlin. Christmas cards and novelties will he on display. 18th District ofWCTUto Hold Parley District President Mrs. George Perkins, Royal Oak, will preside at the 10th usual convention of the ltth District, W o a en* a Christian Temper-ance Union, Wednesday at tha Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Registration will begin *45 . a.m. and cooperative luncheon will be served at noon. The Anna Gordon Unit wifl be host- Mrs. Chester Walker, Corunna, state director, .Youth Temperance Council, wUl be the keynote speaker. Rev. Lola Marlon, district vice-president, will respond to a welcoming address by Mrs. Nellie Mata roe, president, Pontiac Federation WCTU. Officers will be elected for the mining yuni----------- Church Group Holds Meeting Twenty members of the Jano-1 ary • March group of the First I Presbyterian Church met for I luncheon Tuesday at the church. I Mrs. Donald Adams wan welcomed | aa a guest Mro. Lawrence McCann gava tha Bible stady from the Gos-pM if John aad Bias. Smith FBI- I uaner gave excerpts from “Churches for New Timas.” Bin. Philip Meacham who | served as one of the hostesses I with Mr , E G. Clark. Mrs. On- I mer Smith and Mrs. Avery Shear- A er, reported on social education|| and action. won. suit FULL HOMER ...12:90 money basic suit -, In 100% wool homsspun flannol or nubbod tweed. Boxy |sckM is completely lined. Slim skirt Is lined. Choose black, brown, gresn or grey in sisas 10 to .t8. - Love that young look . .. UNPRECEDENTED SALE! FABULOUS HOUSE-of-STROOCK DESIGNED COATS, LOOMED TO BE IN FASHION COATS AT OVER M00 NOW AT A SALE PRICE! WOOL KNIT BOUGLE Junior Dot* Dross ...14.98 Pictured hare Is ona from our collaction of Junior stylos. Perfect dross to go Straight from dtsk to dots! Note tha French influence of dickie at the nock ... tha slenderizing sheath skirt is seat lined to hold its shop*. In green or black. Sixes 7 to 15. Dr— Salon — Second floor Stormy Weather and warmly lined CORDUROY SUCKS Sisee S to 6x ......2.9* Sine 7 fg 14 .......3.98 Washable fine wale corduroy, flannelette lined. Adjustable elasticized waistband. Red, royal and green. SPECIAL SELLING ...6.90 Bogs you'll be proud to carry ... in creamy marshmallow leather . . . colorful tapestry ... so many styles .. . so much fashion ... for so little. - Bandbegs — Meta fleer Sixes 7 to 14 Stormy Weather zip-out Sherpo lining COAT ...22.98 Two-in-one £oat of wool and cornel hair has lining of Creslan acrylic pile ithat zips out. Soddle stitching detajl in camel, rbd, or navy. Faeee fetas'SAep — Le wet Level Fancy pants at a price! THO SLICKS ...6.90 100% wool and fully lined capri ponts in gay patterns ond solid colors. Sizes 8 to 16. . Sport Shop — Main fleer Such Sweet Slumber . . PAJAMA SET ...4.90 Quilted tricot'set has floral print top over solid color capri length ponts. Contrast piping. A dream of g sgj far you . .. for a gift! Us eerie — Mata fleer WHEN YOU SHOP ARTHUR'S DOWNTOWN.*. you wiH enjoy the wide selections of fashion that Is a look ... not o price ... we invite ybu to use your Charge Account and the parking is on t%! « Imagine . . . coats from one of Americq's leading makers . . Stroock textures and weaves including Brushed Stain Glass Fleece, Yam Dyed Fur Fiber, Cobblestone Tweerfc, Monotone Pettipoints, Looped HomeSpun Tweeds, Closed & Cropped Velours, Shadowed Ombre Plaids ond Morel Body Conscious Coats, Demi-Fitted Styles, /'rlore Silhouettes, Classic Spectator Coats, Scarf Coots. H Sizes 4 to 14 and 8 to 18. PICK YOUR MOST CONVENIENT WAY TO PAY! Gael Seise — Seesmi Ftaav : TiffiTY.MGffT _- ^.;.I / • * • *T ' ' \ '•* • V- •/ ' ‘ ' HIi§i xtif' - &&' ri£&§ v '-M % -\ DOBBS M OFF Open Stpck Bedroom Suites Beautifully grained walnut dents of black. Large Mr. a triple dressers, full or twin mirror. Ref. $249.95 3-Pc. Sculptured Contemporary Note the permanent beauty ■ of the richly grained cherry and walnut woods and the sculptured drawer pulls. 63" 9-drawer triple dresser and-framed plate glass mirror, full or twin size bed. Reg. $279.95 3>Pc. Italian Classic Time honored traditional takes a new classic look. Elegont blending of distressed cherry woods in a deep butternut finish. 9-drawer triple dresser, framed mirror, full or twin size bed. Reg. $279.95 3-Pc. Scandinavian Import Rich imported pecan and wolnut woods hand-rubbed into a silky sotin harvest brown finish. Hand-carved cut out drawer fronts and head-boards. Outstanding triple dresser and carved mirror. Reg. $239.95 -fixsraraa- furniture Bloomfield Hills-2600 Woodward (Near Square Lake Rd.) OPEN 10 A. M.—9 P. M. ... - I' pg 3.7933 MON., THURS /FRI., SAT. ”?>*-• THE tv*"* THURSDAY, OCTOBER It, IW1 COME to the FOURTH AHHUAL 5SM mm Duane Upton - Professional Auctioneer (evening) SATURDAY, OCT. 21, 1100 A.M. to 900 P. WATERFORD C.A.I. BUILDING (WILLIAMS LAKE KOADI Featuring: STROLLING MUSICIANS • HOLIDAY DECORATIONS HAIR STYLIST FASHION SHOW (Afternoon! FOOD SERVED ALL DAY • DOOR FRIZES • HANDWORK ond ANTIQUES WHS CRYSTAUAIRES (Entertainment) ? ' This Advertisement Sponsored by the Following Firms: Roil Fine Candies 4642 Elisabeth Lake Rd. Pearce Floral Co. 559 Orchard Lake Ave. GMTC Employees Federal Cnlit Union 156 W. Huron St. FaifKjGroup Meets/ Eats at Home Mrs. Oarcnee Senger opened her Moreland Avenue home for a Friday luncheon meting ot the Faith Group pt the Flrat Prow byterian Church. Aaciating Mr*. Senger war* Mra. Donald Cotter-man, Mrs. Bradley Scott, and Mrs. Margie M. Zander. \ ★ * A Mrs. Randall Spurgeon, vice chairman, preaided at the business session in the absence at Mrs. Willis Brewer, chairman. Btowalo Mellinger Stndie "Instructions in Fine Arts" 65 Bloine St. Michigan Printing Co. 1991 Orchard Lake Ave. Arthur's Womb's Apparel 48 N. Saginaw St. The Pontiac Press W. Huron St. Carl Hengh, Physiotherapist and Mail. 170 State St. H. H. Smith Oil 590 S. Paddock St. MR. AND MRS. ROBERT B. MUNRO Mr. end Mrs. 'Robert B. Munro of Dubay Street, Waterford, will observe their golden wedding anniversary at an open house Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. in St. Andrews Episcopal Church, Drayton Plains. The • Munros are parents of Mrs. Herbert Colluts and William D. Munro, both of Waterford; Mrs. Gerald /. Davis, Drayton Plains; Roy B. Munro and John L. Munro, both of CrosspiUe, Term. There are 16 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Event Set by Women of the Moose At a meeting Monday evening in Mooae HaH women of the Moose, Pontiac Chapter 380, completed plans for enrollment night at Holly next Sunday. Senior regent Mra. Richard Rohr-rer announced that Mra. Vern Taylor Jr., graduate regent, will rw-ceive her green beanie at Monroe Oct. 29. Airs. Richard Dawson, friendship chairman, win receive her college of regents degree at iMooseheart, 111. In June. Benefit bale Oet. 28 Members of die Veterans of Foreign Wan Aisdliary of Pontiac Post 1370 met Tuesday evening to complete plana for a benefit sale Oct M in the past home. South Saginaw Sheet. Sale hours are 8 m. to noon., Mra. Thomas McKeever, chairman of the event also is director of community services for the auxiliary which has approved a donation for the 1981 Torch Drive. rotary i rs. Ernest L. Guy, sec- Participating la the program was Mrs. Merle VoaS. Announcement was made of the Protestant Reformation Day rally aet for Sunday at Oobo Hall, Detroit and the rummage sales of the church’s women’s association Oet 23, 34 and » The November meeting will be held at the Bedford Road home of MY*. James Chou. Butterfield Tent 9 Represented at District Meeting Eight women hum Francis C. Butterfield Tent No. 8, Daughters at the Union Veterans of the Clvfl War. attended the district meeting at Port Huron funday. Most states have had summer temperatures of 100 or more. District officers from the area elected for next year are Mrs. Clark, treasurer; Mrs. Worth, Junior vice president; and Mrs. Fran, da Beechum, color bearer. ★ ★ A Mrs. Marie Robinson, Lansing, I national president of Michigan, I wife honored guest. Bowling is a fun and beauty-building sport, so its not a bad idea to start out wearing (he most eye-catching clothes adopted to the activity. For Fun and Flffure Bowling Can Be Ball By SHARON BAT RITCHIE Bowling clothes should he comfortable, but that’s no reason a woman setting out for a lark on the lanes shouldn’t look every bit as attractive u she would going to a party. ★ ★ ★ Bowling Its a beauty-building sport and it is not a bad idea for a woman to start out wearing the moat aye-catching dothes she can find that are adapted to file sport. The standby Moose and dht nomhlns tiros come bran array at colors, styles and materials, settable fer aay thus at year. Thera la as much variety offered in shirtwaists - another popular favorite — as then la in sweater-skirt or blouse-skirt out- Bowllng is a fun sport, so why shouldn’t clothing be colorful, lively and gay? Just about any color is right as long as It fits the wearer’s complexion and coloring. VARIETY OF CHOICE Bowling dothes come In hundreds of styles, so there is a wide variety of choices. Coulettes, the divided skirt stylos, are Ideal for bowling. Today's slacks offer style and comfort and, when made of stretch materials, freedom of movement. Try to select your bowling outfit from Items especially designed for the sport. They will not only give jam style, but clothing that doesn't bind or hamper essential free, graceful movement. Next: Having a hall. (Miss Ritchie is Director of Women's Activities for American Machine and Foundry O#.) j ‘LaJ&v iggj v * < THE PQyTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 THIHTY-yiyfc American Legion Woman Begins Membership Drive Mr*. Joseph Charter launched a membership drive expected to make the American Legion, Chief Pontiac Auxiliary 377, a "quota unit" by Nov, lata business meeting in the poet home on Oakland Lake. Mr*. Alfred Guide, way* aatf News of Area Students on the For Your Wedding QUALITY and Quantity Harris; - Cart) < McKnight, daughter of the Ruasell Mc-Knights and Janet Tollman, daughter of the John P. Tall-main, all of Birmingham, and Elizabeth Kieffer, daughter of the George V. Keiflen, Bloomfield HiDr Mi— Harris was also named to Phi Society, local scholastic honorary society for freshmen. Walter H. Heyn, Orchard Lake,, has received the master of business gflmininration degree from Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind. - j She is president of the Parnassus Qub and the Council of Campus Co-eds and treasurer of the Amphic Athletic Society. *' * * Selected- to sing with the Central Michigan University's women’s glee dub at Mount Pleasant are Mary MacDer-maid. Bonnie Plummer and Edwina Skelley of Pontiac, and Judy Couzetas, Orchard Lake. Completing the list era Mrs. James Vaaficoyoc, Gold Star Mothers; Mrs. Tunningley, program; Mrs. Howard Bliss, sewing; Mn. Fred Beedle, education and >adwlarsMp; Mrs. Arnold Getzan. ’ hoapkaUty; Mrs. Marshall Charter. | f 1 o w e r s; Mrs. McLauchlin and I Mrs. Tate, publicity; and. Mrs. Walker, national security. I portant supporting role. Ann Hodges, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. H. Vere Hodges has been appointed advertising assistant on the staff of the Monticello College yearbook, “The Echo” at Alton, m. She is a member of this year’s junior claaa. the Deafr’a Ust at Deniaon 'University. Granville, * Ohio, for 1900-61 as announced in the recent honors convocation are Fredrica Harris, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.. Robert G. Not just a sale ... BUT AN EVENT that has taken months of planning! . . . It starts tomorrow at 10 a.m. with the greatest values we have ever offered! Alt new merchandise at tremendous savings! PEGGY’S Mrs. L. D. McLauchlin, auxiliary president, introduced her officers and chairmen at the Saturday’ meeting. They include Mrs.; Charter, first vice presidentf Mrs.] William Tunningley, second vice! president; Mrs. Lewis Tate, secre-i taryf Mrs.^Lswrence Curtis, treat- i urer; Mn. Frank HuebuVr, sergeant - at - anna; Mrs, Donald; Richmond, historian; ahd Mrs. Robert Coin, chaplain. (MAULMEN Chairmen include Mrs. Charter,’ membership; Mrs. Charles Chandler, child welfare; Mrs. Venter: Macom and Mrs. Coin, junior activities; Mrs. Joseph Phillips, Americanism; Mrsi E. V. Myers,! budget and auditing; and Mn.! Mitchell Rampart, constitution and! bylaws. Nightly Till 9 P. M Free and Easy at Miracle Mile GOATS COATS fur trimmed dress untrimmed casual Donald Deckers on Honeymoon at St. Luke’s Methodist ^Church Mowed the vows of Sharon Bain ■ to Donald Decker pledged to Rev. | William Brook shear in a double- j ring ceremony. Parents of the newlyweds are’ the Kenneth Bains of Middle Belt j Road and the George Deckers of McKinley Drive, Jean Bain attended her sipter I as maid of .honor and James Ste-chow was best man for his) cousin at the Oct. 4 nuptials. i Returning from a honeymoon afi Niagara Falls, N.Y., the couple | will live in Swartz Creek where) Mrs. Decker will teach school She Is a graduate of Central Michigan University. • Coats trimmed in luscious mink, beaver or Norwegian blue fox, on bodies of faille or fur blend. The values are outstanding and a wonderful selection to choose from. You can save tremendously during this sale. Sizes fpr Petites 6 to 16 and Misses' lQ'to 18. Choose your new winter coot now qt substantial savings. Finest fabrics of Stroocks, Forstmonns and stunning imported tweeds also smart reversible coots for oil winter wear. Juniors 5 to 15, Misses' 8 to 20. selected group CAR COATS rain or shine COATS one special group 990 SHOES selected groups High dr demi heels In a wide variety of patterns, fabrics and colors. Specialty priced for this great anniversary event. Rain or shine coats' to wear right now. Poplins with print or solid color linings and, many ore revers-. ible. Sizes 8 to 18. Fine wool tweed cor Coots and also genuine Vinyl cSats with Alpaca linings sizes 8.to 18. 1 Special Group of DE Li SO DEBS ond RHYTHM STEPS................ BLOUSES ONLY Dacron and Cotton on prints and solid colors, Roll Sleeves ond shirts included. 4700| 144-244 Two main pattern parts, n& waist seams — whip -up this ver-j satile jumper-dress in one day!-Zips up back for smooth fit, can; be worn with or without blouse. PjIntecbPattern 4700; Half Sizes: 144, 1*4, 184, 204. 224. 244-Size 104 jumper 24 yards 54-j inch: blouse 14 yards" 38-inch. Send Fifty Cents in coins for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-ciaas mailing. Send) to Anne Adams, care of Tbe| Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept.,; 243 West 17th St, New York 11,| N. Yi Print plainly name, address; with zone, size and style number.; Fail’s 100 best fashions — separates, dresses, suits, ensembles, all sizes, all.in our new Pattern! Catalog in color. Sew for yourself, i family. 38c. DRESSY — AFTERNOON — CASUAL STREET — CASUAL — OFFICE — DAYTIME Now is thg time to spieg your wardrobe in stunning .new fall drosses reduced substantially during this sole, fine wools and jerseys, crepes, ’print* ond solid colors, oneVind two-piece styles, ^yery dress on outstanding value. A wonderful group of new foil dresses in styles ond colors you wont ond need to enhance your wardrobe. Juniors 5 to 15 and Misses' 8 to 20 — Sheaths ond Full Skirts. Famous Make Initls and Soltis' Sizes 8 to 18 DARK COTTON DRESSES One selected group. Dacron ond cotton. SLACKS GOOD COFFfel SKIRTS 1 Special Group of 1A90 FOOT FLAIRES. .. .... IU 6" 8" 1 Special Group of O90 ARPEGGIOS Oy Fine wool in tweeds or solid colors. Juniors' 5 to 15, Misses' 8 to 18. Values to 14.95 ? open a convenient charge account. 30 day accounts . . . C.B.A. continuous Budget Accounts or use our Lay-away FORTY E; “T” THE PONTIAC, PRt&B. THtTRSCfAY,' OCTOB^fr id, iMi MOMS Unit Homs Towels for Hospital ■'Urt-*. MOMS RiiliHl f ,* (With d,e Right Menu, i and ea Mow. I the group will J J attend a luncheon and bazaar sBoosqrad by Unit 23, Veradalei it at the Ferndale Community MuBbem of Un ■ at America, heron . , Fqfttiirc General Hoqpifel following a schoolgirl lunch Turn-day at the home qf Mrs. Clarence £. Hickmott, North JMatooi) Avenue. Tilt Presidents' Discussion maetiag 11 ajn. Nov. 6 at the' Veterans Memorial Building, Detroit, was announced. ’ Mrs' Harry Sibley wifi be Dieting Needn’t Be Torture! ........ a loos of tive pounds in seven days, iquest tor the Trick and Treat Diet j Bv JOSEPHINE EOWMAN send 10 cents and a stamped, self-jbboklet. Address Josephine Low. j I Dieting can he fun! It. does not addressed envelope with your ra-imaa in care of The Pontiac press, j mean that you must survive The National Board has scheduled a card party and luncheon Nov; 19 at Sana's ■nu- retOSKej, L„ai,v 1V1» n m«an that VMl 7 Ain'tf Accepted, but NotbyAII Mk/ 1 and Mrs. guests. Mabel Amidon were j really like. It does mean that you iurU) have to take smaller helpings, {and that yott probably will have to '[prepare and season your food dif-The Baltic sea is said to be less|ferently. Salty than the ocean. ’ ■ . * /•«, . It nlan immm Ikhl \ >»it Will • Froglegs • ScalloprJ our specialty- Fresh Catfish ONLY •"d $|2S Hush puppies ^ I Fresh Fries and Cole Slew have to give up these In-between-meal saach* aaleea they ere a part of a preacrlbed meal, which yea saved for te-betweeu ttmea. [ You will find a lot of low calorie tricks in' seasoning M the menus I am offering you this week. As most of you know 1 am bringing you iiy Trick and Tredt Diet". Here are the menus for tomor- MENUS FOR FRIDAY Breakfast lThree-fourths oup dry cereal [Four ounces whole milk [Two teaspoons sugar jbne-hall banana, sliced Black coffee SPECIAL! COMPUTE BOOT MASSAGE WITH STEAM BATH $4 Tired Feeliagi Vanish! CALL 334-8001 OWENS MASSAGE Luncheon Salad 112 5-inch asparagus Spears. cut in pieces. Two hard cooked 1 eggs and six green olives cut in I pieces. Two or three tablespoons tomato reducing dressing 1 Two Rye Krisps Eight ounces skim milk Presto! 4 wove of the magic wand and .the pounds tumble away and a new figure-emerges. The Trick and Treat Diet isn't quite that easy, but comes as close to magic as anything can be. You can lose 5 pounds in seven days and still eat the foods you like in healthful proportions. 1 By BCT8 MILLETT Newspaper Enterprise Asms. I see where ■ little word that used to . give schoolteachers the shudders when Z was sit ting at a school desk has now wormed Its way into social acceptance. The word that has finally made the grade is “ain't." ★ It it Plain old “flint” has rpoently been accepted by the forthcoming “Webster's Third Had International Dictionary”—which, for a word, means it has “arrived." In settling the “tint” question, the dictionary says It is a word that is “used orally in must parts of the United States by cultivated people.” CAM QUIT CORRECTING To carry this thought to the extreme; you can qttit correcting Junior when he says, he ain't going to go to no girl's birthday party. (Let the ‘'ain’t" pass and Just say gently, “any girl’s birth-; day party. Junior.”) And again, to stretch a point: I thought you ought to knbw so that you won’t cross the Smiths off your list if, when you phone to ask If they are, going to be busy Saturday night, Mrs. Smith says, “No, we ain't.” beme to think of It, now that “Mat It a good word-can it replace rarent’ is well as “am not" and ”hr notT- WHAT’S THE RULING? Hi have to find out whist Webster says about that technicality and let you know later. Maybe it would he wrong for Mrs. g. to say “we ain’t.” but all right for her to say, “Ji» to, hut I ain’t"' The thing 1 can’t flgw* to hew “cultivated people In meet parts ef the United States" ever get up enough courage to atari using “ain’t” wally. All I can say ieOhay didn’t have the ssme English teach-era I had er they never could have uttered “ain’t” without blushing. ★ ★ ★ Come to think of It, I feel rather sorry for those teachers who. spent a lifetime trying to make "ain’t” seem as repulsive a little wqrd to their students as It did to them. And now here it Is in the dictionary- And there ain’t a thing the teach’ era can do about it. Ain't that a shame? ★ *i If you have § teen-age daughter, you’ll want to read Ruth Mlllett’a new booklet, “llpe on Teen-Agers.” Mail 39 cents to Ruth Millett Service, c/0 The Ponltae Press, Pontiac, Mich. i Install New Officers at Arem No. 503 Four ounces of baked fish (brush j with Just a touch of olive oil flavored with angOstura bitters, plus little lemon juice) j. Officers of Areme Chapter No. I bearer; Mrs. Loren Pslen. Fast-. ... Two-thirds cup spinach (flavor thisjso3. Order of the Eastern Star, era Star flag bearer and Mrs. Jack ^Job's Daughters, Melvin Patter-not--------------------------------------.kLulim —r. jr, , Gregg Cox and Rick Cm. Nancy Newcomb, honored queen Of Presiding at the gift table wen past matron, Mrs. Edward Pritchard. assisted by Job’s Daughters. Sandra Treitch, Penny Pritchard. Mary Wheeler and Barbara Car- grand guardian, Bdernational On-Warwick, grand representative of der of Job's Daughters and Mrs. Missouri: Mrs. Rachel Levely, Oles, grand chaplain. Mrs Lorenjf™** councilor and Arthur Thompson, guardian of Jo"b'ai0etcher- chairman of finance: Daughters Bethel 40. Worshipful Master Thomas Cox of Brotherhood Lodge 561 and liar-Oakland Couaty Association af- Rynmon, Rooaevelt Lodge jrt. fleers present were Mrs. T. H. [ * + * Glascock, president; Mrs. i Guests came from Birmingham, Perkto, flrst vice president: Mr^ ;au1utan aaWi0n, Commerce, great fall home SALE! with a sprinkling of savory, or were installed Monday evening at Modeft, assisting. marshal, vinegar) [Roosevelt Temple before an *«-[ Officers exemplifying the Bible' ^One small baked potato ^ sembly of some 300. degree are Mrs. Kenneth Newton, One orange j Installed as, worthy matron was marshal; Mrs, William Harsch. i If you would like to have myjMrs. Harry Lunsford with Melvin Adah: Mrs. Donald Hughson. Ruth: i >mplete Trick and Treat Diet, for Patterson as worthy patron. Es-jGeraldine Wilkinson. Esther: Mrs. J " 1 1 7 jeort to Mrs. Lunsford was RickjVictor Nelson, Martha, and Mrs. 1 [Cox and Kalhem Stoqtenburg - tofLbuis Heiby. 'Electa. i„». . - . . _, __________ - [Mr. Patterson. - •* rinmiiro imtinivtoM • Mrs. Bodamer handled the guestl R«»crt Adslr, seoretory-treawir- Ferndale, Hazel Park, Also tskins office were Mrs. ™ iNSTALLATIO.N Taylor. Mrs. Oar- 1Inks Orion. Oak Park, Ortooviile, H.™ s^cUtr m.^' L P“! ™tpon“ °*,,h* «***»«»«* Phillips and Lester deal Mr* <*“•" M*rtl’ Pontiac 228, Rochester. Royal Oak. MsSiate ra”- !iuc,ed„the instaUat.ion with Mrs.|planned the decorations. ! tata' (Southfield, Walled Lake, Ovid and - ! Harry Vernon as mistress of cere- Refreshment tables were to! Also present were Mrs. Stanle^ Redfield, N Y. | monies; Mrs, Victor Bodamer, as-jcharfe of Mrs. Thad Beall and slsting marshal: Mrs. Sidney Fel- Mrs. Clifford, Mossey. past ma-!.............................T----------------- lows, install! ng officer; Mrs. Les- troftI> Mrs. Charles Henderson and!|.. ter Oles, installing marshal: Mrs. Mrs. Fred Boh 1 man. Eugene Perkk>. installing chap- nrrRr*nwr\Ta Appointed officers are Mrs. Al-jlain; Mrs. Theron Taylor, install-; KV*'H *** H 1 uni r Brings yew store-wide savings on fumi> ♦urs, homo accsssories, fina china, crystal, housewares, and gifts) Hand-decorated TURKEY PLATTER Imported from England MG 16"*19" SIZE—SKOALI *6” A magnificrol pleWsr, Hw design tSieF •ngrovsd and hand painsad undar giaia. Tha soma typa planar said for $13.93 Othar Turkey Platters . .. $4.95 ta $22 Buenilurti and Crystal Chip V Dip $3»5 This handsome chip V dip server is of Buanilum—a special metal alloy that is buffed and polished by hand to give the appearance of gleaming silver. Will not tarnish. , Imported Hand-Cut Crystal SALT and PEPPERS special *2 the set! Boxed Set of 6 COFFEE MUGS on»y$2.95 complete! laoutiful hand-cut salt and poppers in door a tinted heavy load crystall Choice of sovora styks. Rag. $2.50 $2.95 valuasl These clever, hand-dacoretsd mugi are just what you need tor' at home" coffee breaks! Is vanod combination, of warm brawn, red. Came in and see our wide selection of mugs at various prices. ran, Mrs. Royal Clark, secretary, Mrs. Robert Davis, treasurer. Mm. Daniel Petersoa, conduct- eociatc conductress. Have You Tried This? i«v..—Hokum,—chaplain, Shirlcy lng secretary and Mrs. Williamj . — (Lovelace, marshal, and Mrs. Mil-LPfahlert, installing officer to dtudl-.frotiuneuta assisted by Mrs. j ton Reddeman, organist. iary officers. Installing organist George . Brash, Mrs. Raymond's ★ ★ * was Mrs. Claude Kinder, and Mrs.{Boatright. Mrs. Herbert Blom. | ! Star points Inst idled were Mrs.lLaVon Rvden and J. Daniel Mrs. Albert Kugler, Mrs. William! I [George Eldred, Adah: Mrs. Ralph j Odneal, soloists. iMedlen. Mrs. Chrislmon Morgan, i| Lister,* Ruth: Mrs. Melvin Pat- „ . . .. _ .______[Mrs. Galbraith Pritchard, Mrs, g I Psot matron Mrs,. Bodamer ^ M„. Itowaftl r^.1 prevented Mrs. G. Robert Scbarf Mrs John sullengef, Mr*. Edgar; % with her past matron's Jewel and WalHng ^ Mrs. Adrian Willis. || welcomed her Into the post ton ; DjStInguiahed guests were Mrs.!* trons circle. Post pntron pi* r™, WUton ^ grand Martha; | was presented to Royal Clark by •„£ Ralph ciara, past grand | past patron Harry Eaton. Esther and Mrs. James Mundyi Prune-Bran Bread Is Prize Winning Recipe terson, Esther: Mrs. Kenneth Bain Martha: and Mrs. Ford Newcomb, i Electa; Mrs. Bernard Garner asj warder and Charlie Woody, sentinel. ! Auxiliary officers are Kenneth; Bain. American flag bearer; Mrs.| ; Russell Canterbury. Christian flag Pages for the evening werepast grand .warder, Mrs. Vernon, the original T-FAL FRY PAN t WTTH THE DuPONT TEFLON ETCHED IN! $695 10“ T-FAl FAN fry healthfully, without fats, shortening, ot atlsl Nothing sticks to this fry panlN^ Ftysggs, pancakai, any food— graaialattly! fsodt toita bettor—and art bottar for tha anhra famtlyl And wbot a work tovor. .-^juU wo*h, rm»a, end »'• daonl Oat youn ••day at Wiggtr S4 “West Huron St • Po23.tiao ________Open Monday and Friday Ev«nings Until 9 ll rtn) II □ XJJ ^ 1 It's been over a month since the State Fair was held. But a prize-winning recipe is good any time. Mrs. Raymond Ellsworth sent us the recipe that won her a blue ribbon—for the first thing she had ever entered at the Fair. 2 tablespoons darl sugar lt« teaspoons salt 1 cup sifted flour >1 cup chopped nuts 1 tablespoon grated orange rind coats with worm pile linings [ . Jean Ellsworth's interests | are many and varied. Talented artistically, she volunteers her time-in a number of organizations. She shares the activities of three teen-age sons, working in PTA and church. Oil painting and gardening are her hobbies; PRUNE BRKAD By Mrs. Raymond Ellsworth 2 cups all-bran cereal •2/ cup prune juice ■ 2/3 cup cooked prunes 2/3 cup buttermilk Add prunes sad Juice to cereal. Stir la buttermilk and egg- Cream shortening and brown sugar with orange rind sad add to first flour and nuts. Turn Into greased loaf pan. 1 egg 1 tablespoon shortening Bake 40 minutes at 350 degrees until crusty and dark brown on top. Serve either warm or, cool with cheese spread. Just but- [ ter is fine, too. , Cream Cheese Spread Blend I small package cream cheese with an equni amount of butter, I tablespoon ; honey or Jelly and enough orange Juice to make spreading consistency. usually *17.98 It's the coat that gives you nonstop wear... rain or shine, the four seasons of the year. Woter-repel lent rayon /cotton tapkle twill with a cozy-warm zip-out lining of orlon® acrylic pile.. Sizes 8 to 16. > Other styles to choose from, sketched: velvet collared chesterfield. Black, beige, olive. (k/V\,£ shop to 9 p. m. monday, thursday, , Friday, Saturday TEL-HURON CHOPPING CENTER 71 N. SA61NAW . Mj rivals Md Mm THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, lMl FQBTY-OXR Buy Souk Stfll Dig It Sigma Beta Instqlls 3 at Ceremony Jive Not as Popular as English Among Teetis, SPECIAL Mon. • Tow. - Wed. Only October 23 thro 25 AH $10 IO? Permanents ^ All $12.50 t|| Permanents ™ Call for Appointment that way.” ;*'Jlve talk,” said Gil Oaya, It, of Detroit, drawing a deep breath, "i* a completely artificial conglomeration of allegory and used by certain ethnic groups to provide local color.” Merle Norman Cosmetics mere ky boy» than girt*. Roughly three out of five of the boy* told ua their friend* used the odd lingo quite a lot while lew than two out of five girt* •aid they hear it frequently from their companion*. TINA MARIE Salon of Beauty tIN Airport 14, comer Hatchery OR S-Ntt , Serving as chairmen of the re-f , freshment committee was Mrs.j , Norman Auer. Assiated by Mrs. Lance Rupert, Mrs. Charles Freeman gave * Jewelry demonstration.1 , proceeds of which went to benefit! 1 chapter causes. Mrs. Rupert and Mrs. Freeman , were, guests from Epsilon chapter, _ Dayton, Ohio. PIECE WORK FOR EMBROIDERY by BUCILLA OR PARAGON Baby Gift Meats—Pillow Cases, Gift Sets THE OXFORD SHOP 43. N. Saginaw Street Opposite Neisner’s differ too radically from those! | expressed by Mr. Welwter in his | most recently published dictionary, j Anything good is often "fabulous" to 17-year-old Orleen Man-chur of Detroit. Jerry Kieraan. 