Tl* Waather . , < V.M. WMtlwr Bare** Flrtuil an (Detain an Page t> THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition VOLv 119 NO. 175 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 30. mi—48 PAGES mn«faESg% mono PRESS IT KRNATTOIUL House GOP-Dixieaat Vote Halts School Aid Chances Dangling High in Space Military Chiefs Agree to Goulart as Figurehead Plan Calls for Prim# Minister to Bo Named by Congress Till '63 RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil W — Brazil’s three military ministers today agreed to accept Joao Goulart as a figurehead president with a prime minister to be appointed by Congress until 1963, a government source said. The decision by the three top military chiefs was reached here and a government source said.it n already has- been transmitted to Brasilia, the inland capital. If acceptable to Congress and government political leaders in Brasilia, it might end the serious crisis, which has been rocking the country since Janjo Quadras resigned as president last Friday. Previously the three military leaders had opposed having Goulart even as a figurehead president. The formula proposed by the military chiefs considerably differed from the recommendations presented to the national Congress eailler today by a congressional committee. ^Jhe important difference k that JP WngftM rather mbit the president would choose the prime minister. WOULD SWITCH POWER The prime minister would have the power to .run the country—the same powers previous Brazilian presidents have held. ■ it h it Goulart would hold little more than a decorative job. ruder the formula proposed toy tlie military rhiefo—War Minister Marshal Od.vlio Denys, Navy Minister Adm. Silvio Henkel, and Air Minister Brig. Grun Moss—Goulart and a prime minister would serve until IMS, when an election would be held. Goulart was en route to New York from Paris. It was not known here whether, the leftist vice president and his ardent supporters would accept his being a mere figdrehead. ADJOURNED UNDECIDED The special session of congress ended in Brasilia at almost the moment that the new military proposal was disclosed here. ’dr ★ # Congress debated the recommendation from its commission and adjourned without reaching a decision. When one congressman was told about the military proposal, he exclaimed, “I do not believe it." The deputy. Ulysses Guimaraes, a Social Democrat from Sac Paulo, explained: "The military chiefs Tuesday said they would not accept Goulart’s return to Brazil under any conditions. " In Today's Press So Legal Khrushchev twists phrases to sound good—PAGE 8. 'Sorry, Soapy' Rhodesia apologises to Williams—PAGE 18. Satisfied - Hoping for 2-year extension on civil rights—PAGE p. - Immunity Judge says Cuban freighter should be returned—PAGE to. State Highways t e highway officials helping solve city traffic problem—PAGE 41. Area News ...........ti Comics .......... —it - Editorials ......... « Markets .............48 Obituaries ......... 88 Sports ...........37-48 Theaters ......... 18 TV A Radio Programs ..47 WUmm. Earl .........47- Women's Pages .18-17 Mediator Answers Questions TELLS OF PROPOSAL - William E. Simkin strike deadline. The (right), director of tip Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service tells newsmen Tuesday of the proposal he made to/the United Auto Workers Union and Big Three asking them to consent to a one-week extension of contract talks past the Reuther to Race GM Strike Date and auto firms later agreed to go along with the request extending the contract to Sept. 6. With Simkin are (from left) Dale A. Ricketts of the mediation service, assigned to GM-UAW and James MacPherson, regional director of the FMS. Pledges High-Gear Auto Talks DETROIT (AP) — American Motors Corp. aad the United Auto Workers Union today announced they have reached “complete agreement" on a new contract built around the pioneering profit.sharing plan. DETROIT (UPll - Walter P Reuther today pledged the United Auto Worker* Union to an * tensive bargaining schedule” efforts to reach a contract settle-with giant General Motors re a government-inspired strike truce rum out next Wednes-day. But Reuther said. "GM is going to have to part wiith some of its money bags" if an agreement is to be reached before the new strike deadline of 18 a.m. (Pontiac time) on Sept* 6. Reuther arrived at General Motors headquarters thii morning to resume personal command of contract talks at the company chosen Tuesday night as the union’s strike target He said GM was “the richest company In the world" but that there was a "tremendous gap" between its present offer to the lug profit • sharing agreement reached last week with American Motors. Motor* offer would put an extra ‘‘$1,000 in the pay envelopes of employes over the . three years" new contract. '' ' tr 4 1 * Merchants Plan Pontiac's Debut Coming-Out Party Set for Sept. 21-23 Includes Rides, Free Breakfasts Hie Downtown Merchants Association) began planning its 1963 Pontiac Coming-Out Party Tuesday. t Hotel to outline plans for the annual tall promotion. Chairman of the event is Robert W. Snee, manager of the downtown Pontiac J. C. Penney Store. '* * * The Coming-Out Party is slated for Sept. 21-23. Plans thus far include qmusement rides to be seff] up in the W. Lawrence Street municipal parking lota between Saginaw and Cass. There will be free customer parking in all municipally owned lots and a free breakfast each nmrning in the old county court-heuse parking lot. Naturally, the “debutant” will be the 1962 ^Pontiac. Plans are being made for Pontiac Motor Di-" vision to display its 1962 models. PALL FASHIONS Merchants will go all-out to show the new (all lines in everything from fashions to appliances. Sidewalk selling, a colorful fea-tre of the annual event, will again M to the festival spirit Outdoor style shows are also be-ng planned by downtown merchants and promise to be a big attraOtioijj, according to Snee. He also said It “doesn't matter too much to us" that the union had singled out GM for strike ■ GM Vice President and - chief tion it the talks foil. bargabwrL^ G. Seaton. «foO|.N interference' insists the GM offer is superior to the gains ip the American , Seaton said GM did not oonskfer tors agreement, said the General Tuesday's request by the Federal — — I Mediation Service, which resulted {in staving off a strike threatened for midnight Thursday as “interference" by the government. The company believed, along with the Mediation Service tint the contract extension to Sept. 6 was Creeps Up on Us fc-rJSrS “ SSS^SSm tshMW J*. -t 6 degrees above the normal liighj of 76 to 81 and normal low of Mi Summer to Stay as September The mercury will drop to about 67 tonight and rise to near 87 tomorrow. The union and the Mg three companies of GM, Ford and Chrysler Tuesday night agreed to go along with the Mediation Service request for a contract extension to Sept. 8. Federal Mediation Chief William _ ,__, . . ,E. Simkin sent telegrams to the Satoiday will agala be warmer ,bi three companies and the un-wUh net too much change there- L tate Tuesday urging the con-an*,‘ . I tract extension, just before the un- Precipitation will total about 2 ion met to choose a strike target, to 5 tenths inches from showers! The UAW Executive Board went or thundershowers both Thursday ahead with pinpointing GM for a and Saturday nights. I strike, but also voted to accede Morning southwesterly winds at't0 ,ho 9,mlt,n r"?um" 8 to 15 miles per hour will become! * * * 10. to 18 m.p.h. tomorrow. i Reuther even agreed to extend The lowest recording in down-j the Ford and Chrysler pacts be-town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. wasjyond Sept. 6, but said of GM: 65 degrees. Thcfeermometer read-'"We will not extend their contract! 2 p.m. was 87. k i (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2). ! Coalition Vetoes Federal Assist to Education 242-169 Tally Prevents .Consideration of Aim of Administration WASHINGTON 1*1 — A coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrats today votai to prevent House consideration‘of the administration’s federal aid k> education bill. The vote against consideration was 242-169 The move, which came quickly after the House met at noon, apparently ended chances of getting through at jhia session the principle the administration badly wanted to establish—federal money for the Construction of-public school facilities. Two other parts of the pack-I age, aid to schools overcrowded by children of federal workers, and extension of a student loan program, are likely to be salvaged and passed later. Many members, both Republican and Democratic, favor these programs while bitterly opposing public school construction. Today's defeat for the administration came swiftly after the House began business. Voting against considering 'fee bill bill were 82 Democrats and 160 Republicans, Voting to con? sider it were 163 Democrats and t Republicans. The tip came when the coalition of Republicans and eon- 1 servattve Democrats passed up a chance to delay the bill for another week. That indicated that they werC'Snre of their strength and wanted to hnry the Mil. I The measure defeated today was only a remnant of the one the Kennedy administration originally wanted. • • called Alphabetically Under the little-used Calendar Wednesday procedure, the roll of House committees was called alphabetically shortly after the House met at noon. Hep. Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., chairman of the Education Committee, was allowed to call up the bill when his turn on the list came. The bill’s opponents could have delayed things a week by having other bills called up by a Southern Democratic chairman who came before Powell on the list. They didn’t. ENGINEER WORKING—High above an Alpine glacier an engineer works on cables atop cable car to allow it and its passengers to be lowered to safety following a freak * accident mar AP Pkstsfss Chamonix, France, Tuesday. Above him is the severed end of the traction cable which was cut by s French jet plane. Helicopters Rescue 81 Safe After * Awful9 Night CHAMONIX, France (API -Rescuers today completed^ remov-81 sightseers who spent hours of terror in tiny cable cars stalled high above an Alpine glacier by a freak accident that killed six others, had an awful time and we’re glad it's over," waa the comment of a Briton numbed by a night of little leg room and freezing cold on the slopes of Mont Blanc. Helicopters ferried the last survivors back to the warmth of their Chamonix hotels. Some of them had spent nearly 20 hours suspended hundreds of feet in the air while workers slowly wound fa) the broken traction cable. The cable was snapped at 1:19 P-m. Tuesday by a French air farce jet combat plane flying law through the valley between Mont Blanc and Aiguille du Midi. Most of the passengers seemed GOMon-Con Delegates Exchange Wit With UAW A veteran UAW official last night took- issue with the one-party polltictflendorsementaby the,Oakland County AFL-CIO, Council and assured Republicans they'd be considered too, in ipK; r • J v* ■ , In a witty exchange with seven GQP County con-con candidates at the Royal Oak YMCA, C. Patrick Quinn, a coordinator for the international union from Commerce Township, seemed to»- —.■— assume the election of _ ICBM Blows Up at Canaveral Minutoman Explosion Sands Flames, Debris Over Testing Base George W. Romney, one of the seven. "I know you’re gding to be up there (Lansing) regardless of hard I work," Quinn said as 40 Republicans applauded and laughed with approval., "I’m 'net m sare and feat’s why I'm here tonight," replied Romney, whose American Motors Corp. is working out the final details of a new contract Approves Nefcro Judge WASHINGTON IB - The Senate today approved the nomination of James B. Parsons, Chicago Negro, to .be a federal judge for the northern district of Illinois. [Scottish Writer, 67, Dies GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) -George Blake, 67, Scottish editor 'and novelist, died in a Glasgow hospital Tuesday. Rev. James B. Gttinan Planning Freedom Ride A Farmington minister will be one of three Episcopal clergymen aboard a bus of freedom riders scheduled to leave New Orleans Sept. 11 for a trip to Dearborn. * it ' * Rev. Janies B. Guinan. rector of the Trinity Church in Farming-too; Rev. Joseph Dickson, rector * “1 Joseph Church, Detroit; and Rev, Malcolm Boyd, soon to take up duties as chaplain at Wayne State University, will make the journey. The Rev. Mr. Gateau, am of Mr. and |*r». Gerald Guinan of 148 Mate M., Pontiac, was ordained in 1848 and took over the mlnMerisI duties at the Farmington ehnreh in 1*52. He attended Pontiac Public tchoois and graduated from Kenyon Colfege to 1942: His that pastorate was in Belleville. The Rt. Rev. Richards S. Em-rich, bishop of the Episcopal-diocese of Michigan, said Mr. Dickson ' < (Is , f« h and Mr. Guinan■ discussed the journey with him. Mr. Guinan, vacationing with his family at Oscoda, could not be reached for comment about the trip. He Uvea at 83747 Ely 1 Court, Farmington. BUtgrp Emrich said, ‘‘I am not ■ running an authorization agency. ■ I have to respect the consciences of men in important social matters such as this. “I do not inject myself unless a question of diocesan policy or a matter of faith and morals is in- The trip is to end in Dearborn I Sept. 16—the day before the open-I ins in Detroit of the 60th general I convention Af the Protestant Kpis-I copal Church. \ The tour, sponsored by the Epis-I copal Society for Cultural and I Racial Uitity, Atlanta, Ga., * visit six Episcopal, colleges ‘in HEV, JAMES. B. GUINAN South. Quinn, 3296 Brookneal St., appeared at the last of two public forums, arranged by the county GOP to give its candidates an understanding of what special interest groups like the union want written into the new state constitution. COULD NOT ATTEND •ounty council, which has endorsed all Democratic County candidatea in the Sept. 12 election, turned down an invitation to attend the first hearing held in Pon-iac a week 'ago. This prompted County GOP Chairmaa Arthur G. Elliott Jr., one of the seven- unendorsed candidates, to flie a criticism at Fred V. Haggard, council president. Elliott said the onion should have given the Republicans a bearing before making a a blanket Democratic endorsement. A former Democratic state , rep resentative and president of the old Wayne County CIO Council, Quinn acknowledged that it 'wasn’t really right", that the local council had endorsed the Democratic con-con candidate* without tint giving consideration to Romney, Elliott and the others. ★ * * "You send a letter to Mr. Haggard in 1962 and if I’m around then I assure you you will get the same- consideration as the there,” Quinn.said. The IretaiMf-born unionist said the council was too busy with the present auto negotiations to have called the Republicans in before Democrats were given "a blanket endorsement" Aug. 9. Saying "Haggard delegated me to come atxYspeak for him," (Continued on Page 2, Col, 5) IftBt i 'rVki CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — America's new “instant ICBM," the Minuteman, blew up today during its first attempted flight from a concrete-lined hole in the ground. * ♦ ■. W The three-atage rocket exploded i a mass pf flame a split-second after its massive booster engines ignited for a surge from the 90-'|DQt launching silo. The Air Force said there were to injuries to personnel. However, it was not known how much damage was caused by die fiery Mast that sent flame, smoke and debris soaring over. the renter section - of this missile-totting base. The 60-loot rocket apparently j ' va* partially in and partially out! .......... of (he silo when it came apart at! the seams. too fatigued by the experience to have much to say, other than that tlfey were glad to get back alive. A German family of four and an Italian man and his son were killed when their cabins fell hundreds of feet after the traction cable was snapped. SIX ARE KILLED They were the only casualties among the 87 persons on the cableway. Raymond Jacquet, prefect of the Haute Savoie Department, said It waa a miracle more people were not killed, ‘This testifies to the effective* nets of the sifety measures on this speetacultit cable .riilway linking France with Italy dcross the highest Alpine range," he ■aid. More than IN Alpine guides, French army mountain troops, police and cableway workers cooperated In the rescue operation. The Uft runs along a three-inch thick' traotion cable -strung' for more than feret miles from the AigiiiUe du Midi to the French-ftnlton. bolder: » • About 30 four-seat 'cabins run simultaneously tat each 'direction, pulled by a one-inch hauling cable which rims In one piece through (all the cabins going up and down. The weight of the descending cabins is used to pull mounting cabins up the slope. SNAPPED CABLE A little above the halfway point the. carrying cable rests on a sharp-pointed rock known as Gros Rognoo—Big Kidney. The plane, flying only a few inches below the carrying cable, snapped the upward moving traction cable at a point about 800 feet above the Gros Rognon. The three cabins moving up toward the Aiguille du Midi between the Gros Rognon and the breaking point were flung backward as if by the snap of a whip. Moat of the sightseers were French, Italian or British, but there were a few Americans. Hugh Putnam, 20, of Milton, Mass., and his cousin, Katherine Blodgett, 19, of Grand Rapids, Mich.,hvere stranded for 15 hours. They got down via a rope and took their ordeal cheerfully. T was terrified at first," sail Miss Blodgett, but then 1 quickly relaxed. We had an American newspaper with us and spent part of the time doing the crossword puzzle. I must confess that when [darkness fell the puzzle was still FLAME BOILS UP \Vhen the firing command was! given at 1:30 p.m., red flame boiled from th« depths of the hofe. A split-second later, the.Min-nteman complex became the heart of a display that looked ■ke Fourth of July fireworks on a lake. Flaming sparks and wreckage soared hundreds of feet into the Fire and smoke-chugged from the silo itself as the solid fuel that propels the rocket burned itself Within a half hour, the fire and smoke -had died ..gway, and Air Force crews moved in cautiously to, tiy to find out the. extent of the damage. . * , * v * . The Air Force hopes to install Minuteman rockets by the dreds in underground silos in the Western United .States starting next year—if the schedule does not fall seriously'behind. News Flashes WASHINGTON (AP) —Senate leaders won a preMroinary teat today in a move to extend the 'tile of the dvtl rights commission. The Senate voted to sae-pend Its rules so the extender could be considered. The roll cat] veto aneprwdlng. the rule waa 7* to tl, more than the twp-thlrds majority required. (Ear-Her atory, Page tt) NEW ORLEANS UB-A three-judge federal aongt today struck law—wMcfe permitted eehool «« Meta to Vote In favor of abandonment of public schools faced with desegregation orders. ORAN, Algeria (UPI) — Mob* streets of Oran to- ' day, hiding and wounding Mas-learn In the aeeaiai ftat hsra this PS? IV1 Wfo THB PONTIC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, Al^l^PT ifte isypr* f 1 ! * ‘H C4'** ■ fflr * Kennedy, Adenauer Stand Together Agree on Need to Counter Reds Envoy Denies Further West Setbacks Will Weaken Germans WASHINGTON <* - President Kennedy and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer were ported in complete agreement today on the need for effective measure* to counter any future] Communist violations of East-West understandings on Berlin. Weat Orman Ambassador Wilhelm Crewe delivered la Kennedy a letter frans Adananar. He bad brought the message back from Bonn after tl hours east meets WEST—This is an aerial view of (he. Brandenburg Gate and the Eastern sector of Berlin. Once a bustling center of East-West activity, it now stands nearly deserted. West ar noMti German President Heinrich Lueblie paid Bartto a surprise visit today to inspect the barbed-wire and concrete barriers erected by the Communists. Russ Freeze All Discharges Warn Aggressors Will Be Wiped Out H War Starts Over Berlin MOSCOW (AP)—Again blaming the United States and its allies for the current world tension, the Soviet government says stopped returning servicemen to civilian life and warned that aggressors will be wiped out “once and far all” If war starts. * * * A statement imued Tuesday night by the Communist party Central Committee and the Soviet Cabinet said Marshal Rodioh Malinovsky, the . Soviet defense minister, had been ordered to hold up demobilisation of military person-nel whose service would normally end this year “until the conclusion of a peace treaty with Germany.” ♦ * ,* The., number of men involved was not announced, bid Soviet Premier Khrushchev said July 8 that a military cutback of 12 million men which began last year was being halted because of the Western attitude on* Berlin. How tar the cutback had gone was never announced. ♦ * * Khrushchev on Aug. ' that Soviet troop strength might have to be boosted even further. He accused the West of pushing the world “to a dangerous brink’ In . the conflict over Berlin, which stems from Khrushchev’s pledge to sign a peace treaty with East Germany’s Communist regime fay the end of the year. The communists contend a treaty would give East Germany control over Western access routes to West Berlin. ★ #" dr "President Kennedy responded to the Soviet diplomatic offensive by offering to negotiate but stressing the West's intention to fight tor Berlin If necessary. He called for tHt biggest UA troop since the Korean war, including the right to hold military men In eervice. Reds Free Car at TanksThreat BERLIN (AP)—A U.S. Army the Friedrichstrasse crossing point sedan that had been halted under the guns of Communist police came out of East Berlin today after three American tanks and four armored personnel carriers rushed to the city’s Iron Curtain border. ★ - * t......... Col. Wayne Winder of Sheraton. Ill, signaled the American armor into position only 10 yards from Reuther Pledges Intensive Effort (Continued From Page One) beyond 10 a.m. (Pontiac time) Sept. TO MEET NEGOTIATORS He added he would meet with GM negotiators today and "stay them in an effort to arrive o agreement” fay the announced deadline. * dr . * - The Federal Mediation Serv-icehgJMervent ion in ft* "contract talflHraa viewed an possibly the firsFigen indication of concern by the Kennedy administration that the industry might be tied up by a strike right at the start of a new model year. But Simkin denied he was acting at the request of President Kennedy or Labor Secretary Arthur J- Goldberg. ★ * * His action, Simkin said, was absolutely necessary to avoid a strike” and was a routine -step. Reuther also denied emphatically that he had encouraged the federal intervention. after word of the car’s plight was brought in by a Western driver. Tank guns were trained ... green-uniformed Communist police guarding the barricades. WWW French officer!/ reported thpt the American sedan had been held about 600 yards bom the crossing point—under the guns of two Soviet-built armored cam manned by East German police. The sedan was drives by a soldier in uniform and had three passengers, also in unifoqn. The senior occupant gave his name as Capt. Wirth. He declined to identify himself in more detail. He said he had to report to his command- The right front window of the car was cracked. Occupants said hit by something, but not a bullet.’ The incident came a few hours after another Communist shoot- More About Berlin Pages 3,4, 21, 22 log, An East German swan MWAe TeltorP'C To Ask Fprcos Buildup OTTAWA (UK) - Against the background of the Berlin crisis, the government will propose to parliament when it meets next week that the ceiling on the Canadian armed forces be raised from 120,000 to 170,000, it was learned here today. The Weather Pali U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICDOTT — Mostly fair and wanner today, tonight and tomororw. High today 17, low tonlglrt 67, Ugh tomorrow tf. Southwest winds I to 15 miles today pmd tonight and 16-18$nlles tomorrow. After delivering the Kennedy at the White House, Grewe discounted any idea that further Western setbacks in the Berlin situation might put Western Germany hi a neutralist mood. He told newsmen such reports “were considerably exaggerated.” w - w w The New York Times t ported in a Berlin dispatch that Adenauer bad expressed such a fear. GERMANS CONCERNED Grewe said there is concern among West Germans about the situation and the possibility of future violations from East Germany. He said he had “s long com for himself aad Adr-to deliver with the letter It Kennedy. “The main point was the possibility in the near future of further unilateral acts from the East German side and bow to counteract such measures in an effective way," the ambassador said. WWW Grewe declined to make public any details in Adenauer’s letter. But lie, said there was complete agreement between the contents of the letter and Kennedy’s objectives. The ambassador acknowledged that critical voices have been raised in West Germany against Adenauer’s Western policies, ask- swam to Canal Under a hail of bullets from Red border guards. He climbed out on the West bank of the canal unhurt. During the past week, Communist troops have killed two men trying to swim the 60 yards across the canal, which forms part at the border in the divided city. Berlto-rs now call it the “Death Canal. Police reported that Communist guards elsewhere on the border flung tear gas grenades and fired water cannon Tuesday night at about 60 persons gathered at Alex-andrinenstrasse. in Krauzberg in the America# sector. Shortly after midnight the Communists opened up again when a group of Western youths started catcalling. WWW About 5 am., a Communist water cannon at Treptow suddenly let fly at a police patrol ar on the Western side. President Heinrich Luebke Wesf Germany was in the city today for a look at the situation. He arrived unexpectedly after breaking off his vacation. After talking with Mayor Willy Brandt, Lusbke planned to visit the refugee reception center at Marienfelde and take a look at the baited wire and concrete barriers erected by the Reds along the ^ hordei _ Mil la WallM Jjfwmt temperature preceding t t Jb • a m: Wind Telocity > BJ Direction: Southveet. Son MU Wednesday at 1 :IS p.m. One Tear Age la reatlae Mesa aau Thuraday at IS: II 1:11 p.m si:fi p.m. n 1 p.m........IS a •2 »*•*.........