15 of Hartford, Conn., likes to "take off” rather than leave. Scott Ritchie, 16, of Detroit likes to " Darvan Nitryi Pile, the shall is of Kodiak Cloth, the wind and water resistant 100% combed cotton. Notion the double aat of pockets; the slash yKM/ pockets for hand-warming, two . hacking flappedirdeketa huge enough to cany textbook*. This it 1 Hjj the coat you’ll live in, from fall to \msBmpy spring ... oar Zero King American Wanner. only I49-S0 *V. SKIRTS SUM SKIRTS PLEATED SKIRTS, All-wool slim skirts with lined swt or mem pleated skirts in J4* plaids and solid odors. Some dyed-to-match or sweater selection. Valued to 10.99 Our entire collection of better raincoats including the smart new velvet collar Chesterfield. Solid colors and prints as welt as reversible*. Black, green, beige and prints. Sizes 6 to SMART LADIES'APPAREL / 75^ North Saginaw ‘Charge It” or Open a Long Term Budget Account Open Thurs., Fri. and Mon. Nights ’tU 9 pjs. Open Friday 'til 9 Saturday ’ill 7 p.m. 'The Man's Store of Pontiac* KWTY-TWO THE POXTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 Russians in Ottawa Reject Bomb Protest OTTAWA explode .SO-megaton nuclear bomb but: was rejected. Dlefenbaker, told a newsman the protest had been rejected by the Soviet 'Embassy here or ' I ground that the was apdneodc matter. jsnmi PURCHASE SflLEll DUAL-CHANNEL STEREO Reg. f69.95 NOW $4295 MALLORY BATTERIES 9-VOLT TRANSISTOR RATTOT. R«f. 69c Now 3"*1‘ American pENUTE SIZE 4 Ac Mode RATRRT. Rdf. 2Sc Now. lU OPEN AN ACCOUNT AT rtmtofu SOVIET CONGRESS GUESTS — Janos Kadar, first secretary of the Hungarian Communis*. Party’s Central committee, has arm over shoulder of Ho Chi mirth. Central committee chairman of Viet Nam’s Workers party, in Moscow, they were guests at the 22nd Soviet party congress. Soviet Premier Khrushchev addressed the f \S Local Teachers pJtSffAS'SS U»,,a DU D»L» _a1 music, and teacher John Maturo nave Dig noies ai wh0 will Chair the section on high 12-Day Institute ■ ‘“‘T', . . | Teacher Roland Hallquist, Pon-Five educators from Pontiac tiac Central Higjx, will be chair-1 high schools will take leading'man of the section on high school parts in the Fall Institute of thejsodal studies. Michigan Federation of Teachers starting today at Stout. Jr. High School, Oeartxtrn. ,TITml> ** ! PHOENIX. Arif C.C. Sow- which moves Into Detroit’s Cobo . . Hail tonorraw. la “New Fnm- « * b«rrow * Hera la Edneatton.’’ yard. He assumed it was made by General chairman for the ele-a V****’ 50 he ««>ded t«e hole mentary reading workshop will be and waited for the ariimal to ap-Pontiac Northern teacher Mrs. pear, Theodore Wiersema. Librarian ★ ★ * . Russel Buller will participate in at But the tiny gopher did not show panel on membership. [up. Instead, out of the hole crawled a 30-pound, 30-inch, full- Big Badger Ousted From His ’Gopher' Hole Also fi n Northern are Director1 grown badger. Boy 4 am of Dole Fancy Fruit Cocktail Hm beet fruit cocktail comes out of ’the blue ... the blue Dole can! It’s firmer, brighter, fresher-tasting because it’s diced from whole fruit, hot left - overs. It’s so good in a gelatin salad, in a dessert, or just as is (children love it that way!). And now's the time to stock up on Dole T^t"Cocktail and save 50* with this special offer! CUP AMD SEND TODAY! .€ CpSPpBATldN • HONOLULU. HAWAII « OM XML OAUTOAHIA lit! i Mife* ■’ we'll send you a coupon worth toward any Dole products l DOLE CORPORATION . Sdt 4 Virginia Street* (Box 40) Son Joss, CaWomia Enclosed find 4 Dots Fruit Coektall labels Please sand me a 50« coupon by ratunnhilf. . * rowt STATE orren exmnuUuautr l.^se* • limit one ofTe^per family 1 NO TRICKS! TERRIFIC VALUE TREATS from CONSUMERS!!! 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Sixes.$2 to 40 9# FOR HE FAMILY OPEN DAILY 9> to 9 EXCEPT SUNDAY v m i FORTY-THREE / THE FOXTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER IQ; 1961 Grid Weekend: MSU-lrish; 'M'-Purdue; UD-Navy; Lions-Colts PnUm Frai Pk«U LEADS AVON — Jim Mai ape. Avondale * captain, taut been a .standout on defense for the Yellow Jackets. He la A linebacker. Notre Dame Is fired-Upfor No. 1 Spartans Full House of 76,000 to Witnoss 27th Qomr In Groat Rivalry ■ EAST LANSING - What some loathe)) buffs are calling the "Game of the Year”—Notre Dame versa* Michigan State-win be played Saturday In Spartan Sta- There have been numerous mag-nificent Spartan-*' hi the recent past, but none to top Jhto in terms of national interest and significance. Each has tame straight major foes, Notre State over Wlaooaoia, and Michigan. Each has wsleariled a devastating ground offense, Notre Dame rolling far 991 yards per game and State for 3M. Each has found scoring easy, State piling ap 7* palate la three games and Notre Dame 71. Each has displayed a niggardly defense. Each has come up with sensational stars. Each Has a big, mobile line and a galaxy of race hone backs. The comparisons go on and on. Add them all together and they spell “gridiron classic,'’ which la exactly what is in store for a capacity crowd of more than 76,000 people and millions listening * over 100 radio etatione beaming the game. The ranking baddield stars for Notre Dam* are mighty mite halfback Angelo Dabiero, who has rambled 310 yards In 32 carries for an almost, unbelievable 9.7-yard Mike Lind, who has carried 24 times lor 155 yards and a fine 6.5-yard average. Working right along with them are quarterback Daryle Lamonlca who has pitched right strikes in 16 tries for 119 yards and two touchdowns, and halfback George Sefcik, who has lugged the leather 24 times lor 91 yards and a 3.8-yard aver- ass lt am ’ US LO Buoolcontl 314 C facomotlch 243 HO Boy 333 RT CMOlto 33ft RB Murphy it* qs Umonin 30S LH fttlck . tat iui Petawi Mighty 'Mite' on Track JACKSON. Mich. IR-Bllly I Mite, a 3-2.favorite, won the Hillsdale Pace at Jackson Harness Raceway last night, Franklin. Sears moved the 8 year-old gelding .outio a two-length lead and held oft Good Portia to finish }n 2:09 1/5. Tha winner paid 15, $2.80' and 82.40. A crowd of 2,090 bet 891,312. Kansas City 17. New Tort 1 Minneapolis-S» Paul 35. Pori Detroit 16, -Omaha 15 Dallfa 33. Preano IS Gross Is to Titan DETROIT — Quarterback Jerry beat Groaa, whose tune is spreading farther with each passing game, catapult the undefeated Uub versity of Detroit (3-0-0) into na-tional prominence Friday night when Detroit takes on once-beaten Navy (3-1-9). at Tiger Stadium. Kickoff time la 8:15 pan. Gross, whose 203 running and passing yards against Boston College last meek, brought hfe three game total effopse figure to 703, ranks second in NCAA figures released today only because he has played two less'games than Memphis State’s Jim Wi^ht. The 5-19, 170-pound Bay City product is also 10th tn passing and his 611 passing yards gives Detroit the top roost in team passing. Navy, mhms All-Americas Joe Betas* aad a raft ef veteran talent team Its 9-1-9 Orange Bowl team *1 a'year age, was aap- yard traiU Pawttee’a speedy Ml halfback Jha Shorter, target ter mast ef nine catches ter IM yards. Bight end aad captain Stove Stone-breaker Is a clone second with sight far 109 yards aad toft Larry Varga to third with ** for 157. Seats now bn sale at Tiger dium and U-D Memorial Bulk State, as-is, i Wayne Hardta have to win three straight, Including a 17-9 upset of Miami two weeks *«•. Running Navy’s ‘‘speed-sweep” offense is quarterback Ron Klem-ick, leading Middle pasaer with 28 completions in 68 tries foe 427 yards and four six-printers. His favorite targets are right halfback Jim Stewart, who has caught 10 251 yards and three TDs from his Banker-back position, and end Gitg Mather, who ha* caught six for 91 yards. Titan scouts call Mather Navy's best defensive player. When Navy wgnto ground yardage, two toft halfbacks get most of the calls. John Sal leads the Middies in rushing with 199 yards Carl Fink is sec. ond with 114 ta 30. Fullback Vic Battani, playing the Baltimore Has Revenge Ideas That man in this ease Id John Unites ot the Baltimore Colts, who leads Us team against die Detroit in Tiger Stadium, Sunday Lions dooe out a four game ■tind. Kickoff to 1:39 pan. Here comes thalj that have left Isas talking from coast to roast. Last Oct. 33 rd, the Lions gained a 3017 verdict ever the Colts la the (teal two mtaates of the game oa the strength ot aa so-yard paaa Interception return for a toaeh dew a by DM “Night Trata” Lane. Last Dec. 4, in one of the greatest games of'all times, the Lions snatched certaiq victory out of die Cblts bands with a 96-yard scoring pass from Earl Morrafl to Jim Gibbons as the clock ran out, 29-15, just fourteen seconds after Unites had fired a.38-yard touchdown pas* to flanker Lenny Moore for what appeared to be the whining score. rowd of 54,000 to expected second meeting of the ’61 between the Lions id the tremendous interest ime stem* from the frantic which have climaxed the last three meetings between the Colts and Lions. Michigan Aims for Comeback Win Saturday Crowd of 65,000 Seen-for Boilermaker Visit to Ann Arbor lore, Baltimore’s great halfback game from the sidelines last ipected to be ready for action against the Detroit Lions Sunday in Tiger Stadium. The Colts will also have pass receiver Ray Berry back for the game. 6 Titan Athletes Get Suspended in Alcohol Charge DETROIT ID — The University of Detroit Jus suspended two injured varsity football players and four other athletes for the remainder of the fall season for violation of campus disciplinary rules. The first string football players were Joe Henze of Detroit, a tackle, and Bob LaPorte of Wyandotte, Mich., a halfback. Both have been injured since the Titans’ opening game and were not expected to play in .Detroit’s game 1th Navy Friday night. Thomas-J. Emmet, dean ff Men, said the athletes, who were given indefinite suspensions, may apply for readmitaion in February. • University officials said the suspensions involved the possession of alcohol following last week’s homecoming pep rally. The suspended athletes include Ron Bbgoyevac of Livonia, Mick-, a basketball ptayer, and three freshman football players, John T. Eroschevich of Steubenville, Ohio; Jerry* Miller of Toledo, Ohio; and Daniel Kozlowski of Detroit. I By CHUCK ADAIR Pontiac Northern resumes its campaign to stay in the running for Inter-Lakes honors as host to neighbor Waterford and Walled Lake battles Berkley for first place big league games tomorrow night Southfield plays its second of five successive home contests meeting ANN ARBOR — Shooting for a quick comeback after their jotting loss to Michigan State in the Big Ten opener here last weekend, tackles another, rugged opponent on its rocky schedule road when Purdue cornea tan Saturday. A crowd of 65,000 to expected to’ watch the Wolverines and Boilermakers in their first meeting since. 1962 when Michigan won, 21-10. While the Wolverines, now with a 2-1 record, escaped any lasting Unitas ha* been a thorn in the ning score. injuries against the Spartans, Pur- side of the Lions almost from the . * * * due, also with a 2-1 mark, will time ’ he entered the league. The Then a month ago, in Baltimore, come here without the sendees of Lions have won six of the eleven Jim' Martin booted a 49-yard Held their head coach, Jade MoUen- games, but he has made his pres- goal in the, last four minutes to kopf, who has been granted leave ence felt in all since 1959. {gain a 16-15 decision over Balti- of absence to undergo treatment sore tn the third sensational fin- for an intestinal ailment. Assistant sh in less than a year. Coach Bob DeMoss will be in The Colts figure they have their charge when the Boilermakers "turn” poming as the two squads head in here Friday, prepare for tljis week’s encounter. For Michigan only defensive Last week, Baltimore turned pact guard Deb Nolan was injured of its offensive attack to the “shot- against the charging Spartans but gun” offense, or the shoft punt, he is expected bock Saturday., {but were unable to stop Chicago. However, ailing guards Joe ODoo- to dropped to a 2-3 record in the nell and Lou. Pavloff still are out Western Conference race. and may be for the teat of the sea- Now the Lions face the task of son. The past three game* have | produced tome wild heroics and I PNH, Vikings Set for Key Games old rival Farmington the slate. ________2. i complete turned in a strong last half showing tod by Dave Shields. The Hatties have bowed oaly to Walled Lake la four I-L games and may have a chance to get at toast a share ef the tide by taking the last two tllte. They hod some anxious moments against Farmington last week but , u not being taken lightly by the PNH staff despite an 0-3 loop mark ai^ 1-4 report) er all. Coach Stu Thoreil has pair of good runners in Lee Ketoer and Gary Moran and is big Injuries have been part of the Skippers’ problem. Lake Orion Plays al Avondale Friday have bees at heme, while taa only victory was at Lapeer. The four remalatac outings the road. The big duel at Barkley could be one of the beat of tha season. The winner wiU. clinch a title share-Each,to 39 in the league. Waited Lake to unbeaten in five tests. Berkley has won all four since bowing to Feradato. One Year Makes Big Difference By DON VOGEL One year has seen a big switch in football fortunes for Avondale and Lake Orion High Schools. Last season at this time Lake Orion wqs tied for first place in the Oakland B League and Avondale waa near the bottom of the standings. The reverse to true this fall. Ate* Avondale to a half game out of first place while the Dragons ta tha basement. The two teams dash Friday at 8 p.m. on Avondale’s field. Records usually mean nothing in. a traditional gaiiiej such as this one. A victory tor Avondale coupled with ■ Troy win over Fttigerald The revolt among the members of the Bwami Association has begun. Long standing Bwaml leader Bill Cornwell was dislodged from 1st place and Bwaml Abalr has Jumped into the what lead in a great surge of the past week. lemph All three other Swamto gained ground and Bwaml Vogel had the best week which enabled now until him to move out of the cellar and push Bwaml Kearns into his spot. ■ As the battle ‘for position* tighten*, another big hectic weekend of football to on tap. Here are the new standings of Bwaml officers and the predictions for this week: would move the Yellow Jacket* and CaMs lata a Me ter Brat place. Should Tray fall to be helpful, Avondale will get Ms chance again*! Fltagerald next week. After -losing its first game to MUford, Avondale has compiled a 39-1 record in league play. The Dragons were co-champions ta 1960 but are struggling along with-a 1-3-1 overall mark this fall. Avondale coach Frank Crowell has been warning his charges not to look past Lake Orion to the Fitzgerald game. WET REPORT "We scouted Lake Orion against Troy.” said Crowell, “but it was early in the season and a lot can change. The rata at Oak Park last week made it impossible to see much. So you might say we haven't really seen them.” :...... The couch has been mi Idly surprised by Avon’s showing *o ter. "Defensively we’re getting a surprise," he said. "I believe this has been the big reason we’ve done oo well. “After what happened last son, we have been devoting more time in practices to defense. This has hampered our offense some-plan 'to put more emphasis on moving the ban from end of the season.” [Avondale yielded better than 22 [points a game in 1960. runtlav Berkley - WALLED LAWS SOUTHFIELD - Farmington MT. CLEMENS - Seahofm FeiMde • Part Miron _ _ , HAZEL PARS - P—rbcrn BLOOMTIRLD BILLS - Httjjr. Cl.rk.ton - WEST BLOQMriEl.n Milford • fltor—ariW* _ Brighton -NORTHVILU5 AVONDALE - Lnke Orion sSpis , Millington - OXFORD ■ 1MLATCITT --- ------ ORTONVILLE - Almost - NWW *- ARMADA - Dryden FLlSnf'CENTRAL - Midland SSr MICHIOAN . Purdue Detroit - NAVY Penn SUM- STRACOTW Boeton College - VILLANOVA ALABAMA - Tennersee Arkansas - TKXAS ,_ BgSjjv-- Northwestern «s mr rbnt - r IAL M7< Weyne BUt* - WABH. * JUFT. u(taa - otm _ Bteelen - BROWNS mssst -iRnsta. . t OnilM - EAOLB* kfili' ■ JutDINALB Vlkhuu • Ef6*- - Crowell credited lihebacker Jim Marine and tackle* Bob Klein and Larry Falk with playing key de: tensive roles. Marine piayt guard on offense and to captain of the Yellow Jackets. Falk atoo to a two-way player and Kirin fills ta offense. MOVE HELPED “Moving Romy Lucero from quarterback to halfback before the season opened atoo helped Yellow Jackets, according to the couch. “tt enabled aa to get Roger Van Otuant Into the startrig lineup at quarterback. He to a flue passer, but has a tendency to wait tee long before throwing the ball. He te a Juater aad should overcome tala problem with mare experience." Regular tackle Tom Crabb to expected to miss hit second straight game. He has a sprained ankle. Moving into his spot on the right side of the line will be Jim Lindsey. Injuries have plagued Frank Kownacki’g Dragons the .last games. Four starter*. missed the Oak Park and Oxford contests and all are big question marks this reek. I Quarterback Jon Cucksey, fullback Mickey LaMagaa, center Chris Has left and end Mai Engle-hy are the silfag players. “If we were at full strength,’ said Kownacld, ”1 feel we could give Avondale a tough game. The) loss of four starter* hurt us in the win* over Oxford • ond really hampered us against Oak Park. I "The team was just beginning! to look good when the injuries came along. 9 Dave Perry, .who normally pUlys halfback, has been filling in at quarterback. Jack Hodges, a 220-{ pounder, has taken Hazlett’s place. Dave Julien, a tough linebacker, has been called on to play bo>h ways, going to fullback on offense, and Charles Waggoner has moved in at end. Kownacld plans to make one other change. He will send Tom Goff into the offensive tackle slot. Frank fjptegrove, a. senior playing football for the lint time, has been “a great defensive end for said the coach. “Julien has been doing very well on defense. Perry probably is our moat outstanding player.” - v* raOUAUU orrzNsivi lineups AVONDALE LiKS ORION __fc Close i 15* LF —^ * Jim USmIf. m Mika Buffmeyer’s absence may hurt the Viking offense but coach Dave Smith hat a good replacement to Jim Webb. Walled Lake’* strong defense, featuring Jack, Shiker, could be the difference. Berkley to ted by topnotch quarterback Phil Krumm. The Smithmen have won easier against comparative foes Water-tod and Farmington and allowed only six points to Inter-Lakes foes | ired to 32 by the Bean. Berkley has the edge on offense by 59 to 54. Hot-and-cold Southfield, favored to even its record and keep Farmington losing but the Falcon* could cause trouble if new sparkplug Larry Clayton to clicking. stopping Unitas and the Grits. And, this figures to take some doing. The (lender Colt star has enjoyed several outstanding days against the Lions since 1966. In 11 meetings, Unitas has completed 190 of 287 attempts for 2,467 yards and 21 touchdowns against the Lions. The Lions .meanwhile, will use two quarterback system against the Colts. Coach George Wflaon ' “ rail and Jim Ntaowski, but he will not hesitate to substitute freely if be wants to get certain things done tl at different stages of the game. “Both will play”, says Wilson. Another rig problem for die Lions is the physical status ai the chib. No less than four members of the 36-man roster were rift action in, the skirmish against tbe Rams. Linebacker Carl schneider, defensive halfback Bruce Maher, kicker Jim Marita, and tackle Willie McChmg missed action and defensive halfback Gary Lowe was added to the list during the game. Just how many wifi be available for the Colts to unknown although McClUng definitely to out s a result of a knee operatic*]. In the series between the two rivals, Detroit holds a 124 edge, counting the 16-15 eariy-aeaaon victory. While the Wolverines were keenly disappointed with their showing against their East Lansing rivals, Coach Bump Elliott summed it 19: “We still have six games to go aad onr jab Is to benefit by * aad wta them,” he ‘Certainly we were dte- Newcombe Released SPOKANE, Wash, (API—Don Newcombe, former major league hurier who was 09 for the Spokane Indians of the Pacific Coast League last season, waa given outright release Wednesday. tag’s to be gained by 1 that one. One game doesn’t to to beat I rigament that will take everything we’ve got. “Wg don’t anticipate any morale problem." Elliott added. “We think .we’ve got a pretty stable group. Purdue is awfully good but we’ll be ready." Elliott said he anticipated no lineup changes, d ' fr ★ Meanwhile acting Boilermaker coach Bob DeMoss faced a right halfback problem similar to tbe guard problem that has faced the Wolverine* all season. The three ranting right halves—Dave Miller, Bob Writer and Lapg Mark* all are on the Injured itot and DeMoss has advanced second Stringer Steve Weil to the starting lineup. Miller, Ihudue ace, suffered a hairline jaw fracture aa nia team lost a 22-20 decision to Notre Dame reports are that ha may see-action Saturday. ■ MICHIGAN 1*4 LI ilMDtl ms 311 LT Heataua 13 3IS LO Hsll 31(1 «*» C Or ant 33: 307 RO Knits tn 337 RT BoUopf 3311 fit 8f m«m in ITS OB aUnka l*« III LH MeJU* 112 m rh iuia«r lit *1* ra Tunnlellff It* TURN TO THE LIGHT listed kTorlte (Ini. You cart see it’s Lighter—you can taste it’s Lighter, too** Turn.to America’s Lightest and Smoothest Tasting Whiskey Goodtrham Wortt r Established 183t SEVEN STAR *420 12*65 FORTY-POIIE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 19. 1961 Segregation Triggers Protest Pontiac Central Meets! State's Top-Ranked 11 Saturday at Wisner Going North During CM Weather? Time to Check All Broken Window$ Before Cold Weather Pkym might he jmtmnwmi.jfc * week. Last Wednesday Boa-;Never again.” / ton players were refused sendee Celtics player Fnhnk Ramsey.jat a Marion. Ind., restaurant aft-j who played at ti*/University of(r u yrhihiti™ game. |Kentucky—in Lpxidgton — apolo- "But tiiiat was different,” said igfaed tor the hotel employe who Riwaell. "The police intervened refused to serve Sam Jones and ami that man will never practice; Ton Sanders. \ segregation again.” "No thinking /person in Km- Russell said te thinks of Negro; ’tacky is a segrtgatkrtst,” Ram-athletes as entertainere. | jaey said. *T can't tell you how: -ch*. 0j the stays the Ameri-|sorry I am as a human being, as can Negro has attempted to show, a friend of the players involved he is a human being is to demon-1 :and as a resident of Kentucky for grate through entertainment andj ijpsniwaanfmeaasaanaasswansw^wjthus become' accepted,” .he ..said.| ■mpmmmmmmtommmm|jjj^w **t am coming to the realization' that we are accepted as enter-tainment people in some places. j I;Negroes are in a fight for their, IMRtV /gOlV rights—a tight for survivsl—in aj Jjf changing world. I am with these HUTS W/TIXan^,' COOLING SYSTEM CHECK Can in and Malta Sara YOUR CAR IS COMPLETELY WINTERIZED OLIVER MAKE PRO DEBUTS — Eddie Donovan (loft) and Frank McGuire make their debuts as coaches in the National Basketball Association tonight in a twin bill at Madison Square Garden. Donovan’s New York Knickerbockers meet the new Chicago Packers and McGuire's Philadelphia Warriors face the Los Angeles Lakers. stars, but they are a well-balanced] outfit which capitalizes quickly on I enemy miacues while matting I minimum of their own mistakes. Northern Ranks No. 2 in NA1A Football Ratings j -Pittsburg' Season Opens Tonight Becker carries only 33 players on Ids varsity raster, but all of j them have seen-action In Handy's five victories. An example of their explosive- I KANSAS CITY (AP) _____________ State’s unbeaten, untied, unscoredj Ion Gorillas bobbed to the top this [ week in the national football rat-1 lings, compied by the National. Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. ^MttlW ON NEW TINE PRICES tflR C.uptn Special Free Mounting BRAND NEW ,1^.70x15 M • I MOO*. Ictrul w Cteafoever. Urn Til mmd (i M imnrtk Otall rtn. No satw Ch«rr— week's 404 rant af Saginaw High. Saginaw trailed by only a 7-0 margin with three minutes remaining In the first half. Then the Wild-t cats broke the game wide open by scorlngf a touchdow n per minute for a 28-0 halftime lead. Handy’s .strongest positions are ' Will it ..he a jinx for the Karf- ! | sans? Texas A&I was on top last|l -weak but tfU 154 before a How- , lard Payne team that hadn't wonj( a game. Northern Michigan andj HIP BOOTS WHY BUY A RECAP* BRAND NEW SNOW TIKES NOT A SECOND, CHANGEOVER OR NEW TREAD YOUR CHOICE 5 Bik. t.t. SA95 Boston again favored in the di-' vision races; the NBA starts with! an "old look'' with St. Loqis and! Los Angeles playing Philadelphia; land Chicago opposing New York] in a doubleheader. $2.19 : Friday. Los Angeles opens the ’'home season at Philadelphia, and Saturday the champion Boston Cel-j j tics open at home against Detroit, while Chicago is at Syracuse, Cbt-j cinnati at St. Louis and NAw York] [at Philadelphia in an afternoon; television game. •* * # j Chicago is In the Western division along with St. Louis. Lot Angeles. Cincinnati, and Detroit. The Eastern Division, as last year, has Boston. Philadelphia, Syracuse and New York. . The Wildcats are "loaded" with ■jendt, shuffling five different play-l ijers in and out of the lineup at , flanker posts. All are rangy andf strong, headed by starters Clayton A * *' j Wilhite (6-3) and Ken Wingeier (6-2). ' The Chiefs, with a 1-3-1 record, 'j will make a supreme effort to stop i j this machine and post a startling j upset Game time is 8 p.m. - | rm (l-S-t BANDY. (S-S4) I S ritat Cent M M Arthur HU) 1 JO Bay C. Cent. » it Midland . • Its Arthur HIM It ft flint North. if ■ • . Midland 7 fl Alpena « jl Pilot North t «t Sofiaon SI 8.00x14 $14.95 Williams Gets NL Honor I NEW YORK (UP!)—Billy Wil-hams, 23-year-old Alabama - born! outfielder who hit .278 for the Chi-j jeago Cubs, was named the Nation-! al League's Rookie of the Year] today by the United PresaInterna-, Uonal s board of baseball experts.1 and TEMPEST SEE ... The Naw SERIES of Tam past, Catalina, Star Chiof, Bonneville: SPECIAL ATTRACTION —LoMAN'S and GRAND PRIX. Choose from 4 scries end 14 body styles in IS different solid colors, with 2-tono of your choice. The suit of the century! Value to intrinsic in the fshrios: choice imports. And in the tailoring: Hart 8chaflher A Man. If you know fine cuetom work you’ll recognize the “fiset" of cnftmmnehip. The immluabU •met to the oonfidenoe you enjoy in wearing an HSM ■uit Worth every cent end more of efOO CHOOSE FROM Av GOOD SELECTION OF 1961 FACTORY OFFICIALS' MILEAGE CARS kf BIG — BIG SAYINGS! 65 MT. CLEMENS STREET UNITED TIRE SERVICE UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Bang-Up Hunter’s Bargains iffy Soassn Opens Timencw 0 [[’ \kj HUNTING OUTFITS V W\ V PUTS coin fir i y Yj\ J Water rapalWnt R abbot* id (TlU Com Pocket f/f yfl $5.95 Water rapalsarf / $6.98 Mj . UXs SM . |.w. SM VtevM Rnb-1 ’■* be riled 6mm 1 >• — Cam In li t; Bl| $3.16 SEE IT YOURSELF! TRAILMAKER ECONOMY PRICED AS SNOW TIRE LOW $14.70 v B.F.Goodrich / l . / B. F. Goodrich Store THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1», 1961 FORTY-FIT £ Die Ole Major Wild About Picking Upsets By MAJOR AMOS B. JIOOPI.K upset Ohio &kte 31^-h|tonimpb! Th. Wizard of Odda Goon ■ Hftk-kaff! Many loyal frilowort ■ MSU's Saimes 10 at ft* Hbople System have been ^ ftanerou* enough to send letters praising my uncanny pereepttoato correctly forecasting Maryland’s upset of highly rated Syracuse. It really, wasn’t necessary, dear nndan. Not that your letters are bp! welcome! but predicting upsets such as Maryland’* are routine far the Hoopla System. (Ed. Note: the same day Major Hopple picked a**, CHltAGO;w - MicWteaft State's junior fullback George Aidmef is plowing through the Big Ten sta-tistical sheet'like he deee opposing linemen. The 18ft-pounder tope the conference la nwfctog with lit yards fa ft carries lor a 04 average; la third ea total sttaaae aad soe- Iowa’s Matt Say kowny is ranked |e No. 1 passer, completing 13 ouft at 22 tosses for 128 yards. His JS87 average pots him above Wisconsin's Rob Miller. Miller, how> ever, has gained 244 yards with 21 hits In 37 attempts for -MS. Hsytouny hat passed for sae Maryland It, Air Force I ftbhame II, Twesass » Georgia Tech tft. Aebura 13 Baathem Cam. to. California tt Urbms tt, Date 14 Yale *4, Cornell • Navy St, Detroit to Florida W, VaadeihOt • Loulstaea State M, Kentucky 7 Purdue tt, MicMguu M Notre Dame 28, Michigan St. tl Mlsrissjppi tt, Tainan » N. Carolina TJ..S. Carolina 1C Northwestern 81, Ohio State tl Nebraska tt, OMahema State N Syracuse tt Penn State M pm M, vault •lee 28, Southern Method Ini 0 Texes Chris, tt. Tent A ft M 18 Sophomore fullback Bill Swingle of Northwestern is second in rushing, Big Ten statistics showed today. He has 125 yards in 32 tripe for a 3.8 average. The best average. 