-«8 ..u ft dw IsPaallaa NgH Ulgheel aad Leant Teaiperelaree Thta Dale la IS lean «7 in ltsi ______ « la II Taeeday'a Temperatare Chart ---------------- “ (S IS MlHraakee as ft HevQriaaaa m m i»e* Tort I fl 73 Omaha I SS M Pells ton I SI M Phoenix i tl SS Plttaburfh I tl 7t St. Loult l St IS Salt Lake C. 1 fa S. Prandaoo i Train Kills 5 Pedestrians WUPPERTAL, Germany (AP) —Five persona were killed Tuesday when am express locomotive slammed into a group of pedestrians at a railway crossing. Police said the accident occurred after a railway electrician allegedly pressed s button opening the railguhrds without authorisation after a freight train had Redi No Longer Interested . NATIONAL WEATHER—Generally (air weather Is forecast tor moit of the East for Wednesday night except for showers in Fheldk Than will be some thundershowers in tbs Upper Mississippi Valley, Eastern Dakotas, the Rockies and Southern Plaint with earn tight rain along the Washington coast It Will be Mtgfatiy coaler In extreme Northern New Englanil And the north-«m Itar of states from the Ufcpfr Mississippi to the Rdddes. ' Call U.N Troops Into Congo Fray Rush Reinforcements to Stanleyville, Scene of Mounting Tension LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (fl — The United Nations rus " 390 Ethiopian reinforcements Stanleyville today as tension between U.N. and Congolese froope If he should choose to use it, Kennedy had a ready-made opportunity at a news conference later in the day to make a public response to Adenauer. W W W The Berlin situation and the forthcoming strategy meeting of the Western Big Four foreign ministers were certain to come up in questions. Passengers Force Cuban Ship to Port NEW YORK m aboard a Cuban coastal ship took over the vessel and toned It* captain to put into Jamaica today, the National Broadcasting Co. reported. ^ * The report, by John Hlavacek, NBC correspondent in Jamaica, oald SS of the 96 pssScugcrs He said the report come from the raptala after the skip arrived at Port Antonie, o Jamaica sea- Judge Rings the Bell Charter Issir to Be Discussed Question in Waterford, Overshadows Con-Con on Sept. 12 BoNot The Day In BirminghRm Bloomfield Twp. Okays Multiple Zoning Areas BIRMINGHAM - A multiple zoning ordinance affecting five sites has been adopted by the Bloomfield’ Township Board < Voting for R constitutional convention representative wttfae * tv new ordinance, the first pro-secondary Item on the Sept. 12 vfcftag fop Mltlp|e dwellings in the ballot to Waterford Township. _ j township, states that no, more than Township residents will be called.7 ,wo_story housing units he ' on to deckle if their community is to become a charter township. This question will he fully explored at a town hall meeting ’ Sept. 5 at John D. Pierce Junior In anotiwr action the township board has taken the position that ' homeowners around a well rite must agree 100 per cent before the wffl allow the area to be used for winter recreational pur- ROBERT ROBINSON The minting slated for S p.m. * “ The change represents a step from rural government corporation into a city-type form at government. A panel of tour speakers will be at the meeting with Waterford Township School Supt. William A. Shunck as moderator. Township Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson will compare costs of gov-enuaspt and public improvements under the present and proposed _______| ___ needs of the township will he Clair Johnson of Johnson h Anderson Engineers, The Untied Nations announced that Ingram Engiund, its chief officer in Stanleyville, was threatened with arrest over the weekend while having talks with Antoine Giasnga. **★ A Congolese soldier burst into the room at Gisenga’s office and pointed a rifle at the chest of Engiund, a Swede, and told him he was under arrest. But the U.N. official's Ethiopian escort threatened to use force and the Congolese backed down. FAMILIES EVCUATED Seventeen families of UJN. ficials in Stanleyville have 1 flown bade to Leopoldville as a safety measure. Consul Thomas Cassffly flew back to Leopoldville Tuesday nighf aftir faeihg expfttied from Stanleyville. He returned amid reports that tere has been a fresh break be-tvMqn the c^Rral Congolese government of Ft! me' Minister Cyrille Adoula and the Stanleyville authorities. Word from Stanleyville was that Gizenga has formed a political party violently anti-Western and anti-American. CONSUL BEATEN Cass lily was-arrested and beaten by Congolese troops after firebrands haranguing a public rally had fold the crowd America was behind the seizure of an Air Jordan plane bringing uniforms and food to the town from Cairo. * '# ★ CasriUy was at the airport to insure the safety of two American members of the plane epew. He was arrested and beaten about body with rifle butts. Later he was placed under joint UN. and Congolese protection. - act. Advantages and disadvantages will be presented by Robert Robinson, supervisor of Meridian Township, which has had its charter for two years. A question and answer period will follow, in addition. District 1 con-con candidates John Coleman and Richard Kuhn will speak briefly. Assisting the council in meeting arrangements are the lakeland Optimist Club, Waterford Junior Chamber of Commerce, Waterford-Drayton Rotary Chib, Waterford Lions Chib, Drayton-Waterford Klwanls Club and the Waterford-Qarkston Business and Professional Women's Chib. GOP Delegates, UAW Meet, Exchange Wit (Continued From Page One) Quinn criticized Elliott's organization for sending out press releases before Haggard receives copies of the letters. Holding up s copy of the AFL-CIO News, Quinn said it wasn’t true, as Elliott alleged, that only SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)-Mrt. Stanley Hardman, 35, was granted a divorce after complaining that her police sergeant husband bawled her out if she didn’t bring „ -____f , .._____________. ., W» erffce h, EfTS!? rang a bell. 'Don't Forecast Deaths!' DETROIT W — An appeal not to forecast high death tolls for the Labor Day weekend was made today by the Automobile Club of Michigan which said such forecasts “serve no constructive safety purpoee and are based guesses, usually Inaccurate.” Separate N-Ban Pact Out GENEVA (UK) — Western negotiators said today the Soviet Union had served notice It is no longer interested in a nuclear teat ban agreement separate from a general disarmament pact. U.S. Ambassador Arthur If. Dean and British negotiator David Ormsby-Gore said the Soviets had brushed aside all the latest Western proposals and insisted a test ban agreement can be settled only Within the framework of general disarmament. Dean today presented two further Western proposals to the 338th session of the deadlocked nuclear conference. One ol them was meant to make unnecessary the Soviet demapd for a three-man ’troika” administrative council to supervise control operations. During the one hour-and-45 minute session, Ormsby-Gore pressed Sdviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarap-Idn on whether the Soviet government had lost interest In the idea of an agreement to ban nuclear weapons tests under strict International control as a first step toward disarmament. .6: * * Ormsby-Gore told a news conference after the meeting that Tsa-rapkin did not answer the question directly. But the implication was clearer than ever before that the! Soviet Upton is nbw withdrawing its offer of , an independent nuclear test ban treaty, observers said. have been endorsed. He said the Lansing area union council had endorsed five.Democrats arid two Republicans, ■ , ‘ 1 Pontiac GOP con-con candidate Raymond L. King, an attorney, sought to find out from Quinn it the Oakland council had determined the position of his opponent, Leslie H. Hudson, on the crucial legislative apportionment Inane Before he was endorsed. King has charged that .Hudson, a former state representative and city hardware dealer, has expressed views on this controversial issue ‘‘that would curl the hair of Gus Scholle.’’ Scholle is president of the Michigan AFL-CIO, King said all he was seeking was “an opportunity to be heard” by the union “on an equal basis.” on an acre. The areas ssaed tor multiple Boultings ora poroeio along both otdeo of Woodward Avenue, oouth ft Square Lake Road to Hickory Property owners in the area also must furnish a liability bond before the rife can be used for foe skating. The board also agreed that infhe future the township will not take over the maintenance of a writ rite If its dedication contract con- The multiple dwellings will serve as s buffer zone between commercial and residential properties, according to s township spokerinan * * * The township also has awarded contracts for three paving projects to the A and A Asphalt Psvlag Co. of Birmingham for 1118,380. WILL ME PAVED Scheduled for paving fay Nov. 1 are streets in the Long Lake Shore and Bloomfield Heights atibdivl cions and Hammond Lake Drive The Birmingham firm was the lowest* of four bidders. ' Another contract was swarded to Hickson aad Coetigma at De The firm, lowest of 11 bidders, received the contract for $57,840. Senator Tosses Ash Tray SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI)—Social-1st Sen. Aniceto Rodriguez set off a series cl fist figfafc in the Senate,'s gallery Tuesday when he tossed an ashtray at some hecklers, injuring one of them. Six persons were arrested. GOP Leaders Urge Nixon to Run in California WASHINGTON (UK) — Republican congressional leaden today urged former Vice President Richard M. Nixon to ran for governor of California next year. Nixon and other party leaders also agreed that the GOP must build its strength in the 1962 elections “to put a brake on potentially disastrous" policies of the Ken-nedy administration. Nbton.tite I960 Republican presidential nominee, gave no answer to those urging him ' to seek the California governorship next year. He reiterated that he would make a decision late in September. vides that the well site be returned to original owner if not used. Sees Trouble for Taxpayers State Solon Calls Hiko in Michigan's^Doflcit Symptom of Disease LANSING (UPI)—Serious trouble is ahead for the taxpayers of Michigan. Republican Stale Rep. Hollo G. Contin of Tipton said today. W ★ ♦ Contin said he would hold a special meeting of the House Taxation Committee be chairs next month to compile ‘ten analysis of why we ate In continuing financial difficulty.” Tfao Tipton RepaMtaaa arid the toenuae la the state's deficit to MLS ■ The situation cannot continue without very serious consequences for file people of our state,” he said, "lliey must either accept very drastic cuts in expenditures or they must cut their way through the state financial jungle and mafaa maa out' of our tax system.” ★ * * Contin said reductions in ex-, rnditures would mean less state aid to schools, arbitrary and reduced limits on college enrollments lower welfare and mental budgets. ♦ '♦ * 'I for one am disgusted with budgets which are billed as ‘balanced,’ but turn out to be deficits,” he said. Senate-House Conferees OK 5-Year Loan Reach Accord on Foreign Aid WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate-Houae conferees have approved five-year $7.2-billion overseas loan program but eliminated its moat controversial provision, authority borrow from the Treasury. President Kennedy said the compromise was “wholly satisfactory,” He hailed it as “an important decision for the United States and the free world.” The conferees, who have been ironing out differences between Senate and House foreign aid bills, announced the loan program pompromise Tuesday night PLAN WRAP-UP With toe major obstacles hind them, they meet again today to wrap up their work. The compromise then goes before the Senate and House. b©-' Top-Rank Opposition Lines Up in GOP, Pg. 22 Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont, predicted today that both the House and Senate will approve the compromise' which he described as “the most reasonable that could be worked out.” “To a large degree this gives the President the long-range authority which he requested,” Mansfield told newsmen. 'It’s not a case of getting all you want but rather getting the Expects U.S. to OK Plan Lending Boost fo Detroit WASHINGTON (fi-^Approval for an over-all economic development plan for Detroit 1* expected from the Area Redevelopment Administration, Sen, Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., says. , -----; j ' * * * t ' AHA approval. Hart said, whilei not automatically granting aid to Detroit, does main the city eligibly to submit projects to the ARA-Loans and grants are available under the ARA for industrial!and commercial projects as well as public facilities. most reasonable accommodation of different views.” Lokns for this year, $1.2 billion, will be included to an overall foreign aid program for fiscal 1962. It will be the biggest foreign aid authorization to yftars, $4,253,* 500,000. ~ For days it had been obvious that House conferee* were convinced the House would insist on annual appropriations from Congress to finance the development loan program. Kennedy originally asked $8.8 billion for a five-year program to be financed by borrowing from the Treasury. The Senate voted $8 billion for the program and approved the borrowing authority. In the conferees’ compromise, the Senate yielded the borrowing authority while the House agreed to a five-year program, instead' of the one-year, $1.2 billion -program tile House had voted. Reporting the compromise aft-, er a night session, Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Ark.. told reporters it was “not exactly what I wanted but a compromise." He said he hoped to call the measure up in the Senate for a vote Thursday. Under the agreement, Kennedy receive* authorization for $L2 billion to development loan funds this year and ($1.5 billion for each of the next four years. ADORN 7 v htwu IS THAT AN BOOT-This ben at North. Catoina State College at Raleigh registers surprise at an egg shaped like a child’s building bloc# College scientists developed the cube-shaped eggs as a stunt to help advertise North Carolina as "the good egg state.” A template with art eggless shell was placed with the hen, who obligingly deposited a shell jaround the template. But it was uncomfortable for Biddy, so the state ‘will keep the standard stowe. tt N. Saginaw —Main Float M THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, A If GUST 30.1961 THREE Berlin May HurtAdenauer at Polls mans an radical supporter! of a fighting stand In Berlin, .or that a majority 41c inclined toward the BERLIN (UPD—Weat German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer guested wrong an the Berlin crisis and the mistake may hurt party’s chances for victory hi the Sept IT voting, diplomatic observers said today. Adenauer's Christian Democrats hop* to hold their abeotute majority in the Federal Parliament, and the chances of doing that appear to he growing dimmer with each day of the Bolin crisis. The Christian Democrats expect to he the largest party in Parliament, as they hsve been dace IMS, tort observers feel they will have less thaa the ma- r necessary to C Adenauer's skipportersblarae this situation primarily onjwhat they regard as the chanceDpr’e faulty reaction to the communist seeling of the East-West Berlin border the morning of Aug. 13, personal attacks oa West Berlin Mayor W«jr Brandt ★ * Two speeches Tuesday in which the chancellor contended that the 1 Russians provoked the present Berlin crisis to help Brandt to next month's elections, were expected to exasperate the voter* further. •Since the mid ISM*, when the Nads bans public office and ha had I family, the chancellor — M*mM a Cologne man — has disliked this city. Adenauer stubbornly refused to some to Berlin to reassure the population after the Communists made their big move. Only on Aug. 15 did he call a cabinet meeting to discuss the Berlin crisis. He preached calmness, saying there was no reason for panic. LET BRANDT BE HERO Above all, Adenauer let Brandt become the hero of the hour by writing President Kennedy to sug- gest toe Immediate dispatch of additional American troops to West BerUn, an action that was ordered a few hours later. Brandt leads the Socialist party, West Germany's principal opposition group. Bn twa days alter U.8. Tim Peas- Private public opinion polls ordered by toe Christian Democrats to the last week indicate all this has hurt the party badly.. The reason is not that West Ger- Instead, say friends of Adenauer, the 85-year-old chancellor’s reaction to the Berlin crisis has convinced many voters that he is too old to cope efficiently with ’ the great problems of toe day. This impression was backed up by an opinion poll in Bielefeld, which showed that toe governing Christian Democrats have continually lost supporters since June of this year, while toe opposition Socialists are gaining to popularity. Warns Japanese of Quakes to Come TOKYO 111 — Japanese Transportation Minister Nobora Salto warned the people Tuesday to be preparpd tor toe “possible occurrence of big earthquakes to the near future.” Saito made the warning to Butte, Mont, la called "toe richest hill on earth” because of its copper mines, which produce sixth of all the copper mined to the world, The recent quake in Central Honshu, Saito said, was of a magnitude of 7.2, Compand with toe magnitude 8 of the Tokyo-Yoko-hama earthquake of 1983. Two earthquakes in rapid succession to waters off Japan recently indicates "we should be fully prepared,” Saito said. Easiest ChUdren’s Permanent A NEW Tonette with No-Mix Neutralizer HJISin no mixing... no dripping... no six hour wait! DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL ■ DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL ■ DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL | DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL ■ DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL | DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL ■ DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL ■ DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL Pocks of 200 ttHb Kleenex Tissues UBAUTB Steel Jacket Eight Bltteiy Keg. 20c 1* American mad* USALm tank-proof batteries. Standard slat. Limit I par person. Seminfton ar Super X .22 Jgg Shells 5th 68' I Regular Me box of M loo* rlfla I U TrnHbTT Walla. Hi-powar I cartrldiea. Limit IS bum. r FUta Enamel Hardwood Teilet Seat 94.95 Value Ml or AGI Sit* 12-79* Ladies' and Teens" Flats “lar Heels Values ltasuiar Ol.te c . m $3.00 ■ 9 1 On# Me table ot popul ,--------_________... i wm for baok-to-school 6 Choice at S popular tlsea. Limit J s eryday wearing. All I I 10 oartone. R I group. ' —**——’ B ^ SHOES—BaumeM | .^-",|i|imwpftawEmnimnMBnmwJI' CAMS BAS—Mata ftaar j Hew Fall Shades In | Ladies' Nylons Value 91J00 all rater quality mom m darb an* Uxbt——“ “ — U denier. Site TOMORROW MOUSING 9 AM. UnH 9 f.M. TOMORROW RKHT rnutm LOOK For SIMMS Special 12-HOUR TAGS on All 3 Floors Here are but a few of the ‘SUPER DISCOUNTS' you’ll find hero at SIMMS tomorrow . . .' every item is guaranteed below regular prices . . . you owe it to your pocketbook to shop this money-saving event and see for yourself how much more YOU SAVE et SIMMS during this 12-hour sale event. Sorry'..No moil or phono orders during this sole. We reserve the right to limit ell quantities. > Be Here At SIMMS When Our Doors Open At 9 A,M. H Famous BANKER'S CHOICE Ic Cigan 25 -1” Pack at M smooth smoking altars. Regular 91.90 value-save lta on Baaktr's Choice TOBACCO—Mala Ita MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Katin Stock of Sc Chewing Gams s 29»»5$°j Regular 01 carton of 10 packs et gun j —Dentyna, Wrigleys, Beech-Nut, etc. ] Limit 1. CANDY—Main Ftaar | Entire Stock of Sc | Candy Bars !15*44c 1 Regular TSc value—choice et Her-E they*. Milky Way*, all famou* ” brands. Umlt U. CANDY—Mata Floor mmmmstmmmmamsmmmm Bright Plaid—Chili's | School Bags s- 49 Scbaol bag with handle and rtrap— Ideal for youngster* to carry ichool “ *' SUNDRIES—Mata Ftanr 00000000000000000000000100000. First Quality Load 5* Lead Pencils 12-13° Regular 00c pack of 11 peaclli—eraser tip*, Advertiser's misprint* on l'*dr' SUNDRIES—Mata Flaar DRUG DEP'T. SPECIALS Per fOMiaiao Hygiene J Kotex Napkins j l 29c Regular 41e packs ol soft, akaotaant Kotca unitary napkins. Limn I DRUGS—Mata Flu. 1 4 Famous Braids if > Hair Sprays sis) Afic Cans I Pressure spray cans of 1-ounces. Choice of Tempo, Adorn, Alberto VOA nr Brock's. COSMETICS—Main Floor 5-Grai* Strength Aspirin Tablets 389to29c Regular Me pack of MO'aspirin tablet*. Full k-graln *trength. Umlt t DRUGS—Mata Ftaar Famou B. H. Ayers Lipsticks $1,00 r Value QQ Creamy H. Hi Ayers UpstlA* In popular shades. Limit J tubes per customer. cowrncs_IUJ|t Famous Listerine Tooth Paste 2-57° Regular OLIO value-twin pack of famnne "LUterlne" formula Moth P**‘* DRUGS—Mala Floor FREE—5 Upsticki Witt X Hair Dressing $2.00 CA^ Value Receive FREE I glamorous lipsticks will Helena Curtis Oay Tap ball dressing. COSMETIC*—Mala Ftaar PHOTO DEPT. VALUES Fobmbs ‘SATELLITE* Flash Camera Set 96.95 . Value M Set ha* 'aambiD with fla*h. Dim, J battary, bulb*—everything to atartl taking ptetaro*. 1 CAMERAS—Mata Flaar 1 FaawU POPETE' 8mm Movie Cartooas 59^79° 1 Regular I JO reel*. - Tltlrs am 'Fop-i eye the Batcher*—Indian lftglitar'-— I SSL1* 'Otter and ‘ita* at the I , ‘ CAMERAS—Mata Ftaar Interchangeable Bowl 'Falcon' Pipe 93.95 Seller Lightweight 'Falcon• pipe with Imported briar bowl which .Is Interchangeable. TOBACCO—Mata liter Soys' and Girls' Plastic Wallet! 49c Sellers 29° Novelty plastic wallet, with coin dots for peonies, nickels, dimes, quartan. Plus 10% ted. ***' SUNDRIES—Mata Itaat 1-Cell All Metal Flashlight 98c Value IP General Electric Alan Clock $4.95 Value 299 Dorm1 model seU-etarttaf electric alarm clock Faatwy guaranteed. Flue 10% fad. tax. SUNDRIES—Mata floar SCHICK" Compact Electric Bezel $12.95 Seller S95 Bsck-to-school special . . ideal for young men and men's •kin. Doable head electric raaor. Cord aadeaaa. SUNDRIES—Mata Flaar Hew SUNBEAM "SS5" Electric Basel $32.50 Value IP Kneads Lilac Veaetal Shaving Lotion 39° • bounce tiie et fam oat Ftarmute' after ahnvlns Keg. 75c Cboleo of S Brands Hat! Wave Set IV Reg. 29c Bounce ^i of IKeeU 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS is. Limn j. COSMETICS—Mata F Jokuw'i Famous 'BAID' | House, Garden Spray | 91.59 AftC I Cm 90 Spray bomb of famous ’Raid' that | bin* bugs dead. For Indoor and out-1 door use. Umlt 1. HARDWARE—Ind Floor | 1100% Pure Boyal X-Press Motor Oil . Ota. 109 I Regular II.M value—«AE grades of 1 10-30-30-40 weights. Baalmf factory | can. Limit 1. 1 HARDWARE—Sod Fleer Full GALLON Can of | Paint Thinner 1 «•*> CQoi rd" v«l Best, for cleaning brushes, thinning 1 paints, etc. Limit * gallons. HARDWARE—tad Fleer § l Per Moat Makes—Paper {S Dirt Bags \ ’z 58° I For most mskes of popular brand I vacuum cleaners. Number of bat* 1 In pack depend on moke of' cleaner. 1 ELECTRICAL—Sad Flew itaeais Trim wir Anto Wax, Polish j AM* 188 Shop Size Larse lS-ounce size of fomaoa was | and polish In one operation. Limit 11 eon par parson. HARDWARE—tad Floor | Per ludeor Use | TV Aerial c *1M Vv ■ For black and white receptions— E sharp and clear. Rabbit Ear TV 1 Aerial with lead-in wire. Umlt 1. ELECTRICAL—2nd Fleer BLACK & DECKER Vs” Electric Drill 916J95 AM j Seller S . 1 'STOIM KIMG' Slam Door Closers I jm. mm_. $2.00 Value m Powerful s amp drill* with ROM r.p-m. gear shock. Kandy for around the house. Limit 1. HARDWARE—Ran Fleer Adjustable closer for outer doors— stops ’em from slamming hard. Umlt S. HARDWARE—tad Flsor Twin Beater Actiei Egg Beaters 49c 97® Seller .MM Wood handle nod amok—twin beater j action, a nay to clean healer*. LUntt : 1 par parson. HOUSEWARES—4ad Flaar j Study CBYSTAL GLASS Chip V Dip Set S2M 188 Value il-toeh chip bowl and tta-inch dip bowl on bras* ftntsb holder. Umlt I 1 dot. HOUSEWARES—^tad Floor Durable Woven Wicker j Serving Baskets) Res. QC v i Woven wlaker baskets ora ideal for | •erring * brands, rolls, UacnNa, etc. 1 Limit •. HOUSEWARES—Sad Ftaar | i-H*ce rusne i Picnic-Snack SM SIM M ft0 ■ Sot of tasy-to-elean plastic Includes I 4 cups and 4 plates, ideal for picnics 1 HOUSEWARES—Sod Ftaar Famous W1SSEU* Rig Shampso ) $i.95- ■ * * j Can Foam shampoo far use In applicators 1 —cleans rugs and carpeting easily. 1 UtM * “housewares—tad Ftaar j ; 6-FOOT All Plastic I Floor Renners 98c JO® VeUc C|^ I Ribbed plastic runners for hallways. 1 doorways—protect* against soil v*nd I dirt, sf-taah widths. 1 HOCSRWAREn—tad Ftaar Polyethylene PLASTIC f Colanders «*= A7® Seller f Largs_ non-dogging holes, dentproof and itiatanaof ptaatto. Odor rail sum j plastic. Asserted ealors. | HOUSEWARES—tad Fleer I I Class sal Ratal Ctasaw Sf Glass Wax | 79c CO® I Cleans, -polishes, sanitises windows I .and mirrors, anto bodtae and chrome., 1 silverware. U ounces. ,. . 