8.1, la by Northwestern' Larry Benz, who has gained 97 yards hi. 12 carries. M i c h i g a n State’s Dewey Lincoln is next with 7.6. Prep Gridder Dead j CH1CKAMAUGA, Ga. 0 $P95 PANTS 3 REG. $4.90 SHILL VEST and GAME BAG $3.75 SHOTGUNS \ • STEVENS Single 2-16^20 Go. 90,788 Reg. $30.90 Li • REMINGTON Mrs. McGrow Stricken. BRONXVILLE, If. Y. (AP) -! Mn. Blanche McGrow, 70, widow of the famed former manager of: the New York baseball Giants, John J. McGrow, collapsed! Wednesday night outside a restaurant in Yonkers, NX She waft brought to Lawrence; Hospital here. A hospital spokesman said she had suffered a stroke and was in serious condition'. • S. C. ROGERS • PHEASANT SEASON OPENS Friday, Oct* 20th Rabbits end Squirrels _ Too! Pull bettor! Stop quicker! Turn gofer! Got nearly now traction for years... long after other snow tiros hove lost their grip! BFG Trail maker Silvertowns do a job in snow that will open your eyes... and open a whole new world of safe* sure winter driving. These tires have £UH ... powerful, deep-digging, sure-footed pull. The biting edges on Trailmaker Silvertowns are fully 30% to 50% deeper than any of the other four major brands. In one set of snow tests, these deeper side cleats helped Trailmaker Silvertowns outpull chains! Not only do they give you the biting power to fight through deepest snow, deeper biting edges last longer, give you extra seasons of iecurity! No down payment with a set of your old tires. FQBTVSiX THE POXTIAC PRESS, THURSPAff. OCTOBER lB, 1961 Lancers Down Romeo, 20-19 K-Z TERMS LAYAWAY SHORTY HOOK'S * PLACE L'Anso Crouso Takes Third in Tri-County;i Two Games Tonight L'Aiwe Cnaic took third place! away 'from Romeo Wednesday! night by edging the Bulldogs, 26-19.1 Ite Trl-Omnty contest’ was moved up from Friday because of! teachers institute today and Friday. Two other ontests khve been changed fqr similar reasons. Oxteed travels to MMiag-tso and (apse Is at Anchor Bey Reg. $39.95............Special S29.SS wftJU ife, Inti SCARLETT'S BICYCLE I NOBBY SHOP 20 I. Lowrfnc. Sf. FI 3-7843 sSHmsir B»y eft; Bendy it Fwuit Oeetrel Midland et Flint central SO Deedere et Oraeeo Met* , , Brass City vs. Memphis et Rlchmo&al Crenbroofc et University School BRAND NEW 6:70x15 k • tr’Anse Creuse upped Its league record to 3-1. The Lancers have one loop game left. It is against Rochester. Romeo ended Tri-County play with a 1-3 mark. Bill Upton blasted across for the touchdown that tied the score 10-11 with nine minutes te play in the game. Theh' Dave Bay passed to jjoe Broad for what proved to be I the winning extra point. I The Lancers had jumped into a >13-0 lead in the first quarter ! thanks to Romeo Inistakes. Dan1 | Schmidt picked off a Bulldog pass land returned.90 yards for a touch-1 'down. A few minutes later Rifhy 'Peebles fell on a Bulldog fumble itn the Romeo end zone for a ID. Bay kicked the extra point alM the first touchdown. Romeo struck back In the sec- HAVE YOU BEEN REFUSED AUTO INSURANCE? PLAY PN’H KKlliAV - Linemen certain to see plenty of action Fqday night for Waterford when the Skippers invade Winner Stadium to play Northern are. left to right; Andy Strska. Tom Coach Sid Abel.Stanley Cup champion Chicago igoais and appears to hgve regained Detroit RedjBlack Hawks in its. last two games. Ms ,or™ «* through 1988 when ^77-Trrzzn les of finding the! ... . _ _ w „_____________. he topped the 36*oal mark three!* *te*dy m^ch by blasting ooprj team lacked in ..’“Iv ' He fell to 12 goals two seasonslfrom the three Hie PAT kick wad tonal Hockey “TVP* ago when he was crittoally injured1* 1 oc ke d. End Bert Krrnaghani veceMo ana GowBe Bewe afede M acCfc|ent at Chicago tajpkiied up a- fumble and raced *7 Inless after three to fch **•”** '• ■*■**■*• which Ms wife was killed. Lastly"* to pay dirt hut the kick am lesson he scored only 10 for thelno good and the Lancers led IS# Black Hawks., . ;«’the half. ... ■ .... . |L .i Bill Trleioff put the BuHdogs! . ****.*?? Ay*" " ahekd in the tMrd quarter with a IT0" wing to^left wtog a, (SptAteg TOyaid gallop. He renj „ —g* —»JH. ‘yt1* the extra point, I Norm (TUm>n. Howto Glover has Bodily Injury, Property Damage, Medical Payments, Fire, Theft, Wind, Glass, Vandalioin and Collision EASY BUDGET TERMS Alao Sign Trio of Youngsters ! Vic Stasiuk. who was left wing on the UOman line, was shifted to! ■right wing on the tMrd line. Bruce! MacGregor remained at center and! | DETROIT (Ji—The Detroit Tigers Charleston. The Colts paid an esti-Val Fonteyne at left wing on the ‘dropped three players from their mated $20.000-tor Woodeshick. ;tbtrd line. ■- — ju—|mi||e| The Bruins, under Phil Watson's Tigers Release 3 Players "The Insurance Mench" 161 WEST HURON—FI t-4091 Opm Daily 9:30 • 5:30—Saturday 9:30 • 1:00 ! roster yesterday. The Tigers sold southpaw Halj Woodeshick to the Houston Colts homebred youngsters to contractsItoMans, last In the NHL. and the! { with their minor league affiliates, [fifth-place Wings are the only ctobs; pitcher waf* ilcned t0 a^eet Watson is carrying seven rookies I *L 1 With the rebuilding Bruins, with the Dnluth-Huperior team of the Class C Northern League. He ■peat four yean with the Phil- lO J* ft*.! sri^sr.r^rjlanadiens Rip j Cal Carmen, a pitcher-first base- . . . . . ye «a { man. and Fred Adani. a third base-; Al rate* y*J# C 1 man, were signed to contracts wlthilaHW | 111 |\ J*/ the Class D Jamestown club of the j ■ * iNew York-Pennsylvania League. ! Steplitus and Carmen are Detroit! NEW YORK (ft — It could bb residents while Adani lives in sub-[that itl over already. The (short, urban Fraser. '---- —*' “ — BOWLING Ulfck. 29. posted a 4-3 record last season with Detroit and Washington before the Tigers tent him to Indiana .Golfer Is PGA's Pro ol Year UNIS DUNEDIN, Fla. <*-Don Pad-, gett. 36-year-old professional at! [the Green Hills Golf apd Country, ■“ * ' * has been, Club in Selma, _______. ___ [named PGA/Golf Professional of) the year.' • - The announcement of the honor! awarded the native of New Castle,L Ind., was .made today by Lou' Strong, president of the Profes-j atonal Golfers’ Association nl'. America. j L Formal award of the trophy wUll be made Nov. 7 at the PGA’s annual President's Dinner at Holly-wood-by-the-Sea. Fla. I Padgett was (elected by a com-, mittee of prominent amateur golf- i jen. The committee studied the j qualifications and records of 23ri nominees before making its 'de-i i cision. & • h [happy season of the New York! [Rangers, that is. t “We didn't skate, we didn't j jcheck; we didn't think,” summari| ized player-coach Doug llaiveyj after last night's 5-2 pounding tyi FROM 10 A. M.-2 A. M. Come in AnytimeH! [the Montreal Canadiens. Aad the Rangers, who get off te a flytag start; now (Bee a and Fluffing • Shoot and Baft BUI Smart, Frog. /by winning the league meet for They're in Chicago tonight and the ninth straight year Wednesday visit Detroit Saturday. ! afternoon at Hickory Hills Golf! The Rangers, who haven't made LOW PROFILE* SNOW TIRES Gel them while they're still at iow,iownictsr Grand Blanc Golfer Wins First Money Walled Lake kept its point total! .down by placing four runners in! the top 12. Chuck Smith was third! ,and Joe Butler fifth for the Vito) ings. Walled Lake also won the reserve meet. i-t tun OUR LOWEST PRICES EVER! ■ 4.70-11 TsMType I MadrweH Tyru-Rayea Pius Tox sad Treadable Tin MESA. Calif. (API -j ancour of Grand Blanc, j last-minute replacement.,' ,wooa five-under-par 33-33—66 r»ui{and won first money Wednesday! U.S. ROYAL WINTERIDE GUARANTEED* 18 MONTHS ^JU^iln the 18-hole pro-am prelude to :-Mtuer. Vwt> [the $20,000 Orange Gounty Open! . —————• , Golf Tournament. Grudge Match at Armoty The 26-.vear-old golfer, playing j . ’ I his first vear inn the nrh tour, i ! A grudge tag match is the ture of the Friday night rai program at the Armory tempi Larry Chene and Wee Davie jean face Chauncey and Pei HNPRL,_________________ ^ Pringle. In the other bouts, Joe fiS Smith meets Cry Baby MacAr-j The 72-hole championship' thur and Paul “Bull" Bernard'gin* Thursday over the 6.180-yard | fares Gino Brito. The bouts start!par 71 Mesa Verde Country Club! at 8:30 p.m. [course. V* j ALSO TUBELESS 'WINTIRIDIS Prepertfewfiy lew Priced/ IN * BLACK WAIL . a WHITEWALL a narro-white •V. e-eSie - k U: 3 S»feWf Cieewyk FREE - \ CHECK UP /L ixow.jBob Harrison, Dick Stran&han, Dun-Bob Rosburg, Bobby Nichoii and, rciva) Jack Fleck tied for second with| Cass Aye. Brake Service MANO NIW...AU riaST-UNI CONSTRUCTION! NO MCONMI NO aLmittM|lt Now,.. replace those worn, wsar-wesksned tires with famous General Tlrss.,. at these never before, once ln s lifetime low prices. Drive safely.,. and savef SAVE Bit ON OTNBR SIZES TOO EAST Ukm-PAY AS YOU GO THROUGH SHOW ----------COUPON------------- mufflers sam TOR ANY CAR JUU THIS WEEK ONLY , m\ COUPON WORTH .... ' TRIE INSTALLATION PROTECTION HEADQUARTERS FOR HUNTERS! $¥E US FOR - S’ SPECIAL ACCIDENT POLICY FOR HUNTERS. Yea ■elect, the amounts and number of days. A 3 dap policy costa only $1-05- HjST *ALL RISK’ PROTECTION for your guns, Kuntiii| equipment and baggage. ■See U» £e|gr£ You Leave! FRK MOUNTING—EASY TERMS f THE A GENERAL LAZELLE AGENCY, Iik. 4S1 S, Saginaw Sf. af Roaburn WE SERVICE WHAT Wl SILL Opes Daily l-.I0-5:J0, Trida; T P.ld. From Compacts To Cadillacs! NIGHT RACING 9 Races Nightly Rain or Shim through November 8 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY KING TIRE CENTER 60 SOUTH TELEGRAPH RO. ..................................... „»ubttM^ttlWHWiW*t*imWlMUHlllMiaMIHIIU*mg I** THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 FORTY-SEVEN II THIS IS HEWS... Machines and Paper Tape in Early Morning Means News Stories in Early Afternoon All night long the teletype machines of our wire services are at work bringing us the news from all over the world. These stories are Simultaneously printed on paper and perforated on special tape. When our editors arrive in the morning these stories are edited arid the tapes fed into specialty equipped linotype machines. Thus the process of bringing you the latest news is speeded up immeasureabty. Stories lhat come to us from the far comers of the earth during the night can be brought to your doorstep that same afternoon. Truly a miracle of modem journalism. A miracle repeated daily when The Pontiac Press brings you All the News of Your World. THE PONTIAC PRESS m Pv, FORTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER l», IMl 15,000h>*4S; 2,000 Hi *56; 6,000 Now Canadian Reds Building Up Membership UH>-Chaada’s Cbm-r h making s clow l Its km point la toOow- member*, a b e ■ t threw times as mmmj m la MM. Ibwww, security say the Communists tend to inflate membership figures and that the ia closer to 3,000. They say those who are not actual members but are caught |n the Cbmnmnist orbit number about 35,000. fax cnr from ’« This is a far cry from the Com- munists’ hey-day hi IMS when they had 15,000 members, ran 00 candidates *in the federal election that year, drew 111,Ml votes and elected one member of parliament. In the I960 election they ran 10 candidates and garnered only 9,869 rotes. The Srst Mow t* the Oaaadtaa Reds came on Sept. (, IMS, whea 1st, plans to turn the G. B. Mad ellsn. deputy commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Mice, said recently Communists have attempted to influ- Blth Rule Makes ooistsAngry NEW YORK (AP)-Mlke Colas-1 “People want tattoo*.’’ add < tuona, 23 paced his 0th Avenue tattoolst, who then added a refer-tattoo parlor gesturing furiously erne to prohibition not prementing with arms that emerged from an the sala of Bquor-becauae people undarshirt inscribed with skin: wanted liquor. Fred Roee, the Communist member of parliament wha represented a Montreal riding, was Implicated in the spy ring. He now lives in By the middle of the Korean War membership had skidded to 10,000. The tow point waa reached in I960, especially in Montreal, where j many Jewish members left following anti-Semitic utterances at the “Well go underground,' threatened. "All the boys they’ll go underground.” His threat was part of what could be the death throes of hd-too parlors u legitimate bud-nesses here. The Health Department has ordered all parlors Mot by Nov. 1 as possible contributors to tbs spread of hepatitis, a liver aifinent. The tattooists say they win sue Leonard Rubin, a lawyer repra-sen ting several tattooists, notes that cigarettes weren’t outlawed because of claimed statistical links with cancer. And neither, he points out, waa the automobile industry, despite ananrintinn # * w Tattooing is a small industry. The department says the city's six full-time and three part-time parlors do about 10,000 tattoos a year The tattooists any they, do many more than that. Gross Income apparently is between MO,-000 and $100,100 a year. NO 8CM00L There is no formal association of members. And the business re-certificate, passed down from another. There is no real tattoo school in the city. Tattoo parlors usually are store fronts, their major equipment an electric vibrating needle and per haps a steam sterilizer. The customers. so the tattooists say, include not only sailors and teenagers but bejewded; well-dressed the city good,” said his brother James, 36. “How many guys the FBI caught from tattoos? How many people we helped by covering up scan?” He stormed about the shop, got to be a bum," be said. Jab-Mag a finger to Ms. chest, 1 need to be degraded because they 'Mi* ‘maybe.’” The “maybe” refers to a Department ruling that tattoo parlors may be transmitting ram hepatitis directly into the blood stream through dirty dies and dyes. ♦ * ♦ The department said it traced 9 cases of hepatitis—and one death—to tattooing past three years. ♦ * “Listen.” said James Cotonta-one, “they haven't proved give hepatitis. They haven’t proved a thing. My father was all tattooed, and he never got sick Bern Edwin Ludwig, director of Bureau of Flood and Drugs, said "Well.” he added, “if a guy gets tattooed and then ernes down wdth hepatitis three or, four months later the presumptive evidence Is then. But yon mightn't convince the supreme court,” Their fees range from $4 for s heart to $90 or more for a chest-size eagle, which sometimes adds up to nore* more than $100 profit each week during the spring, the summer, and toe fall season. Business becomes slack in winter. During the season, however, customers may wait in line. - SI FRANKLIN BOULKVARD , (City ot Pontiac) Sn pursuance at provisions contained; In Miscellaneous Resolution No. 3SU adaq(a< fcy tto Oakland Oonat^ Board rvuc mu wBurn.* Public Mil 'to* be CaM* bar SS. 1MI. at !• a an at Jack 1 SSL** \ THE PONTIAC FHJ&S3. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 FORTY-MMv , The foUmrlnc are top tuwhig Mm of locally „ produce by grower* and eoid by them Id wholesale package lots. Quotations am furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, at of Tneeday. Blue Chip Gains Boost Market Detroit Product gains by a selection of blue chips produced a big gain on avenge stock market which was thoroughly mixed in fairly active trading early this afternoon. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up 1.20 at 291 JO, with industrials « 1.50, rails 19 .20 and utilities up .TO. OUT OF PROPORTION Gains running to 3 or 4 points by some component stocks to the average pushed it to again which was out of proportion to the gen- CarroU, Sm. Sea*. C»u!5tow»r,' do*. Ctlery, Po*c*l ... pu. Owe. - ...... ; Parilty, early. dM. tabs. . do*. Id*. ... GM Is Proud of Its Products NEW YORK (AP)—Substantial trai picture: 'Gatos and were pretty evenly balanced for the list as a whole. A leap by Pacific Gas A Electric followed dews that the company plans a 3-for-l stock split and dividend boost. This brought buying into other utilities. AIRCRAFTS HURT Meanwhile aircrafts were hit hard by a published report that the Pentagon has decided to discontinue the production of the B-52 bomber and limit investment in developing the B-70 supersonic bomber. Autos were mostly lower. Steels, airlines and building materials wen narrowly uneven. JUMPS I POINTS Pacific Gas A Electric was up ■bout 5 points on the stock split which had been rumored for time. Southern California Edison responded sympathetically with a rise exceeding s point. Commonwealth Edison gained Prices rose on the American Stock Exchange. Trading Bond Prices Open Mixed NEW YORK (AP)—Bond prices opened mixed today. The lax trading pace that has ruled alt week did not appear to have changed. Over the counter dealers to UJS. government securities said there were tew pice movements in either intermediate or long ends of the list. The only changes were a few plus 3-32 maria. Governments posted irregular gains Monday and Tuesday and were mostly un- Among corporates traded on the New York Stock Exchange, rails were the most active, but prices remained mixed. A few utilities edged upward. Industrials were irregular. * j-JJ changed Wednesday. I* iS ...'... Among the larger movers 1 Southern Pacific Railroad 514s up 1 at 103, Baltimore Gaa A Electric fc up 1% at 2314 and Chicago A North Western Railway 3s off 114 at a. President Soys Despite U.S. Monopoly Charge, F|rm Will Grow By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)—One of the great rituals of American life is the business conference. The conferences are, usually held behind closed doors to give sir of secrecy. That is a great shame. They should be thrown open and tickets sold DETROIT Ofi — John F. Gordon, president of General Motors, says the giant corporation intends to keep on using its resources in developing superior products that will outsell all competition spite a government charge of monopoly. GM is under indictment on a charge of monopolizing the diesel electric locomotive market. In a speech Wednesday night, Gordon said GM hopes to gelt even more than the 84 per cent of the railroads’ business which the gov- moderately active. Gains or better were made by Fairchild Camera, Canaveral International, Aerosol, Technicolor and Speed-O-Prtat. Great Lakes ernment says the company now Chemical and Goldfield Conaoli- dated Mines were active fractional gainers. White Eagle International and Anken Chemical were losers. American Stock Exch. Fleur** sfter 0«elm*l salat* sr* el*h*h« . 23.3 Imp Ik c* .. . s.s la* N am .... ,. 37.3 Kalatr Intfu* . . 1X7 Ibtd Joirn ..MM .170 4 NJ Zinc ..... 34 . 13.4 Not* Indu* .. at .14.1 PM PM Ltd .. 14.3 . 3.3 IMbalM .......33.3 . 44.7 The New York Stock Exchange Pttwjr Bo* .73 3 31* lift Sl%+ % 31 43% 41$ Mt S 14 30 29% M ■ 28 34% 33% 34 PurcOU I N OtuCIsar ljo ' _______■ iDynom .S0p 133 25V, 33 13 33 Wfc 23 + % * 3»V, MV, 3I%- % ___.. _ 33V« 33 33 — Vi —,lIMtr OetiMlU* 1.20 7 34% 34% 24%... Oen Motor! 2 H |M M 49%- V, — Pm 1.20 13 00 Hit so%— % ■ Poultry and Eggs 31 30% a* ItSr- $ 70 00% 07% 07%—1% __________M ._ _ to) . 44 30% 19% 12%— % Oen Pub Ul 1X0 M 23% » , I_________ 14 14% 14% 14%....... O TeUUEl .74 132 23% 23% 13%. Am Kkjni 2.40 4 43% 5ft Aft-.... Oob lire 1 . SS t. JL- — *3 — - 48% 47% % O* P*C CP l.h 7 30 97% 57V 43% 44% 43 + % Getty Oil 11 K% 14% U%- Am Cyan 1.40 40 1% 41% 42% + %|OUlett* 2.30* 30 135% 134% 134%+ % ■ Am a PW Ll» 40 71% 70% fe%+ % Goodrich 2.20 M 73% 73 73%... DETROIT. Oct. If HAT)—Trtets ptld Am A F Pw 50 I M |% g»4 Goodyear .90b II 49 48 + fit. n**”U "* 1,0 1 «u*u*»|Ainltt«W S3 74 42* U% «%- % Oract A Co 1.00k 34 74% 2% 71% .. live poultry: • lAmiieta 140 eo Mb Mb Mb W Grand Dn ,80b 7 17 5T 37 -f Heotry type bans 14-18; light type h«n» AmlloU* .80 1 tfb 15% 18V- ft Oran C Stl 1.40 2 42% 42% ft “ * AmMat 1.3* 41 10% 13% 19% lot ASP IN 4 37% W% 17%+ % 7 M m 17%+ ft Of No Ry 1 to If# ma m «■ 13% 11% if%+ % ot w rto Jtr MW3in M M2% Hlft 111 + % Oiaftwand £ Dwrnaw.” om."» TipT-s* Wm|12 2» rpor daten cite* Include* of Detroit t3pVSTm* u SI* in* SSfc 2 SI firm receiver* (tajfSgs DAI iJVn.'" H SO SS S37~ »4*’“ Repub SU 3 Revlon 1.1* Re* Drug 50b has Met 50 MCnS 1.50 H.Mto type reMter* a 13-14; Barred Rock* 17-14; duckllnge 21. larf* 41-44; tors* 30-44; medium 31-33; email 23-23. Browne graSi A extre Mis* 41-41; CHICAGO, Oct. It (QPI)' ___________ ptvltry too taw reealpte to mart price*. Butter *6aa4br. 99 score at; “----- 69. 90 More 94; 12 eOore 37%. B(f* SMM3M. Whlta large extras _ * C* 1.40 4 §2 43 I Ck 1.90 4 73% 73 NIC X M 8 Dtps O 2 90 3 99V, It ____ion 1.30* N 33% «| Anew Lw 3a - Livestock • 3M, calve* 33, hoc* ll sheep 100. Cattle compand last week good and choice iilMchtar steer* and batten-24-30c higher; standard (toon and haifan igne; (wean non i _____r to He higher; stttlly______ heifer* steady; cow* (t«ady; bull* ‘a 30c lower; t*n head mixed high and prim* i*27 lb ytarUng steer* 3*.oo; thn* MM* sNmd Bgpk *Mma “ *“— ----------------i NMUli ltiiio fi. yearling steer* 25.95; 1100 1230 msanfe awSpe _ . __ 15. ateers 33.10; moat choice steer* . lb. down 34 *0-23 23; mixed lead* good and low ehatea ■ tears UN S>. dawn 34.00-34.M; moat good (toon 21.73-24.00; standard staers n.4S-Ui.i>; atUlty 3 M , e high i rholc# heifers 22.*0-3X30; goad heifers 31.03-3340; standard httfmIMMl.Tl; —“7 better* 17.00-30 00,• utUlly cow* 15.00; utility hi bun* 17 00-19 00. fir2---------- ___t prime vcolon^MAO^ 1; good and Note* 29.00-36.00: ____dor* 33 00-39 00; cull and Utility SSm. Sheep compared lot* week eteughter lsmb* Me Usher; slaughter ewe* steady; matt choice and prim* slaughter iamb UJfoMAk IMq and choice 1I.00-U.30; Amph Borg 1.40 U 33% 31 04V, 63% *4V«+2 8 34% 24%' 24%— t. to tom 33% M%+ % 26 37 30% MS. * IJEI_______________ gsv, + % Berts 1.30 . u 11% 51% u%, %;Meeker Ch 1 « 3% 3 * HeamaPln 13* U SiWi 30 - %|lm»etUP 1.00 « **% —H— 53%+1% to uo . 1**%+2% 1 AS 3W4 + /y • it% to% 13% 11 15% 1S% I5V,- _ 2 Wt «% 40%— m 14 «K 40% #%- V, Net 7 *8% *0% **%+ % U U% U% U%+% 17 210% 207 2W +1% 22 *3% 95 99%- g “And believe me," Gordon said, 'if or when we come up with such a product, we will not hesitate to provide the facilities and organization to produce that prod-regardleas of the fact that we are now being proeecuted by the government for exactly this type of contribution to the railroads of this country.’* -f 8 i mS 2*% 2i%- 13 33% 11% 31% —R— 14 34% M 34 — % Weather Reversals Spur Futures Bids CHICAGO (AP) -Unfavorable weather for harvesting over parts 34 41% 47% 47%—1 a 9% N% 90%+ - 2* 74 27% 71%— . IS 36% .35% 55%+ % W M% 35% 35% % 27 74% 71% 76%+IV, 2 15% U% 13V Rob Fulton ,71s 1 SSV. 33V, + Safeway M 1.1 »% . 40% 40>.+ ___, _____ JK IN 17% 17% -j7%... Bohentey 1 23 21% 27% 27%- % AM 39 03% fi% 02%+1% U 120% IN 12*%+ % herlng 1.4* —mt ret w.___________-___. SeobALMt 1.30g I 31% 31% 31% . hears Seek tS 34 B% 11 43%+3 . 13% 12% 12V 17 40% 34% 43 ■ 12 10% 16% M% 4 33% 23% 15% to 38% toja'Jwto? 3 113 112% til +1% Singer Mf 8mTthCor __________ SmithKP N 10 •*% 60% 4|%. 1 Soeony 1 3* 44% 44% fangein^ im * M% 22% «*%+l' 14 35% 35% »%+ % WC«' » \» 5% SS+ .jSSSK'tS1 iS%iS% i»!+i«r*'’“’‘ *4 Mi 53 + » 62% 83%—1%; -4— 2 2t% 21% in...... 9 46% 46% 46%+ % 1 6% 6% 6%..... • 44% 44% 44%+ % to *to M6% IN%+ % 25 51% 50% 50V,— g SoutbemCo IN Sou NO** 2 SouPoc 120 SouRy 160 |2«9iy|to jj I M% 56% IM.. I 46% 40% . 40% + . 14% 14% » »•% M% 28%+ 1 2 57% 27% 57%— 1 35 24% 24% 2476— < 25 8 34% 34% i 013 40% 47% 4S%-2% I 37% 1 37%+ S 34 48% 44% 46%— _ 34 47% 47% 47%-% 44 44% 44% 44% 11 20% 30%. 20% 3 34% 14% 34%- 14 4SV, 44% 44%-% Itacu Brk .Up 70 sr* 51% li%4 rlDrug 1.1 ^nwhiiJr 1 » StudPack t 5 JonLocon .7 t + fllJonoeiL IN I 5 *>7Mfg I * 45% 11% 13% to 92 mil *1%- % 21 13% 21% 3t%— % 324 12% 12% U%- % 11 to% 27% g%- " 13% U%...... 20%. 20%— % 31% 31%+ % 7 7 TennO** 1,12 1 7* Texaco IN TexOProd M , «, ToxOSul 1 r . TexTni Gordon told 111 top railroad executives from ail parts of the country that GM hopes to como to oar todaatry and to oar country on the diesel locomotives have.” even have them daily. In otheri the boss merely calls them whenever he i> lonely and feds like bawling out the ataff. Business conferences, whatever their outcome, have two undoubted social virtues: They keep executive! out of the rain in summer and they keq> executives out of the snow in winter. However much critics may denounce business conferences as a waste of time, it must be admit-person is reasonably sale from pneumonia while attending them. He is usually pretty safe from mental strain, too. OFFICE MATINEES If you have ever attended one Appoint Dale Lott Ad Manager at Dodge Truck Appointment cl Doyle W. Lott, irmingharo, as manager of advertising, sales promotion and training for Dodgei Truck is aim ed by David RJ Crandall, director! of truck market-] tog. Lott was 4 13% 91% lift- ft 1 8 51% MS- ! M’» **’• toft- Mack Trk IN M 33% 13% 35% to toft ft -ft. — 15 H% 23% 29%— 7 m K% 53%+ 16 37% 37% I7%— 1 94 8 8. 36 V 'M i 22 10V, 19% 16%— % 9 47% 47% 47% + % 4 13% 13% 15%- % to !!» l n n% loft i*%—'% 13^10% 10 M —1 nS ^ %|g“ 13 53% 52% 52%- V, 2" J5fc-AJL , ! S’* « 12% 11% ll%- % 25 2“ gL® * Sta fits tet£ te B% ^ ‘in Alb li S3 S* & -Nh 10 3-6% PR! fi» ss str i 2* 2* to a* S2 44 + te ttelt MAM 1 * 32% N 22 — % 4 2% iitil v! U8 Borax ,45g 1 33% M% 36%— % «*l% *1% «%+ % g, Freight Si 2 74% 74% 7406 7... j 102.4 83 MA 74.1 Hi |l 35.3 7SA 31.4 41.0 H.7 A7.3 — ----- "iww PreightS* * —M— os OypfunvlN* I a% 41% NK+ % tig jtef* M . AT a 11-36 12-11 *fft to®-4 ■ 22% 1 4 Mft 1 5 14% 19% 19%. ▼ 11% lift 11% .-« UV. 11% 11%- % NatBlee AN »»D-“ 9 12% 12% 12%+ __________ 12 36% 36% 39% + Doom Rm IN t 17% 17 §7 ♦ latDalry 2 lalDiatill 1 raioype n IM Lead 1 XR W t Dot Bdl* 2N SLlFw * 1 21% 21% «%7. Disney Ola C Scat i .e. DIMM Min .74 Dau« Aire Dint tot IN T?J 1 14% 14% ^ 2 43% 43% 8ft+ % .? St SiS Sii5 a Tift n “ " 29 230V, 23 fOB jJfAIsTl East Air L 25p 14 B% 22% M%- ---- — .Sr j, S% 43% __________ 37 107% 103% MM- ElAMu* ,13s 11 "3, J . EmerEl lb 5 77% l|% 77 . = ~ 2 11% 11% 13% BN Mb *g llh4 %tharkeDa 24 11% 11% 11%- % ••“•“‘tor %t 38% lift M%+ V. _________vS 1 , %|US Smelt | i Madison Fd 1,94k 2 26% 26% M%—%|US IMhut 27 14% 16% M% SSte Cop 1671 9 57% 57 4 37 %:us Ltete A 2 K% M% Mognavox .50 29' IM 35% 39%+ % fig Sfi.I ti mu. esto xau. Marine Mid lb 7 35 34% 35 . .....|OB Rub, 2.20 dorquordt **iy D Sir MeedColr 1 71 7 5™ 47% «%— %|0hlvMatch" N 59 31 Mere* 1M™ 21 79% 79% 79%- % UnivOilPd .50* S ft, L._ MerrChfcS J M *% •%- % Upjohn N 41 54% 84% 24%. MOM IN 27 49% 48% 4B%— % __V—• y? ! i&T 2 VanAlStl 1.93* 1 30% 30% 30%... m53£?2 4 140 1M% 140 I % Vanad Cp .40 2 94% 24% 24&- V, iE^MAU1 7* 34 77V. n *76% t • + Vartan A* 31 41% 40% te%— % uSSUa^.N M mt 2% 3%+ % VaN*l%W IN 12 4« 43% 45%— % Moh*sco_ Ind 4te 14 _?% _9^..... —W- Stocks ot Local Interost <4, Figure* alter decimal palate on olghthe 58% 53%— % , « err, 34% SM+ % A 17 79% 73 79 — ft A 9 13% 15% 13%+ ft A _ “ Nft Nft' lft Baldwin-Moot. Chem. Co. fed. I ACP-Wrtgley Store*. I Arkenias lentelaaa dee Co. ..N.i 40. toWM in ianiward 1 NT ChASL 1 Mia M Pw IN Norf A West 4a No Am Ar I Nor N Osi IN Nor Pm AN Northrop IN Harrty Aluminum |te*nr BaU A Roaring . Prophet Rockwall_________ fust* tdteoa O*. .............34.4 24. OVER IN COUNTER STOCKS I Tho following quatatlom do not noe-mhb nawuaaM oatual traMoaUne '— tr. Intended a* s guide ' ante trading rang* d th e approxV ________ Crjttu ......... Mtetronl** Capital ...... __ Electronic* Internattonel . 89 _ % Prlto Co. . flu 9 OeAm J* I 7 24% 14% 24% • • 17% 17% 17% 9 41% 41% 41%- 34 43% 44% ll 1 111% 114 WRl ,, 141 94% 48% 41 -Sft _ - “• N%+ % Jh. Il%— %; Andrew Jergons iMcLouth Stool MR)............... jtehataa aaosuMo Tub* Oa..,Nj Plan per Finance ......... Sent, Pa Drilling .............8 ,41 Traaeeoatinratal a. Pip* Uaa SAT 24 Wyeiedott* Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS I Chemical Fund . — j Mft Mft- ftK _____________________ ________ I Nw»t Alrlta N 4 24% 94% Jpa --j; _>^AlM^«5w te’axtra*. b—Annual rate!^motTweaRh Stock Norwich Ph 1 « »*% N N — % Iptuiirtoek dlrldend. d Dtelarad or pan] geyeMne taeowtoK-l ... ----O— m 1M1 phu (look dlrldend. »—PoM loet lteyitoa* Orowth K-] . Ohio oa 1 sob S MU MV, nu— u. you- \*'. POpahte to etoak durtet MM Mml Uraetan Oroth oii„ uSat l 23 3ft "% SCI S,eeUawted euh rahM on ex-dhrktend or Mae*. Inre.tor, Trust . 8£ L36 6 78% 73% T3%= % oxford r»f 1 11 m% 11% h%+ % eIand „ fjs 23* yen, ( ----1 — Meat wth dlrldend, n a II IS Nft M%+4% »M» year, dirtdeod omlth U Mft Hft IM+ ft jnjgPjiSewN IteM « 94 30% 19% 19% ' r> 36%"36% S8%+ *» 31 33 NS 33 . j ft to 36V, + % 131 H 8% sift+tv, 16 34% 34% 36%+ % _______ 36 JK .IM.Jwft— ft gCJtelNM^N - PkalpeD ‘ ptmii 1 Penney AC a- ifffiae- jklii ‘Ritual’ Should Be Open BOYLE the public. For the avenge business conference has bettor acting and far mqre drama than an off-Broadway production. In some offices they hold conferences weekly -— some o( these office matinees, typical chanctrs: Statistical 8yd — He shows 19 with an armful of charts to prove Ma points. Halfway through his presentation, he discovers he has hung the .charts upside down. TWi makes no real difference to Syd. His figures read the same forward. backward, upside down, sideways. Bulldozer Bert—"What this firm teds is some real down-toeartb aggressive thinking! ” He cries, thumping the table. Everybody nods. They’re all In favor of aggressive thinking, whatever that is. They are also in favor of motherhood and the federal 8 way program. .HASN’T RECOVERED M umbo-Jumbo Jack—He once read a book on psychology and never quite recovered. "It’s about time* we paid more attention to our socioeconomic public image and reconstructed our corporate contour psychiewise,” he says. Everybody nods profoundly again. Why not? Why argue with a nut you can’t even understand. Gilbert the Gamblep-"So we’re losing money on tiddlywinks,” he atRuee. “Let’s diversify. Why not ■tart making bowling balls? Item for item, there's a lot bigger profit potential in bonding balls than tiddlywinks.’’ DM WORKING? Procrastinating Phil—When his turn comes he looks mysterious and says, "I pass for ’ now. I’m on something I think will before him. MBs plane are afi made. Aa soon aa be inherits the burinees, be Mends to fire everybody and asB the firm to its biggest competitor. Sylvester the Spouter—The sales manager is a master of glowing, push-button proee. "White our figures are down a mite this month,** he says cheerily, "all signs indicate that next month win see a record.” All signs point to a record an right—a record fans. Omnipotent Oliver — "This confab got us exactly nowhere,” says the boas, winding it aU up. “The next time I can you boys in, you'd better ibow up with somr real Ideaa-or there’ll be some new facet at this conference table.” The session is over. The executives inarch out, firm confidence showing, in every face. Industry marches'on! solve all our problems, haven’t got it in final form.’’ Phil has used this same line so many times he is beginning to believe Whereas Wllbur-The company lawyer never makes a suggestion himself. He is there for only one purpoee—4o arisen and announce why the suggestions anyone else In the Ann makes are legally impooible, phis being again* public policy. THE BRIGHT BOY Doodling Dan—The boss’ nephew sits and silently draws pictures 0^ pretty girls on the pad and public relations for Rcol Motors, Inc., Lansing, from 1M7 to LOTT 1965. From 1966 to 1966, bit was an evecutive with William Hart Adler, Inc., Chicago. He then joined Grant Advertising Inc., Detroit, as a director of regional accounts, and became vice president-account supervisor in 1968. For the past year, Lott has been vice president of Electrographic Carp. A Michigan State University graduate, Lott and his wile, Virginia Mae, have two children, Mar-laina and Collett. They live at 5630 Sussex, Birmingham. Intertown Bus Line Back in Business Rowland Williams Named to A & P Post Rdwtead T. Williams, 1996 Devonshire \has been ( promoted by A A P Food Stores to the position of supervisor of operations of some 15 stores In east side Detroit He wlH succeed Howard M. Saxby, who la retiring after IS years with the feed chain. — Williams started with AlN? in 1937 as' a clerk in Pontiac, ne served in various capacities including produce department head and assistant manager prior to his promotion to manager in 1947. He has been associated wi Detroit unit sales department for more than fix years. News in Brief a S aid 6 a.m. yesterday thieves broke ■ rear window in the Lakeland Hardware at 2520 Airport Road, Waterford Township, and stole 963, hunting id rifle ammunition. Three youths charged with stealing $iqo in merchandise after breaking into Bob's Market, 587 Colorado St., Aug. 8 were bound over to Circuit Court yesterday by MuBicipal Judge Cedi A. McCal-lum. Charged with breaking and entering are WUUe Jones, 20, 4Si Ditmar St; Eugene Jams, 19, f9» I.; and Albert Page. 16, 497 Ditmar St. Bond was set at $300 apiece. Tire sliiks valued at W were stolen from a boms at 266 Fisher ., it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday evening by Andrew A. McCaskill of 47 Orton St. Rummage Sale, Friday, Oct M. . a.m. to 4 pm. Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church. 33460 Pierce, Birmingham. 3 blocks south of 14 Mile, bet. Southfield and Greenfield. —Adv. Scats Annual Fair-CAI Bldg., Watorfoitf. Oct 31. 11 am. to i p.m. Donation. Me taie. refreshments. Meals served ail day, Me up. —Adv. LANSING 0 — The Intertown Rumawge Sale, I_____________ Episcopal Church, 6301 Hatchery Road, Drayton Ptaina. Fit. Oct. 30th, from 8 to 1. —Adv. bmtatiae today, hi aptte of He that H was quitting- The firm was erderad by the State Public Service Oommta-skm (PSC) to “refratai from taking aay action to respect to abandonment” aad to "take all ■taps and actions necessary to he able to restore speretisas.” The bus Hue, serving IS snb- Weetaru Wayne Caunty, by u strike of I Business Notes To meet expanding agency activities in behalf of American OB Co. and iStaiidani OU (Indiana), Ernest A. Jones, president of Mac-John to Adams, Inc., has appointed Fred J. Hatch, a senior vice president of the advertising as company officer charge bf tie account!. Richard P. Monley trill continue to function as account supervisor on the American-Standard business, and Joseph L. Hardig has been named account executltafc- Bargains in refintehed furnRere at the Bahratton Army Bed Shield Stare, lit W. Lawrence Street. New merchandise received daily. —Adv. murage Buis, Stevens HsR Exchange St Entrance. P71, Oct. “ 7-6 pm. —Adv. , J»'' Sale, Birmingham Unitarian Church, woodward Are. at Lone Pins. Pri, Oct. 30th, t ul to I pm. Clothing, bousshobi goods, ate, —Adv. 31. at 10 am, st 331 Ferry Avt. nimage Sale, Fit, 0*4. 30. 6:00 to 5:00, and Sat., Oct 31. 0:00 to t.-ObjilliJ*. Bagtnsto, next to Nu-Vlatau. First Church Of God, Missionary Society. Bammage Sale, VFW RaB, Drayton Plains, Sat, Oct Slab from 0 to 1. -Adv. Baldwin E.U.B. Pancake sapper, St Mary’s Episcopal Church, oornsr of Joslyn and Greenshield. Oct. 31,6 to IM put. Adults $1, children 50c. rxr mHUKKM ________Sul, Ool 31st, 0 to L First Unftsd Fento-eostsl Church, 113 Gram. —Adv. Companies’ New Policy Uninsurable Are Now Insurable By SAM ifAWSON AP Baalaesa News Analyst NEW Y O R K — Persons who have snapped back satisfactorily from a heart attack are finding life insurance companies today wUUng, even eager, to them on as insurable risks. So are those who have been cured of tuberculosis o cancer operation has been pronounced successful after a period of -time. Nor does total blindness any longer bar a person from getting insurance policy. And the number of job categories on tt proscribed list shrinks steadily. Some newer companies are specializing in insuring- cardiacs, diabetics, and those with n history of other serioue ailments. TAPPING NEW FIELD Many in the insurance business see a definite trend toward expanding coverage by tapping the vast field that once was barred, or penalised by tench larger pre-la, as substandard rtrita. As an example -it cites a recent trend which has swung a large majority of companies to issuing permanent policies to healthy and well-adjtuted blind persons standard premium rates, where an extra premium chanted tt unually runs to no more than 62.50 a year for $1,000 of protection. An example of a specialist in the field once barred as substandard risks is the United Equity Life Insurance Ch. of Chicago, a legal reserve company charted by the State of Olinois. One move that was widely publicized Was into the field ot insuring persons over 65| a steadily growing sector of the population. The Burnt Is large. Garland [estiiAatca there are U million Americans who hAvt some form of heart or cireawtoiy ailment sad other millions with Material of cancer, tuberculosis, diabetes or other serious ailments. Hie majority, he says, now lead normal or near normal Uvet- And getting a policy not only reassures them about their faaititos’ future but give* the person hira-seli a Hit aa being regained a A CARDIAC ALUMNUS Its president, Jerome Garland, Is a cardiac alumnus. He says his experience led him to study ths actuarial tables on similar vio-tints who returned to normal e* eryday activities. As a remit early this year- his comparatively new firm began offering to insure heart dlaeaae victims whom doctors report, after'a period of time, that they have recovered. Ia tht first six weeks' the company wrote nearly $6 million in poMcfee Hdl on the doctors say-so without any physical checkup fry United Eqptty in now agfendkig The Institute of Life Insurance insurance coverage to those with reports only three out of every lOO.Medlcal histBrtos of aifistsd tip-applicants today are turned dowp|beraiitHii, ) controlled fat reasons of ~ I' , A- I MLS IMA MM ____a UM !4i a Mar ..MM UM JIM S. . niV ma U3*a mshabiu or family medical htetory.|aa opiration. Part of the trend toward insuring those once barred cones from ■ study of actuarial tables which ■bow that most recow almost completely from th* initial attacks. Put comes from the gnat advance in recent yean la medical aad hospital treatment which makes ancefothal dfosasaa controllable. And part comas from competition within the hMuranct It has gresd its aalse ot policies into many fields sad inersased the variety of tho benefits offered. Aad etiB the reserves of the grow. So as Jut an mortality flifaltnm they move fade FIFTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1M1 UHlon Rdb Still Under Indictment for Shyfag in I960 > Hung Jury Ends-Trial of Ex-Dancer in $478jOOO Theft Small-Town Stuff: A inter might bt pretty tough to liv* with, but h* mataa a gaigUjr nto Moaate jtaater, Wn told, to a gal who toori i m wdraaa My i (he aaada n— lift Wilson. POTTSVILLE. Pa. (AP)- The burfUry trial 0I former cboroa gill untoa Reis ended with • hung Jury Wednesday night altar Am panel waa table to reach a Ate aha plotted a 1478,000 theft. GULF MYIRAl STATIONS la Mm Nattoa Aiea MINIMUM INVtSTMINT Coll FI 2-917) of ka money t» parrhaae a nightclub. ■ ♦ ♦ * Judge Charles W. Standee dismissed the panel of.five and seven man alter it had reported lor the second time It eras hopelessly rteartVortred. Use Jury, which had heard more than 40 prosecution witnesses and five defence witnesses during (he five-weak trial, had deliberated 1SH that on the first ballot the vote was M; than on the second ballot and at toast 18 thereafter the vets was a steady T lor conviction and 5 tor * acquittal. The source said that all five were for convicting her in the Aug. T, 1901, burglary at the home of cool magnate John B. Rich. . dr A *. Mm Rate, 33, a striking bru- late Tuesday. An unimpeachable source said to no change whatsoever; it to si heard tbs Jury forqman, Cora Thompson, toll the Judge: “There 1962 Cadillac READY FOR DELIVERY! Selling for *5,025.00 CARRYING ALL THE FOLLOWING ITEMS: it Cadillac Fewer Steering * Cadillac Fewer Brakes ★ Cadillac Hydre-Matic Drivt ★ Cadillac Hooter end Defroster ★ Electric Clack ★ Outside Miner ft Front Seat Adjustment it Two-Tens Faint Then Stendenmetor, who presided over the trials of Suae men convicted In the burglary last Wring, told Sis fay: "This to something we regret, that yon are unable to arrive at a verdict. All the court can do tor Hi part to to explain the taw. The Jury must find the facts. You an discharged." A A '# Miss Rata, who was rateased in US,000 bail, told a newsman riie felt she should have been ae-iiitted. ' / But, toe added, “tfs pretty much of a relief and a atop in right direction, don’t' you think?" AAA . Dirt. Atty. Calvin Fried berg, the prom ruler, said that ha assumed Dbt. Atty Robert Harris intend* to mby Miss Reis on the burglary charges. *Tm convinced the evidence warranted a conviction,” said Friedberg, "and Tm hoping when cam to retried there will be **.” Harris' term expiree at the end of this year, and he to not seeking re election. The next term of the Schuylkill County Gnat to Nov. I. A A A v An odd twtot to the cam to that Mbs Rato’ defense attorney, John Lavelle, to mining tor district attorney on the Democratic ticket in the November election. Should ha,be elected and a retrial scheduled after Harris leaves office, a special prosecutor would have to be appointed, probably by the Pennsylvania attorney general, toji try the cam. Mtas Rets still to under tadlct- ment by an Atlantic County, N.J. grand Jury on a murder charge to the August 1910 staying of Vincent Blaney, whom body was found hi the Atlantic Ocean. Police arid Blaney, one of the six defendants hi fig cam, hod been killed to keep him from turning Nate’s evidence.' Vincent'* brother, Rtohart, ate as killed in gangland fatolcn ist summer after he had toad-flsd for the prosecution at the trials of the three men who were convicted—Robert Poutoon, John Berkery and Ralph Stslno Jr. Richard, who had said lw testified from- accounts of the burglary given him by his brother, to have been a »tar witness at Miss Rato’ trial. .A A A facing trial In the burglary i last of the defendants, Clyde (Bing) Milter, who testified tor the prosecution against Miss Reis. Miller, who testified lavished more than 3100,000 on Mim Reto for the privilege of meeting her twice a week in hotel rooms over a two-year period before the bundary, to accused of tipping her that Rich had plenty of money in the safe. Rich nuda-tained all along that only about 33,500 in cash waa taken. He branded police testimony as Urn." The actual Indictment listed the amount Rich dahned was stolen. ; A A A The defense had contended that Mim Reis had money that Milter had given her and also money born her stepfather, Sidney Rate-kin, of New York, stashed away before the burglary to buy the Celebrity Room night dub. in Philadelphia, where she once had danced as a chorus ghi^lriM -si Community National Bank of Pontiac £££££&£££ iuswn/«Lnsa»““ E. Berlin Kids Paid for Tattling Youngsters Get Prizes for Telling On Persons Crossing Border Texas Senator Slams U.S. Aid to Yugoslavia DALLAS, Tex. (AP)-Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., says he always has opposed “trafficking with the enemy" and "it to my hope the administration “ RAILINGS '1(9 - BERLIN (AP) -- The Commu-ilsts are offering prime to children who betray people trying to escape from East Germany. Footballs and track suits have aid to Yugoslavia.” The senator spoke from Wichita Falla Wednesday night via telephone to 1,700 persons at the National Indignation Convention Dallas. The convention was organized to protest the sale of [been handed out to young inform-1 American Jet fighters to Yugo-mgn in the border area, the miU- slavia and the training of Yugo- per lin. ft. The “Do-It-Yourself" Rail With the Custom Look (We Do Install) mmmmmmrnf'mmimm Extra Heavy w mgr bh,l iMljj, iilni.JJC PORCH COLUMNS *13°° I I I I tary correspondent of the Communist paper Das Volk reported.' AAA | The writer, a Maj. Aue, said the vigilant youngsters were all members of the. Young Pioneers, the junior Red youth movement for 10 to 14 year tods. ■ A A ,A Aue gave these examples; Heidi Mallowitz told her father there waa a stranger in the border area. He alerted the police. Heidi was very pleased with the track suit the commander of the border rewarded her with. A A A Horst Braitke also won a trade suit after he spotted a stranger In the fog and warned the border guards. A stranger asked directions to foe border pf another girl Pioneer. She pointed the way “not to the border but to the border guards.'* The West Berlin paper BUdxei-tung commented that the regime Communist chief Walter Ul-bricht “becomes day after day more like the Nazi Reich.” Manufactured By Concrete Step Co. 6497 Highland Road(M-59) Telephone 673-0775, Add Beauty to Your Home With Concrete Steps and Railings A '• Open ’til 5:00 Saturday ■lav pilot* at Perrin Air Force Bam, Tex. Tower mid he opposes foreign aid to such Communist countries i Yugoslavia and Poland. ■ , _____ Another speaker, attorney John! uSflSIi Conlan of Dallas, brought the *«««» fiOffl*. hearing crowd to Its feet when he proposed that the Texas Rangers and the National Guard be sent to Perrin if the federal government fails to oust fiie Yugoslav Industrialist, 88, Dies PORTLAND, Maine (AP) Charles O. Poor, 88, a retired Chicago industrialist, died Tuesday. Poor retired in 1939 as president of the Vermillion Equipment manufacturer of electric automatic block signals and other railway equipment. OtoUntionY political ,Jtleal sukdiylilopa ...J0.mTlI.il Wdortl tmw bonk).... m.ooe.io tak ppeeeleei owned .....ts.0tl.800.0f IMtiUte ■MU e!5 uabujtiis lemand deposits of tadl.ld-1m sad mhw deposits W totetemT mam U»Itod*l rations. UtHHlM iauN-ii vwrr lunmn Deposits of bank. ... MW.W Cortlfiod 111 otflraW , . ..... check., «te. ..... J,0*».U*.»l TftwdMts iioj.ow.iis.ji Tot. i demand isaeu. Total Uabtttttte ■ ..llK.M*,teSJl cAprr/' “™*-" •pita) Stock: 5n»« »u SSirtobd sraimo'i j I v Total Capital Aseouto.. g.M7.M4M Cipttd AMfioto ..............|1 11,001,803-IT MaEf mu aa showneboys Include United Metes Oor-trnment obligations pur-ehaoed from othoro nndor rotorroo of ......-•••••• •al. ootato loan! Insured anteod bp VeUrana' Ad-mlnlotretmo—Insured or ggnrSBlto* portion. Mm) Housing Admtn-l.tratlon Tltlo jropotr •taUmsnt loans. 0* the ostml cowed by lnour- MH.71IM TtealAmodPt of .teana, CertUlcatM of mtento and ObUtbtteaa, or Por-tlon* Tboroof (Mod abort), mm sro fully hacked Or Ineured by aaanolsa of the Untied State. Ooyernment (other than "United | t a J e . Government obligations direct and rr M. MoLsodi Cnshlor aoro-named bank do Mat thlo report at oa...... ,j - and correct to tho boot of my knowledge 1,101,110 11 Four Pontiac Men at U. of M. Workshop Four Pontiac men will be among 40 from the state of Michigan who will attend the workshop on “Physical Fltneae Appraisal and Guidance” at the University of Michigan Saturday. The Pontiac men, representing the YMCA, Include Jim Templeton, physical director; Don tell, Aaron Baughey and Claude Me-G ruder. Included in the workshop program are teats an adult fitness, Cardiovascular endurance,' muscular strength, Motor ability and flexibility. The group will study adult exercise teats and will later conduct a similar program for men at the Pontiac YMCA. The men will be guests of the University of Michigan at the Purdue game Saturday afternoon. REPOUT or CONDITION OF Pontiac State Bank of PontiM la tho Mato of Mtehlssa at close at bualnc. on September 17. provuioo. of Sootlon U of tho MMISta tlBOhOtal Initltutloo. act. ASSETS United Mate. Oorommont cludtni M.U0.4I drafts) ............ Bank premises Total A.aota •34.M3.M3 1) LIABILITIES Demand dopoalU of lndl- TKKN-AGE BEAt TIEN — Two contrasting beauties of the Miss Teen-Age America pageant, being held in Dallas, pose Wed-, nesday for ^photographers. The' lovely contestants ars, toft to right: Mte Uada Cheryl McSpadden, Miss TMKtet of Lubbock, Tex., and Sharon Kay Htehyr. Miss Teen-Age of San Anfonfo, That. ' eaamtnod by • jeieyer Death Notices -SSir aT s&j'M &im m. *“*=an“ —“I itfl Un Vtth‘lUr oflS H.Mh.y Proabytorlan Chttreh, N.wark, !■ IRaoinrtoni i Parent., itr. and Ifn. Orowr A. Porter: Mom ^ ltuth; Brother Harold. Douphtor. lotty; and Orandaauihur. Cnrtotlno. Funeral Directors 4 Donelson-Johns ,‘D«3nSt*ifer^!5»*l**' C6ats paATTOI^P&afs110**?* MTW SPAiun-aairTXN chapk. _ Voorhees-Sipl© • testeSe* Owe to Ytea — Cemetery Lota ___________8 4-ORA VX LOT XN WHITE CHAFE I Garden In the Spread «f The MM MT MM S tU 7 r SINGLE ORAVE IN SECTION 3. Pony 1ft. Park Cemetery, (IM — BOX REPLIES At M (JR. Today then wan repllae at The Free* office b the folfowtag 8, 11. U, SI, M, 81. »1, lie. no, 117,- lie. Help Waatad Mah t « EXPERIENCED WATER eOTT-toor .slotmon. Leads furnlthod. tOm commlMlon. Royal Water Softener Dl.trlbutor. l»*«E.Au- L O, OIRARD I. W. HUTTXNL l. R. SLDRXD U,«3».M4.M 133.N3 N owned fureituro ships, and corporation. .. U Drpot.lta of united Mateo Government (looted lag postal savings) ..... ...... I Deposit, of Mateo and political .ubdlvlalon. ......... j Depo.lt. of bank. .. ...... Certified and officer.' ebook*, ole............... Total depo.lt. 131.M3.40771 Other Total uSSmU* profit. Reserve, (and, rellrem. account for proferr capital). ..................., Total Capital Account. TSUI l.JM 00 » 1,304.031 71 Account. 034.Na.001.il IteORINU Assets pledged or t.signed rediscounted an Uo. Mid with to repurchase) Do ate III of Michigan (tm dopoolU of a poiMeal .ubdivl 1. Everett X. ■ tale of. -.hided In Mateo aif 40.M7 00 ... _____ — ___________ -loot. Vise President at tho abere-naMM bank ——— “*iat Okie report of pamaPil,._____ correct, to tho bo lay knowledge and belief. EVERETT X. 0ARRI80N rRANK A. ME] JOHN C CO WE SMITH MUMm Stats of MleMsaa, County of Oak- ___13th day Of October, ISM, ^ . hereby certify thot I am not on officer or dlrootor of this bank. ----------r TATLOM. Notary Pubbo, Oakland i atop, i iis, Oet. around 15 years of ago. Mate .bo a torn school araditto. Qood starting salary with oar aOow-anos furolshoa. Liberal plan of company bensfUs Call «c apply PE ten Associates Dlooount Corp., IN N. Saginaw. trfii s PAf. Needed at oaoo - I men. ablltty for svsotng work Owaraateo or rrfll tearing. Cah Mr. MoDroy. 1-0933 8 P.M.-S P.M. BARBER. PULL ‘fBHL m HAN. SEE SERVICE MAN-yor^Lawyote OolllMnu. Eoogo cARpENfiM, BuIldHIis ~ aok laysrs MU—1----------- bldbrook 0-1 COMMERCIAL - WAIXCD LAK* proa. 4 men over It aoodod immediately. Part qc full time om-ploymsnt caU Mr. Mavis, MA 4-1411 after 4 p.m Earning S13D Weekly if aei, lnvoitigato this oppbhm tty in route sales. Must bo married. 13-34. high school education, dswiodobli oar. ie abio te fur-aUb flionoiis and have the Mod m_|U? or aoro weekly, hmt OR 3-MOT to sot up lntor- CED TREE TRIMN Isftrences. Phono a ♦MW, Bh> hopTigirw.__ tools, superior Auto. MS Oob- EX^ltNCED TREtf iMBag Oood worker. No outer nood -np- s1«Tmbrs,«Dw*r,rpSJa:: Press, Bou fib Firestone TIRE A RUBBER CO. Hat openings lor salesmen with management potential. College degree or equivalent work experience required. Starting salary up to $6,000 per year plus bonus. Excellent hospitiHx-ation and retirement benefits. Interviews at Firestone Store, 146 W. Huron. Thurs., 2 to 8 p.m., Sat/10 till 4 p.m. wo bate no gimmicks or gifts tor our custdmsrs. Wo MU duality and service. Bams deal to i Uke thU tree eolith*, which'has given d crimp la our field, aa Uko UM opportunity to o teflLp IP Y ton I day*! MA g-trig. Halp Waatad GUYS AND DOLLS . Earn $$ After School Bgnggt ambition and n pleasant tslsobon* rate* art all that * needed. Oood. steady Mtemlsslons possible If you ooa talk on lb* telsphoae. dee Mr. iffi at *«r iowatewn routlsj office^ no la- ir teas I p.m. this w< uron St., offlee 3M. Experienced preferred. vFlll train aettv*. ambitious person* o»or M. ATTEND CLASsn MOW. Phono WELL ESTABLia ipany offers training program, ••iflcs and flnaastel help to man who Mb stoesrs Company ear bo tjftotogd. (budiiiii* — “ ~ tonftto. lWLEIOH Co. Write M flM- Cooloy, 114 W, wssw. WANTED AT offoN. RAJ.-dealer to N.E. Oakland Co. D^MQIASM Empfoyiwat Ageedefl 9 Legal Secretary PLUMBER Aged 30-44 for oorrioo and' repair work. Mood* oorn small tools . Top •alary to staitr sltdwsst Employ 8ft & a#**- B Inatrwctlofia 10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER lfr, 1961 FIFTY-OTO Work Wentod Male it M Wanteg Mbroinmini JO Rant Apt* P»1»til <7 Rentfaoi • Furnished 39 Room* With Board 43 OPTICS WUITUM AMD MU> I Wanted to Rat end rubber Inflatable Leal la Northern i ga:: gggggE ?■& OTg.* udj^TS?\JEi ioiTaa . . 1 Share LMng Qnartwa 33 ■ww MODERN I BEDROOM HOME, ranch type. upni flneatels. Tiled throuabout Ui|i closets. REASONABLE BO! I4IH Oakland ATI _________ ROOK AND. OR BOARD. IJ4Vb OaklandAt#. PH 4-MW._______ WANTED ROOK AND B100 par month. MA 1-3414 ■ walled itk*. ncmi. \ Foomb. i Rent Houses Unfurn. 40 Family Acceptance Corp. ABILITY surs&rsrsus: SSiJsr.S'LAr&r^i'sa ARRO REALTY ims Csaonuaat-^jmml yvgfp&s.^ APARTMENTS _____i. KrmMcd. “ VICINITY AIRPORT 1-BEDROOM. STOVE AND RB-frUarator furdiebad Call before «:00 aja. Adults. PL »-M»1_ BEDROOM NEAR PONTIAC Trfffnfafc—** | i^r IRONtNO Bfbr- Adults. RipS . . •nSru=______ cement work, patios am pe memT nmI— | COMPLltfi LAWTTwolg, OAR- ^ **"^ *** gay*1' v^Mj; Rent Apts. Uafarnlshed 38 Or taw la •mall, call >nu waLTi«8r» Qjm, ---1 ROoW'pncifNcf Broker. RR Etta. Lake Rd. #L ABSOLUTELY Ttfa-pIsfEST' AC- UT 2-BEDROOM BRICK NICHOLIE - HARGER 53 W. Huron FE 5-8183 la Hwp. OR war IDEAL LOCATION PCM SALE OR aarrtaa Mslaaai. Attractive 13x34 buUdlat. Baa I Mas room*, eom------------------ Additional Mad plate plumbing arHuMaT CRT i oornar Oelf. i OFFICE NEAR WILLIS SCHOOI Ideal for raal esute or ft Mop SPACi AYAILABLS NOW IN AIR _Carta| Sagas. Bldg W.'nURON gT. NEAR HOSPITAL. LSO WEST OF PONTIAC BAST BORLAND, ao MM Mar Duak Lake Road. IS month heat and QtaaMa. PHONE FE 1 AFTER 1 FM For Rent Miscellaneous 48 ■ MAtoM AND BATS. M» ADULTS » ■* Mennoalnoo. FE Mjat. CASH tw» “fH-***/ Building Service j s i Fhuc*No atatfte ■ HAUUNOAJ4D RUBSISH. NAME your prtoo. Any Urns. FE MOM. hadlIno an d |Bn And Aeosasorloa for Mar* a wBwSt* nUTer GET OUT OP DEBT WITHOUT A LOAN! tank peace of EMM Rnr Protect £?VStJT Avoid saralahmanta and repotoo Ws*haT0 Ma aapartaaao aad a ■ m LAND CONTRACTS HOMES and EQUITIES WRIGHT J &HAN R&6Ug AND BATH A,,to,nsirtUobffi_ |75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 Ht Baal Blvd. N. at Talaaala i^jSSa; mi A Mfornim For Sale Houses 49 MEDROOK (Ml DOWN. MS month. 443-3334 IMMEDIATE ACTION 1 JOB PAI4JHLT Now ffbBT-HA0UNOn«A85NAltE. i ail PiHHI. City Adjuitaient Service FE * ““ B AKD'fcArt:; w -s* *■ * lafaatory IteiRe af ’opFoarnTMAi Member £K FE* 4-SOOT after lam. ROOUS. RW*tofc*At«-- KMJ&iXF 1 °l’ rii&JratLr. All typoa. Par frao satM1 —■— ---Tries, am Jahn W. aryss?1: m RAT^RroSrjH Painting ft Decorating; 23 , fan may qualify for ■ honofRa. ANNli. OaO Mt-oaoo 2Mb Orchard L>. f ^ SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS ' SHOP AROUND—THEN SIS US CAPITOL SAYINOS * LOAN ASSN. __________ , ,____________________ 3-BEDROOM dual Uka new Pan haaamaf. braeaaway aad imraft- Poreed al hast. Oak floors, lane comer lo* Near lake. SIMM WRR Sarmj. JOHN iTVERMETT 2stsn& m WEAL ESTATE , Kit S. Teleariph Rd. PE M rasa, MU down, take area V j 1ST CLASS PAOmNO AND PA-per hanslnr. Thompeoc PE 4-*3*f AAA PADniNO AN* DECORAT- x aiml'o konotto. Aga ai-TS. «JaU tod./ far faithea Information. PE Hunter's Imuranoe Wanted Reel Estate <6 SLATER'S ; A-l PAINT1NO AND DECORAT- j ALL CASH n an pha neuinns k nro leaving etate or aood y quickly call si for tmma- day Lake, oil furnace. OkToWI « ROOM MODERN ON BAST WAL-Mn Mar Baldwin Reference re- _____________Q« Mill. 3-BEDROOM HOME. M60 DOWN. MO month, gfML prise, M.1 Some mlae. furniture. CM11 ] HIE aftemaane. STORY brick. 4 bedrooms. 1 bethi. aaaed MaMeae illMO. HAROLD >. WEAVER. REALTOR S. Auburn Rd. UL 1-3731 Mutt atra referen aa. nSHW. R DECORATOR KA/talr lent i yearn an. Juat desarnlsd. No down payment laqumd. 1 year's taxes vtn move you In. WATBR-PORD REALTY, OR 3-4SM Srm^MhB^'tif a£ ’ !■/«? s^io^uirTr' 1 man. LMoaaad bnUder. 8nSi W5 easF.j&rS'.srs MICHIGAN CRE&lf COUNSELLORS ; Pontlso'a oldset sod largest hudgat BUILDER NEBDe 1 OR MORE Vacant LoU. City a( Pontlse Any area. Part Action by Mftt. CALL. FB MlW. U K I SEE. RUtUENO tXsri . IDROOM. MODERN. aaMI> A' Children to Board 28 Lorrsins Inmtmont Co PR I-34I3 I ROOM .TgBRACT ON SgMIl, I monthTlnJBB call FE «■< ___________iwlwFTLvm. wv plo proforrad. rtf„ FR t-OltQ - 4-hook Lake bomb with LIST with ue Wo haw# ssyeral buyers, for good )M HOtrBE YEAR ROUND, .e PflYttOgoa. MA 4-3141. LsLjaaa—x——am ; OI LICENSED Wtd. Household Qoods 29 A. JOHNSON ft SONS REALTORS FE 4-2533 its# e. tblbobapk mBss°guArpcJ}*% & J6n APiRtMENTf - 4RO S!.WdttRu«k.T«t,T. MML &B4' Ka. Using rm . so. AT 4 ROOMS ANDElMPWHn gee boat, 41 Cartm. PR 4-41M. 4 ROOMf. NtWLY DicORATED. r60F§ : NEW, REPAIR CAVESTROUOHINO FE *4444 you naKe rr. tr* Can build LOST IN THB UNION LAKE AREA Uryt OoQnr ' *• UR with UR I ' TRADE Wl OL. CASH ON AN FRA 0 r6u NAKE H - ifE ItfBJi'HI Oulnn's Construction FE 4-4133 j 14 iTEm tNMWiPVPk tag on. Reword for Infor- -------a*5. ^•..^r^i" ■■ L^ou* ^oiu^RD^ Community AUCTIOW. OA MKl. -_™ M ML __ LET US IRON OR TOUR REAL ESTATE PROBLEMS. CLARK ‘RIAL ESTATE. 1111 W. HURON —Ml llrmlnghsm - In s beautiful nttlng of apartoni landscaped [rounds. CboHig 1 kodroom tor- Oood locstlon OR 3-0134. -orM^dT MU. Ego. woekehon bldg. 4 apple aid pooch Ceos. Bpn 4 ROOM RANCH HOME IN WA-tsrford Township, gw month * ae • rooms win * earn. C_ g IMIIMW. Union Lake 3-TUI. , 52 FRANKLIN BLVD. 4 ROOK! AND BATH. OIL HEAT. L. R. Middleton 111 Boards 3 Vb Id. Ft. I s llWjm. pins kiln dr 11 Toi Quality Bpru iss .11 u. Ft, I x 10 44 14. Ft. lx it u lT fl____ Mrpart Lxmber and l OB 4 -1M0 Miracle aaua mas seen Lakbvtew ConsaMaaent Noma aad Square lake Area. Okaieaalgray. ll" et f itirillm Name •Tfaldo.” Tag has name ETA. P. John, end I phone KI I Brick Flat—Heated ______ __■■■I Attractive lem femlly building Louie Herat, ifigfi. PBIMn. Jm AOw^m., SekOT ^ Rent AgU. Fnnihbei » SeXgSfc^^'^S ---■—d. 140 ^r month. "hr.n« OOUPiSr P1UYATR BATE &b » ROOK HOUSE FOR RENT $9,500 adieam rei__ lot. pan basement. • hart, birch ewp- ; RUSS McNAB -zTfmmr COUNTRY APARTMENT. 3-® _’. UL S____ CRELLE DR. BIUORf River U.8. M. I I Including ti side. PR A-3M1 reome'Cnd heUi up* duplex*hoUM paV* in Pootlac. sher i pm. EM The e Rert^Ert. Oh COUNTRY LITINO JUST ll MW ms*b«: ranee. Adnlte. f* hliW. 3-ROOM BASEMENT APARTM . Aiphalt Paving Heating Servk> Rag Cleaning DRIVEWATS ASPHALTED AND I . ulROI ROOM BASEMENT i rooks. BEAimFutx'f rtm-ntebtd. w»——M iyhoMdtnfts ao drinkdf. FE ^ ------FSiX’.e. Telegraph LAKE vftStA APf§T EURARBTR LAKR PRIT- , srstoTjtadl>all ntlliues furnished. PE 4-TOW. MODERN »- BOOM TER VBT7SL SSir-fi^Sbi us a- lone yard with eut- >0. IM month. MA Clarkston Real Estate MM S. Main Stroot Clarkston, Michigan ______ ma mi A BEAUTY basement, OR- _ . pci^iyAiid^ddl^ ( ML OU • nq«lf«4. _ — 1UKIUTT like front. Wards 1_, srsjr&sats&t MODERN 4-ROOM APARTMENT. BOAT - TRUCK - AUTOMOBILE 303 Auburn Asa. * PE t-U‘4 Foreign and Sport* Car ServIce Sewer Contractor* ChUd rm^we^come" »«r montti^Ap^ I rooms sad bnlh, around floor, ptaa bnaomant and garage. All HMaMKrUMlS ■ Call OR 3-1113 for appointment hoot. HOI per NEAR CENTRAL VlOH >CH^ s g*k iffl; IXCELLENT 3-BKDROOM HOME la Draytan Plains ersn Lease i only. Rrtersnuj roqnlred. Write Pootlac.Press Box IM 4 ROCHESTER: 3 - BEDROOM full beaement. yard. M Meadow t ASffeAtr •tea 4-room home m Lake lew en fares gj61 IBiMIUt. ns 101. >300 down i Itk. Lease, de- E1.WOOD reaLI y. IMPORT-SPORT OAR SRI... (Hi Khan From SenEa 111 Orehnrd Lata RA BM4M ^eldi^lnrtaUed*0 CaU^ Frank PntrUk. » "OR- "trm.. bath, lit Hoar, bssamamt. LARGE Bnildlng Materials eaal fnroaeaa. BtOan. fit1 blocks, gstagn doors. Baste! daore. widows. y Dore Wrecking Co. Ill Auburn El. lMPhlEEOOPEOAIUKIalK.fi. • 1X3 PURRINO STRIPS, »be Ra. ft. 3X4 Kiln Dry Mr ...K IK. r H Hsrdbonrd .........IIUI j StEwpn for CoBect>r» ; 3-ROOM AND UTIUTT ROOM l^rt flow. Pvt. entrance. Coople ■r^slw.IK.ya.KM, Manager. II Ealmar St.. Apt A partly pB*ni4h*d aSrT-imrI i “ mijlMRMNU^h _____ SSSuSl.wtMl"{ tom-nuis nama. tats. 3-car gangs 03.000 down ana t contract. PE 4-3133_ BY OWNER CRESCENT L A K B Budding MederniKEtlon A-I ADDITIONS. PALIfOUT S Uts. Hr--n*v— Crete 1.. PAUL ORAY1 jtliunv. rsbirou * om-w- loose Raising. Oarages. Ceo. ora fxa° coStwa cTiNa SxKKPIr PJywood ... UJI PONTIAC LUMBER CO. CAgE ADD CABBY •31 Oakland Ays. PR 4-0413 a#-TiwiifikivjwtS 4?