1 HOUSEWARES—tad Ftaar Famoes Brands el Deodeiantf 75c to $1.00 33° Ototee et special group at fa-—is deodorant* la stick, foliar creams. COSMETICS—Mata Flaar FBEE-4 Krona Blades With SCHICK iumMSIrOm Reg. 98c 68° As Sen ea Television BBYLCBEEM <2* 69c JTube 41° Eeepa hair neat and in place all day—Just a little dab will do you I Limit f Colaates "FLOHIENT" BOOM ~ SPRAT $1.19 Value 77° "Liquid Wrench" Penetiatiag Oil 2<«19e 'Spikin' Fan Shower and Laws Sprinkler 91.00 Value 49° ■ARDWABE—Cad Flaar Fits Any Sir# Gun. Bifle Cate 91JOO Value Natural. Corn Straws Whiik Breem Reg. 97c * 41 rood Vito metal rtn I Ftve-Wap Hand / Can Opener 11.99 Value 79° la IM lifter, opens round, square ar aral cans. Opens 'fan, bot- * **IK)l;SEWARES—tag no* BARGAIN B ASEMENT Pint Qialtty COTTON Boys’ T-Shirts 3-1" Nylon relnfaroad neck. Mil ant for comfort. White cotton shirts In staaa medium and large. Rsgular 44a. ROYS' WEAR—Basaaanl Boys' UaliBod Typo Poplin Jnckeb Values 4 07 to 92.95 Waahabl* poplin In solid actor*, sip-par fronts, water repellent. Maaa (. «, U. 14 and ». ■OIF WEAR ■aument Zipper ProBt—DENIM | Men’s Jackets S3.9S 197| Value Cans Denim In bins, brown or ahor-1 coal colors. Fully mppar front, slash 1 pockets. Size* 34 to 44. MEN'S WEAR—Bszement | n*VHdU* Styl* 1 Boys’CarCoats 15310 A" Values M I Mans 11 ta 11 In link quality boys’ f revarstbla ear coat*. Cnmplata ala* | nn*a. Osiers. aonna_||H|||t| Ssaisiizsf Cevsri - Men’s Work Shirts A.g. 709 91.49 ’...1 w J Size 14 only. Long slssv* work ahlfta j In sanforized covert. Only (8 ot j this price. CLOTHING—Rase meal | Velios to $8.00 Men’s Shoes I Four 999 j Choice M 1 Choice it loafers, oxfords, points, | chukksboots, eta. Broken staaa * to 111 ... but net la ovary style. SHOE!—BsssmsBt ilzir Heavy {asUly Carpet Sfiares Ijhj* Large aiaertmont of oolon In solids, twsods. Heavy carpet back* ar foam rubber. Mix ar matah 'am. DOMESTICS—Bssemeat Pint Quality Washable Sheet Blankets *2.49 157 VJue | I 100% American cotton la Mild ar I postal colors. Boft napped for ysar-I round comfort. Blno, (roan, rose I In MxMMnehes. 1 DOME Wien ■Heeemsnt MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS J OiJL Mai* Pint QBality | Childroi i 3 ui 14 Only Kid’s Bonr Pant* | Raincoats Va^a A Ac) Value, 4 00 SL98 99 I Lined and ualtned corduroy In red H ^‘berU^nitTuS' SSS rop. Bites 2 to ex. 1 in broken ststa ) and 14 wlp. CLOTHING—Mata tl~r | CLOTHING—Mmin Pint One Table of Girls' Summer Wears 2<.i* Values to 13.3d—blousei. aborts, pedal I pushers, ote. In broken sisei 4 to 14. 1 Assorted stylos and colors. CLOTHING—Mata Ftaar j | Summer as4 Pall Stylo | Ladies’ Capris I Values 4| 0Q 1 92.95 1 Cords, check*, plaids with zipper I back*. First quality, UE-A. made. I Broken staaa 10 to U. CLOTEINO—Mata Ftaar With Ml aid Kerchief Jo Hatch Girls’ *2.49 Skirts flaiuieU and diamond cheek skirts with belt and kerchief to match .. . also some cotton and wool -plaid skirts. Sties 4 to 13. Your choice at Discount. CLOTHING—:Kata Ftaar 97‘ Famous Make—Table of Nyloi Loco Trim Ladies’ Bras tidin' Slip Tour QQS . <*** 09 ’•* Styles Include paddad, strapless, elr- T 07° 92.49 ioo% ootton pH*** sup*. mn% as ante cl* stltehad, hl-upllfts, cotton broadcloth and nylon. Mas* MAA to MA. CLOTHING—Mala Ftaar sups wNk shadow panels. White stay In size* ■. M. L. CLOTHING—Mate Flaar rl 1 ill; laII JlfflltS discoSUt'd98 N. Saginaw St. pric* of $129.95. Now an ^jrniture AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MICHIGAN 18 W. Pike St. My tN Stahiway lasts In i STEINWAY 4ho f talnway—wnd •• do lb* chlldron. Its wakhlaas tono is a fay, Canaaloo from $1645 GrandS from $3295. U»oor4*ay Plan (90 daw mm oa a ' or Bud got Plan. 27 So. Saglaov St. PI 1*7168 SH0ES MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Weston reflect!® rapher on west side of Mirror—New Weapon the mirror every time a photographer on the west side raised a camera, in an effort to tog negatives. Reds Fi^ht With Sun By THOMAS A. REEDY BERLIN CB — The Communists stationed a man on the East Berlin sector frontier today with an unusual weapon, a minor, dr ■ * dr His Job was to raise the mirror every time a photographer on the West side of the Friedrichstrasse crossing point leveled a c& and — by aligning the mirror to catch the sun’s rays — try to fog the negative. That’s aD he did trosn i Says U.S. Faces the Red Coats of Karl Marx DETROIT (If—In "A New Revo* lotion of 1776’’ the United States faces “The Red Chats of Karl Marx,” a former Earlham College professor told an aatt-Gommunlat conference Tuesday. mtoe," E. Merrill Root, a former professor at English at the Richmond, Ind., College told TtS per* sons at the “Ooaaterattack” conference sponsored by Education for Freedom, Inc., at the Hal* versify of Detroit. Another speaker, Fred Schlafly Jr., a former member of the American Bar AmociatkxTs special committee on Communist tactics, strategy and objectives, said Comma, nists are planting dangerous slogans In a psychological warfare campaign. d dr if The slogans, said Schlafly, an Alton, HI., attorney, include “The Communist Party Is Just Another Political Party.” “There la No Thing aa Guilt by Association” and “It la All Right to Hire Communists.” What the sergeant meant was that the chap was hot a policeman, he Was a civilian. Certainly he bad orders to be there, per-haps from the Communist party or the propaganda ministry. Cuba Kills Commercials HAVANA (UP1>—The govern- morning through the afternoon. He even skipped lunch to stay o* Vtfedrichstmaae, designed by the East Germans as the ealy ten Alllee and otter may erase aew to East Berta. Photographers on the West side gave him a workout. They raised their cameras each time he Gunman Kills Child in Omaha Girl Slain Sitting on Porch; Toon, Dog Shot at; Police Nab Suspect OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) - A motorized gunmen killed a 9-yearold girl with a shotgun blast Tuesday his mirror, so he bad lots of len*es^Wght *nd Bt •nother OM “8 as targets. ★ * ★ The busy chap was about 40. He wore a gray suit with a white Shirt and a necktie. He stood on the pavement juSt inside the East sector, A CommunUt People’■ Police sergeant, naked who the mirror-wlelder waa, replied laconically: a dog during a shooting spree in Northwest Omaha. ♦ ♦ Shortly after the series of shootings, Richard Let Lawler, M, of Omaha, was pulled from an overturned car and held as a suspect. A shotgun which had apparently been Bred recently, low empty shells hnd a six-pack of beer were found to the wreckage. __ h ,e a Lawler suffered a bump ou the head la the eraah. He told authorities he could not remember Bring the shotgun la the city. * Beverly Peterson, daughter of Arnold Petereon, farm director of stations WOW and WOW-TV, wa* struck in the face and fatally wounded by a blast from a shotgun fired from a car which had pulled in front of her family home while sat on the porch with two sisters and a friend. 1t ■ it ★ Mary Ann King, 16, suffered a slight wound when a shotgun pellet hit her in the thigh as she walked along a sidewalk in the same general neighborhood. and Margaret Thues, daughter of Harry Thues. GRAND RAPIDS (UPI)-Neariy of 198 was opened la Lindsay had been visiting at traffic southeast of Ihe dty today, nearby Grandvtll* and waa at the lake on an outing when be went Wyoming police rescue wrtendtng the route from suburban Cascade to the nut edge of Grand respiration after ha. waa tarn ashore when Thues rushed up to report his daughter missing. A brief search led to the child in the lake. if YOUB Hoist Paiat Poeliif? Free bspecflen—CeO Ft 44171 iCfc So fine its taldqg lie place of manner-priced tads Tty PM- its now so fine it’s stamped ^ Recent refinements In blending methods have made today's PM into what many people now regard as the finest blend in the market PM is increasingly being given the finest of testimonials—favorable comment from one person to another. Try it at home and when you go out. A Member of National Distillers* Family of Fine Brands MWW— Speciol for Thun., Fri., Sat.—Open Friday Evening Until 9:00 F. M. TWO-IN-ONE SPECIAL!!! 7-PIECE SOFA BED ENSEMBLE SALE PRICE ONLY *5" DOWN SI 29.95 EASY terms 1 YOU GET ALL THIS! 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST i ^IVE.-. Parochial School Aid May SnagCon-Gon Workers hi*h court-against spending money "for the benefit of any religious a dec!- five appears dear. On the issue of state money far parochial schools, however, there is no direction from the federal la fact, there are powerful opinions on the subject from sev- eral quarters—some saying aid should be granted, otbeii saying the VS. Constitution prohibits it. Delegates to Michigan's con-con might choose to ignore the issue, leaving it to the federal government and the state legislature. fiat if somebody suggests that permission for aid to parochial schools should be spelled out in the constitution, somebody else will probably insist that such aid ought to be specifically prohibited. * W ★ Language in the present constitution appears ambiguous enough require judicial interpretation, i if unchanged by the coh-con. Only certain transportation pro- grams have been receiving aid under present law. .but parochial students are counted—though the schools do not receive a share of the aid—when the stair determines how money in the primary school interest fund should be distributed. If efforts are made to get state aid far parochial schools, open the floodgate holding back alt kinds of controversy over religion in education. General problems — without the additional question of religion — will create headaches for school men at the con-con. (Nest: From college to kinder Karten, educator* have e stake la a.) 800,000 Flee Floods RANGOON. Burma (ft — More than 800.000 people were left homeless as swelling rivers and heavy rains flooded towns and villages in southeastern Burma this week, r More than 20,000 acres of rice pad-J dy land were inundated. , Stop fit Mary's Caodyl&nd far Fine Candies ns W. Harm R MM Shop Thirdly, Friday sad Mtaday Nights HI K SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE! New Fall Velvet Hats Values to $7.99 See the gorgeous jeweled colors. Try on the *4>ill boxes and cepettes . . . ravel in big savings so early In the season. Weife’a Millinery ... Third Fleer Car Minors 1 Give You Eyes || in Back ot Head i£ Frequent and proper uae of rear- I view mirrors, both inside and oat- I side, provides drivers wfth a mar-gin of driving safety that greatly f improves their ability to “Bring |f ’Em Back Alive!” the Automobile Club of Michigan advises. ★ ★ Sr Mirrors give you eyes in the back ot your head, and allow you to always know what traffic conditions are like behind you. A check in your rear view minor keeps you aware of what is going! on, and helps you anticipate traffic problems before they arise. It is essential to use your rear view mirrors when you slow I down, stop, park, tom to the right or left, pass another ear, change lanes, bock np, or turn around. If a car overtakes you by sur-j prise, or -appears out of nowhere when you are turning, it is prob-j ably because you haven’t been ua-J ing your rear view mirror to its | best advantage. One of the most essential safety | devices on your car, it helps keep | you fully informed, and in driving, | as in other things, the most in- i teiligent action is taken by the j: moat fully informed persons. Agree to Stop Conflict on Ethiopian Border ADDIS ABABA. Ethiopia "Soldiers No Longer Get Rough-Tough Treatment Having just returned from duty with the UJ. Army Reserve, I was both shocked and disgusted at the lack af discipline, disrespect for rank and the methods training our new recruits. ★ ★ ★ ^ —-—A sergeant can no Wager exercise Us aatharity Ur fear af Msg Us mnh aU because muteere of them "little daritaga" are writing te seas tors aad ceagreemea that 8 Ar ★ ★ 1 took my training five years ago. On the first day we wen told we woe men and would be trained as such. There was no such fidng as talking back, and I never heard of anyone writing a letter to ids mother telling her he was being mistreated because he had to do 20 push-ups, mop down file barracks,- or that it was too hot or too cold to be training. A A A if ear notary has to depond ea whet we aew have U training, God help us! Reservist They’ll Come Abuzzing David Lawrence Learns: West Is Slow on Labor Relations ‘Offer Would Please Retail Workers' Being a retail worker I read, with Justifiable envy, the new offer made UAW members fay the big corporations. The fact that they are scorning the offer la a cause for deep concern. The ire of the auto worker seems to be directed at office workers and executives. ft ft ft Do they realise that the average office worker, too, has skills often acquired la schools of high-~* rr learning at great personal effort. Often years of service with grades! pay Increase* are Invested before an office worker attains a salary comparable with the starting pay. of unskilled workers. Who should resent whom? An office worker must ‘Important Reasons Behind Strike' To husband of “Working Man's Wife,” tell her she was so right that most men do not want a strike, but a greater per cent voted “yes” because they am willing to strike for better working conditions and a guaranteed higher standard of living. ft' * dr Tell her Heather Is greatly eon pensions aad paid insurance. The WASHINGTON—One of the biggest challenges in the current competition between the Soviet Union and the Western countries is to be found In the field of labor-management relations. There la no equivalent on the Western side as yet for the discipline - Which the 8oviets have achieved in handling their labor. The Western countries are being urged to find voluntary methods that will attain some semblance of order in the wage-price problem and permit economic progress without disastrous interruptions due to major strikes. ft ft ft In the United States, the friction between the two economic forces has long been recognized as serious, but no solution has been achieved. ' , Nobody waats to am the government run the labor Batons or direct the maaagemeat of the employing companies. Be the tendency thus far has hern to roly on some form of government mediation. It has not always ’ proved effective. Europeans, on the other hand, have made some progress toward voluntary settlement of disputes which it would be desirable for America in particular to examine and see whether some of the same principles could not be successfully applied in tide country. -♦ ft A On this writer’s recent trip to Europe, .he had an opportunity for a long talk, in Sweden, with Arne Geijer, who is not Only chairman of the Swedish Federation of Labor Unions but alao chairman of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. He has often visited the United States and is well known to its labor leaders. .. / ^ *............ He favors a policy of moderate wage demands rather than hit-or-miss settlements which hurt the economy. He says that wages must not get out of line with the development of industrial productivity. This is, of course, even more important to European countries, which must watch their competitive position closely in export markets. ; SOCIAL WELFARE The Swedish labor leader is also ins latent that workers must moderate their wage demands with respect to social welfare measures. He sees a growing competition between labor and government in the field of social welfare. He thinks that workers cannot kave both maximum wage la-creasea aad generous social welfare arrangements. He would prefer to oee the government handle the whole weltaro long-range advantages of a moderate wage policy and better cooperation with management, but he is making substantial progress. He said, incidentally, that the United States has a lot to learn about the settling of disputes with labor. * ft * Geijer, in his capacity as chairman of the International Federation of Free Trade Unions, recently said: “One Is always faced with the problem of how to Unfit labor disputes, strikes and lockouts by democratic meant, la order to benefit as much as possible from the rapid pace of development. "In some countries these problems have been solved through legislation which, in many cases, covers quite extensive areas, and this is an infringement upon file freedom of the parties in the labor market to secure peaceful conditions. "To my mind, the freedom of the parties in the labor market tg negotiate agreements concerning wages and working conditions is an essential part of a democratic society. . . "However, we must not misuse this freedom. Otherwise the state can be forced to intervene or can make an excuse for doing so in order to ward off serious harm to the community. The freedom of the parties in the labor market to fix wages and working conditions without interference is therefore a freedom under responsibility. ...*’ NOT ALL HONEY But all la not optimism about the future of labpr relations in Sweden. There an fears of a major strike next year—the first in many years. Wages keep on going up, and so do prices. Profit margins are narrowing. That’s why so many of Sweden's industrialists pin their hopes on the European Common Market. They look for increased volume even at smaller 'profit margins to help them otit of their wage dilemmas. (Copyright INI) which Is the way It should be. Instead of quoting executive's ■alary and bonus figures, would it not be wise testate that Joe Doakes of Blank Motor Co. received as a bonus $4,500 after taxes, the other $44,500 going to the government as income tax? Newspapers and periodicals should make theap comparisons more often and in vny plain English. ft h ft Let’s confine our Ire aad hatred to the force# of communion! aad rue no chance of Ignorance aad greed marking our downfall. Hie big army of retail workers would surely think they'd arrived at an Utopian state it they were offered a setup as auto workers are now scorning. who had what it takes. A ft ft The union saves some of the $5 dues for a strike fund so we won’t have to suffer as much as the old timers did. Tall her phe should have a Mg nest egg without a big strike for the pest 13 years. Also, if she has a child before the 31st. she will get $25, instead of M0. From now on why don’t you wear the pants? B. H. Portraits Dr. Harold Hyman Says: Eye Impairment, Blindness Inflicted by Cataracts Here are some facts about your eyesight that might be worth your serious consideration, especially if you are 40 or over: An estimated million persons in the United States have serious eye ailments without noticing any £7 trouble. In another column, we’ll consider cataracts and inflammations of the optic nerve. (Copyright, INI) In every large survey ot pen bus over M, two out of every hr.ndred have chronic glaucoma. lu homes for the elderly, this figure rises to six In a _ „ _ „„ of Dr. firms'* lulM. “What About Hordonbw of tlw Arter-JNt'* oond IS onti to Dr. Hyman, ear* of The Pontiac Frew. Box MS. Dept B, BaSto City Station, Hsu Ton U. H.Y. By JOHN C. METCALFE When the gold of the sun in the gray of the sky ... Is a gem for the dawn of file day ... I shall listen for birds and their beautiful songs . . . And hear angels the melody play . . . When the rays of the sun in the morning unfold . . . Like tin sails of a ship on the sea ... I shall drift in their wake to the rim of the world . . . With the longing I have to be free . . . When the glow of the sun' at the bright of the noon ... In siesta Its body had laid ... I shall gather my dreams in the dust of the road . . . And He down at its feet in the shade . . . When (he red of the,sun in the twilight is dim .. . And the hue of the heaven is blue ... I shall walk down the lane to the door of a house . . And my heart will be calling , for you. (Copyright INI) The Almanac By Ualtod Press btemattonal Today is Wednesday, Aug. 30, the 242nd day of the year with 123 to follow in 1961. The moon Is approaching its last quarter. The morning star Is Venus. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. Aft ft On this day in history: In 30 B.C., Cleopatra commited suicide by permitting an aap to bite her. la 1Wt, Hermann Goering, often called the Ne. I Nasi, was: alerted president at the Gemma Reichstag. In 1945, Gen. Douglas MacArthur arrived to Japan and the U5. Marines landed in Tokyo Bay and took over Yokosaka Naval Base there. A thought for today: French philosopher Blaise Pascal said, ‘‘The heart has its reasons which reason does not know.’’ THOUGHTS FOB TODAY They are filled with all manner of wickedness, evil, cuvet-ouanros, malice. Fill af envy, murder, strife, deceit, malignity, they are | ■ Multitudes think they like to do evil; yet no man ever really enjoyed doing evil since God made the world.—John Ruskin. Case Records of a Psychologist: Hie Country Parson Test Stand Retires -A well-known test stand used for the stratic-firmg of rocket engines wit recently retired ffttn duty at George C. Marshall Space Flight Center la Huntsville, Ala. | This would hardly be news except Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Ada Moerdyk of 9416 Cooley Lake Road; 97th birthday. Randall Foiser of Birmingham; 81st birthday. Mrs. Pearls Wlnterman of Waterford; 82nd birthday. *£Mr. aad Mrs. Jonathan Ormond of Rochester; 52nd wedding anniversary-Mrs. Pauline Hanchett of Metamora; 81st birthday. A. B. Greene of 268 Judson 8t.; 80th birthday. Every year about 4,000 of us go .blind from glaucoma. In almost every instance, the vision might have been preserved and controlled fay early discovery and faithful treatment. ft ft ft • While glaucoma accounts for 14 to 15 per cent of blindness in the United States, it is only second to catafact as a causative condition. Blindness from cataract also is amenable to treatment When discovered early and remedied by operative Surgery. INFLAMED NERVE Further down on the list of causes for blindness is inflammation ot the nerve for vision, usually a result of chemical injury (retrobulbar optic neuritis). This too is preventable if diagnosed early and treated faithfully, ft t ft • ft " With this information at hand, most of it prepared by the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness of the National Institute of Health in Betheada, Md., perhaps you’d like to know something of these conditions and what you can do to .preserve one of your most cherished and valuable possessions. Glaucoma to the name given a condition that to characterised by Increased pressure of the fluids that are normally present within the eyeball. This Prize Contesting Is Zestful Tonic “A tot of the troubles of tbo wrid would be ootved If we ould Just learn to spend toss U easily and painlessly measured by the eye specialist (ophthalmologist). After a drop af local anesthetic solution to placed In your eye, the reading to made by gently pressing a measuring instrument (tonometer) oa the eyeball. That's all there to to It This sfoipie measurement, made in a few seconds,.may prove the means for saving your vision, often without the need for any surgery- BY DR. GEORGE W. (SANE CASE J-481: Andrea M., aged 41, is a jittery housewife for whom I suggested “Prize Contesting" as a hobby. "Dr. Crane," she began about 9 months later, *T can’t thank you enough for steering us into prize contesting. “My husband was reluctant at first, so I decided to fry it alone. One night I had our din- ........ fog rooih table DR. CRANE covered with contest material. "He came along and looked over my shoulder for several minutes at some of my 25-word letters. Thai he made a couple of corrections, for which I thanked him. "Soon be was helping me write new letters. And we entered 3 in that first contest. "Well, we just naturally kept an, for once you get well touched. It to tte’a contagious disease, for you can't quit. "We also began to write limericks aad submit names far a ‘New Home’ contest. "Since our contests didn't have the winners announced for 3 or 4 months, our early enthusiasm had to subsist on hope. '¥♦'** "But it was great 'fun and we began to share this common hobby with such rest that we felt like newlyweds. It welded us back together again in a very instructive hobby. - "After A months, one day we received a strange letter ta the maU. Apparently, we had beginners* tack, for toe letter cau-tetaed a check for $IN that we i the Srd contest i "The thrill of actually getting a prize was so intendcatiqg, we celebrated that night by going to a drive-in movie. ft ft ft “Since then we have won 17 more prizes. Some were $5 and $10 checks, but others included an electric refrigerator, a set erf encyclopedias. plus an all-expense trip to Mexico City. "Dr. Crane, it wasn’t Just the cash value at our prisea that we liked the beat, but the renewed sent ia living, pin ear being brought closer together ta thto fascinating hobby. “If every married couple could become contest minded, it would snap them out of their stodgy living and give them a new outlook on life. Thank you for getting us infected with the contest bug.” CASH HOBBIES A lot of Americans waste time and money gambling on the policy games or the horses and dice. Bat prise contesting te a far For when anybody pital wins s prize, the through all the wards ■tantiy and perks up of the entire hospital Several monthly ma; now befog published V test fans and aspiring at the hoe-news travels almost tattle morale population, ergy and ean bring yen much greater retains ta cash as weU at happiness. Instead of pouring over racing dope sheets and hocking your furniture to raise dough for a few more $2 pari-mutuel bets, get wise to facts. ft ft ft You can improve your English, plus your advertising skill, 'and ' restore yoot marriage to a far happier, more zestful arrangement by entering prise contests. Year children eaa also join' you parents at thto aeqr game. Aad invalids or patteata at the Yet Hospitals will Hkewtee get Mrs. Crane and I used to ha contest addicts and won many prizes, including two of $1,000 In ta national contests, so we speak Tbs Awoclated anti Is' aaUtM mMiW to tfio aw for ropubU-eation of sU local newa printed la (Mi newspaper as wan u ill ap now* dtspotdwc. Tbo Muttof Prow s delivered by carrier torll.orato a Utah: where mailed Ul Oakland. Omwia, Uvlnj-ttoa. Macomb. Lower and Waafi-tfaq dtaftprijlK IQrlHMS a year; e Ur where ta Ifleblf an and aU other P'area In MOPOBod StoWo SB.dt a — -a- -^ EgtoOwto piyakja ia bao boon ;pwd reto at YooUm, STudra THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1961 Jut My 'CHARGE IT! ... or $1 HOLDS IN LAYAWAY! % to Vi OFF! SWEATER SALE •5.99-7.99 cardigans, slip-ons •Brushed & bulky Orion* knits •Now collars, now.designs, colors It couldn't happen at a better time-Federal'! marvelous sweaters, known for top styling and value price-at as much as H OFF! And in time to fill your Bock-to-school Vardrobel Carefree Orion* acrylic keeps it shape and washes so easily . .T in all the fall fashion colors . . . solids, stripes, tapestry, houndstooth . . . classic and novelty styles . . bulkies, brushed-looks! You won't find sweater values like this fpr months—gather a wardrobeful! In sizes from 34 to 40, S-M-L Shop Federal's. •*«#. TM. DuPont - ■■■Hi Smart girls know FASHION + FIT = a. Bend-lee brief: white tricot. 