® fal -kits pine boards US B. R. . I fir 10-14 R. IK bn. ft. casing ....... tic Us. ft i Bslgbta. UL i ii mu fiaai A^HENfl*, OTPEiC 4 INBOJ Kt'------------ LfeASfi WITH omow TO BUT knell mml mojwm home In ■ ...i ds. suburban nelghborbo. prtyflaggC || s^rsa month. fKyd Rent. I bSrt'STbot •wSSna moSmn iiMk iiiw iow Television, Radio nod Hl-R Service At Sylvan Lskr Corner weeded let. J bedrau. and Km”---------- Drepss, carpeting and fireplace Built-In eppUs tached heated situs MA MW. '■T&JVZLJU -- If OWNER. b - 3 It' St. ana . 40% Waterford Lumber "yh/kd °*fn0R 3-TIM MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE DAT OH EWE- PE l-IMd ggajagfc,4 or 3-nii VNIR, 4 ROOMS AND BATH, haeem sat, affalknt Mar ga-I. a0x400-foot lot. fenced yard, ma— aupboerds. eloeeta and Plywood • MAMS atoek a ell those UnoriBw ARD SPECIES . Oet ear Brtaea before you My 1 SHEET cm CAR LOAD Plywood Distributor pt k. c— “ ““ C TREE SERVICE rUMP REMOVAL irlESk^ town, utUttlej fur ROOM, PRIVA1 end bath, utlUtlea pis, adults FE 3- YUK Apts., « s 3-ama am* • 3-43M I, Lake horn Ith l child p atwaga speea. 113,100 with HOW down. _Lxr(a discount *“ dMh r FES-ISlir | BY OWNER 3 BEDROOMS. REA JSL! HBARLT NEW BRICE TERRACE. I bedrooms. Oround_tlaw. SMI Dixie Hwjr. **'“ i. Rawra Nursing Homes srgWKgn v/EisT. iSauIurn' irasraw|^ mee clean J rooms. aHTh ra- B***f. •» mots in Qnly_(l.i0»-f rlgorator and atlllkes furn. Park- _a«._______________________:—- plans. F homes. : OR TOUR PALL PAINTING dona BOWl At fan prtcea. 4-7140 for fra# aatlmntoa. DRYDEN REST HOME \ i call. M S Dressmaking, TailEi'klg Licensed boaaa. Bg. JR « arac-wstssi Ret Hukeee FnrnlEhEd 99 clean. _____ Only M.« I. LAUINOBR REAL! i skli i....W-’ JOHHL !-BEDROOM, COZY. < utllltlee supplied 4SS-I4TT. I BEDROOM MODERN OOTTAOE. ** bedroom S. vi jMm/gjL-. lot. 10 min. N. of P«ShCKM to lakes and schools Country Bv-taJ^WHk neighbors, UK ma. rent wmt option buy nai E. Telsgrsph Rd. -- irwwff - Waal EMa. I up, T dawn. Exeel-—rrr. FE MgilalUT TO-________________ rage, beach prlyUtaac. One heat. 1041 Yoorhels ltd FE hWai, Excavating NON-CHALK HOUSE PAIR . INTERIOR LATEX ....... ■ >i « ; Trucks to Rent ! **mT JCD BATE. PRIVATE. iSUAMpMl g—uwp—i—i Furnlabad. Can. MY >0441. 3-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT. NEAR r frontage. Near St Pat risk's Schools t«3-3ll» COLORED 3-BEDROOM HOMES Floor Bending *-&ir2rts£s.xxa% (mtufll, MaiMB IM MEDIATE SBMVSOB ON Vi ■ BlaatatlM Joba. OR 4-1KA -i rUnraixo ajid REPAbts Pontiac Farm I Industrial Tractor Co. _____» * WOOOWf^ f tM1 _____ s Mammae, i 4 rooms anO ratSIpu* nhItd 1 "rndTRe mo. plua utlll- Oarage. Oae I1M leaaa. $iod5wn 3PMMB lomttans left i payment. MY migkbirkBad.' Far wfy »7,i yoa have |3.Me Is —- —* ■ toms mors bomai m HnaAjnjm ify ream. Nlcaly taadaeapad. An- S5MTA«ttXrtS garngh This la lost Ska new aid “'"IS JACK LOVELAND -v -a can. Lake Rd. K-K4EI COLORED ^.s.rasvsKr«aB: 1W East Huron, FE AMS*. 0B TRANSFERRED. MUST ABOUT MM dams a 3-bedroom kewia 4 -»SrrtrU:-pri#E. ALMOWT Oim AWAT down payment on this 3-bedroom on Otweo. Low down payment, oi MW ARoI* 4-bedroom home ta good pond man. Ante beat, gnragaa. Yours an Rkaral terms. | to I FRONT, $300 DOWN choose from. NEW taken heme with i bad- Hft 1» down pL0 q ... BBS DOR »ifn on RMbuhi fR f and shrubs. 3 lewSy Ledrooms with double closets. Modem to . the gtilsK kitchen, large pleas- J__ ksmSsbateman only ana bJortt from the a—Ml. Ideal for tarnUy with small aktt-dran. Cheaper Kan rant. Priced v only at MIM. gW par month. Jt tachullsf taxes and MMfaaM. 822*2*22** MULTIPLE LMTIEO SERVICE ! ENGLISH COLONIAL _ _ Km 1st. Elea area growing enlldrwa. til,ISO, A term*: LAUINOER REALTY, PE 3-ain OWNER MUST SELL Raw 5-room bUBpalnw on tb acre “u. Pull beaement with mdt Automatic ofl Rani. “■ uown, balance Uka. rani. Ml Watkins Lake Rd . ofl Raott Lika Rd. _______ ROCHESTER - UTICA I M pared'atraat.1'llIjS? at. DROOM bungalow, ge, 110,700. Terms SACRIFICE VACANT... WIC^NOWJtfSc^P ter quia ante to only |113.300 with istjg^sr/rSs& and mm. NNl M I ail. M ^i'ta'S X&I&R ao why mn Let's trade WEST SIDE ment with tiled floor. KMrn sharp: Ewan carpettnx Kafiod. SSL. lLsT. SPECIAL ------------ LETS TRADE. 4-badiaam take - front Mmo, WiMwiaa mt i_____PI Use. lb balk. Raw terosaaTMgga well-shaded lot. Bate batblna beach, aasnle rtaw aver large taka, SIMM K family tersos salt. I4.7M. Tarms. REALTOR FE 4-0528 FE & 161 PL0TD KENT^^ REALTOR Sale-Trade-Lakcfront "BUD" „ r’VSZK&S?', place la KISS rustic bring ta_| Aluminum rtdtag. ltb-car garage KSffp l I lots for Income anal dda. Reply .-'m^lsir___ __ fcrsssj^f a.1^ Webster a« tw$ LAO ORION - OXFORD Extra targe older hews wtth sank merclal frontage. Lot III a 331 •11,710 wtfc MHBta WWi C. A. WEBSTER, ReaHor OA Mill ___________ MT----- tion, 3 bedrooms (offV--,. '—rkjrsun3% WILL BUILD HURRY) "Bud” Nicholie, Realtor %SK9JStffSSS -------— * After 6 pjn. FE 3j37P Don McDonald ucmnqrojroiLi NICHOLIE t BUNOAL Sw ZERO DOWN Mlalmam ataatag coats, 1 bed- PACE REALTY OH 4401 BUILDER lOALOW^1 N 4 4f tgwn. gow- MULTIPLE WmO 1HBOWTW IRWIN dining area Kitchen and a mace NwWty daaaraloA Tn Smell down payment yarn POUW-PAMILT INCOME saa^sr-a&ft l large kite run baeemenl lent, recreation i __________ boat. Ptorma acreeas. I lota. It.SOS dm NICHOLIE-HARGER 3 bed roc Puli kai im DWt mlae this a rjsr wTwflhSi”1”' ■uraui Full price—^650 Homes-Farms mss Watkins Lake prlrllepaa RS offered al 0<.*M. Automatic aE gaol. gta«— *~ *-- ^^Sla uhSiP is, full basement, tear garage. IN IT YOUR trAET ttMUUf TV everything. OIM Mil pwl immediate tala, leaving ! fcrata. lll.BM. Sett. DANDY RANCH tag. privileges an Creaianl Las. Redwood wirtkiroonl storm wKdowa and doors. iBW Bgir. POLL PRICE, rt.K#. TERMS fAN YILLAOK - brtah bam# ^Vtarga_^aggk EMd—nHW: Laka eloao by, Oeraar wtU naoapt !® JliT SMITH WIDEMAN m Val-U-Wav OTT .FM GIs $50 DOWN lot 70x141 wtth garase. Homs ef ~ te, astir ter a 3 family. On Auburn Height! Income Pontiac Fence Company OR 3-6595 30MS, upFer uMitms milClchsd. IM Norton. WMM4. 4 ROOI^S AltD BATH. ON'LAES; Rentab-Equipment « JS#. SKMkVS ta Ponttaa rraac. Pox «- For Root Rooms 42 For 4alk or nMV wTir SP- --------------- n bw~ ■ma nifvam kfit- sawftSLm*'Ftma CtAAN~R05te PO« mnn CONTRACTOR*E RQUIPMMfT. ! ~-is wroar*a tama- Wmt a Hoots aim. PK 44344. DOUBLE NO Oil. SEPARATE bads. Chrlstlan hams. 47 ABtaan. House Insurance, Off Lake Front, $300 Down ismgS* ^L2«i ; FltblSBftNAL ; • OBMJBiA*, Mth I axesuont ocndHtona. Ml Ypsllanti and bntha.'-asraaUc tOa. Drape* after 4._________ x near oknkrau SPECIAL BARGAIN Sti&SjpUS * A^ Wmt Suhmban gynkSs-wAtSi COLORED iarruisra i SNlff ramfrTwo THui rujiuiit riMiAa, immtoiJAi < • ' •« V • UCiumm A». i)wi > JrMJki STOUTS Best Buys 1 *Todoy &KS2*2r$a.B5?- inum screens tad itirir‘ matlc MliCliU OWL to* a ■wtjKT'iw [SYLVAN LAKE IO « bPfttoOR Ml WMieett. s built-In. L*kc Mid bout prlvtTegt. Pttead from $31,500 up. Open Saturday ud Sunday or by ap-jjotattnent Phone (63-1114. M3 UH O WARWICK^* BON^ WEST SUBURBAN I So dream — Kitchen and DWai ■asm —• Mi Ream — M Sms — cmdet Mem pptoMft I MS — Mom. | acre M — HM wttb MS por MBte. WRIGHT m bar* vision you’ll _____ Price reduced la M.SM tor idtk sale. Sanaa. CLARKSTON Ton’ll enjoy aabaabaa living at ■’a boot to MatMNMM nwi. food schools. abuTbaaa. aad Sip ping. Lai us saw you (bit 1 bedroom boms al onlv in 100 with "oil faraacs I Oreptsrec. ] with tanas. (pptaulmeto only. AS good sited rooms. Built In CbU now! US. Laoblas tor a real valuer ^ "** • CRAWFORD AGENCY toad down payment \ WALK* FE UM m «. nan *tr hmi COLORM3 SPECIAL — cat I SI S2T nw' UK* down t XL"J5. total price wit 4-Bedroom Ranch BeautKal quburban brick la Waterford. lib baths, playroom, carpeted being room, etl bant, potto In haok yard: Class to Mbaab aad Sawn, ottered at Holty* 7-Family Larfe apartment heaoo tooatad I the village. An Opts, anturnlshe with private baths aad entrance . owner fnrn taping beat aad bat water. Building tat excellent condition. recently mslatit. Otrar W. .'Huron Near Hospital Brtak thidroom with extra lama living room, dining ream, gun-re eta kitchen nod's baths. Scar garage. Ideal tar pfiitoetarasl aw. -BMLMai Clarkston Mill Pond 3-bedroom home with aluminum •Idtnx. convenient location. Lot 600 feet deep with ample maw (rootage tar twlauatag aad tog teoao down at radaead Relit H. Smith, Realtor . BARGAIN — COLORED S Bedreami — Rice Stoe Kitchen — Dining room — Living room — Owed to tram porch — Pull baaemi to eakper I rJSi? Rice I Tap S ____ Mt — Price arty gut* as aa' oHer — First good altar gats the break I WRIGHT Executive s Lake Front without question this le eaa at the best torated aad flwat built better homes to Oakland County. I spartoas bsrtreemi, anaiaally beautiful solid Cherry paaewd ttr lac room wttb custom designed natural fireplace. Olsamtag St. Charles kltshw. S .nag garage. Family rasas wttb lad brick fire-place arertoabt erne of the area'i most bsaatlfal scenic slews. Avail, able to yarn tor many years o! ewgtoH and luxury Bvteg w com PARTRIDGE AMO A8SOC.. REALTORS 1M# W. HURON PE 4-3M1 Chesapeake BAY MOt>EL 965 Carlisle 3 Bedrooms Vanity in Bath Faraily-Siaed Kitchen mrn?MS to*C*rUxle> **“" OPEN DAILY . 11 to 8 ALBO The Hudson Bay Basement Models SPOTLITE FE 4-0985 LAKE KsfllSi . - TRI — QUAD LEV- ___ - RAHCn ROUS. Ptt. teach, park tor ntMtoft*. Prised it 133.500 Including Jwmroi lot. HOWARD T. KEATINO CO «. Lww Laga Rd. V, mile east of Orchard Late Bd- ttodall OPEN tB4:3B SMtr tswtt Thursday 3 BEDROOMS • CHEROKEE HILLS 2 FULL BATHS . 'HIS NEW HOM as exclusive a For Isis H^sas » RED BARN No Money Down •Jam uaotgese Cost) The Orion Star Pull Basement Pane Msk-Oas Boat The House of Ease 1 Bedrooms — Paw Brtak mat — Free Carpeting Attached Oarage The Oxford Squire The Expandable 0 Bedrooms — (ton Bemmtad Oae Beat — Him CU Matts Large Wito-to Claiatq Just waat at isot w tizuh behind Alban'a Country Cowsta between Late Mm and OnM. OPEN 11 u/b t PM. Dully meet with recreation i hot water beat, tales! o FHA approved. Par additional informs tioa phone rotunda aad waabomds PE 6-1764. NEWINGHAM MB monthly am tbit t bedroom boaeo mi % aero wMh abode trara and garden apace. Pull Price oily **.M*. H. C. Newingham, Realtor UL333I*____ Brick ______________dream brick raaeb home near Waterford High. Two ton baths, a 16X33 aaalwad parch, aaaamiat, —* prot rationally terraced yard a frets. Cakottr CRT CONVENIENCES — Will be yours whoa you paiak"1' **■*■ lovely ) bedroom brick faWtondieaped wttb __i tetem Mf _ _ hest. glatsed-ln porch g garage. Immediate pommslon. *10,500. MODELS OPEN DAILY 4-7 BEAUTIFUL "FOX BAY" ALL WRICK EKTBUQR — t JM> d BtnWOOBli — attractive 3-Car qa------1 — WALK - OUT Call for further information and directions. GET TOUR EQUITY OR LAND CONTRACT HELP YOU OBT THE HOUR OF TOUR CHOICE I , * THU McCULLOUOH. Roaltx fully Iliad n< terad celling, ooacner ana incinerator. Large 3-car at- ' tached garage, IN’ site nicely landscaped and fenced. Chtaosst watt ltd* location. Realistically priced, pee it today. Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor ’ It West Huron. Street FE 541*1 or FE t-tlW ANNETT 2-Family, Terms mrantoal i tatoctpwto. -HWL Maceday Lake Lane 1-bedrm. 1-floor home, SM ft. water (rootage, beautiful fatally atyle Ml chan llelng rm. with fireplace, all steam teal. Landarapad tad feme ad lab garage. »11 S00. tome. Drayton Area Brick Raaeb. S bedrmt.. dining area In family style kitchen, ceramic bath, toll tiled basement with gas beat. Incinerator and water . softener, atom, storms and screens. Alt. 3-ear garage with elec, eye door, cyclone fenced . yard, paved street and old-walk*. *17.400. Terms. tor children. 3 .fireplaces, f BARGAIN DAYkwgjjgjjwsr. EVERYTHING YOU WANT can ba| found to this lovely 3 bedroom brick and frame, ranch. Extra { large dining area, full basement, gas beet. 2-car attached garage. 1 Cyclone fenced yard, black top ctreeto. (tear grade school. Lake! 1 privileges only 016,300, *1,000 . down on FHA. n kitchen with I type fireplace, W woe Hw heat. Inter-y special features. Att, Lovely Home Has apartment. Extra largi I betas room. It ft. t. bedrooms are 14s-l.ealwr this 4 ACRES—5 ROOMS Stream and Trout Pond 0 seres Of eaeolletA garden soil. WMh Marly a thousand tooo of read frontage aad bardariag on A spring-fed stream. I leaf with a nice 3 bedroom raaeb borne teatarbw aa gggenn walk-out basement wttb targe windows. Atoa IhatoSoS o bretteway with A Jana, » garage. All m ea-cellent condition. Only 00,000 wMb 11.000 down. ■ LADD'S INC. 3000 Lapoarld. (Parry* MM FE *-0301 or OR 3-1331 after 7:30 ONLY 3,LEFT bom s». I 10f(e rooms. 3 bedrooms with double alee etc. Large ■*|pt reom. dtotog room end up. In llw pitnuta ktachsa. Large fpgt-Uy roam aad hobby room. Oa let os large ae U0 ft. 'rootage aad US ft. deep. CMU to schooE shopping center aad lake. The ekp-ren will ' enjoy the baatoHal wooded area, o acre pork on tae lake giving residents Isle privileges. Ideal late for duck hunting. (That Mate la aeaxiy. Be one of the lucky onto Come oat now aad lookl OlLHO full price. Easy terms. DLORAH BLDRS j >Pda l to If, FE 34133 I By Dick Turner WWW KtoMIKHOUM “TV ahowg set mot* unbelievRble all the Urns! Look at that! Three parking spaces in one block!” Ft Sale Houses 491 Ft Sals Houses 49 DIUTTONItt 3 bedrecat brick, toll basemenL gas boat, garage, large earaer lot pages mreR, comm. wakw. ton priced at 010AOB aad will eenslier trade!!!I Call W. W. Roes Borneo at Of* >0*11 tor. BUILD A ROOM, 1-FLOOR, NEAR HURON Builders Sacrifice Now yea eta own your own Home with a lewtew down payment. Tam wee a We So to home to excellent eowdlUen aad la wender-ful west aide location with lake prtrUmee. Large lot. Attamwd garage. f large bedraeam. Mew Sot wmm aagito. Forced air fMMto. Jamm A. Zuehlka. Custom Bldr. OR M71g 3 to v PJ*. LAST CHANCE1 Three 3-Bedrm. Homes Leftl MOW "O" DOWN no MORTOAOlHcom NOTHINO TO MOVE IN f Seal* Humphries » g- COLORED^ ySu basement NOTHING DOWN to mi Herb tteMl teed bam*. Close to McConnell School. DRAYTON PLAINS — Large 0 == —i.—. -—ellent LOW FHA TBRMB — Rear E__ era High. Nice two bedroom mod- MUST BE BOLD — I bedroom brick rancher with lore# two ear «aret*. *r‘ —~^t~ NEAR SCOTCH LAKE — large rms.. fireplace. Dining r« t rm. bungalow oa large M 406 ft. lot. If roe want a roc bom# this to It Priced at < 112.500 Terms. LITTLE PARM - Just west r frontage. Many possioimies svf*. Only 017J00. Call Mrs. McCarthy. EM 34163. COLONIAL RILLS — Ons of the very best values being offered today.. Repossessed brick rancher with large two ear brick game. Full basement. Two baths. All real large rooms. Full dining rm. Large fireplace Built to oven and range. A^bomt really ^ built below coate. Newly decorated. Easy terms. Call tor detain, FALL-OUT SHELTERS INCLUDED (OPTIONAL) WITH 3 BEDROOM , HOMES COLORED ZONED COMMERCIAL. ■»»»<■ wash M operattoa. Extra lc-. _ 6-rm. older home In good sseB- sv ------------ CONVENIENT TBRMB. etranted 3 bedreem baa* with a large lot. MilO ft. plenty of play inn tor the children, separate dining mom, good dry basement. aereened porch. Total price *6,666. Call Mrs. Reward. FE 3-6411 Wm. Miller Realty, W. Huron. Facebrick Front Paym’ts Less Than Rent $10 Moves You In) No Mortgage Gists Oae heat-carpeted brine room ^DON’T WAIT—BUY NOW! No Down Payment Weetown Realty PE 33763 afternoons MR after » J0 pm. Weetown. ReMty GAYLORD CASH TALES .for on"- BUI FIVE lots with this good six-room bom*. Basement. Aluminum siding. 1‘v-csr garage Hardwood, ” “ “ “ ’’ i boon. Plastered walls Excellent CEDAR ISLAND LAKE. Thto homo 1 kitchen. 3 bedrooms. Down pay- has all the feature* tor eomforte-36663 Me family Urtog. 1M bathe. Built In kitchen. Specious living room with Thermopane window - looking water. 3 nedrooms tiled both. Btsement openL lake lerel. Picture window. Finished recreation area. bar. and study-den. Lot g*xl74. *17,(60. Terms. FE *4*41. HAYDEN HIITER Six ACRES, near Clarkston. raaeb boms, largo kltohssi. built In store aad area, aluminum siding, lots of (bide, terms. NORTHERN HIOH AREA, 3 bedrooms, full basement, gas boat, fenced yard, tarn* to edit, see this one today. NEAR PURER BOOT. mreg-Vb acre lot. 4 room* and bath with partially finished upstairs, only tS.500. QI term* or on tend con- 40 acres, vacant land west of Pontine, *500 per sera, Cell PE 3330R B. C. Hitter, Real Et- tau. 3300 r** O'NEIL MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE IT'S HARVEST TIME AND IP YOU OWNED this 3*b ACRES yon could bohsrroalinf. ----- toh are Uto MY MR). WE HAVE IT now. A large 3 bedroom bosu on a corner let. 1 full baths. New kitchen cupboards. Got stove Included. Also bas gas beat. Total price 313,006 with good terms, call MY 33131. Lawrepee W. Oaylerd M E. Pike « at City Hall KENT Open Daily 2 to6 P.M. QUALITY HOME AT AN ECONOMY PRICE 3-BEDROOM tri-level, o uoo •«- ft- of living sr“** *■ closets. Large family ____ ___ kitchen with dining aren. Wl build on your lot or • ours. N mortgage cost. We arrange l nanctng. On our let 30,604. Lows down payment If you own yet - 10.3x10.3 - llsff.4 ' -6.4x13 - Partitioned . Ree. Room Tonne - To suit most any- one: This team le bare to beak. IN TROT - Vicinity of White Chapel. Delose, one-owner red brick bangnlew having I king-site bedrooms end lTt ceramic baths. Dream kitchen. Basement. 3-car garage. Seltd value at git,-300 with only 10 per cent plus closing costs down. Ton can be the tint to see this one ae this to fbo first time tdeertleed! FOLKS - HERE IS A DOLL HOUSE. It consists ef 4 rooms, lovely carpeted ltrlng room ana den. Beautiful recreation room In the baeement, and torely landscaped yard. You will really’Ukc this One. $11,700. M.300 down plus mortgage costs. West Suburban. &d» H oases 49 Perry ^Park Two-bedroom boms an Mg. earner s Tem». Retiremefit Home Four raom* and both wlU basement, gas MfO, gas heater. Cash priced at: MS JOHN K. iRWIN ft SOHS—REALTORS ___ M3 West Huron _ Since MM Phone FK 3044S Eve. PE MW MILLER completely furnished and rented ok W weekly. * spacl—------------ and bath down. M 3-car samaa. A Ufettme ally, priced a* *11,1*0. Doat walk aae R today. BRICK 3STORT. Attractive wed side loeaflon. Webster school district* spacious reoms. m baths. Mtok Wreptotr, atom, storms end eereene, Soft, bullt-la trseaer. ~ car garage. Nine wild neatly lam scaped. A home that wifi eh yen the comfort yon desire. (15> —reasonable terms. WILLIAMS LAKE PRiyfl-EGES --- - -|.bC(j--- ST lake. Altito. Stan glassed-in porch, fenced yard, rare bargain a* only **,(** ird. A William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 6- Enron Open d ‘ twcof— Proper ty 50 - 2-FAMILY Promt 4 roams and batb each. Good rental tooOtltn. Close |g (AMO. terms. C^renceCRidgcway >8 W WALTON BLVD Templeton INCOME 4 rental unto*. AH completely furnished. Plus owner's t-rm. apartment. 0 full bato3 .totoSte ;a*i per month. 3 tats, glen said location to ally. Reasonable down pay- K. L. Templeton, Realtor "v orchard Lake Road 6330*0* For Sale Lake Property Sl II a, WILLIAMS, PETTIBONE ljkefllnl homes, (0.000. **.260. *14.060. term*. H. Laperle Brok- CRANBERRY LAKE — Its ACRES oo M-5*. US’ on water. Phone Belleville, Mich. 067-6674. Ball L. FISHERMAN’S DELIOHT. PON- best. 3 lakefront tela. All fMtced to. Reduced price only **.600. Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 Northern Property 51A ACRES NEAR ORAYLINO. Ik mile from Au Sable Hirer. 316*. FE 4-4067. j__________ lodge ( nlsoed. gas brat. AU modern cl SrIs jhilftE Preptrty g7 rrM’YrwK*LKs to thU/toto. Total price. Lite PERRY STREET - Re oomer locsuon. Idee dreftat or etbrr rata . Acre** from ASP a Northern Sigh. Wei Realtor, fk Mist. dbpo5u* Monty to Unh « ,lli mil Mien Tirder*>..., TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. .MAIN ^14 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO jitm ______,T SBRVICE- CtoMt Atom BUDGET YOUR DEBTS CONSOLIDATE BILLS-—NO LOANS to»SfK?^ Financial AdviJert, Inc. 3Vt S. IAOD6AW H 1 Attention! tor, dentist, accountant, toe nr. I men, eallga* dealer and et*. * yen sen purstns* eommer. property an M4A vicinity k#M Hvigbte. Only a mint-i ff ggpi= — r- -T_/*rt far lto’ highway Ite Plenty M perking si Reeled eep »S5ir ““Ev^^sa Businest Opportunities 59 ■toe^^wuMA, Ml 74W3. Hagstrom sp6rting Goods Owner Bred. Excellent opportunity for e live-wire. Wonderful bunting end fishing aren. Mala -—’ 1—Men. Modern equip- LAUNDERETTE Good location, good income. But-toett and equlpmeot. Only *3,606 j Mftrtlftf. j 1600 to $2,000 _ Oakland County hornet, mod* Voss & Buckner, Inc. —) Nattocnl Bldg. **»* firug^pp^ id feerB°D.rCharlet, EqulVtble Form Loan Servlet, 1717 K WBW grtph. FE 4-0631.______ - kojftY AVA.Lglff.* ..w?y trecf*or "morStge^^Alto. to lm- or fa,jMiNtt It n MIW. r WOLVERINE WAGE-MAKER. “aUher'^toJSM& grated car of equal value. OB 346TO. _ » HO^^Jb^SONOR jREFiua- * *av and motor. OR Suburban Hardware One of the finest family oper Unit anywhere. JEmOam location on pared hlghwey to lake area. St w —w -— *—■ bldg., ptas a* Mdg. with fend HAVE DIRT AND PLAT CON-—‘e. need power tools, mortar *r. cement miter, paw** (MV* no jjoe tamper. Cone's Rental. COMPACT LUNCH Nett, sttrectlve. Nice I on Dixie Hwy. Property *12,*0*. *4.500 da. MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LANDME88ER. BROKER 1*73 TELEGRAPH RD. FE 31463 OENERAL STORE-GROCERIES, meats, dry geode. Clean fresh stock. Mato comer location Very goad business. Ill health reason jjp jgju^fryWBjjfcs l o. a. Urge kitchen aad neck, brerae-w*y, birch panelling, raetoeed patio, basement 3MK turn celling, knotty Ptoe walls, rec. room and bat. Uto floor, two-car garage attached. Will trod* I" * bedroom be* -FI 3733*. a beds FeY-376L~ LONG WHBBLBABE TRbclt. stake body wttb power end ante; »ka i short wheelbase damp i*3 Trill swap. tog sta- truck I tloo wagon .. _ you? MA 33*00. MANY GOOD ITEMS, SELL OR? Market, Drydsa, Mich, RESTAURANT—BEAUTIFUL 1 ting on almost 3 acres at 1 4 bedrooms, Urtog nuav<>r> Completely SUBSTANTIAL EQUITY IN PON-1 boa* tor 'SI ear. EM 346*1. TRADE EQURY IN 2-F A M 11 Y 7 MP4 -3771.______________ ROOM HOUSE, (as beat, gong*, reasonable. To settle estate. 135 Wesaen St PARTY STORE Low prle* tor this beer-win* store. All - good fixtures. Oae boated building. Flinty at perking — WILL CONSIDER SMALL HOME, contract. Income, eta. en large new tri-level. OR 3-11*1. Nelson ■Mg. WILL SWAP OIL FURNACE OR “ space beater tor gas space tar. 3410 Eastern, comer of WILL TRADE 11 Ith regulation track a newer-- | —1 LIST WITH US and trade. 33 Open 04. Multlpl L. H. BROWN, Realtor Pb* FE* 335*4 or FE 3-4*10 weather shelter* barns wttb M bo lly home. Rochester CLARK piece. Full bsm't. ree. space wit nreptee*. Landscaped, oaesge Sea wan. Bee this new at *33,60 arSuS *3bedrm - ^ fireplace. Roomy 'uichea. Btmr . and oil heat. Oarage. Attractive circular drive. Shade trees and met View of Lake Oakland. *12.-000- Total price. See this. ] LAKE FRONT INCOME — Now I showing an Income of *160 por mo. 3 complete unit*. 3 five rm and one four rip. 3 baths, 3 all furnace*, etc Some furniture Inter 113.000 "with 12,500* down *U REDUCED — Attractive 3b*drm ] DORRIS 34X40 RANCH ROME. (11.-40*. 1136 down: Por donors >be*t. _. __erful 1 C Being Mcrlflced 91 WE WlUs TRADE I - ANNETT INC. Realtor* 28 E. Huron St. I Open Ev* ' EAST MANSPOBLD 3-bedroom bungalow. 3 blocks to schools. Corner lot 50x133. Beautifully landscaped and -Anehor^fenelnj l'v-csr^js- eendttlen. Rich wall-to-wall carpeting. Water softener, gee furnace, price gn.700 or (red* *™“* up to *17.101 ARRO Daved street., , l from *2,50 iRECTIONS WILLIAMS 1----------- TURN LEFT TO ELIZABETH LAKE RD. TORN RIGHT APPROXIMATELY H MILE TO OPEN SION. TED McCULLOUOR. REALTOR 5143 Cass Elisabeth Rood PHONE 682-2211 EAST WALTON Near aew university, 00k240. Good locettosi tor raaeb type or tri-level. Hoar grade school. *1,600. PONTIAC REALTY Baldwin________FE 44*7* HI-HiLL VILLAGE A besutlful spot to build your own home, where you may bo protected and assured of future value. - Plenty at raom. Plenty of hills. Chqtce sites located on winding pared roads. Excellent drainage and good walla. 120 s 160 tor tlMO with *300 down. LADD'B INC. 3434 Lapeer Rd. (Perry) M3* “ ■ “ - 3-1231 after 7:30 THERE’S A LOT YOU'LL LIKE AT _ CHEROKEE HILLS! Controlled to protect bette homes its 100 ft. wood*** »«*»*■«' sites offer appealing c location — Drive out Luke Rd. to Scott L Turn right 3 blocks to LI '8-7711. Dab ALL SET? YOU BET! ! Buy fids exceptional vsljie in Co-1 Mtlol HIUsl Lovely landscaped feneed* lot. 3 bedrooms. 2 fire-' tftft-M tolte re*, raom. Near Woodward. Square Lobe Road, j MAKE AN OFFER 3dKf /(*■• home, enclosed glssssitlr front porch, fcnccd-ln yard on S nice street With plr”" Of shade. This home needs ._ decorating. U you caa paint CALL JfOWTEow, tew prise I DELUXE RANCHER A bewHtol Ram so brick au cSZ *l»rge T ESrnuvaSc picture window, Tcnn. lcdgcrock fireplace.- radiant heating, wall -won carpet, m cere life tile i •red fiktT kitchen bullUno, *er lty room, family recto. Den with bndHb eheivH, 3 bedrec— . torn Urtog pod dlntog MM ,_ to chbft cupboard, 32xto garage, ewagr ^blll wacrlfloe tor 33.500 dnwtete* this If you are p'— — SefpgtT FE 8-0458 MM Wt (terra near Telegraph DACgitjpf SUNDAY 1TO I FI^CE A -LOST” AD. UR FE 24181 for an ad ___________________WL. to rcMrtr ft kps. Diftl FE Dorothy Snyder Uj^ndcr 1 Rltel-----A Upfto*™ill ^^iru.7j 2-8181 for in m writer. FE 8-04661 HOYf “For that' personal interest - 1270 AIRPOfiV RD,1 6-room brick, ranch, 3 bedrooms, llvlnc room, dining raom. kitchen, built-in oven. *440 DOWN *4.650 Vl beater. 4 rooms screened rear perch, < furnace, caret*, only *10.700. Many^motejtof^iocsC'trom, t YEAR AROUND FRONT. S3,M0 Late. Catpetu Full b * SCHRAM Iji I Near Drayton $11,500 254 S. TELEGRAPH V 24*00 FE 24*41 MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE Unai Front Completely furnished. Small. bcdrmTx extra lots, M.S00 level or ranch starter homes. “—^ -•*— ■ —- model. CLARK REAL ESTATE MULTIPLE LISTINO 0°8ERVI KAMPSEN EAST SIDE Near Pike at, Five -raom bungalow, i porch, basement, eat n«c — (MM — 41.00( COLORED GI Nothing Down Two totally Income ■ place, urge cement pstla - ramie. kitchen and: bath, home burn In 1M3 and k) top condition. Located . fenced corner lot. nicely lend- FLATTLEY ty i Bonder Commerce Rd. 3034*11 ATTEJrrtoiT nryksfong N to 247’ frentoge on fast imiB MM. Wttb a quaint 4-bsd-im modern home. Lot 3471306 eft and bentos. Low taxes. ---------27 — Terms. aabtirwKt* porch, oofner lot, paved FURNISHED INCOME M.3M — (700 pn. This one win par tor ltsttf -Conventional two family loceter tn North side ” 1X71 V Open Evenings features. (3.5M down. $100 Down Carpeted living room and hall. 3-bedroom wifi wardrobe cloe-efe. Oas FA beat on 50x130ft lol. In LeBeron-Msdlsoa-NoHb-ern High area. Only (laft.ee Idck yours today. ' IVAN VV. SCHRAM , Realtor FE 5*9471 0*3 JOBLTH COW. MANSFlfcLD Inc. 1 ■■■ Stic I 3 bedrooms. largo living room, smalt dew. MM down — 30 per cent discount for cash. Consider boat, trailer or ear as doira payment. 43 HUDSON OFF BALDWIN — Drive by, don't disturb. In our opinion this eye-ap- WMTA In perch, new gas furnace, 10'j-block basement and good garage Is a wonderful buy. Easy FHA or Ot OI 47,460. 3-bed room bungalow. Vacant, w «B move you In lmmodtatoly. Modern kitchen, tile bath, oak floors, garage. Off Baldwin. 17* ei ■ 3-bedroom botot. »t t. In goad feeeuoa ( paved street, bus service, cent tot. Might trade. *10,6*0 VV. R BASSjRkBltor •’SPECIALIZING TN TItADEI" Bulldar .. PE 37316 -----------5EbR<5oir'^" MULTIPLE I riNO SERVICE IOOD CREDIT we wm sell you e nice 2-bedroom with U acre of lend for balance due on contract. «MM et 661 per month, r 7 1 A. C. Compton & Sons HOME or neat, G.I.'s No Money Down NOW YOU CAN BUT A RANCH HOME wttb a basemen* for a monthly payment you can afford. It’s located west of Pontiac on a corner lot. Very dean and well Shears old. Lake priv- CHARMINO 3-BEDROOM BUNGALOW. Beautiful living room H& «y CARL W. BIRD, Realtor 3 acres of around. West Sub with I BLOOMFIELD WEST It MINUTES 5 * «y*2Lfro5L”w?,°wn. Priced i Pontiac 1 block to Cass Lakt cloetoig' e&U A 7061 7 ACRES. . __ automatic oil, ______ 52' b,vr3Do»te8gd tars Uke fi°nt fruit tree* end oeriiee. . Only 3^bedrWa 115.850 on terms. -I ?lievel, J 5ffU5iSi.S,,^35S: If 1 TP t at m James K. Bird. WILL TRADE. Bring your deed or Land Contract. - RUSSELLYOUNG REAGAN UL 3-340* Builder - Sate Bsshwiss Property 97 106-FOOT FRONTAOE ON DIXIE Highway — 433 feet deep - Masonry building with ever 4.000 ■square feet *- Suitable far many types of business - Ldbk I* ovsr -it may suit yours. l63Feetfrentag/ee M14 nrarOlKle Nett to FUneral Farter — Corner WkJft- U„____I a,.‘n.vbl?,kp.x.usrt#rSii Sale Land Cftfttracts 90 Money, to Loan 61 fLtoenssd Money Lend***)! BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY Where you can BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pontisc — Drayton Plains — Uttet Willed Lk., Birmingham. Plymouth LOANS $25 TO $500 On your slguatore or other seei. tty. 3* meaiha to repay. Our serv. “HOME'S’AUTO - LOAN CO. 7 N, Ferry St.. Corner For Sftk ClotMw$ 64 1 PERSIAN LAMB COAT, SIZE It. 37*. 650 Menriminee. FUR COATS, 13-16, *10. OIRL8. —'1 *6. JtotoL *4. i suit. M. Boys 3* r. *7. 3* top Coat Lovely 34 ■ jacket Uk* i 111.662-0*77. HOURS. HT Jtoftm polk*4ot. Drag*_________ 16. Brown tweed bey's cent Ms* 6. OR 3816*. MINK SCARF. 4 SKINS. EXCEL-lent condition. MI *4*36, f 8ABLB DYED MUSKRAT OOAT; j* dyed Squirrel jacket; exc. WEDDING GOWN. SIZE 10 elate ion* sleeves wtt 674.1812 WEDDING DRESS AND VEIL. site Il. toO EM 34603 after 6. Sale Household Goods 68 1 5-PIECE DINETTE, 113, NICE Whirlpool dpi? *46, sectional bookcases *14. M Clesn-Ouaran-teed stoves, rsmg., and waobsrs »}» atkJHtaaa bedrm. **”3 piece living rms. $10 up. Duo- rv'tfobim? Odd beds, springs, rugs, dressers and chests. Everything in used furniture et bargain prices. ALSO NSW Bedrms.. living rms., bunk beds, dinettes, rugs, frames, bead-boards and mattresses. Factory seconds about to price. E-Z _ ftUY-SELL-LTRADE Bargain House—f*3 N. Case at Ift^P*4* FI 24842 5 Monday and Friday J f'DIUWl too youth'’size „ both. OR 34736, VP to fast, friendly am.________ TUtt. J* ™ 1W»^rtttdtti qrk Whits si 0»i and elec, itovn ......$ Blood bedrm. »ulte complete * WllDff- a .— .......... ... IMKw IwTiTre^riarato* Signature Up_b> 34 months to repay. PHONEFE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Company >3 Pomlse gtsto Sank Side. CENTURY FINANCE COMFAN1 1M South Broadway Lake Orion MY Kepapre lroner ...... mju Davenport and chair, foam rubber with brown cover. oMSMi l Kitchen 'table'*** siS Cbasti. dressers, beds, springs and every thing . for the boms. BUY-siLLTRADE «^ FEarson s « Orchard Late Are. FE 4-TM1 - REJECTS. ftfAOTl-ft1«TinAwroo»m ,u,to» L)W as *76. Oil?. FE^ 2SX* ***’ ” *" f /ATCRWORk QUILTS. NEVER JjM^f^ltMtorpletures. dishes. Borrow with Coofidence GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance . Corporation et Fantote' 3to S. Saginaw ----- Need $25 to $500? See .Seaboard Phone FE 3-7C17 1185 N. Perry St. FARKINO NO FWIBLEM JScaboard Finance Co. tyHtN Vou ^EjJd *75. *62-132* Vf^rS ,^,JU,10I,AL TABLM’ chair, ta-lamps, bedroom sutteT BUR- Pt till 4 m, Petr- B0n s. ' If (VphaM T aba iwa irehard Lake Are, ______ year crib; birch, like - "ew- ra *•<. complete, MI 36*4*. •' Mf-YHJATOR REFRIOERATOR Excellent sond. FE *4671 - PUfCB MAHOGANY DINING *61- 4100, EM 30216. FOAM SACKED ' RUioi! VCTlsTA-------* I JM** tweed* and Axwiln* I'll 4-1574 | pads (tta. Fearson. ---—----------- ruroltuf, « Orchard Lr*- lllXlljl’ $25 TO $500 ,rv» .wm_*s glad to help you.I* STATE FINANCE Ca rSr 1M Pontisc State Bank Bids I sixes LOANS 44* TO MM - elture. 42 Orchard late set iTL™». a ■WLwKlP IWVST THE PON'TlAC PRESS, THUH3DAY, OCTOBER 18, 1961 ITFTT-THRBB' m Jb&ki XftfoftlON gdeHoMehoMOeods 68 'Brass imi ^xasHtseu ™p» ».«.ii'insns ■SftSftSftJ .,,„ _ uw Hhih ^ggr6"1' UTOMATtC EIO ZAO SINGER thrtU\a£nfe«.**Sltod “em? monogram* with dUl control. _ tnU%r1««. Ctu'wi *»lffVafioto? tdo WaiIt fjri St?® lit out of the way but a lot F#v3r\£m sriStr in* <*. * W* boy. tell or trade. Coat oat 84 W^TEI TO HT , « alltt V. of Pontiac or I Milt . MQBmHlIihU on Auburn. JSkSfiSL MODEL 8INO-rr avlnc at flat with me be tor Itaey atttche* tie. Paid down 2 ® T*?1 payment# of M. not month. Untvcrral Co. |9 'ito^M^roiTg: intiibM I wwtutmh USED APPtUfcCS BARGAINS OB Auto Wathtra ... I1M.M 555 ea $11* weekly. Guaranteed. . Proa delivery._ GOODYEAR 8BBT1CB ^OM URBAN RENEWAL SELL-OUT SALE! BETTER BUYS SSeSStSdCaff :!:::: VA Innerfprtag mattrwa . |is.M J pa. bedroom mite. Mt.M 3 ^gp^M^otTTirrrrpiB' m “* on mST* “ Of » Bn ila> Mm. «m »:» Berry Garage Door * Factory Seconds A ratable at thtablt dlaeotmt ■w^-ya. ----J inhw) .Man and _______._____. I ap. ftepia. wrought Iron. . A1m Trundla had Trlpla M OBCHAKD l Carpet Remnants KAREN CARPET tt» pm# »WT. OB 3-1100 CHOICE USED FURNITURE lion BETTER HOMES Oats Kroehter couth and chair Hi. laitjataatch tSST Limed WAli TIL* M" ........ Me ft. CETUNO TTLE ....... TVk# K ft- ASPHALT TILE, a*.........Mt PLASTIC TILS, ea. ...;..... Ma "Bwyto"* Tile Outlet aaw 1M1 tank type with all at tachmanta. CloM-oata. *11. Vacuum Cm tar. Call PE 4-41M. WE8TINGHOUSE RKPRIOERATOR Ilka aaw, M N. Edith altar d. WILL TRADE DRAPES FOR — WASHERS — AUTOMATICS. TOUR CROCE “’ja&u^oj’asr1 SPEED eujaH**... 115*00 Mattao wRnaoHB Mata WYMAN'S your old autto rpfardleai at afft or eatatttoa aa thla aaw Apt. bedrm. outfit, bookeaM had. doubla draaaafc cheat, ra>lllant aprlofa, aomlortabla matt-- 11 E? Huron FE 1 .M IS W. PR* E-Z Tarma PE HIM WANTED TO BUT HOUSEHOLD anode. Odd Ma or |MM fun. Waalao tar tool* Can PH For Ssle Atisceflaneoos 67 c£osMg srw:a£s SS.^SXiUlSCiS: er at coat. Evan* equipment. *M7 gUM Hwy.^MA 5*TW8._OR PIMA Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY jEMENT steps, ~rea6t madS) ~— -------—-BAtanas Mht. PE 8-1P41. iSS. ■ ~m—HE8»*if* ATS3 era.* om»d. auluhio §mc wwy tor. atnk and I double hung windows with atorm *a*h, ilka aaw. PE 5-7453, By Kate Osann r Saie Fete 79 Ssk Farm Bqdpuel P Beets A Acre—flee W ______MA OR 3-731*. Wit miniature poodle, ____ Hcyaabrohen. Immunlaod. ■teEa iat '>JS.iaan| TrlHSS aad^H»»»!« PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDYEE USED ’ Mtnnrapefle-Mgleno, traetor, l id-tom and aprlnc tooth drag. tranirolielon Mi iA. jbN M hour*. Exc. oondltloa.- g.vaster a a® t-1. etiti. BOAT AND TRAILER, 13 P60T. iff: I foot beam, pjywt---- _ anchor, etc. line complete. BOAT STORAGE PR IDA T AND SATURDAY LUMBER AT. WHOLESALE ML r Mas Ma each K S’ tonf. Ma each B ir long, la a foal M ir lon«. Ite a foot 1x12. Ion* length. l«c a ft. Inaulatlan. Urge hag. Ml A. C Compton h Bona ran frSSmif wfim -gm r Me tah r5 — “ » “ “ I pc°tS!th nit wwn mat b wmm ‘aAlT3 m B. Sa" PE S-SIM OAS SPACE HEATERS. NEW AND aaad. Safita^MTMm. ODCART. mm OAS FLOOR” "FURNACE.' MOfc WYMAN'S Ouar. Electrlo Refrigerator Ml. Apt. stsa gaa atore . till DININO ROOM, MODERN. LIMED oak. dropUaf Uble, hraakfrnul. | 4 ahalra, reaeonabla. MI W DRYER; OCCASIONAL CHAU ------- ^.ORHW. atture. Raaa. HHM. DINETTE SET , PH M7M- ELECTRIC RANOE. IM.M frlgarator. IM.M. TV Sweet * Radio and Appl. i Baton. FE t-lUl_________________ E"! REMAINING DECORATORS 1 —‘— from Ooaalry oalle l and 22 from u t» m^wv Domini Bd.t Bloom! - THE QOAilT SHOP. AffttttfW. organ, marble mantle. unuauaU. MSI trooka Head at Big Bearer Road. Trap. Bonn 114 except —REFRIGERATORS— AdmlMl. Phllcn, Prlgldalra ’Norge and 01 Rebuilt by oar Samoa Expert! Tear choice ........'tai WHO . 1M H. bglnaw ELECTRIC STOVE. REFRIOERA- FREEZERS—UPRIGHT. FAMOUS CASH ifOR USED TV*. FCRN1-tura and mlac. PE MHl COSOO PLAYPEN, CAR BED. BAS-alnet, OR I-14H, ELECTRIC RAROE, M”. ISO- FE 4-sito or ph naai. PULL SIZE ELECTRIC RANOE -.toed condition — thallow well atwd. SOU Sawyer Street. OB FRffezfeKS—?148 Mama Mand freeaer*. All fiat frataa ahalTti. handy door ator-agt, iealed In unit, now In crate*. LITTLE’S APPLIANCES MIT Blila Bwy. ftSSlMB tb Mila N. WIlMame Lake Bd. OE REFRIGERATOR. ISO; PRIO-Idalra refrigerator. |M; Admiral *1“ TV, MO; Magic Chef gaa rmag. Ml, good condition. FE OAS WATER HEATER. $15. AUTO-matle wether. MS. Refrigerator, US. 11-Inch TV, good condition. MA Oaa Store. US. Electric ------- Hlghchalr. is. Harris. WAYNE OABERT OE REFRlOERATOR. S'. OR Hi-Fi, TV A Radios 66 HffBr Warranty FRETTER S APPLIANCE MnUCLE MILE CENTER HEATH KIT. STEREO AMPU-flar, ISO. Come altar t!» p.m. Itgg Berkley, Pontine. USED TELEVISION - GOOD CON-dBaa — guaranteed . gg.OO down OO&^eYr^&RVICE STORE B s. Caaa_______Pi MW For Sale Miscellaneous 67 1 SET HARVARD CLASSICS. SO volume*. EM 3-OBTO. 1 USED OIL FORCED AIR PUR- J JALOUSIE DOOR AND 1 WIN-dow, SIS Doetrahts buffer aad waxer, aaw ptaa vacuum. MA PH *-i«01 Z WHEEL 4x0 BOX TRAILER. SSO Duck boat. 04gT PE t-0004. 1 OIL BURNERS. 4-S ROOMS. S4S, bench *aw. MagfrU lav* mower. e.Umw. Largo Boor paub> 1 WOOD COMBINATION DOORS. * *tormi and Mrean*. er, Hrlgga * HAVE YOUR PARTT AT WALTS Hall. Walton aad Patry. PE MH3 “ MT MBl. Michigan0 Fluoraaaa? M Oh •alar. UgMa for hedraam*. kitchen*. dining roam*. halU, garden*. Priced not at dlteount but below wholoial*. Michigan 1—--------- 111 Orchard Laka-Sl. ah6 ic'“ H^lNfT llS!kror>UMP. ribbed barrtl, Cutta taf fla *101 M2U. ~ iTJigrw lap POODLE PUPPIES BLACST Ate. champlan *tock. MI 7-0417. POODLES, PLATINUM SILVER mlalatara, AKC abort ararag* laaiRy. rE nw yb immStI* j j> “ 4 Hoietaln cowfc hSToi af ftr I t&F&o£ _________________ ir AUCTION SPECIAL CiOClDATION ■ate. Sunday October ll*t 4 P at Hadley Michigan Auction Me Bsaf jpa#^ lgrsfe |f|n' him tory, Famou* branda. craiy price* CtOSEOUt BARGAIN Thompson Johnson 39 h.p; tlwctrfc, trmilwr. |io>rlng cove* $795 — $10% DOWN Mazurek Marine BAOINAW ut e. eltp. CLOSEOUTSALE m Orchard bSa Avt- *» Ml B&B Ola*. Crane'* Bird 'Q-J9 •WIMMAtaMAaMMAltaaH “One more thing, do you allow toll caHiT** For SdJe MlicellHEes— 67 Sale Office rqjripiMeiil 72 OAS AND OIL TA130TT LUMBER sa-A5a.f..,!’ “fa'aA WILL ACCEPT “PAYMENTS' OP MJS on daUnquent aaeaunt. Singer aahMalyla aawlagmaaMaa. S-040T, Capitol Sawing Canter. USED BRICK FOR BALE. DEUV-ared by the thouaand. Clyde Lumbar. 4WTN. Milford Rd., Clyde, Mich. MU 4-1411. WORLD SCOPE 10 Volume. PI ----- WINDOWS. IS STORMS ADDING MACHINES HaW. Uted, Rebullt^-'-rerna*" Qualttr—Price—Service "Mara taday hara to atay Pontiac Cash Register MT a. Haglnaw PE rrm NEW NATIONAL CASH REOIf vara tram UM ap . Haw MBS TWBSfS office. In Oakland and Mac^J or*Uctonr ea“ rSglaten u?Trarn.H month*. EM BEAOLE rtjPS FOR SALS. HE . 14’ SPARTINETTE HOUSETRAIL- “ snatratlsn at Warner * s*. MM W. Huron. (Pt__ „ la ol Wally Byam'l azcltlng Trees. OWarad M> I ENGINE AIRLINER, NON-STOP* Lot Angela*. Ban Frandaaa. ■*" Bervlat Inc. OR 1-I154. Wantei Used Can ait, 4540 Dixie Highway. Phone *J5 LU55. "ALWAYS BUYINO” ♦JUNK CARS — FREE TOP TOP Ml CALL PEMtU SAM AURN d> SON INC. OR THAT "TOP DOLLAR" SHARP LATE MODEL CAR! Averill's “.ss-ss. srtss-e lala. ahawar wk. nrregator*. tarrlfla value*. Michigan Fluor------I M3 Orchard Lake tLKRdlt SPACE -seat. Mu*l Uke all at UP. FE SIMS. 1 WOODEN COMBINATION STORM __deore aad MI 4-5341 AUCTION. OA 5-Mil. LUXURIOUS CUSTOM SOFA COST Mt MB SITS Chair f* Ml !" ‘"r I. OR 44MB. LIKE NEW OAK AND CHROME HlafefR table, 4 mitwilng ahalra. ----->5*1* Moat *35 0r«a plastic reclining eh_ ________ NECCHI VORLD FAMOUS «5 hair: Orti r. OR l-»lgO. Sag automatic Mwtag machine. Jut dial to put on MMaaa. da* algn*. bund aema, ato. without amag attachment*. Taka on 55.10 payment* eg pay MSU total of uw eoatraet. (Originally sold over MM.) tiall Capitol Sawtaw Center for appointment. Pfl, I »4Q7. PHILCO 17 INCH TABLE MODEL, new ptetare tuba. Mt. Mae. range, Mt. Peer Appliance* EM - ■ household good*. Leaving ___, rauat be arid. OL l-oaoa. T Oak. Recbutor. REMAINING DECORATORS venlory from Country Oallerte* Oct. if aad M from ,It to d M too . Duneton Rd., Rloomfialn Hill*. TEFRIOERATOR, PRIOIDAHti. 1 cubic toot, white, aicallaoi eondt-tlon. MI d-WBt, f ItlNBEAM MIXM ASTER. LARGE metal bg*V PMel glaia bowl, gEwroTsa Vff'R A TOVES ALL KINDS. tOl MT. •ale ‘to all Raw, agta po**u*ad. Over It i Hatchery__— -______ SINGER ^PORTABLE STRAIGHT rsta w2&?P> tdMS ahlna with mg lagger. equipped FE 5-Mli. Waite *. reftlgaratw, Lionel electric trait All vary good eaauL ii srbmtrWMBWfc nxir good condition FS 1-tlM. H-QAUOE SAVAGE H&TOUATIC. t lid*. 1 cook mn* With oven and tank. MA t-ld>t. 12 REDWOOD STORM WINDOW 8 gJO. One ^5-gaL^m*^ —*" —’ pedlaa, Ilka MW. * acarf. Real. PE 1-3*71 ________ 1-INCH TELEVISION AND POW-ar mower, ptoa girl* roller awl lea *katu. aue g. Ehoallant eoodl* ___________Pw MM5 _ PE 4-1111. m^iAL. pbO,m'fAitt. lio 681*1134 altar 4 p.m. and Sat. 1IU CHEVROLET to TON JICK- ____JBSmnBR OemBS up. to good Call”afte?'t,‘ rfir am tm in.------- jw «8a ° ** ***»"*• ALUMINUM SA-Bh CLOSEOUT" N PER CENT OFF ur&rtsr&Ss Ruitoleum JSffi 44dn rOHTt, tltit light* tor kltohao* tll.M HU faatory - manta, n Finer CM ant. Ml Or- MAHOGANY DOORS WITH PLATE glaa*. alao, fluib door*, ilaaa from yrr. Tryr, rii!itrr‘ r l"aT3”, varle* IVk” to I”, at while they la*tI Thla la a •peem11 O. J. Partel Antique*. 2740 8 Roche*ter Bd.. UL 14511. Homo to BMjWWIu — SoHlas all Malta tool*, truck, mlaar, acaffoldmg, plaaha^ wheel- ato. li.m tit all or **11 aepl •rate. FB 4-5a#L PE t-MM. keftICINE CARbikTS LARGE NT mirror. aUghtly marred MM-Large aalectloo of Uktaato with •r without ftobto, alldlakdoora. Terrific buy* Michigan Tluoroe-aaat, lU Ortaard Qei — la. NEW SHIPMENl USED EzaaltoBt quality, priced to pan. See^ ua far a& year building SURPLUS LUMBER & OIL SPACE HEATER. 50,000 BTTJ with Mt gal. ell tank, Ut- 181 w. jlton. OIL SPACE HEA' aal. oil tank, Blnnta|him. i HEATERd, N - kfw'ANS ________________kltll. OIL PA LENNOX FURNACE, 150,-000 Ma. Exarcycle, Laator Spinet plana lit ben aaaordlan. It' iabtoia booaetraitor 'IF Saaalad MORRIS MUSIC Mdt 8. Telegraph FE 1-0007 Aeroga Prom Tal-Haron 35 BASS LIES NEW ACCORDION. UL 2-1888. completely ""morris music Hdt S. Telegraph FE 1*8817 Acroa* Prom Tal-Huron BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PLAN CHOOSE FROM LABOR SELECTION OP ACCORDUMS, QUIT Alta. DRUMS. SOWOOS, ORGANS Aim MANY OTEER flfSTRUlCENTS PRICED TO SUIT YOUR PURSE , LIBERAL 7HAPB ALLOWANOE — 1 EPWARIFS 1AOINAW BEAUTIFUL BLOND PIANO, hn tt keyboard. OrtoagU made tad guaranteed. Tarma to Ntt. Ptaa delivery. GRINNELL'S W S. Saginaw PE HIM GUN SALE Bboigaaa aad nflea. aaw nan used. Oun repair aad acope mounting. Burr-Shell, lit S. Tab* graaErH 147M-, BULMAN HARDWARE Bnwnhig oun* Mil Elliabetb Lk Bd.. PM MTO OPEN DAILY ~TIL 1; BUN. >1 KELLY HARDWARE New end Used Guns Complete Una of baiting itoo^ihfKS/^rv- tatar --*•- —»— (*| y,a. eXoush pointer; maUL 1 mo*. 510. not Hire after 4:10. ENGLISH SETTER. 1 TEAR; POINT-er. I month*. OR 3*3171. FEMALE BEAOLE. 8 MONTHS PIO-ltM. OORbON Tran RtoSto - Apache Cam pa ^enlng*for taw'mid Ragator Pear Rum 3345 Dlxi* Hlghwa OI> 1-1458 ~ HlOH t K)R'UTE~ggDEi~ EUawaHS A Eaatto. Ha 84 DOLLAR, JUNE CARS AND aat, PH r ‘— —1— AKC, J -at a Back Lake. il 711. V year aid. 818. Hewtleg Accobi’fletm. 74A ORATLDfO 8 MILES BAEV. HQ. Dear man rata-w mu ail** a p.m. EM 1*1750. , month* EM 3 *300. ___sCfln. isc. totfffB ready for bunting. Call attar T p.m7jhP l-MTO.___________g LABRADOR RETRIEVER. BLACK. 1350. Call OL 1-1118. REGISTERED ENGLISH 1 135 Alia punt. 03. or a tor dryer. FE 4-3081.________ SIAMESE BRTTENS WITH RP yer*^ Radaaad tor aatok gala. PE SELLING KENNEL BITCH AND Vl-Mac* champion Al Kahrla Ami. tauB miniature white popple* AKC rertitered, atarted hunting! PI M1M. Hay, Oram tt Feed fiAT AJTO STJAW. l ELALS OR MM katog- Tit Sage " ^ ^E 44218. OR 3*0165._________ SECOND AND THIRD CUTTINOS «f Alfalfa ir— —1 -- Oxford Trailer Seles Y*Ra*0*aa Pamoa* Traveler bafit Sssri-U MMt daya. a' )DOUGH? „ jtaKrwairSSf Glenn’s Motor Seles It wide. Oardeoer rimm a ail lna a home* •( Ikt ■ Send, Qrsvei A Dirt 76 For Sale Livestock 83 BALDWIN ACROSONIC SPINET _dirt, bj __PE 5-41tt. ____MBps. sH TAioi s Lids oil < : buck, lachlara. moaph. iwittera. Omott PURlOTURi AMD ifA-chln**. u**d d**k». chair*, up* hol*ur*d (tralght chain. *-•>>-• atoraga fllaa. _»»U, work Ssmu __ _ auittth aflaat prtaa. tyaawitten sss-wr^srin wat Portae Printing A Offtaa Supply. POOL OAMKs“ 8 P6CKET AND hamper ta*L Haw gad aaad. Part* gad aaeatoa. U**d faka has rec-. ord*. Free d*Uv*ry. AA Radio and Electric Company. Mili Da-vtaon Road. Cider 5-1021 Pitot. -—sn—srs;—A'. til N. BAOINAW ______ triiriifntfuiiT'nfior-*T ucaiJbi" iSusic CO. .. IIP N, BAOINAW PE 54M1 CHICKERINO BABY ORAND PL aaa with Amplco player aad roll*. Completely watered Mi xletoar, aagd two wa m’‘Sfl *’• 5aA P. A lyt^TV......'.. 14 55 5" 4^n?5?V&»’gco c6 5U 1415 Baldwin Avt. PE 1-1548 REMAINING DECORATORS fN-ventory from Country Oallerlea Oct. 11 and 22 from HJ * “ 450 Duntton Rd.. Bloomfield ROMEX WITH OROUND WIRE. 58.75 for EM ft. raO. Na. I a— Stoa£atoL*^8M>Mlt*Si*t.0' ;S: »VSS ' • BATURDAYONLY----- ■tutrta ana aadltafaeiR aaa Jta tagfc Ap*-* Davto- Sump* Orea*e trap* catch baatn* }j:: dte? s: «:S :: tra dlamater crock ramp 57 51 *a. vssssaesrSns: Cover* and drafa grata for teas MORRIS MUSIC 34-M S. Telegraph Rd. PE 1-0557 Aeroea Pram Ttl-Nunm ELECTRIC OUITAR AND AMPLI-fler. FE 5-5551. beautiful ftoiek..ll8_ . cordlon. Make, offer. Ol-- "f*OR gALE^UPRIOHT PIANO. FOR "sals’ CABINET OS AND —■win by ortmill Ira*. OR 3-r^ ■1 TOP BOIL. CRUSHED STONE, wad, gravel, fill. Lyte Con'— M3-34ao or FE 2-8373__ BLACK DIRT, FILL AND ORA3 ___________fe t-ten__________ BROKEN UP SIDEWALK AND cow manure dtUnrad. FE 44371. BEACH SAND. 40-40 OR ROAD TTayjf jT 5 yd*. daLPtn^a^jt ' r-— v—, u.. nuntB. Augu*. llght-walgnt. Alao young cow* du* MM. Yoang ttock bulT III Efi - oood milk Goats. ________ wThsm ■ IrarSttle PouRiy^MS mtimi «»vw<^y.yi m your,elf. . IClIord. SPECIAL—WAStfED BEACH i_______ 880 yd. Pan OraraL 51 yd —Road Oravel. Me yd.—10A Stona aad Ovarataad Stone. M rd. FBI Dfri pea yd. DaUvary extra. AMERI. CAE STONE RD MA MIC.. RICH DARK CLAY L6Al4 aoll. • yard* far lit daHaarad. APPLES. 45c AHHhIL, PICK your—if. 3118 w. Long uu Rd. APPLES, PICK YOUR* OWN 50? — Brtas contatoara. Stoala APPLES, GOLDEN AND RED DE-Uctoua. Sprayed. Claa* L 3834 f of Walton CALBI MUSIC CO. U8 H. SAOUfAW »'•- ( Htoaiar dtpRgjpaa IMMEDIATE SERVICE Wiennd Music Center ________!&L TOP SOIlT BLACK DIRT, MA* Wood, C—11 F—> 77 ALBERTA LUMBER MILLS. SLAB ' ' * CANNEL" COAL. THE toEA'ilFtRE plaaa faat -Paraaw — fmm —od. Oakland Fuel and Paint. — Thome* St. FE 84158. ALL KINDS OF WOOD AND KIN* dltng. FE 54888. OR 34188. 775 Bcott Lake Rbad._________ DRY SLAB WOOD! S jsa'' Plants, Trees, Shrubs 78 Mclaioah, Jonathan. CortlaaA Snow, Oravenateln Orlmaa Oold* •a, Paaitaba. Northern Spy. and other*. Finer to afttRyarada. An at tow price*. HartMl, Woae, Coofiranc* tad Sheldon pair*. Oakland Orchard*, t mil* eaat “1 Milford on E. Commerce Rd. an Dal etia* _____ IMP ^ ^ctoto.h. ll.t^ luce ra ituaaaa ~**-*Ti wggaw — -—... . _ and Hr**1*11 wo00. Dial Orchard* 833 N. Coat* ----.IE - towTOA MHi APPLES. 81 BUSHEL. „ ory Rd., Otogaltvllla. ---------------------it SeUDRd. APPLES. 6 LEADINO VAfilEflES. Road. Uka Often. — es for r”- 118 N. SAGINAW _________ Used Pittno Btrgtins r Omni* fe 5-1481. A4 EVEROR81EN8, SPRUCE ala* fir, arborvlta* J uni par, yawa arid mugba. Dig year own. Bring tool* and burlap. to» SleeUi jStorwUom MU 44«35d ^ I. BEAUTIFUL NURSERY GROWN •vargraana. aulttvatad, aheared. •prayed, mate IntpecUd. IS or ttac. aaJpX 18. Cedar tana Mar-, graaa Farm.. 8878 Duda Hwy. Tu.a. 18) MA Alta. US'S 'SJJ^tal*OpankTu«Iday and Satarday morntog* 7:88 to wiwit y**•*="*• RID DBUCJObs WAONKR AP-ptoa. Orabata. lit Squirrel Rd. For Sole Pete 79 SNOW APPLE* STESL RID 'aP- 8M W > quality. Pwi jaur awm. 81.lt buahel. MI Hny I^eR«^Clarketcm_____ l REonrratBD spitz, with ,8»AIaahPnSATJ8lL PO°Di4*' dice OAdftfmfis jit BiMN STUM JAHSIM’S ISO. FE 8-2838. gb^.?GS«1aft. CUrttt fi***tsr Tag ms n 863 W. Huron at. WE MEED CARS! Especially Into medal PgnMaa* Cadillac*. Oldsmoblla* Bntok* Chavraiato. Fir tom nf**— “ ‘ M &M°\?oToR§XLES - 3887 Plata HWy.__OE P48M TOP BUI - CARS 5 D TRUCKS, WRECKS OR ~^5ei iSv8Brj i "WATERFORD PORDIjEALER" . _________________ 1 • KArUS^t.33tu^< I (At to* MenUsMta w»urjordi I-A frowb' o^yBfftKtk With UW ClfboTimfallprtra g*. *»?' m i-mi I automatic tronoMUoon. OL >-0011 “-*--**“ | |g| ff*- »”•) ujf.aBWMUf |?ApgKli- *“ The bathroom door te locked! For S«l* Cars , ----5—. < mrate Bn* November Lakdkld* Motor* icoUeot condition. J •n Chevrolet oorTsaraix ! wo n auto., power eteertag end ,_______ _______toLjrr _ _. law e. WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINGHAM in 4-T7M low CHEVROLET 4-DOOR SEDAN. Van Camp Chevrokt, ]& MH*OMP MQ4-IW1 U^GEldKbJST fiar-rkwVROLET brooewouD amo. If ton “^^vErtiBLes MeteWo MW ftntah. Only twj FALL I --------- SSBI& - NORTH -CHEVROLET ------WARD /** r 4-n3* 1*M FORD STATION WAOON. « cylinder sad | Moor, foil price (1M6 Lloyd Metier*. Uncoln-Mer cury-Comet, U a. aoflnew, FE Mill 'll FORD FAIR LAN* ■ ________ __ Ford Foiitono BOO. VS. Auto- I MUd new white tlree, on htaek aoUc. radio. Motor whitewall* I finish.--exceptionally dean, II.- ........... »H»5 1 c hw._________________________ HI DODGE. I D60R RAR5tOF. radio end heater. Up engine wtth standard ahift trsneltalsllon. full ^ price ISM. Lloyd Motors. Lineoln-{ferehry-Comef. SU A Saginaw. FE Hill.__________________________ ISM FORD. 3-DOOR SEDAN “A*jKooTm' Feafle^l Mwk .*• ?J&rlrvn ^^|TTfgte*44!>ddh wao5n" or WJWlr lnlormetion can ra. v-S engln*. radio ad 0411 ' has ter, very clean, low atloo«e NOTICE hardtop IMS Homeeteed. Water-ford, Mlchlgoa. see oftar I BJh. ■ REFOSSESSld^. 1 'JSr. iff^Sra^S'iiotoKt « ^D ^rrohnjNx^i gret payment due xs.sntst;^^»glJUHr RApy^y n Motors JM-Tllt] ER AND AUTOMATIC TRA 313 W. Montcalm | MI88ION. ABSOLUTELY -11 ' " - 1 1 MONET DOWN. Assume poymi of M7 II per mo. CsU Cn Mb. Mr. r • w Harold Taras OL1-13T1 Ufa Wto iUHUii*, MA610i» 1 ---------—wn. rt _ Credit as « Ia 4-7300. Ford. OR^A MS 3-DOOR, Lloyd Motors. n-Msrcury-Oomm. i TUm -azazzr model.iuw FORD cubtom m 4-doqr.I n ^”3i:---;--- ! SS5 2SssW? TK^^sSSBl^yiEMor. steeidSd transmission j 56 Lincoln Premier : wfu°b« liquidated for the hhlioee ^rld*'An11‘whlt|l’n5? v«f hetutlful. Ivory top. brenie ! dee of ast. TWO ear ms, be ^^,Ltr^fL41L7h2^ hodr full power, ueettut whtts-i claimed by taktog over weekly pay- walk. Tea mimt see sad dries meeds ef llJM The balance dee jgj*}?.H,gj SS°£- this te appreciate Nil MM. 1 may be said off la caeh If pro- S**S?S PEOPLE'S AUTO BAUM (erred instead of taklat orsr pay- "f*J—nlnBU* tnm yoB M Oablend FE 3-3M1 »—»tr—• uhT foto aqoosl v-A iyffilS:1 color Black HEATER RHP FORDOMATIC Equipment: Auto. Acyl, radio ABSOLUTELY NO faONET DN. am beater : payments of lit.76 per- BodT Cond- Excellent mo. Cnll CredH Mgr . Mr. Ftrkt UkL Cood' Excellent’. at bU 4-7500, Harold Turner.| Ml ear Is being stored by bad Ford, is be sera at Kins Alto Isles., “ “ — y**“k *n WeterleN DIO. HEATER. AUTOMATIC. AA SOLUTELV NO MONEY DOWN Assume payments of Ml.n per daily -and I to 7 Seturdxy. For beater Exti fMae *,... “■ * 1' NOTICE MODEL: 2-door, SERIAL NO: BMRM4B4 will be liquidated for the balance due of (117. This car any be claimed, by taking ever weekly payments of I1.M. Tbe! balance due may be psld off hi! cash If preferred fneteed of tsklnf Orel payments. DESCRIPTION Color; Two-tone Equipment: Ante and beater. Mech. Cond: Very Ot This ear It betas stored ,K*bi_* King 2-9131._______ IMe MERCURY COMMUTER 8TA- JEROMF. - FERGUSON I S5 TSJS ROCHESTER FORD DEALER I steering, red and while ftnleb. __________OL 1-Plll j full price (MM. Lloyd Motors _________,!rr5:.iUT?2fAlS; *S£z,:i9m Afiii00"**1, m • Mack ftnleh. Full price. (1.-1I51MO ROADWTSR. NEEDS A 4M. Lloyd Motors, Llncoln-lfer- little work. Only 1413 NORTH cury-Comet. 333 S. Saginaw. FE CHEVROLET cq ion S. WOOD For Sals Caw lOi ‘SI MERCURY UU NEW laperter Auto Sales. 340 Oakland 37 MERCURY MONTCLAIR, “ door hardtop, full power, att II --^-l iwTVh 1(13 MERCURY FOR SALS. AIM. Ish Reel Nice Only (4M Easy me. NORTH CHEVROLET QD. S S WOODWARD AYE.. BIR- 1 MS MERCURY 3-DOOR RARD-top. tan trite ww. Lloyd MeOere. Ltncoln-Mercury-Comet. Segtnew. FE fafil IT. OOOD O W UK tLEAJi Birmingham Tcades WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Pw Sals Cars . -- PONTIAC. 4-L____ r&n 1961 -------- SMB sedan Radio. Hester. White aMewolls. an taxes. UlM. As lew to WWM down. We tbs knee dEe prised eomper-ably low for Immedlete deUrery. rt raur Rambler deni at BIRMmGHAM RAMBLER m - SAFETY-TESTED USED CARS SuburbanOlds 311 S. WOODWARD MI 4-44M UW RAMBLER 4-DOOR S CTL-tader wtth standard transmission. HA T-31M Sale w demos hryslers. Plymouth. Valtanl R&R MOTORS 1M Oakland Are. FE 4-3331 Chrysler—Plymonlb—VaUnut ONLY |4S6. I CHEVRO- ___..._______ VOODWARr AYE. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-3734. W OLhs “W" WITH OLEAMhfO white finish, wtth strslsbt shift, with only ll.MI setae! wiles. Obe owner, yen eon ebook the title I |10M fun prise 1 Wo ft-. otace! Lucky Ante. JntaR ill S. JgjMJwSL *“■ M RENAULT. FIRST ( VOLKSWAOON CAMPER AND mats exoellsnt eenfltlep. 3MQ Fen tine Luke ltd. RAMBLERS FALL SPECIALS __ PLYMOUTH CLUB COUPE. radio end beater, power brakes. -ZERO down end H«0 per week. Uayd Motors. Ltaeeta-Mereury-Comet, 333 S. gaglBAW, FE 2-SUI. 1»50 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 4 doer. VI, Automatic. Radio MM better. See the eparUtas finish on tala sharp Birmingham trade. MM BIRinNOHAlTR AMBLER, MI S. WMdVMd. I r*—*— -—' Pontiac. MI (-3M0 THESE ARE • New Car TRADE-INS NOT REPOSSESSED, BANKRUPTCY < V OR LIQUIDATION CARS! ;;61Ford -59Chey. ■HfiRw* ase*'®.’ $1795 $1095 ’59 Plyin. '59 Marc a"3gip*asa $1195 $1495 '60 Ford. '57 Plym. CONVERTIBLE WtW radio and heeler. This beauty bae auto- STATTON WAOON. MMr 1 $16^5 $595 '60 Ford '56 Chev. 3-DOOR with Stans finish. R ins radio, beeter. Automatic trunemlasloo and whltewbllsl $1695 $495 '60 Ford '55 Ford ONVERTTBLE, V4 wllh radio._ rater, etandsrd transmission 3-DOOR wNh V-0 engine, auto-nd whitewalls. Solid block with matte traaemisqloa. radio, hsst rhlte topi tr ead ilsamtag white well. I $1695 $395 FBEE PARKING on the Rear of Our Lot TRANSMISSION. (CYLINDER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN, i Assume payments of (17.W perl me Cun Credit HR Mr Parhi I gTt MI 4*7500; Harold Turner, iHg WEE 1 year written (uareatee. Sharp Birmingham trade-ins. Birmingham Rambler’” Ml s. Woodward • minutes from Pontiac I John McAuliffe PONTIAC’S ONLY FORD DEALER 6t30 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 MI MOOt PUBLIC NOTICE ONE AND ONLY ESTATE LIQUIDATORS - MOTOR SALES — THE FOLLOWING CARS MUST BE LIQUIDATED BY OCT. 21, 1961 YEAR utra MODEL STYLE PAYMENTS FULL PRICE ’54 MERCURY Hardtop $123 $97 '54 FORD 2-Door • $1.23 $97 ’5(> CADILLAC Sedan ' $1.23 i’97 ’54 CHEVROLET 2-Door $123 $97 '55 PONTIAC Sedan $129 $197 '55 FORD Sedan $129 / $197 '56 CHEVROLET 2-Door $129 $197 '56 FORD Convertible $325 $297 '55 CHEVROLET Convertible $325 $297 •55 MERCURY Hardtop $325 $297 '55 OLDS Convertible $325 $297 '56 PLYMOUTH Wagon $325 $297 '56 CHEVROLET Bel Air $325 $297 '57 PLYMOUTH 2-Door $325 $297 '55 BUICK Hardtop. $325 . $297 '59 RENAULT Sedan $525 $497 '57 DODGE Hardtop $525 $497 '57 CHEVROLET ' Stick V8 $525 $497 — BRING THIS AD WITH YOU — IT IS YOUR COMPLETE DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY CAR WE HAVE IN STOCfc! . SPOT DELIVERY I WE ARRANGE FINANCING ' -ESTATE- LIQUIDATORS V* MOTOR SALES 150 S. SAGINAW ST. 1M0 PiTMOUTH STATION WAO-on. radio and heMer, power brakes and Steertni, full pries MM Llayd Motors, Ltaeoln-Mer-wyf ‘ 'NSW >0131. i rinfouTH, mm. UL 3-1451 ----------tfATE OWN- uM'KWTue iraiflDIp l doer hardtop, double pewer and full price of (MS. Lloyd Motors. Ltacoln-Mercury-Comet. 333 S. Stltaaw. FE >■ 1(3. 1 M PLYMOUTH. IPASSENOER station wagon. Take over payments of fft.il or sell for 11.731 EM Mill, _____________________ IMS PLYMOUTH, OOOD RUNNINO . ___ Lucky Auto._______. lta a. Saginaw pt. Ft 4-3314. IMS FONTIAC PPAMEROEB STA-hester’^Poi' Red wtth Wonderful temfli It ear. Haupt Pon- _________:k.ton M15, 1 mile _____of U.S. TO. MAple MM. Open Mon., TUw, Thun. UU P M FOETIA.C. BONNEVILLE hardtop, power stearins • a d brakes. (1.7M. FE M7tt REPOSSESSION ™ “ 1MI Ford 4-door, automatic Iran* mission, full price 1715 and pay Hue 1 meats offal e month Firs Isj) radio payment due November 33. WARD / 4-2735. '60 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Convertible. with solid red finish. Auto, transmission, radio, heater. All power. A beautiful one owner. Long tenet on bounce. Haupt Pontiac Sales. Clerkaton. M15, I mile north of U810 MA 5-5504 Open Mels.. Tues. Thure. UU power steering end brakes, 30.000 1U0 PONTIAC CONVYRTiSlT power steering, power brakes, whitewall tires, radio, heater, h.v-drsmstlc. 300 Pioneer Dr. FE '53 PONTIAC, RUNS OOOD, BAR- rORD FAIRLANE. 7.000 MILES 1 _ _ -SX,uTr-, w1.ET C ftrtf price SIMS. Lloyd 1 Lincoln-Mercury-ComSt. Saginaw. FE 2-9131. I S! end White. BUYING OR SELLING SEE US BEFORE YOU DEAL HOUGHTEN & SON o. . "T V" , M.ta, »«>^r oL_tgji; burplus-Motors mi ta cash '«FORD. S PASSEHOrt WAOON. , • Sit™ iver OR 3-1333 after 5. 171 S Segtnew St |'M FORD OALAiUE. POWER! M 0#0 muse, new > lfat FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE jgqg I station wefon. .fordometta^ radio, igsp w Kl hrater.jrhlte |l ; IWHBRwSr '■ **' *• ‘:• jtwl (*a‘,K' D*Luxe 4-Door ^#fataeuta*fcd»n» fat! /Sedan ‘‘6’’ with Standard Iism Oldel-dotM’eedAn ... JCw7jN$K»ag»r '..r*j transmission,. radio andlJJJy jg|||ck century*b{*NTI AG GOODWILL USED CARS Conner Cass and Pike ALSO — X 65 Ml. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 V THE P0XT1AC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, mi FIFTY-FIYS; --Today's Television; Programs- > 4-wwj.n ckuMi t-wm-n TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS l:N (2) Movie (Gant.) (4) Wyatt Earp (7) Johnny Ginger (Coot.) (9) Popeye (56) Searchlight l:M (4) Weather «:« cn News (4) News ‘-ft1 (7) News (58) Ags e< Overkill •:48 (2) Sporta (4) Sputa S:45 (2) Newa | (4) Newa (7). News,' weather, aporta 7:99 (2) Divorce Court (4) Michigan Outdoors (7) Tallahassee 7000 (9) Huckleberry Hound (Q6> French Though Television 7tM (2) Dimes Court (Coot) (4) Outlaws (7) Ozzie and Harriet (9) Movie *- "Mission in Morocco.” (1950) American looks Mr oU ia desert. Lex I Barker, Jull Reding. (56) Modem State 9:19 (2) Blue Angels (4) Outlaws (Cent.) the persecution of Christians. Michele Morgan, Michel Simon, Henri Vidal. (7) Weather P (4) (Color) Jack Pair ;; (4) Newa (7) Hong Kong FRIDAY MORNING 6:49 (4) (Color) Continent) Classroom •itt (2) Meditations 1:25 (2) On the Farm Front ‘ 9:N (2) College of the Air (4) Craitinuital Clmaroom 1t49 (2) B’waan Don (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger-(2) Captain Kangaroo TV Features (56) Spaniah For Teachers I' (7) Movie, '‘Bachelor Daddy” ,(56) Philosophies of Educar 9:99 (2) Morning Show, “T1 Legacy” (4) Ed Alien (56) Your Health 9t96 (4) Gateway tb Glamour ’ (56) Children’s Hour 9:46 (4) Debbie Drake 9:69 (7) News 9: It (9) Billboard I (2) (T) I (9) Movie (Oont) 2:15 (56) Imagw of Art 9:69 (2) “ ‘ (4) Dr Klldere (7) Feathertop (9) Movie (Cmt.) (56) Introductory Psychology ip 9:99 (2) Investigators (4) Dr. Kfldsr# (7) Feathertop (Oont.) (9) Playdate 9:99 (2) Investigators (Cont.) (4) Haael (9) Playdate (Cont.) (7) Margie (9) Playdate (Cont.) 10:99 (2) CBS Reports By Vailed SPECIAL FOB WOMEN, 3 p.m.t r<4). “What’s Wrong With Men?’