541, 59c; 9-10,79c Nylon bond-leg brief.......rises 5-S, B9c; 9-10; 1.25 b. Elastic-leg brief: white rayon 5-8,59e; 9-10^ 79« Nylon elastic-leg brief........541, 89c; 9-10, U5 C. Bond-leg panty: white or pink rayon—seamless rides; nylon bar-tacked.........54, 69c; 9*10, 89c d. Campus brief: elastic or band-leg. Rayon in white, pastel colors. Nylon bar-tacked. $-M4L-XL...J9c Compos cotton briefs, white only................59c O. Sports panty: White or pink rayon with nylon at strain points, nylon bar-tacked..64, 69c; 9-10, 89c JUNIOR PETITE sarong SALE! Famous criss-cross girdles and panties at a scoop-up price! Sarong's exclusive 'crisscross' steps midriff bulgu • . . steps tummy bulge .. . stops thigh bulgu . . . with NO GIRDLED FEEL-INGI A style for every figure type—now for the first time sale pricedl Got yours today. Sizes 26-34. Raccoon-collared coot in heatfiOMnist wool Tri-color’ 'frou frou' sleepwear or drift gown . . t bewitching. EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, /WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1061 to Lansing of an adjoining com-if© SelotSie Of Ethiopia | munity school district. * Transfer of the district, between) ADDIS (APJ- laMina and ba l^ine wax V-S. Amba«ador Arthur L.-Wfr\ iTwistaPlirases to Sonnd Gdod WWW «7 IWI________________. . —. ____i boards of education of Ingham, Prertknt Kennedy to Emperor diaten and. Eaton counties. ' Haile Selassie Tuesday. Residents of the district peti-j Hie contents were not divulged! tioned lor the transfer, saying it but the message was believed toll taefcsip finances tb meet achoorgive the United States standpoint High Court to Hoar School Board Appeal Hungary. scheme, it is Soviet poiiey tolln coming weeks, efforts to find cloak it in legality. Thus Khrush-! a successful formula lor the Ger-dm referg to a "sovereign" Ger-: man question will be intensified, man democratic republic which la,(Prime Minister Nehru. of India is tend the action bypasses their] Later the Germai policy celling for political annean»|affidree delivered a i Berlin and its isolated 2.5 million people would be the third. And in German eyes, a fourth could be added. • This would be what in Bom, the capital of the German Fedowl Republic, is referred to as the Eastern territories, those lands beyond j the Oder-Neisae sliced from East Germany hy the Soviets and turned over to Poland. . Those lands, originally to be - The latest exposition of Khrushchev's views came in an interview with columnist prew Pearson pub- A sash-tied put-over top at simple end uncluttered as can be, mixed with a matching box-pleated skirt, combined with a crisply-buttoned blouse of fresh cotton. The pure wool outfit in plumage plaid colors of oriole, peacock or wild rose. Sixes 6 to 14. lushed this week. Since the English language version of Khrushchev's statement was prepared by Khrushchov's own interpreters, it provided an especially interesting] document for students of semantics, defined by the dictionary as, -the science of meanings. la it Khrushchev employed both )da well-known histrionic abilities and that art form hi the field of propaganda which permits the! Comm units to manufacture their own set of facts to tit any given situation. Ihas the Beaa government be- Young feet grow test. Don't tkfe guess! Bettor come irt to |Sn hove Us check yOur child's shoes for proper size . . . with the new, sate- Visa- M Meter. No obligation to W MRS. EDWARD VAN TASSEL We ere proud to announce Mrs. Van Tassel as manager of our childran's department. Mrs. Van Tasael has had years of experience in the children's field as the proprietor of the Margaret Arm Shop. The' Eaat Germane, it la made known, "created" another state which "bon a peace-loving and democratic character." This, no .doubt, came as a surprise to the East Germans who suffer the regime of Communist leader Walter Ulbrlcht only because of die close I presence of 22 Soviet divisions. NOT MENTIONED Further, it is disclosed that the j East Germans "repeatedly sought" ! ho get the West Germans to the j conference table to discuss reuni-1 Be ready for school with BUSTER BROWN, For the young child or the Hop-scotch sat . . . Buster Browns qualify for attending school. They're smart and athacHvt too. These shoes are healthy and they want to go pi acts (on the feet of active,, fun-loving children). Match his, slacks with shirts from our wide selection of sport styles and knits. Colorful plaids, checks, solids, stripes and ieaf patterns. Boys' Slocks Washable cottons for school wear. Available in ivy and boitless side tab models. A wide array of colon. Slims, regulars and huskies. there's always something going on in these Girls’ Sweaters Paul Mage A Ur Scandinavians In 100% "Orion” /for Young Men. Designed with a unique low-set turtleneck, it features an intricate diamond yoke pattern interpreted in striking combinations of Blue, Block) Coffee Brown and CharGrey. S-M-L. __ • '* V They're the fashion.busiest! W And newest! Bows tied a different way, a stitch here, a tuck ther% toes more to the point than ever. Even gay calico linings that, make slipping in as much fun as tripping off to play. And, as always, priced so American Girl-lew, you could almost have * different pair a day! Dressmaker, novelty or basic styles. Shaggy Orlops, wools, and blazer stripeff. 3-6x, .7*14, * no,95 STORE SEE the "GROW-ROOM MIRACLE MILE ith new VISUMETER TPRobei rt uce r-m&XLAt' imaa*. \yjiLUKggtrATrAuGtarr 80, reel -NUm- Waterford Civic Chorus to Select New Director Ifca selection o< a new choral director wU be the tint Item at business lor the Waterford CMc Chorus when its meets at 7:30 p.m. Sept. U «t the Wsteriord High School music rojn. ^ The meeting will begin the third year tor the chorus, which has been under the direction of Rlcb-srd'Meier. He hu since left Wstsrtord to continue studies in marie. Under the supwrlslse et toe township recreation department, the CM» Chares wU meant aav-ertl esMosto dariag the IMl-SS RICHMAN BROTHERS CLOTHIERS Alee trader the recreation department's sponsorship, the Waterford CMc Band will have its first meeting of the year at 7:30 pm. Tuesday, Sept- 13, at the Waterford Kettering High School music room. CMc Band Director Gene Preston Is skiing up plans for the band's first fid year of operation. Weekly rehearsals will continue from 7:30 to 3:30 pm. throughout the fill-wtoar mason. Residents living in the Waterford Township am who on interested ia either of thhtwo programs have been airind to call the recreation or attend the first Employment Rose in August Labor Chitf Goldberg Notes Record Figure, Slight Dip in Jobless WASHINGTON (AP)-Employ-mt surged to a record high during August and there was some reduction in the number of kmg- But Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg, releasing the August Job figures Tuesday, said the un- same 6.9 per cent of the labor Players to Otter 'Mister Roberts' Nov. 10 and 11 The Lakeland Players of Waterford Township have choaen the comedy "Mister Roberta" as their first production. It win be presented Nov. M-U at the Community Activities Building on Wtt-Uams Lake Road. Scheduled for Feb. 23-2* is Arthur Miller’s "The Crucible.” The final play, “Visit to a Small Planet," has been scheduled for May 35-33. * * ; ft... The Players are conducting n KIDDY RIDES 10c CUL1 HDDYLAND Cor. Telegraph and Dixie Extradition Refused for Robbery Suspect LANSING Ito-An extradition request from California involving an armed robbery charge against Stuart L. Stratum, 21, of Grass Lake, wak refused today by Gov. Sfrahaa was wasted by Oal-wtttea for alegedly GARAGES ICIMENT WORK I IMSICnV During an extradition hearing, Strahan testified that he had never been in .the )ar and . that he was honeymooning In Calitomia at the time. visor to Swalnson, said toctor test indicated Strahan was tellifM the truth. He added that a comparision of Straban’s fingerprints with those of file bar bandit showed they did not match. Employment hit a total of 6i.93S.000, up 40.000 over July. This compared with 68,763.000 in August last year-unemployment was down 598,-000 to 4MU000, compared with 3,788,000 a year earlier. STUDENTS QUIT IVI ING Despite the dip in unemployed. Goldberg said firs percentage of the labor force out of Job* remained the same because the labor font total declined as many Students, unable to find sun lobs, ouit trying. Goldberg said he was encour-jed by some reduction in number of long-term unemp.oyed those who have been out of Jobs for oo many months that their unemployment compensation ments have ended. Execute Opium Dealer BANGKOK, Thailand Hi — A Chinese Natiwtal accused of manufacturing and distributing opium throughout this kingdom was executed Tuesday. Pfivnfy’s ALWAYS FIRST QtlAjLlTYfl YOU CAN CHARGE IT NOW AT PENNEY’S Black, charcoal, olive, blue, sand .. .Penney’s hefty llU* ounce ramble cordenims bring new style to Joans! Deluxe stovepipe model ... low rise design, swing pockets, tunnel belt loops. Machine wash* able in lukewarm , water. N PREPARED FOR BACK TO SCHOOL! GET COMFORT and FIT in, PENNEY’S CORDENIM JEANS PENNEY’S-DOWNTOWN PENNEY’S >-MIRACLE MILE qpgn Ivai^ Aan*ra wed MdsytaSAJ*.. twVtOO PJb AM Other Weekdays •s too AJR. to $00 PM. p Open tveqr Wlaefcday—Mangey fhrewgh RIVERSIDE PUJEUT—Thirty cars of a 134- " rwtof“ car Milwaukee road btifif train jumped the Part of the plleup from the derailment is shown, track near Dubuque and left about half a dozen None of the time crewmen nor three hoboes can in and dangling over the Mississippi River. riding the train was hurt. CASTONE AND •1G900 PI 2-9421 24 HOUR SCRVICI 1457 PwrcsM Bvhs PaHw How To Hold FALSE TEETH MorsHmlyliPlact The lint meeting of the year has hem set for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Sept 6. At that time a date will be set for tryouts for the first production. Fourteen men and one woman are needed in the cast of rMr, Roberts.” I „___ ___ Oman or Witt Suit sprlnklD • ttttl* VaMTSITWoo your putAD.Thlp alfcallnp Oaoa asMi BMte oocnfortvbt? Ite gummy, g,Biityl>1i or f—ting Dm mm f. Checks "pUU odor* (Mrturi ith) om FABinTM todvy M GET set... FOR A GALA LABOR DAY! Drive A Brand New 1961 PONTIAC Sensational Saving on All Remaining 1961 P0NTIACS and TEMPEStS ALL MODELS . 7. LIMITED NOfflERS^ EXTRA BI6 TRADE IN ALLOWANCES Cars AU Ready to Drive Away •. . DON’T DELAY-BUY NOW-SAVE! Offli1”1?*1 Nui»t*r *V961p0*t« «jw/c Pfice Actions ... h.aL0W MILEAGE! s*Z?L PONTIAC RETAIL STORE .65 Mt. Clemens Street I Marriage Licenses (Applied tor) ; THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. 'Should Return' Cuban Freighter But U. S. Judge Says Private Appeals Must First Be Heard mbit L. K—tor. Wetnut Creek. . MM *. Low*. (141 r-ton, ud Juanita Bttyeu. Orteavrie , , Arther K Pohl, 11M CaeUewood Union 1M». and Ardltb L. rowel, 174 Dreedeo Michael T. Cerventet, lit Wall. and KH«M a. IlKlIlH 24M Bald Mountain NORFOLK, V*. (AP)—A feder-»n e0,ju a n h*rSJS,.^oiuri*** L*k,1“<1’ aj judge says the hijacked Cuban Bahia de Nipe la pno-. *y*. Tn3SUL ** doctrine of sover- 1 immunity and Mhould be re- | turned to Cuba — but not until OK^nii'Sifct ~v * *• i claimants, against it have ex- “fw- “US5: h*Ufted 1111 ** ■"*"«* Of ap- ford, Milford iPCtl. Michael R. Herehey. Detroit, and Carol, * * ★ ond ** WUM branch bT the fed-Judith j And*raon, lam ana Quentin. eral government “should avoid any conflict with the executive in Explorer XIII Defies Plans, Drops From Orbit WASHINGTON (AP) -Exyiorer XIII, a dust-hunting satellite expected to remain aloft for several yean, has plunged back into the eatth'a atmosphere less than a week after it was fired into orbit, dr ★ * The National Aeronautics and Space Administration launched the satellite last Friday from Wallops Island, Va. Orbital information examined 34! hours after the launching led to predictions it would remain circling shout the earth for several! years. 2,500 Gallons of Cream cr*#k-Spills Into Waterway ROCKFORD (It — Nearby Steg-man Creek was fortified with 2,500 gallons of cream today after a traffic mishap which tied up motorists more than two hours on’UJ, 131 just north of Rockford. State police said truck driver enry J. Kalman. 