-’ explores the dilemma of a man who Is concerned with job problems, civic status sad accusations of.inadequacy as a parent .and ign husband. Starring James Daly. OZZIE AND HARRIET, 7:3P] t. (7). “The Fraternity Rents iRoom." - -COK) (4) Sky wran _ (7) Jack -LaLanne (9) Nattoaul School Show (56) Our Scientific World 19:99 (2) I Cove Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Jackie Cooper (9) Chez Helene (M) V.I.P. 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time' U:09 (2) Video Village (4) (Goknr) Price Is Right (7) Texan. (9) Romper Room (56) Spaniah Lesson 11:15 (56) German Lesson 11:99 (2) December Bride (4) Concentration (7) Lowe That Bob! (59) Images of Art TV's Free-Wheeler Proves Crime Pays By FRED DANZIG {objections by means of coarse NEW YORK (UPI) _________ David sll0Uts And equipment-smashing. . Brinkley kicked aside ’some more DIALING AND FILING rocks' on the American landscape Although ABC-TV’s “Steve Allen Wednesday night to spotlight one Show” had some bright comeg ... J, ..,. -mirth in-Nots Wednesday night, the Mel ^ iBrookiCari Reiner “tatendew” lustries. crime. routine wasn’t one of them. The! As Brinkley put ii, crime is >concept is a good one but the ex-i “bigger than steel, oil or petition is heavy-handed, coarse mobile*.” HI* wry-uader-lhe- unfunny, rocks NBC-TV halfhour demon- j “perty Conio’s Music Hall” still I strated that the top echelon of J remains the most alert, warm and gangster society has money, intelligent of all TV’s one-hour van power, public glamour, admlrs- u^y shows, but I think 1 detect Hon, and lives la “luxury aai’-Up, that it’s- getting a bit too Hplendor.” He added that "The cracker-barrel comfy with its only possible conclusion is crime {humor. Certainly that “Peter Pan” pays.** spoof Wednesday night was a SONOTONE House of Hearing Five Hearing Taste Free Partomrat Boar of « . Building *Opon Cvos. Ay Appoint*** r 143 Oakland FKderai 2-1225 PONTIAC, MICH. Brinkley also said that “A young bomb. AT ntMu ON MARCH IN BERIJN - Soldiers and trucks of the U.S. garrison move along a West Berlin street Wednesday as they begin a three-day test of combat readiness About MOO of.the divided city’s 6,500-man UJ).. garrison an taking part in the major tall exercise which Is being held In Grunewald forest In the American sector southwest of the city proper. American-who wants to make aj “B®y Me Twice,” J^e^eri lot of money . . . may very well HQur” . presentetto Wetoeed^ deckle hie best career opportunity {night just missed being • tnor-l is to become a gangster.” joughly OTttofytag *■“» by the width of some sour notes in PVT IT BLUNTLY 'acting, script and staging. AltHbugfi various TV shows have|_.......................—~—-! tackled this- theme in the put FRIDAY AFTERNOON V (2) Lov* of Life (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage (9) Home Fair Prof. Patterson (Wally! (56) Memo to Teachers a room in Rick and! 12:^9 (2) Search for Tomoftow (4) (color) It Could Be “ , FEATHERTOP, 8:30 p.m. <7).| (7) A musical fantasy based on Na-i <•) , thaniel Hawthorne's story of a| (56) Spanish Lesson Salem. Mass., witch who trans,,1**4 formed a scarecrow Into a gay ME ox) routs, a roon 'Slty's frattmlty fa The Twist' Is World's Latest Dance Craze {none has put it sowluntly. j Brinkley picked up n dtscus-; sion of crime Involving Alty. Oen. Robert F. Remedy and j his top aides In the Justice De-1 partment. with They about how crooks, supported by 62 bettors and public apathy, are able to take over legitimate husf-H | nesses, corrupt publicjbfficials And fear no law. By EARL WILSON NEW YOltfC — "Twist” parties are totting chic . caviar. Mrs. Gary Cooper looked in oh one at photographer Milton Here again, the summation placed the blame on John Q. Pub- j lie. I'm beginning to think the "public apathy” bit Is an excuse! for laissez-faire. err. our pricc first! Average Site H*ss Includss Furnace, Chinnier. Duct* KLEIN AM FURNACE CLEANERS |IM LOMIK OR 3-0100 *17" Get Our Frico on GAS HEAT CluBdUi Heating Co. OR 3-4492 OR 3-5*32 CONDON'S RADIO and TV TIT 0UI BOOSTERS! , 117 00R YA*I ANTENNAS FOR CHANNEL * AND 12 TO IMPROVE TOM RECEPTION FOR TUT LIONS FOOTBALL DAMES! — Moaey-lack Guaranis* fit* Technical Adrtcai CHECK 00B DEAL ON COLOR TV BBTOIE T0U BUT! 7 TUBS EXPERIENCE HI COLOR TV Authorized Service RCA—>ZENITH —MAGNAVOX— Open t to 9 Mat, Fit. 73* WEST HURON ST. FI 4-0736 RCA-ZENITH DEALER (7) Untouchables (56) German Leaaon Made- In this version, Jane Powell i1*1** (4) News ,.._________________, . stars as Juhe Balfour, daughter of ,:*® *7) Star Performance (4) (Colcr) Sing Along iLoulglana-a ta 1832, and <*> G««cte Marx * Mitch {Hugh O'Brian has the tide role. <7> 001111 Mary Rodgers has composed eight ®) song, for the program. The csstui* (59) Showcase, “Night and eludes Hans Conried and Cathleen Day*’ (ID t Nesbitt- M {1) News _ I DR; KILDARE. 8:30 p;m. ;(4). i:SQ <2) As tbe World Turn* i“Winter Harvest” 'has Charles; Bickford portraying an aging doctor who defies demands that .he , 19: U (9) Weather 19:91 (9) Telescope UAW 19:99 (2) CBS Reports (Oont. (4) Sing Along (Cont.) (7) Untouchables (Cont. (9) Golf Tips 19:46 (9) Sports 11:99 (2) News 11:12 (7) News. Sports 11:16 (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Movie — “Goodbye Mr. (4) Californians (7) Lite of Riley (56) World History (4) Faye Elizabeth (2) Amos ’n’ ^ndy (4) (color) Jan Murray (7) Number Pleaee (56) Conversational French. Qiwne’a studio the other day though she didn’t Join the twisters. But the Phil Silvers,! Tammy Grimes, Jule Stjme. Ritk Gam, Barbara Nichols, Buddy Hackett and Hennlon^ "0'f Qlngold — all very chic people (even though they work for a living) — did get to twisting.] Mach of the anttcrime segment as repetitious sad I draught the hat to serve as aa effective gal- would also question the wisdom of having a camera crew along a street in Grosae Pointe, Mich., to take a few extra pictures of “gangster bouses” and then stick around so that the local gentry could make knowrr their HAZEL, 9:30 p.m. (4). “A Matter of Principle” finds George (Don De Fore), ignoring an inner votc^, | _ ^_________ defending Hazel (Shirley Booth) U-jg. (2) House Party against a parking violation ticket. <4) Loretta Young ___^ . ; : CBS REPORTS, 10 p.m. (2). i7) Seven Keya Qtips. (^) Qg^schori-r.,^ Water famine," & global) . (56) French Lesson master is beloved^ by tos^^ dealing with the role of 3:99 12) Millionaire water in history and today’s water ' students. Robert Donat, — __ m • ,».« wain III IIUUUIJ him WUUj a wi Greer Carson, Terence Kil- mg ^ UBlted burn. 11:39 (2) Sports I (4) Sports ! SING ALONG WITH MITCH, 10{ li:|6 (2) M 0 v i e — “Fabtoia.’’ jp.m. (Italian; 1947) Gladiator and Diana Tjesk and Leslie Uggagu| the daughter of a Roman supply familiar songs. Mitch Mliirr nobleman are involved In will solo on the English horn inj —*—. j 1 v . ''1'——:-------“Autumn Le’aves.” (Color). fiwSu* e***!*1 (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day , (9) News ||:I9 (9) Movie, (4) .From These Roots (7) Who Do You Trust: >3:65 (2) News _ 4:oo (2) Brighter Day UNTOUCHABLES, Id p.m. (7)J - - “Power Play.” Eliot Ness (Robert Stack) offers to cooperate withL,u the new head of a crime commis-sion, Willard Thornton (Wendell! Corey!, unaware that Thornton I also heads an underworld syndi- |.w <***• 4:55 JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 pjtl. 5:09 I (4) Guests: Vivian Vance, Jack! Haskell, Genevieve, English come- ' ' dian Tony Hancock- (Color). t4) Make Roonf for Daddi (7> American Bandstand (2) Secret Storm (2) Edge of Night (4) Here's Hollywood (9) Adventure Time (7) American Newsstand (4) News (2) Movie, “Rlunder Road" (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7.) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles and Pinocchio Probing Cause iof Blast-Fire "1 don’t see much future for a dance where the partners keep so distant they may never toe introduced,” uts« Olngold said. But "the Twist” was becoming a erase in London, Paris and Borne. Us Tmyler’s _______ big party In Rome far Kirk Douglas had | a competitive party — a “Twister”Vith kids ef Rom/ doing the dance that was cradled in staid oM Philadelphia. And at NY. "Twist” headquarters, the Peppermint Lounge,' Waitress Anna Kruehko told me that she o)okes $200 a week [In Ups — and has an ABC offer to go on TV as a twister. 9tt9. , .; v ' ; Chubby Checker, young Philadelphia Negro singer who re-; corded “The Twist” a year ago, Song of the Thin |g due at, the Peppermint. Guess all you cats know that {Chubby Checker isn’t his real jnalqe . . . Just sort ,of his 'salaam of respect to his hero, I Fats Domino. ; Esther Williams says Fernando Lamas personally cut off soms of her tong halr for JOAN. j No one was killed droplte thelrmovie Foun- i potential tor high loss ofllfe {tain,” which they filmed In Madrid .. . Robert Wagner, Natalie a* blast Wednesday, which de-< {Wood’s ex, and Joan Catena, Warren Beetty’s former sweetie, atrayed a one-story reinforced| are still a-roqianoin in London. {concrete building used by Helene it it it Curtis Industries to Mend cos- 1— nifiLWiiiT j... irastic chemicals. Authoriie* said I TMc MIDNIGHT EARL ... ithey had reached no conclusion] Ed Sullivan’s bedded-pulled a muscle stepping off a stage! “ 10 the nut* *1 Chicago Worker Claim* Explosion Sparked by Overheated Mixing Tub CHICAGO making hair sprays. HEY WEST Fla (AP) — The) Any man who ever laughed at women’s hats never paid thejin a LMNeaBt* blending tank-Cuban government will grwntN ior ®nc. That’s oarl, brother. 1 (Copyright. INI) Cuba Plans to Grant 1,000 Scholarships [one of several in the building. >OL 3 Wliii Attolut" 4 tmrthrm ■ tmI • 0«nu» of SI . 1 Olbbon _ , IGW CbsImS 2S BHrtctlm ■I sEue IS ft*U^M» rorlut* SI scholarships to 1,000 Latin American university students, Havana] radio reports. A broadcast Wednesday night said the students will haive all their expenses paid for the duration of their studies. They may attend the Universltiee of Havana, j Las Villas and Oriente and may study engineering, agronomy; ar-1 ___ jehitecture, medicine, pharmacy, auya’sivWM* the humanities, economics and • ami I MM U gMgOT 34 Retro* r»d« ■ MS L Bnut —3- 37 Lind mMiur* SS PMiets 41 MMUI coin* 43 Irtaute Qunnttty Individual Free Speech Championed by Reporter “For the first five botches the| {temperature had risen too higii-[Hodges told a Chicago Tribune j newsman, "it should, have been 170. degrees. Instead it rose higher. to as much as 190 degrees, j Each time I put water in the cooling jacket/’ USED %*$&*» BUYS MVs" Aircastle $14.95 16" RCA $19.9S 16" EnferiOit $24.95 17" MHHtZ $29.9$ 21" Raytheon . $29.95 20" GE . $29.95 21" Silv«rton« .$39.9$ 21" CBS $39.95 27" Mmtti .. $69.95 17" Admiral Combination .. .. $89.95 30-Day Kschwape PiMtoye WI MAEI TEAD66 WALTON TV 515 E. Walton Blvd., Corner Joslyn OPEN 9(t9 GRAND OPENING SPECIAL! •3.95 '"UlEi machine for $14.95 wt will . recondition ony make or modal Vacuum Cleaner faslndee Ho*o. Colds. Filtora. Mima , Cords. Sims. end SwMhos FREE FICKUP—DELIVERY-APPRAISALS Vacuum Confer — FE 4-4240 per cent from 1920-50. -Todays Radio Programs-- wc*n (I CKLdr. N*«« WO AM. K**r» . WPON, «•*» f ■sst arses SSS«: 5: SSBf 1:SO—WJR. Choral wxvz. ii from wpon, Auburn uwwj. r»T* 0:4*—WJR, RoekVT WPON, Otl* With I —WWJ. World N*v* li ra-WJR. N«*. WWJ. J____ , CKLW, Hopvood WCAR, Dm Sport* ; lira—WJR,’ Mu*to WWJ. Hak til Down csxjr. R. Knovtoo wcar. to orarad rsituT ■omttxo nra"*** niw* daw. r*ra me* «aw. 7ira-w.it. nrag,.ito*<* W^Alt. _Bowo._ Shrajdr- Mn. Butt Mom. Tiss-vnrrx. mot, won OKLW. MOT P*>td wpon, Mrtr Mora. S:**—wjr. Row*. Oran WJBK, Awry WCAR, New*. Mtrlyn j wpon. CttywU tow* 'e^vWtokl *:**—wjn, x*n Mm. CKLW. Jo* V»n \ WJBK, MOTrlmi > SEEMED TO COOL "This time," said Hdges. who suffered bums over 25 per cent of Me body, “the temperature be-: w. j NEW YORK (J) — Herbert- L.[ - Matthews ‘told the . association igati to rise, and I put water in| .1 1 ..... Matthews of the New York times I the question was whether an in- the jacket. It seemed to cool] Mexico's populatiMi Increased 75 ,^ today the Inter-American dividual in the IApA and Its mem-!down.” - {Press Association could champion her organizations can say what I “Two minutes before the explo-1 freedom of the press, only If it (they believe to be true and right. 8ion the temperature was okay, upholds its members’ right to their . we could ^ he. nid> -youi^n « hot?! could see it was] joplnions. ~ would have no right to set your- f‘f8 ™ ’ Se'Vc™ivM„^l , Matthews addressed the IAPA *elves up as champions of freedom ^'* q 1 "el during a debate prompted by a of the press." out of the ‘ank statement of five exiled Cuban! '■............' {editors criticising him and an ed-| ttorial printed Wednesday In the f ITQJJIQH tlQllt Special 6 to 9 Sale SPECIAL PKICES EYEBY EVENING FROM 6 to 9 P.M. FOB THE CONVENIENCE OF THE HUSBANDS AND WIVES Open 'HI 9 Every Evening ELECTRIC COMNANYV CKLW. Jo* V WJBK.- Mil WPON. MMt* N*n, 0**14 WPoii'. Nr*», Mu»lc»l N*l*b HOT—WJR. Hetlth. wwj, m*«, Lyokti WXVZ. MoNraby cklw. Jo* vra . WJBK. Mvt. Ml WCAR "■*• WPON, Times. ry The exile group raid Matthew*, fill] flOllSG FIIB . _ _ ; Find No Fun I ajl tow* i tog FMri Cnafro with aa un on bra MeLrad show breakable pefristeace.” Mat- CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) — It -WJO. mot. anovc** thews la the author of a recently * as anything but amuasment fj Mat. Bliairar. Club pabIMked beak, “The Caban Wednesday for firemen who bat-] '!w' 5*rt**‘ ! Story,” and a member of the tied a blaze in the Fun House at *• N«.0, sh*ri• Federal Program Is Nixed Con-Con Seeking Solution to Row LANSING M — Michigan’s constitutional convention today sought a Ablution td its first family quarrel — a jurisdictional dispute between two committees. At odds Were the committee on legislative powers, headed by T. Jefferson Hozie (R-st. Louis) and the committee on miscellaneous provisions and schedules, under the chairmanship of Claud R. Erickson (R-Lansing). Bqth claim that In preparation of Uto new constitution wiey have the right to deal with sections of the pres ent constitution cpvering corporations, eminent domaif, personal prBlwty1 ----- tions, homestead exemp- ibels f Republicans A 'Mockery' tions and other matters. Wednesday delegates approved j 32 million budget covering everything from postage stamps to an electrical voting machine. Salaries tor the l«4 delegates, at |1,M s month each, swallowed up more than half of the budget, adapted unanimously at • plenary session. They totaled HAS million. Reduce Charge Against Youth Who Killed While Playing With Gun Didn't Really Mean If A charge of first degree mur- Second biggest item in the budget was $329,306 for salaries for convention staff workers. Smallest der against John Haase, 19,, who 'authorised expenditure was $400 j admitted slaying an 18-year-old tor-newspaper dippings of the con|PonHae glri whUe “playing around vefttkyi’* activities. Erickson’s committee moved into the disputed area first, naming several subcommittees to deal with proposed changes. HOxte’s committee voiced quick objection. Frank Millard.of Flint, former Republican attorney general and a member of the Hoxie committee, described the Erickson committee’s action as “the biggest power grab. I’ve seen in a long, long time.’’ . Hoxie'* committee voiced its objeettsas at a morning session of all major committee chairmen Wednesday with Stephen S. NW-bet, the ronveatton president. RichnnF’Van Dusen (R-Bingham Farms), chairman of the Committed on rules and resolutions, suggested one solution would be tor each committee chairman to make a written outline of what sections of the present constitution should | be considered by hi* committee.' \yitli a.shotgun” Sept. 29, was reduced to manslaughter yesterday. Haase was boqad aver to Oakland (ounty Circuit Court on the tower charge yesterday after Ms. examination before Pontiac Municipal Judge Cedi A. McCollum. Judge McCallum said the facta presented Jp the case showed there was no intention or premedication Hadae's part to murder Janet M. Olsen, 115 Euclid St. Spociol Session of State Legislature Ruled Out by Rejection LANSIN3 liPU-^Gov. John i. Swainson today tobtled is “a shun and a mockery if the democratic process” meetfhg Wednesday in »hich Republican 'fegttl.-j ^ m !OES, Who control the State ship officials examine the dim at Lakeville Lake inance committees, turned in Addison Township which will have to to pur-lown his proposal to bring! Chased to maintain the lake level at a height of Michigan under a federal! 8523 ,wt ***** ** ,tvtl " esfebtoted hy a irogram. recent umm Oakland' Child Bony, Addisc Webber and R nc hmiim / EU>ER STATESMEN — Barney Baruch (toft) and Jlunes A/ Farley chat in New* York’s wkldorf-Astoria Hofei In New York Wednesday night They were attending a memorial dinner tor/Xl’ Smith, and judging from their serious expressions they were dis-cupring the state of the nation. The rejection makes the third | time In recent montha,' Republican legislators have rejected • I new program providing federal funds - for children of uiaemployed parents. Upholds * Earmarking' Claims Road Funds Face Con-Con Threat •Hie dead girt) daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John - V, - Olsen, whs killed with a single blast from il^gaugc shotgun. Her body was found shortly after midnight Sept, 29 in Haase’§ home, at 181. S.J Mhrshalk St. .where a party had taken place earlier. „ Haue ran out into the stiwel mid told two Pontiac patrolmen of the shooting. He told peMce lie was just trying to scare the Olsen girl when the gun weal A likelihood of disappearing state highway funds a’result of the constitutional convention was voiced locally yesterday by, A1 Kaufman, executive assistant to Michigan’s highway commissioner, John C. Mackie. Addressing the Inter-county Highway Commission at the Botsford Inn in Redford Township, Kaufman beseeched commissioners from Oakland, Macomb,' Monroe, St. Clair, WaAhtenaw,^4"""*- “ ^ ur‘T T and Wayne counties to de- M to am i>». «wu p fend state highway funds In Today's Press Bang/ Bang! U.N, hoping to slop clear tret — PAGE tl. To Get Ax off. His mother, Mrs. ivy Haase, a nurse tit Pontiac General Hospital, was at work when the Shooting occurred. -—- Haase is being held in the-Coun-ty daffTnlleU of $500 bond. I Berlin expecting Red put [pet Ulbrictlt.fo.to fired -PAGE a. Cockeyed Optimists, (Look at the Forecast! Reject JFK? Retiring d.e a n defends I Harvard "ftolicy — PAGE Si. through delegates at con-con. The hinds are threatened by convention proposals to do away earmarking of monies raised through taxation In toe'state. fc- Wj"# [cording to Kaufman: vat by the togtslatare at Leasing-In effect, the state highway commission would have no assurance that sufficient hinds would available to finance its five-year (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) He was pinch-hitting in yesterday's talk for Mackie Who had to break his commitment to speak. The state highway commissioner was admitted to a Lansing hospital yesterday tor a series of tests on| his kidneys. Kaufman described it as a minor ailment. Doing away with earmarking Flash New York Temper Governor out In stats talking to people — PAGE 14. Bto taMJMHHL money I ent*. Wonderful weather will continue -r-1- , —---t—-— ■ • -*• ■ through Saturday with skies clear!D D . .. '• t and temperatures coot'tonight, the By Hcdlord General Hodpital WASHINGTON (|JPI) — President Kennedy today reaffirmed strong UA opposition to admit-ting Red rWaa to toe United y U.N, compos- Key to Setting Lake Lcvglu ; mutt rtm rant Seen from , left are nissioner Daniel W, jpervisor Frank F. deputy county drain Proceed on Dam Purchase As a result, there will he no special *e»*lon of the legislature to Consider claiming some lit million la federal funds avail- Michigan tor the m months starting Jaa. The decision by the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Appropriations Committee Wednesday triggered an angry burst from Gov. Swainson. H« had indicated he would call the letfs-iature into special session only If majority Republicans indicated there was a good chance- the required legislation would pass. Lake in Addison Township has teen Set by circuit court decision Bhe Oakland County Drain Com-lission is proceeding with purchase of a dam that controls te lake level. Acquiring the antiquated dam ear Rochester and -Lakeville roads will untie the first of many strings that have been holding off establishment of. lake levels in the county. Owaer of the dam which Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry The Democratic governor appeared* before the two committee!, at their Invitation, to (dug for the federal program, only to learn that the decision to reject been made, informally before .the meeting began. JOINT STATEMENT ■ Moments after rejection was announced, Serf. Elmer R. Potter, R-Blissficld. and Rep. Arnett Engstrotn, R-Traverac City, Issued a joint statement explaining the -GOP stand. The governor estimated the federal grant would save the state $4 million and local governments $6 million in welfare costs. Barter sad Eagstroro, however, contended that fl.l milItos would to rates ap hy extra ad-minlstratlvt- casts. They said SM “The program has too many drawbacks and leaves too many questions unanswered," they said. Terms of the plan ani hazily defined, they added, and do not require welfare recipients tor their welfare checks. •aid wfil have to te the Dan aad tons Machine Os. It hi asking fSS.SN tor the shorelinef and the efficient opera- ping water levels has planted lake te— ——„- —BrotojkOBl Barry admitted that the appraisal Jails short of what the drain Commission is prepared to pay for the property “since in effect we are buying the entire lake." Maintaining the level of ! vllie Lake-will assure surrounding property owners of sn adequate supply of water both for their Ford May Close Down Due to Ohio Plant Strike DETROIT UP)—Despite a new national contract and plant working agreements, except at one factory, Ford Motor C<1 tpday faced/the threat of a shutdown of some p a assembly plants withjfo a week. . Ford and tiniled Auto Workers Union bargainers broke off their attempts to reach a local-level working agreemeht covering some 3,300 employes at a key stamping plant at Walton Hills, Ohio, outside Cleveland. At Chrysler Corjp., top-level’negotiations were. In re-cess while -bftfgaining con- Bolivian Uprising Folds LA PAZ>, Bolivia (AP)—A leftist uprising at an artillery bp trucks near La Paz collapsed today and the leader committed suicide police closed in, the government front property owner* f the county for many yean. Numerous petitions by the property owners to establish lake lev-els ware stymied until this .yenr when a new state law was cre[ a ted to simplify the procsedure, \ The new law naw enahtos Uw county to make necessary purchase* such ae that ef the dam at LakevtUe, assured that the he repaid hy township beneflttiag tax- payers. While the county is prepared to proceed with condemnation in order to obtain the dam and its a site, Barry - said he feels certain, an agreeable purchase price can be reached instead, * Once the property has bean-transferred into county hands J a new. Bam will te constructed at an estimated cost of $23,345, mid Barry. It will be located approil-mntely 20 feet west of the present dam and tbe stream will'to rerouted through it. The new dam is expecfed%(b, raise the lake level 14 feet sha^e • iLs p Friday wHI he fate and cost with a high ef SS.-ttotarday’a out teak Is tote aad warmer. Ty, A Radio WBsrn, Earl 41 I mtlea por hour ipffi heresum Oftcty. srsl Mwspl«S|i -K+re teryaar Morning easterly winds at 3 erly late this afternoon at I5 4a 20 m.pto. Win$a will shift to north to northwest at 10 to 15 miles tonight becoming northwesterly at 81 to 12. miles tomorrow. I :----- The low temperature preceding 8 a,m. in dowmown Pontiac regts-tnrtM 41 tpSriw- The nadEg at $ p.aa,«a« Bfr- tinued on the sub-committee level. The union accused Ford of Insisting that pay rates of 435 jobs be reduced 5 to 15 cents at-the Walton Hills ptept. It said all.' otter issues had baen settled. “We are, net proposing that anyone's pay he eat," Ford said In a statement. “Seme af ear employe* at the The Dunn company, Which manufactures automotive puts, irill have to convert entirely in electrical power. The firm has topm getting a portion of Ms power tram water flowing hver the dam. ,T Fitzgerald Renamed Director of IAPA Blue Cross Charged With Fraud DETROIT (API -* Redford CM- cult Court tor an order to halt the Michigan Hpspltai Sendee (Blue Cross) from ‘’conducting further busfatoss to hospital services." the ch»riM and laid the hospital did not meet qualification*.------- the 47-bed hospital, formerly Tte. Rtft, Mofl. Wedoroday. att cusarf Bkw Crops of fraud, false gdyertlaliig, restraint of- trade and price-(btlrtK..; / . '••gh *%' Blue CrajifiASppkeMan denied leased from the city of Detroit to I tat by ivy satespafe phy-tietoas tor flva yean af 44.IM a month. The lease stipatotoJ flcat the haspMal prevlda a M-hour of the hoard, tf Redford Ctiliral said that ufter the Hrpt' took over ths hospital Etna Ooaa gave ft accreditation on a qonpartlojpat-tog baste This roenut, he laid, that subscribers Blue Crass whuM pay only flS a day towards bospMaJ Owta that npproximntety to $40 day. ‘a great deal of that to because oflklue-t^oturi', ' 5 " The hoapttal charged in its suit Blue Crons refused.th pay t^awwl aaid the hospital has uC .Clarento R, Qhnrast, president collected fees of $150,000. He add- services and that this “conctitdtos n effort: tedeteuid the pul—1|| a defrauding of Ua (Blue , assstei' op* Mm ft ?tl SfDhVrd TA'.^o'i's j Pontiac Prc*s Publisher tirifMd Cleveland !A’. r“*««ntel Was re^tad tojto Stamptag plant are receiving pay lboaM of dl«c‘ora of the %r In excess af rates, negotiated toe [American Press Asmciatkm a# n [the work they are doing at Clove- [matins in New York City yes^r- elsewhere la the osmiltolit^. I A six-day wildcat strike at the Walton- Hii)s plant closed several Fwd assembly lines a year ago, and both*'the company and union agreed continuance of thq ourTOnt effects within a wank on newly restartsd Mfildlj of nte rod Ford began ralHft row m«P « Csto all the aRtombly Km Monday tor HHl the (ten tla* hi 14 days. , M He was sm sf U i moat Iton North aad frees North aad tnelte lea ehooea, six of wham are ten Baked Stotos.^TW aw dose sf the The Inter elation has me dtkft of THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER IB, mi Note Bitfctr Pbaottraaln* Moscow Warns West on Ait lanes OKUCK •Washington iAP) - iapj«v Static Bounces said today Moscow TSs sent a note renewing a Soviet stand oo Berlin air corridors that to in—niniteMf to 'the Sliest, ‘ text of the Soviet note, de> Hysrod to the American, British 4V French Embassies in Moo-cow. was ant immediately available here. ^iafownaeto.teid the Soviet cotn-muhication rephbd - to Sept. I Western notes warning the Krem-lin that any interference with the «ir traffic linking Commmrist-en-Brcled West Berlin with West Germany would he ‘ aggressive of playing down the ig the Allies *ihv their proadh to negotiating with the Soviet Union on the German, question Aad to doing this, In tdtoct, he tejctqred against the French view Jhat intensive Western j ms now for Eaat-Woto i Hath— would appear to the dpied again its view that the air fbrridors are only supposed to he eld. for supplying the Western jnirisons la Berlin,. TV Western . powers regard the air lanes as a .Mil lifeline for the city, to be Paris Police Check Algerian Riot Try PARIS (API—Reinforced police | broad avenue leading to central checked a mob of 4,000 Algerian.] Paris, tried to riot through totem* The Soviet note was not regarded as a good omen to the simmer-jpg fterniau dispute about which Secretory of State Dean Rusk spoke-—at a news e Wodpesday- Rusk, giving the first ss* U.s government chev’s speech to the Communist party congress to Moscow, said hooted not preUminary Judgment because the full text of the long Khrahchev address is Mill not available ben. He declined Dp, 31 deadline lor treaty with Communists East Germany, Rusk said, “may serve to jjKce tension somewhat.” ~%ut Khrushchev’s “general ob-sdhrattons about the Gorman and -Berlin problems show little If any change from what 'ton been toil T*ore," Rato added. Wie secretary of state made a Swainson Acts fo Get Job Aid War on UnamploymGnt —Continues With Request for Federal Grants LANSING . lure, neine accessories, fine china, crystal, housewares, and gifol Hand-decorated TUSkEY PLATTER Imported from England MG RS-SPEOALI A wogwificaril platter, thw daiign yteal-tngrovrd and hand pain tad undw gkiza. The soma type plotter told for $13.95 lost yoarl Other Turkey Platters ... $4.95 to $22 r Star points installed were Mrs. [George Eldred, Adah; Mrs. Ralph [Lister, Ruth; Mrs. Melvin Patterson, Esther; Mrs. Kenneth Bain, I Martha; and Mrs. Ford Newcomb, {Electa; Mr*. Bernard Garner as warder and Charlie Woody, sen-jtaeL. I Auxiliary officers are Kenneth Bain, American flag bearer; Mrs. Buenilum and Crystal Chip ’ n ’ Dip $3»* ThU handsome chip V dip server is of Buenilum—a special metal allay that ft buffed and polished by bond to give the appearance of gleaming silver. Will not tarnish. Boxed Set*of 6 COFFEE MU^S ^$2^95 complete! That* dtvtr, hand-dacorofod mug« ora jmt what pad Mad for “at homo” coffoo braakil la varied combinations of warm brown, rad, groan and yatlow. Came in and see our wide selection of mugs at various prices. Imported Hand-Cut Crystal SALT and PEPPERS special ^2 the sett * ksauttful hand-cut salt and pappars in clear c tinted heavy load crystal! Choice of seven ‘ styles.-Keg” 12.50-$2.95 v Ltt#*Z the original T^FAL FRY PAN WITH THE DuPONT TEFLON ETCHED INI ■Fry healthfully, wtfhouf fats, shortening, or oils! Nothing sticks la this fry panl ^ / .. ,, «. . • 10" T-tAl PAN rry aggs, pancakes, any .food—greaielesstyl Foods tasta ( batter—and, are batter (or the entire fomUyl And what a °!/* work savor.. . just wash, rfnsa, and It’s eteont Oat yours ' 12" S9ATUH today ot Wiped Vi-. ■ ■ ________■ ___________ ' 84 West Huron St • Pontiao op«n‘Mohday arid Friday Everihigs Until 9 A were installed Monday evening at Roosevelt Temple before an «*■ Officers exemplifying the Bible Installed as worthy matron was marshal; -Mrs. William Harach, cort to Mrs. LunsfOfd was Rick Also taklag office were Mrs. I Harry Eaton, associate. matron, Eartnoa Howard, asoociato patron, Mrs. Royal Clark, secretary, | Mrs. Robert Oavts, tree surer, Mrs. Daniel Peterson, conductress aad Mrs; Thomas Cox, associate conductress. I Appointed officers are Mrs. Al-[ bert Holtom, chaplain, Shirley Lovelace, marshal, and Mrs. Mil-ton Reddeman, organist. [hearer; Mrs. Loren Palen, Eastern Star flag bearer and Mrs. Jack Moden, assisting marshal. degree are Mrs. Kenneth Newton, Adah; Mrs. Donald Hugbson, Ruth; _ . Geraldine Wilkinson, Esther; Mrs. Sandra Treitch, Penny Pritchard, SW-*U_ ___1 Sf_me_____ArLau.1.. Dnuknm, Par. Victor Nelson, Martha, and Mr*-touft i Heiby, Electa. CONDUCT INSTALLATION Past matrons of the chapter eon ducted the installation with Mrs. Harry Vernon as mistress of ceremonies; Mrs. Victor Bodaiher, assisting marshal; Mrs. Sidney Fellows, installing officer; Mrs. Lees-Oles, installing marshal; Mrs. Eugene Perkio, installing chaplain; Mrs. Theron Taylor, instal' big secretary and Mrs. Wiilial Pfahlert, twatailtng officer to auxiliary' officers. Installing organist was Mrs. Claude Kimler, and Mrs. LaVon Ryden and J. Daniel Odneal, soloists. Pal matron Mrs. Bodamer presented Mrs. G. Robert Jfeharf with her past matroa'i Jewel aad welcomed her Into the post ms-tram' ctooto. Part patron ptn was presented to Royal Clark by post patron Harry Eataa. NSncy Newcomb, honored queen el Job’s Daughters, Melvin patted son Jr., Gregg Cox and Rick Coot A * ★ Presiding at the gift table ware past matron, Mrs. Edward Pritchard, assisted by Job’s Daughters, Mary Wheeler and Barbara Car-rick. Mrs. Bodamer handled the guest book and Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. Clarence Phillips and Lester Oles planned the decorations. Refreshment tables were charge of Mrs. Thad Beall and Mra. Clifford Mosaey, pal' ma-Charles Henderson and Bohlman. IVES REFRESHMENTS Mra Loring Downs served refreshments assisted by Mrs. George Brash, Mrs.. Raymond Boatright, Mrs. Herbert Bloat Mrs. Albert Kugler, Mrs. William Medlen, Mrs. Chrlstmon' Morgan, Galbraith Pritchard, Mrs. Oaries Rose, Mrs. Howard Rose, Mrs. John Sullenger, Mrs. Edgar Walling and Mrs. Adrian Willis. - W' Distinguished guests were Mr*. pay Wilton, past grand Martha; Ralph Clara, past grand Ian, International Order of Job't Daughters ahd Mrs. Oles, grand chaplain, Mrs. Loren Thompson, of ' Job’s Daughter* Bethel 40. * Oakland Couaty Association officers present were Mrs. T. H. Glascock, praaldent; Mrs. Perkio, first vice president; Mrs. Rusoell Canterbury, Christian flag Pages for the evening were warder, Mrs. Vernon, grand guard- Warwick, grand representative of Missouri; Mrs. Rachel Levriy,' grand councilor and Arthur Cotcher, chairman of -ffaftaeef Worshipful Master Thomas Cox of Brotherhood Lodge 581 and Harold Rynerson, Roosevelt Lodge 5UL ★ ■* ■ Guests 4ame from Birmingham, Clarkston, Clawson, Commerce, Fkrmington, Femdale, Hazel Park, Lake Orion, Oak Park, Ortonvllle. Pontiac 228, Rochester, Royal Oak, Southfield, Walled Lake, Ovid and Also present were Mrs. Stanley Redfleld, N.Y. Have You Tried This? MBRNMMMMHjj Prune-Bran Bread Is Prize Winning Recipe sport coats with warm pile linings usually H7.98 .f It's the coat that gives you nonstop wear. :TtaTn or shtne' the four seasons of the year. Water-repellent rayon/cotton tackle twill with a cozy-warm zip-out lining of orlon® acrylic pile. Sizes 8 tol 6. Other styles to choose from, sketaiiifet veTvet edndred 7 chesterfield. Black, beige, olive. It’s been over a month since toe State Fair was hid. But a prize-winning recipe la good any tone. Mrs. Raymond Ellsworth sent us the recipe that won her a blue ribbon—for the first thing she had ever entered at the Fqir. dr ’ (k dr ■ Jean Ellsworth’s interests aid many and varied. Talent-eCartistlcally, she volunteers _ B her time iri- a dumber at organizations. She shares the activities of three teen-age sons, working in PTA and church. Oil painting and gardening are her hobbies. PRUNE BREAD By Mrs. Raymond Ellsworth 2 cups all-bran cereal, 2/cup prune Juice * 2/3 cup cooked priines 2/3 cup buttermilk 1 egg, 1 tablespoon shortening 2 tablespoons dark brown, sugar teaspoons sit V/k leaspoun soda-1 cup sjfted flour ft cup chopped nuts 1 tablespoon grated orange rind Add prawn aad Jatee to amTegg. Cream shortolag floaraad^lbUL ..........iirfliftl Turn into greased loaf pan. Bake 40 minutes at 350 de- | greet until crusty and dark | brown on top. Save either warm or col j with cheese R>resd. Just butter Is fine, too. Crams Cheese Spread Blend 1 small package cream cheese with an equal amount of .butter, 1 tablespoon honey or Jelly and enough orange Juice to make spreading consistency. ILmrIrh shop to 9 P-m- monday, thunsday, - friday^ satiifdGy >7*^ TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER . 73 R SAOHdftftT IT. / ML Ml AO PKI THB PONTIAC PftgSS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1,061 wunnuMn VoiSutiom Time to Check All Broken Window* Before Cold Weather fc^n^iac aLA se 23 West Lawrence St. M 5-3441 Segregation Issue Triggers Protest BOSTON _~ A. ' A A The other teams will be in ac- tion by the end of the week, getting under way a season that will still be tapping along when base, ball resumes next gpring. SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT ! ! ! the 1962 PONTIAC and TEMPEST PUBLIC RESPONSE NAS BROUGHT OUR NEW OAR SALES TO AN ALL TIME NISH ! SEE '...Tho Now SERIES off Tompogt, Catalina, Star Chief, Bonneville: SPECIAL ATTRACTION —LeMAN'S end GRAND PRIX. Choose from 4 series end 14 body style* m 45 different solid colors, wifk' 2-ton« of your choice. • CHOOSE FROM A GOOCt SELECTION OF 1961 FACTORY OFFICIALS' MILEAGE CARS AT BIG — BIG SAVINGS! rosch at St John’s and North Carolina, la the new coach ef the Philadelphia Warriors — a formal way ef speOtag 1-1 Wilt Chamberlain and cohort*. Donovan has the unenviable task of trying to shape the hapless New York Knicks Into a winner, taking over a team that won only 21 of 79 games last season. Eddie came to the Knicks from St. Bonaven-here he had nationally ranked powers the last six years. Friday, Los Angeles home season at Philadelphia, and Saturday the champion Boston Celtics open at home against DettOi^ while * On. etmnffl af St. Louis and New York et Philadelphia to an afternoon television game. AAA Chicago.Is in the Western division aldng with St. Louis, Los Angeles, Cincinnati, and Detroit. Hie Eastern Division, as last year, has Boston, Philadelphia, Syracuse and New York. Williams Gets NL Honor NEW YORK (UPD—Billy Williams, 23-yeer-oM Alabama - bom outfielder who hit .273 for the Chicago Cubs, wea named the National League’s Rookie of the- Year today by the United Press International's board of baseball experts. UNITED TIRE SERVICE DiClARiS week’s 414 rout of Saginaw High. Saginaw trailed by only, a 74 margin with three minutes remaining In the first halt Then die Wildcats broke the game wide ppen by scoring a touchdown per minute for a 28-0 halftime lead. Handy’s strongest positions are in'the backfield and at the end! spots. Two quarterbacks, _ Don Bach and Bob Baughman, run Randy’s T-formation attack, although Bach la the better passer of the two and sees more action. Both boys are talented at the art of running! rollout and option plays. Dick Westcuberg, who stands only 5-7 and weighs 149, Is the scattmek of the offense. Bob Es-sex, the other halfback, is not as fast as' Westeaberg, but he’s bigger sad stronger and alsehlt!, •de. The Chiefs, with a 14-1 record, will make a supreme effort to stop this machine and post a startling upset Game time is 3 p.m. - ON NEW TIRE PRIDES Coupfin Special Tim Moonting 6.70x15 $4.11 WHY BUY A RECAP? •RAND NEW SNOW TIRES NOT A SECOND, CHANGEOVER OR NEW TREAD YOUR CHOICE 6.70x15 Elk. T. T. GJU~ .50x14 Ilk. T.T. *9* EXCHANGE PLUS TAX NO RECAPPABLE TIRE NEEDED NO MONEY DOWN! SPORTS. IMPORTS sad COMPACT, NgW 1st UNI 100 LEVEL ,*12« .$14w coupon sesciAL—no nuns nbbdsd WHITEWALLS .SKIS- • OOiH $14.95 99* $ A 45 I 1 up Opea Jfoarfoy. Tbandar. Friday ‘HI 9 -Clesed Sunday UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. >• ' 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN ?QNTIAC.' Pontiac <5 MT. CLEMENS STREET v> Tha auit of tho century! Value is intrinsic hrthc fabrion: choice imports. And in the tailoring; Hurt Schaffner & Marx. If you know fine custom work you’ll recognize the “fiM” of craftsmanship. The invaluable •met is the confidence you ei\joy in wearing an HSM •uit Worth every cent and more of AfOO TAidcixisonS rrdsinl 3 7114 H VLSINAW at UWKINCE OpenFru% Night UntU 9BIRMINGHAM—02 W. Mark THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961. MAKE OVER PAP-M ■Mi arkets, Business and Finance 111 ‘Ritual’ Should Be Open ARKETS (top prices t of locally grown ( by growers-and sold by i wholesale package lots, fettaae are furnished by the Detroit. Bureau of. Markets, as of Stock Market Is Irregular Detroit Produce T^Big on the Moderate Side NEW YORK (ft - Trading was moderate! Galas and losses of most key stocks were small. Boeing Ml 2% to 48 on successive blocks at 15,000 and 6.000 __ shares in a delayed opening due Ml to an accumulation of sell or-;|o ikA. The rush to unload Boeing *gi followed a published report that the pentagon has decided to discontinue production of that company's BIS strategic bomber. Boeing wasi It was also reported th£t the .among steels, hit by a wave of selling in an ir- Pentagon will lirojt1 investment in lag oil pr regular flock market early today. ***** bomber Other ■ aircrafts gave ground. Douglas and North American Aviation off about a point each. Some solid gains were made elsewhere in-the list. International Business Machines jumphdji points “j-ea new high. Du Pont rebounded a couple of points. Eastman Kodak advanced more than point Helene Ctirtit -recovered^ more than a point of'Wednesday’s Slight ehaages p r w vailed Broccoli, 'das. Ochs. —............. 28 Cabbage. Wtf. h ' * Cabbags. red. bo. Bond Prices Open Mixed Prices on the American Stock Exchange were irregularly higher. Fairchild Camera, added a point. Moderate gains were scored by Giannini Controls, Mead Johnson, Technicolor, Paddington “A" and Ural Electronics. Aeronca and Kaiser Industries were lower. Carrots, tapped, bu. .. Cielery, 3 to 5 doz. . CelOrir. ,nd ............ celery, dao. ataika ■ }•» NEW YORK (API—Bond prices] Among corporates traded on the iso opened mixed today. The lax trad- New York Stock Exchange nils | ® irtg paceythat has ruled'all week Eggplant, long type Fennel, doz. baba. . Gourd* .............. Horseradish, pk. Kohlrabi, doz. bchs.. . Leeks................. . Over the counter dealers in U.S. ;; J jJ government securities said there - 1 ®j>|\vere “few price movements in ei- were the most active, but prices fr- Onions, grasp, doz.' bcha Onions, pickling Parsley, curly, doz. bchz. . ptr*^ root. das. bchs . Parsnips.’ cello pas Pea*, blackeye .' iIso fdtt' plus 2-32 marks. Governments • 1JJ posted irregular'gains Monday and • Tuesday and were mostly nn-Yoo changed Wednesday. Among the larger, mover* Southern Pacific Railroad 514s up 1 at 103. Baltimore Gas ft Electric 4s up Td at 9314 mid Chicago ft North Western Railway 3s off 114 at 52. electrical Pacific Gas ft Electric spurted 2% to 94 on an opener of 3,000 shares following news It planaa S-for-1 stock spUt and dividend booat. DETROIT III — John F. Gordon, president .of General Motors, says the giant corporation intends to keep on using its resources in developing superior products that will outsell all competition spite a government charge of monopoly. .. . • *" under indictment on charge of monopolizing the diesel electric locomotive market. American Stock Exch. niur*. »ft«r drclmsl points sn eighths Tew Ago .. 1961 High . Sn Low . 365 0 127.5 140 5 257 . Pumpkins ..................... ■Radishes: black. . Rsdtshes, red. dot. bchs. Radishes, white; doz. bchz, . The New York Stock Exchange GM Is Proud of Its Products President Says Despite U.S. Monopoly Charge, Firm. Will Grow speech Wednesday night, Gordon said GM, hopes to get evefi more than the S4 per cent of the eminent says the company now has. The occasion was GM’i announcement of a new model diesel. —Gordon told 125 top executives from all parts of the coaatiy Butt GM hopes to opine up with some new product “that win make as great and aa dramatic an economic contribution to Mr Industry and. to our caaa try as the dtesel lecemodvea hav?/’ "And believe me,” Gordon said, ‘if or when we come up with will not heals ! NEW TORE* —Following ll li* ot' seteeted stock 9HHH1 J jJ York Stock Xzchan** with no *3 (Ids*I HigtiYow €>!ery Cftbfctge .......... Collard, bu________________ Endive, bu. ...... Ebdive. bteftched ....... *ac%rote, bu.............. liwwii. bleached, bu. , .) High U« Last th*. tate to provide the faidlitie* and organization to produce that prod-regardless of the fact that are-now being prosecuted by jibe government for exactly this type of contribution to the railroads of this country,** By IUL BOYLE NEW YORK (API—On* to the great rituals of American life it the h««ri—* conference. The conferences are heU behind doted doors to give I an air of secrecy. That is a thumping the table; Everybody They rimikl be thrown open and the public. Ft* the average business conference mmj ing and f §r more dram than an of Broadway pn duction. In some oi ftees they hold conference weekly — same even have them daily. In others the boss merely calls them whenever he is lonely end feels Hke bawling out the staff. Business conferences, whatever their outcome, have two undoubted social virtues: They keep ex- railroads businros which the gov.out of therein Urunmer end they keep executives out -of the snow in winter. However much critics may denounce business conferences as a waste of timer it must be admitted a person is reasonably safe from pneumonia while attending them. He is usually pretty safe from mental strain, too. : ( o* A 1 36* 36* 36*- V, Romaine. bu Sorrel, I Poultry and Eggs 15 13* 33* 33*... _____- - ... I Gen Accept lb • ■ IS 11 22* SI + * RCA lb 4 45* . 45 45 — * GritCigar 130 1 38* .38* 38*— V. Rayonter job • 49* 40 40 |GenDynam ,50p 129 25V. 25 15 W * R4ytheon 1.121 10 50* 50* 58*+ *lGenBlec 1 * 78 TO* 75* 70 +T tRelch Ch ,50d 11 04 63* 63*+ * OenFds ISO 32 04* 94* 94*..... Repub Av 2 40 28* SO* 10*.[GenMills 1.20 , 7 34* 34* 34* Repub StI 3 .64 27* 27* 27*+ * I Gen Motors 2 124 50*l.io » 58* 58* 50*— * 0«n *Htez Drug ,50b <70 89* 87* SHtewUfeJUl Will1 SV’33g 10 7* 7 7 — * Reyn Met ,S0< ^^raOTtr-W*^ * am Pub Ut 130 28 35* 35 £tr*'fb£*r Tob 1.50 27 76* 75* 7f*+l* GM's new GP30 locomotive will be bull! by ^Electro-Motive Division at LaGrange, HI., starting in April. The basic cost at the 2,250 horsepower unit is $196,500. GM is. 38* 37* irjt-^-*| model, 1 10* 18* 10*+^ * j 23 -sf* 58* 50*~' iso far has 20 orders for the new i e*... > TelAEl .76 132 1 •3—iTiRtcMld 00 45* 44*' 45 + * Getty Oil .. Qron 1.00 48 42* 41* 4Z*+ S OI1MU IS . Ant if P* 1.10b 40 71* 70* 70*+ VOoodrlch 2. [Am & F (t X | ft W 9* . Goodyear AmMAFdy 90 79 43* 41* 41*— %l5nct A Cc 30 23%.JBi .23*- iEaWeather Reversals “*+i*l ||SpOr Futures Bids 00 367* 36* 3 »! Grand Un 60b ^ . Jive poqltqr: y AmSmeh t Mq 1 18* i ■7-6: heavylype rooster* 3*20; ■ broilers n TelAtel :njU M 121* 111* a tab Lta <■• ■ i ion* ioo> B-Wwose- I ■ H* W IP Inc 30 17 27* 27» Ainpes Cp 40 10* 191 Amah Son 1.40 i* mi 9JV DSTBOR EGGS Anaconda 150* DETROIT.' Oct. 11 (API — Egg prices Armeo S" * . or* 17* 57*+ * Ot Ho Ry 3 ___«*-•-»* IS* 15*+ * lot W Pin .00) “ — ‘ * [Greyhound - LI . -Whites > 48-50*; |l ■ ft M 49* 34 7|*‘ 71* ,49 « 45* 41 4. 71* 73 14 te* 35 -511 - —H— 49%_ Halliburton 2.40 45 54 ■ 53' - 7H, ‘Hamm Pop 1.10b l M 34 34 + * S>St Tron a Have* tad 35g 5 41* 40* 40* “ - *Ajre P«ta 75, 13 ill M.'.MJ*+1g|8S£- S' 1st £ wmthitP I* V .CHICAGO (AP) —Unfivorahk wvoy st m is jo* so* 5g*+i* I weather for harvesting over parts jm laid i 7 32* 3i* 32*+ * of.the corn and soybean beltcrcal-^I*plt40» 13 is* to* 40*» *|pd a demand lor futures on the St m wl M ffl trade today. Och+rttf 1.40 * 10 01* z$&*m§w 61* * ao*+ 1 i30a 16 12* tr' 02*+l 27 40* 30* 40 + 1 12 U* 9* 16*.... 4 25* 25* Mi.:.. Ate. checks'30-30'i Chicago raoDcci CHICAGO Oct. U (UPH - Hit poultry too tew receipts, to report pruts 00: N wore 50: W scorT 37* *C0T' BallAOh J0(‘ _E*g» unaettled White ‘Urge extras BoounltM * BaldLmia A i 11 W* 30* 30 — * • 42 23* . 13* - 231s—' 'V, W 0 4**4 4IH- Y 3 97Vk 57*4, 57V,— I I9S 39% 39%-f V; 37 S. mixed large I 34. 4 a Beckman In *, BellAHow . Livestock n 93 % i It 94 i - ■ te 40' * < 465 48* ‘ ,1, talMlner 1 (O rvltUPfcSk 00— -gg JELT stdOllCal 2 Std Otltad 140 2/1* 2;,*” ,J SLdOIINJ l.gSe Nearby soybean contracts moved, up a eent or moro a-bushel around the opening on accumulated later the advance was trimmed to fractions as support dwindled. Corn advanced fractions after a mixed opening trade, with no. future. In wheat, early transactions were light with commercial house brokers on both sides of the mark-*|et. Rye declined, reflecting profit [taking after Wednesday’s runup. 5^ • . . * Grain Prices ^l8U«Wsr 1.30 '(• DETROIT LIVESTOCK Detroit, o«t 10 suit 700. lluibtM suers »oo non-ri> moderately active, steady to strong; Sudd Co •t+asy, several loads high choice BuSVa J : g* * eStcrlDnijf^ l.M Sunrfty 1.49 SwlftliCo 1901 CHICAGO GRAIN '•!■ CHICAOO, Oct. 19 «APi — ^jgrftln: 4 • I W* 39% 39H— Vi I 12% 13% J*%~ », _________ stew* Y39-JIO;____________ states 24 54-15 25. mixed loads high •Ml low ehpbM oUon 24.00-24.50; grade steers 22.75-24.00: load high c heifers 24.00; gc~> 21.75-13 00: util: >0-15.00 ’• CmllAb Mng i- Camb RLk ;3 t 3.75g 1 01* .41*1 TennGai 1,12 . TexOProd M i,, TexOOUl 1 Tezlnz 10 23* 23* 17 »* 32* ,32’. 8 19* 19* 19* LOO* May ......... 1.43* .1.14* July” ...... l.je* 1.18* -Lard. (Drumn . .■!.»* Dec. .........:0.ft d loti edn f Hogs 300. Butchers i. No. 1 absent earlj i. l and 2 190-230 a.._____________ and 1 10M23O lb. 16.75-17.15; l'l ____________ 1-300 lb. 1500-10.75: No.- 1. 2 and 3 Cate 1-400 Mi am 14.75-16 00; No. 3 and 3 ! Cater me t » 13 75-14 50 Celanese 130 * Trsnsamer JO 11 54* S3* 54 — * 10 U* 11 11^ + j{ M it*— * DOW JONES 11 NOON AVERAGES e 30 00-40 00: :t a utility t •0-23 00 t ChampIm^Ojl [r ChMSpAP*C i Lehman 1.71k *i2!-bSwJ^i' y. LtggArMy 54>i_M*+-^«a Otabld^ ,r.ig5^5,ss^cA »* 21* 22*+ *'Unit Air Lie UNIVa 134 134 — ' j Unit Atrr 3 197 19% 19 - —U— 1 M 12 126,* 125* |20* > 10*- * Volume 12 Noon 1 INCREASED OFFICE MATINEES If you have ever attended of Jheae office matinees, typical charactrs: Statistical Syd— He shows up with an armful of Charts to prove his points. Halfway through hii presentation, he diacovers he has hung the charts upside down. This make* no real difference to Syd. His figures read the same forward, backward, upside down, or Bulldozer Bert—"What this firm needs is some real down-to-earth aggressive thinking!” He cries, lawyer never makes a suggestion himself. He is there for only one purpose—to arise and announce why the suggestions anyone else the firm makes are legally impossible, plus' being -against public policy- THE BRIGHT BOY Doodliitf Dan—The boas’ neph-IL aits and silently draws pictures of pretty girk pqJhs pad Rowland Williams Named to A&P Post . Rowland T. Williams, 198* Devonshire. has been promoted by A ft P Food Stores to the position supervisor of operations of some 15 stores in east side Detroit. He will succeed Howard M. Saxby, who is retiring after 28 years with the .food chain. Williams started with A ft P in 1937 as a clerk in 'Pontiac. He served in. various capacities including produce department head ai^d assistant manager prior to Mb promotion to manager in 1947. He haa been associated with the Detroit unit sales department for mbre than six years. Intertown Bus Line Back in Business nods. .Ttay'is sB in fnvor of aggressive thinking. Whatever that is. They are also in favor of motherhood and the federal highway program. HAftNT RECOVERED Mum bo-jumbo Jack~H« reef! a hook on psychology and never quite recovered. ‘ time wo paid more attention to our socto-soonomic public- ' and reematraeted our' corporate contour psychicwise," he says. Everykady nods profoundly again. Why not? Why argue with a nut you caa’i even understand. Gilbert the Gambler—“So we’re losing money on tiddfywMa," argues. "Let's diversify. Why not start making bowling balls? Item for item, there’s a lot bigger profit potential to bowling balls than tiddlywinks.” I’M WORKING? Procrastinating Phil—When his turn -comes he looks mysterious and says, "I. pass tor now. V working on something I think will solve aU °ur problems, but I haven’t got it to final form.” phil haa used this same line so many times he is beginning to believe it himself: Appoint Dale Lott Ad Manager at Dodge Truck Appointment of Doyle w. Lott, Birmingham, as manager of advertising, sales promotion and training for D-odgci before him. His plans are an made . As soon as he inherits fee business, he intends to fire every: body and sell the firm to its big-'-gest competitor. Sylvester the Speutsr—The sales manager is a master of^gkiwkig, push-button prose. "While ear By* urea are down* mite fhieljiiaatli.’' he says cheerily,-waB signs indicate that next month wiH see « All eigne point to a reek bid all right—a record km. Omnipotent Oliver — “This con* fab got us exactly nowhere,” aajfW the boes^ winding it afl up. "The* next time I call you boys hi, you’ll better show up with aomr real' Ideas—or there’ll be some new! faces at this coWerence table.” The session is over. The executives march out, Ann, confidence, showing in every face. Industry marches on! News in Brief game time between S and • a.m. yesterday thieve* broke a rear window to the Lakeland Hardware at’ Airport Rood, Waterford Township, and stole $63, hunting knives and rifle ammunition. Three youths charged with steal* tog $100 in merchandise altar Whceeaa- Wilbur—The company breaking into Boh’g Market, ?— Colorado St, Aug. 8 were bound over to Circuit Court yesterday by Municipal Judge Cecil A. McCollum. Charged with breaking arid entering are Willie Jones, 30, 464 Ditmar St.; Eugene Jones, 19, 399 Branch St.; and Albert Page, 18, 497 Ditmar St. Bond was set at $300 apiece. Two sinks valued at 129 were stolen from a home at 268 Fisher -it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday evening by Andre# McCaskUl of 47 Orton St. Rummage Sale, Friday, Oct. 20. . a.m. to-4 pm- Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church. 33460 Pierce, [Birmingham. 3 blocks south or 14 Mile. bet. Southfield and Greenfield. —Adv. Zonta Annual Fah^-CAI Bldg., Waterford. Oct. 21; ll a.m. to t pm. Donation, 50c toe. refreshments. Meals served all day, 59c and ,up. “ —AdS, Rummare Sale; American La* Truck is announc-i by David R.l Crandall, director H of truck market-] tag. Lott was direct- ] or of advertising, j l e s promotion I and- public rela-1 tions for Reel Motors, Inc., Lansing, from 1947 to 1955. From 1955-to 1966^4* was aa account evecutive with. William ■ Hart Adler, Inc., Chicago. He then jj joined Grant Advertising Inc., De-matCinmkat -at^ regional -jMyregjr Rala. JHrtetoglMi . ’ " . ~ . ITnltArlan nhureh. Woodward Ave. J rooks Rd. at Maple, Trov. Thurs., Oct. IP, arid Fri.. Oct. 30, • am. to 6:00 pm. —AdS. Rummage - Sale, 8t. Andrews 1 Episcopal Church.' 5301 HatcherV Rood, Drayton plains. Pri.. Oct. idOth, from 8 to 1. —Adv. LOTT Store, 118 W. Lawrence 8treet. New- merchandise received dally. ' _________—Ads. „ . Rummage Sale, Stoven* Hall, . Exchange St. Entrance. Fri.. Oct. n “, 7-P pm. -Adv. laccounts, and became vice president-account supervisor to 1958. For the past year, Lott'has been goods, etc, Unitarian Church, Woodward Ave. at Lone Plne.'Frl.,Oct. 20th. 9 am. ■ * “ Clothing; household vice ..president of Electrographic Corpr A Michigan State University -Ads. Rummage Sole, Saturday, Oct. 31, at 10 am], at 20 Ferry Av#.-—Adt. Rummage Sale, Fri^ OcL 20, 0:00 to 5:00, and Sat., Oct. 31, LANSING * — The Intertown Suburban Urea was hate la bustneaa today, In spite of Its announcement two weeks ago that it was quitttog. The firm was ordered by the State Public Service Coinmta-sion (P8C) to “refrain from taking any action to respect to - Take all ia Mae, have two children. Mar- next to Nu-Vision. First Iaina and Collett. They live at]0* Gcd- Ml«k>nary Society. Sussex, Birmingham. .able to reefers operations. The bus’ tine, servlfhg 13 sab-urban Detroit communities to Western. Wayne County, was Idled by a* strike of drivers ployes. Adv. - Ruminate 8 a I e, * VFW Hall Drayton Plains,, Sat:, Oct. 31st, from 0 to 1. —Adv. Business Notes ] Fish' 'Supper. Baldwin E.UB. • Church, 210 Baldwin, Friday, 5 to meet etending ggency pcfiv;]*0 .T jties to behattiof American Oil Co. Rummage Sale. Friday and Sat-and Standard Oil .(Indiaiia*.. pr-{“«iay. 395 Oakland Are. -Adv. nest A. Jones, president of Mac- Rummage sale Fri. and Sat. I till Manus, John ft.Adams, Ind., has!noon, 147 E. Howard. —adv. ^•pointed Fred J. Hatch, a 800161* pancake sapper SLMmry’t Epfa stops and actions necessary to be vicq president of the advertising oopal Church!^confer1 m J^vivand " * ~ - ----“— “ agency, as company officer injGreenshleld,Oct. 21, 5 to 7:30 pm. charge of the accounts.' Richard F. Monley will qpntinue to function as account „ supervisor eri ^the American-Standard business, and Joseph L. Hardig has been named account executive. • / Adults 11. ohildren 50c. Rummage Bake Sale, Sat., Oet, 2lst. 9 to 1. First United Pent#* postal Church, 178 Oreen.1 —Adv. Companies* New Policy - Cattle 13009 calves ttndf lo Hi higher: < weak; bulls* steady to and. ztockers and feeder two, urn imiHs+i Rad 68* 68* * *JJ»bdUon 47* 47*— * Magnevo |Un On Cp 1.50 13 *iUMt MEM I , 1 S|HR6,r-.-1 US Oypsmji 2.40* ^ rfatr 1400*1000 -| 22 50-24.5t * ComlCred 1.60 mm&ss 1-1400 lb 34 00-30.00 k choic#0 33.! 3o%w.ig!m ite3ua> i '34% 34%—» v; Un WhfAtn 47J 4 47>i- V4 UnlvMB«!b i 79>» 70'n— ••iUnivOUFfd . »»« fcr-v'pO 811 pt . n NTS . .50 Q 11.-3 11-30 __JZ. 34>g 34% 34%-f % JjjJ* *1 Ml- Ml .____1IL Oklk - til- Het Pap pf . A,lta All RaoSr o« _*-i* Sk*!. »d 4.71 a. 20 51* 54* .S*» UM 54**54* 25*+* Lc'VonAlStf LOOg - 1 20*. 29* 20* leo + *JVoaa< cP- 40 .2 so* 24* ft*- ^v3SWo “ - • - . 1.25 a 11-15 13-. .. .ITS . . 11,10 12-1 .35 Q H. 11-0 rr-.e»S- -t 1011 •. H-W t .. Mms-d-’ -iM7iT.tr 35 0 10-27 12-t < amplli Comte! I to i Mn. |U 102 4 r. Dzy 76 4 102 4 m £1 •Mfg I 19% IftS 15% 1 90 V# 5J% 33% I- -W*- 7f* to*’ -DL-. ' W 12* 12 * 4 ? i iJ'NBtCan .0 NCt-thReg -191 : S RVV' ^ *■* rnum V WnlTnTel M0 : 2fl‘. -ML_'14 WeitfAifk 1.30 L£. - !48=fc Uninsurable Are Now Insurable Stocks Of Local Interest Plfuroo alter decimal potato oft il(Mht IM Asked Arkansas Louisiana ( V* By SAM DAWSON ' AP Buatoeas News Analyst «m U R| YU It & who have snapped-back mtlsfao-torUy from a heart* attack are finding life insurance companies today willing, even.eager, to take them op as insurable rikks. So are those who have been cured of -tuberculosis or whose cancer operation has been pronounced successful after a period -.—_ 11. DRvidgop Bros. ....- .14 " if; Ffderat MoruI-Bowser Bearings 37.0 30 Hoorn Bali ft Bearing ! IT* . Leonard Reflnliut ...... ^*rbi35o 19 20* 20* 26*-- >J;w®»|Vw}r IJ4 < 00* 00 -10 — 4k|j?*P{V,f Jt b.vf--' it % '7fr5v.-."-W* * %!rV Si_. — : Dms lip 70 i 14* 24* 24*... |Uia tan quarterly or uml-maasl lion. Unless otherwise! noted, cstr^dhrldenrt* — * forming *“«od on I Aunt Jane's Pood ____ eclara-1 Detroiter Mobil. Hemea special or DUunond Crystal .....: -. IjHaetronlaq Cspttal...... teas! eon tea international l a—Paid k Kalanea ..... .. . I 7,788.171.421.06 Dug Ll 1.1 i Deposit* fiscal year - v ..— ' ' .Jsirr..>........AMte.T*,in'M'eM,' ... , ■jJSb*1 El&Mus ...ItSidratteiU . .....___—------------ -Total dm ................ 387.fl50.03(M Golil-esselk -v ..tv-. II.082.(M,I * imiin miff del,t Dry'lce »w* firtd mamitactured CjSS*. i* .xtfwifeciaUy in *— Otog^&nS 'Mjr+.Mtn5. I - ’ * • Otis Kiev 1.80 6 75/4 fr—• , I Owens 111 OI 2.50 3“ 0F4 22* ws »*- * Okford Pap i 5 32Vs ■mk 453* 45* v ,]■■.. ■' P- KiTiinr ““ f —ri— JCl. 17, I!I60 1,378,439,062762 ,050,874.20_ PeatedyCaal M -KtPwfieyTJC 1 20a IPaPwlkU IjS— sis-'Ki* ... --------— 26 47* 40* 47 +, * PII1IEL i-20 ...iMkr«l Low I 24* 24* 24*— * Ptllt&Rdtf lb City, PwOotone .lb.', IS 48* 48* S*+ ■ • FtuchariF aril - 2* United Equity is now extending The Institute of Life Insurance insurance coverage to those with t medical histories