30, of eacaped injury when Ms tai overturned after it waa farced ■n embankment by two a_______I swerving to avoid one disabled by a gear failure. The tanker’s load spilled into the S5,50o. The toad «Sd to *”99*** Pennsylvania a Holland ice cream plant. ' Both Farm Boy, Hone Killed by Lightning Belt SELFRIDGE, NJ>. .CAP) - A am bey and the hone he was riding to bring in the cows from pasture wen killed Tuesday night when struck by a Bghtnhv bolt. The victim’s parents, Mr, and Mrs. Valehtina Yochim, found the body of their son, Melvin, 15, and the carcass of the hone after the sudden electrical storm. Exploit Empty Mines EAST LANSING W - A geographer from Pennsylvania State University has suggested Pennsylvania should exploit its abandoned mines —as Is done in Northern Michigan -as a tourist attraction. Phyllis R. Griess, hi a research paper delivered today at a meeting of the Association of American Geographers at Michigan State University, said promotion of the defunct anthracite mines as tourist attractions could help ease the financial pinch in Eastern Pennsylvania. , /A pound of evaporated milk uses 13 pounds whole milk. Xsthnv vuirat Paul A. Bradford, 14M Norman Turpin, M3 Baldwin, and StjUn V- Oratn. 144 S. Parke JM C. OotUohalk Jr.. togtesw. and •hirter ■ Woodoock. 317 Park. Orion i— “4 Draper, and JudlUi D^Wbl Uoc2°JJ0 N Jama* S. MeCR—... . Tapp, iM Saw J. Jm, l Robert J Stile*. SWJon loU J Tucker. 3340 Pit* i. 1*4 Webb. Trot !* Jones, Holly, and I mat Lake, Keeto Richard L. Blllman, Roscommon, and Myy C. TrudaU. * Horay.jQ^ae| Mary 1 tow Walled Lake! and Barbara J- Smith (SSL C. Utiembere MM----------1 Rlrar. Pirmtaff. and Omutanee M Mutchar. Livonia E OMi B. Mare*. IM Marlon and Judith A. Saves*, I3MWhipple Laka. Clark»ton Tbomaa L. Scott, in Cl overport, Roth--------1 Marla P Roaarlo. 1»J Clover- field of internstional relations,” Diet. Judge Walter E. Hoffman said Tuesday night in •apporting the US. State Department’s. decision to return the 3,800-torv-vessel to the Castro emment. STAYED ORDER Hugh Bien Monte of Los Angeles on its list of most wanted fugitives Tuesday. ftisrlw J lrjdjT Pattoraon. Pa„ and Sballa J. TowaO. Royal Oak BnvU J. OrtaDal!. North Faith II. HooVdV, MM Phaa___ David I. Carroll, MSS Orubb Road, ^mklMlmil J. Lannlnf, PM X ifintel TV Doonellr, MM MMvato. sad Dewp S. Dunenn. p Center. Okferd ■award R. Jaaeph. SM Lockaven, Union Laka, and Karra L. Klter. 1044 Charest Donald A. Uehiina. Royal OaK and laipnllo llarlewini, 31131 Waldron. Farmington Patrick C. Caldwell. MS Laka St.. Qrtso, and Carole s. Lombardo, tm Beach Drive, Orion If'---L McNelve. ISM BlUoraat, Wa- terford. iand OoorgM A. Sword. SMI S5S5" Iwr Dba Ll wilaon. 11 K Hopkloi Edmond P Ktfrier. It Mark. I___t. Klter, fill Cat*' b*i&bert,SBHaine*, 1PM OraefWULBtr-mlnfham, and Elaine D. Bapaon, HI N. Eton Band. Birmingham Melvin s. Johnson. IMS Stanley, ond pilMII S. Baker, 430S Lamont. Drayton Platne Arthi JuSuh'V^ “SSSTj. Oremaud. 1M4 Vermont. Troy, and Judith M. CholL Royal Oak ** v a’skiiisiHTi Donald ATLsom .K JSW. MB WO— Oary A. Rowland, Royal Oak, and Paula K. Etesian. 4ill WindUte, Water-B. Chldeater, 3MS Ahda. Roch-d Judith p. Mam, Funds la O. Mueller II. HIM Warwick, — SM Joyed A. Dally. Detroit ■araor. e» menzsavuiv, I ffatWtrr t. voaa. I Ftdan. Blrmlnsham ten i. Paroor. IM Bait Bled., a y L. Crowley, MM Crest Haven M. Kteer, dll S. Tele*raph, 0 Mary D. Voaa. Ckwaon L Tasmania, Waynt D. MaeXlpIne. 44SS Kei..r.. i ■Jlnii Plalna, and Conetance J. lata, Ka,. Bloomfield Hllle, sad Janet M. Parker. INN Mwryuerlte. Blrmlnsham Oaoret R. Johnstons, 1S4J Pettlbona LMte RaaT Rtehland. and J-------- Crawford, MM 8. Hill. MUford Bari j. Cook. Livonia, and Donna ■KIMlMmMk ( Motors Road, MUford, and Janet Rowe. 030 H. Union, MUford . , Bdsar O. Raedle. Detroit, and PatHota H. Nellson, JMM Inkster. PanalMtsn 1 Shohen R kspaslsn. tap e. Jessie, — WUste I. HsnXton, 10J Roser D. Potter. 14 S. ■sndro L. Orefory, UN rrem Thomas L. Taylor. Pemdale, and Mai M. Casto, M0 Wimble ton. Blrmlnsham Jack D. Benson, Bis Rapids, and Linda O.-lioOM, SM Roush ton. MUford > Clifford W. Reliant. 3PM Olmstaad Dianna 8. Hurlburt. 4011 Olmstaad John O. Whitman. 401 Taylor. Boch-estsr. and Beryl L. StanseU. MS Dwane L Kernel.' ’ 0444 * PmSS^t-JC Blrmlnsham Rari Valsnchsa. Chlcaso. 111. otto A. Qrtssom. Ml Rlisodate BaaU I. Caverly, 4MS Oak vista, Drayton Plains, and Ida B. sock, lit Omar Ranald J. Oreenbaum. 3133 Park cirth, Koran Harbor, and Berta M. Weinberg. Detroit MHf V. Tyler. IM W. Clarkston. “1 Marltha Marcos. SM “ Clarence A. Tor sen Agi K Wilson. 1H a Lnthor B. Morris ■ Thomas W. Ball IL Ut Waal and Loralnc IL Coop. 3371 Bed for fttek J. Penoaa. Detroit, and I , K. Lueses. 1311 Cote, Blrmlnsham Oannls L Pnffln jftsrsnli Arte,, Ldte If. Ayrss. 33033 Wsatleu. Parmb James L Paawslta. 30303 yoe.., Parmtaxton, end Barbara A. Roark, OMnini Park, Katts. . Rash A. Klrtra. Royal Oak. and I any J. Shields. 3131 LovUwton, Troy iamso K Pittman Jr., 6*1 DeSou. i Dae A.< MeCaffroy.jp Poplar John P. Moya. Detrott, a IMS, 371V4 Orchard Lake A toad H. AnspauRh, SOU Reece. • tote, and Mabte BTRondo. ton. .Clarkston H Rdkert A Joss. M5 Lakevle tone K Shell. 4350 Seeds ____... B. McRolvey, 104 H. Wtsom RfiMLWIxom. and Roylora L. Mussen. IM Olemtarv. Walled Lake , sack J. Kerr. 306 Oranser. Ortonvtlle. and Irene J. Marw, Ooodrlch i. DrnUMUL ids Judton, I - V Seebald. IT Oritid I . rramaa, IMS OreeAeld. Blr-1 L ind Dilarad M. Orels, MT Onefleld. Blmtn(ham Charles K Lark, SMT Warren. Drayton j Plains, and Marla 6. McOUI 337 X *- | MID Taw 1 loot J. Strauaser! —. -w ArSJiU P . .—Kalitta. TpsUantL and Bea-trtea A Peters. 3444 Anders , _%«> «■ Bodrmei, Oak Park. amf Bhsron O, Olbeon. MM Bosmona, Blrmlr—- JFK's Sisters 'Sick' Belgrade rttpii ~ Mr*. Sjpnhw Smith and *Ir-. Sargent ftM, sisters of President Kennedy, canceled plans to fly hers Tuesday because they are slightly Ut the U.S. Embassy announced tip. The sisters are la (he Yugoslav coastal Mm of Sveti Stefan. Wear ’tm Up or Down I Either way Morpul® elastic tops stay puti No sag, no si kit, no mattor how much you wash and wtar thorn! Discover the top-to-toe quality, of AtorpuP socks ... now at this Big Buy price! DOWNTOWN j 1 TEL-HURCN I MIRACLE MILE 1 DRAYTON PLAINS 1 'PONTIAC j aXTRL. I SHOPFHG CENTER | CENTER I sti r^ii^rri^rPa^ rfo^rr^vTi^r^. r«, Specials continued while quantities all if "CHARGE IT" AT KRCSGE'S — pay only once a montl I MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTE1 DRAnON PLAINS CENTER Shop wit hout cash - "CHARGE IT" A T KRESGE'S- pay only once a month! ELEVEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1961 Reliable Filing System TAUNTON, 'Maas. UPD-A MO-Ktary'i record book of the tMB* and for heattfay blood. Penney I-vania State University enerts aatd a the 150 pupil* inter-:5Unny$ide or Over? Viewed 27.5 per cent laid they • were confirmed smokers. UNIVERSITY PARK. Pa. CUPI) Bread and Butter Note Confesses Indiscretion MEMPHIS, Tran. (UPI) - Mrs. W. C Gary said Met the hank Smoke at Young Age SAN RAPAEU CaW. (UPD-A FAMOUS MAKE- thuraday, friday, Saturday HOLIDAY IrSuwiNi design Cycolac case protects •gainst jolts, jars. Mel-O-Crust ENRICHED Tel-Huron Center Has IRQ Color-Key Touch Typing Course 42 Character Keyboard Card and Writing LineScele llna Lock and Bell Two-posklon Paper Sail Visible Margin Slope Left-IBght Shift Keys Pica Type Style Wide 9W Paper Capacity A FINE LIFETIME GIFT FOR ANY BOY OR GIRll 8-COUNT Who wears our all-wool “Golf Shirt”? Center Cut Blade Chuck California SEEDLESS GRAPES Wrigley The look is long and lean ... the feel is plush and smooth. Deep, dark geometric and abstract prints of cotton lurvwl®. Expertly tailored with a Talon® unbreakable nylon side zipper and Snugtex® waistband. 10 to 18. a. cotton lurvel in brown ground. b. green ground print in lurvek Dyed-in-the-wool golfers,*of course. But many of those good looking shirts are happily bought by men who never touch a club. All agree: The full-fashioned design feels so comfortable through chest and shoulders. And they like the way the knit bottom looks—tucked in or out. For putting or puttering, you'll do well to pick up a stack of these weightless wonders. They won’t be available for long at this incredible price. Choose Dark Brown, Beige, Gold, Red, Rust,. Light Blue, Gray. Sizes S, M, l, XL. 93 SCORE 3 to 4 LB. AVERAGE From first steppers through school and plaSdays to their twa tunes... Jumping-Jacks are always a match for their bustling energy. Exclusive size grading for perfect fftj You’ve seen them in Parent7! magazine . .. now see Jumping-Jacks here. ISMUN’S TIL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER shop to 9 P-m- inonday/ thursday, friday, Saturday Security Charge Account Service s1, v *m Mm., Tkarf.f PH. a*4 Sa*. 'HI f Mi. ' , Ft 4-025? TEL-HURON CENTER ONLY-FREE PARKING Optra Thur*. FrU Sat as* Mm. IB 9-T»«t. as* Wa*.0 la • SHOPPING CENTER fABRIC SHOP .11 II UHIL Ph. FE 5-4457 TFL HURON SHOPPING CENTER \CHARCE IT" AT KRESGESl I TWELVE THIS PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, lQfli ONE COLOR THURSfV and F|§ ™ 9:30 to 9 P.M. CLOSiei forinve §s3^8e?I i|||P4 ■ -SHF tllip |\l igiifsi ' ^jf« ■■ ■ ai ODDMENTS! Wo took eve annual fiscal Invantory on August 30* Wa found so fnany odds and ands of ovary kind and doscription that wo doddod to mark Hio pricos way down and mova ’am out In tho groatost oddmant solo of ffs kind. Llmltad quantitios In soma casos, soma Just oha-of-a-kind. This ad is only a partial list of tho many savings waiting for you at WKC. • SERTA a GE a MAYTAG • ADMIRAL a AMANA • FASHION TREND a ARTISTIC • WESTINGHOUSE • FRIGIDAIRE • MAGNAVOX a SIMMONS • ROWE • DOUGLAS a DORMEYER a EMERSON • RCA VICTOR • BASSETT a PHILCO NO PAYMENTS UNTIL W NOVEMBER - THEN TAKE UP TO 3 FULL YEARS TO PAY! 1 >TrmlHir |JS||4q[ jSb^.. 'jm I C«»fl.u wM k«. BBS; y 17" yBfi V PONTIAC PRESS. Wl5t)yE8DAYt AUGUST So, l»6l , PONTIAC, (MICHIGAN THIRTEEN A Sparkling Brook, a Rod and Hook-Ah, Fishing Casting in the Au Sable River white1 visiting at the 0. Leo Beaudette cabin is Dr. Lucius A. Famham of West Pike Street. “Practicing medicine and help- Will Celebrate Anniversary By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK — The American housewife gradually is changing 4- from the kind of woman who wants big, new, ahiny things, to the kind at toman who wants small, elegant, personal belongings. At least, this is the opinion of a great Expert on small elegancies, Philip Rosenthal. The lanky young German pcsaident of the world's largest chinaware factories dropped in this , week to reveal his opinion that: “Rightafter the war, Americana wanted a feeling of security. That was represented by .a nice new house, lots of tV seta, chrome-covered cars and mink. These were Hie status symbols and presently everyone who could afford them had them. “But the big material things have left a dissatisfaction — a feeling that a flashy show of : money isn’t enough. "Tpe American woman particularly Jibs come to realize that in order to have a house, she has to be a lady and have personal taste. RETURNING TO VALUED “So she is returning to the ' values that her mother had, or her grandmother, before the war and before the depression. Saw is buying more fine china, crystal and linens —t which are the outer clothes dp a woman, and which, trAdl-'*-tionally, have brought women through the ages a measure of almost spiritual satisfaction.”__ Rosenthal conceded that it is to his advantage to have this opinion. After all, fine china is Ms business. Selling women on the necessity for it is his life work. .f> "Alt I have facts to* back up my opinion," he said, "In the hist ty yrers.tbe sales of pur .finest china have djthbed from $8 to $28 million. It is women who buy china. What ■ more need I say? v. . ;.it' ’★ People are spending (speaking of big mtHfies) more than a billion dollars a year on crash diets to lose weight. If Ml this money—this cost of keeping fat people famished— were used to-feed the hungry citizens of Africa, then Africans would have to start reducing too. This analysis was made recently by a U.S. congressman (and revealed in Cosmopolitan , Magazine), who made a study of some - 4B million Americans who annually turn over plenty of cash for new chassis.. They go on whoppingly expensive reducing programs, rather than reducing by wjll power. They insist on t their doctors’ prescribing appetite- many of these drugs are either useless or have harmful side effects. ^ 1 f A great many doctors claim thaf they are literally forced to prescribe such drugs or lose their patients to other medicos." * The American Medical AAsx -elation has” warned that no magical panamas can reduce you; only intelligent and dedi- , cated effort, plus a reasonable amount of will powei^ will do the slimming. They have set down rules for suspi&tia of any weight-reducing products which: 1. Claim use of that product alone will bring about a weight reduction, (Watch those trims, “no-diet reducing, lose ugly fit, yet eat all yot/want.") 2. Fall to state clearly in its advertising that the reducing agent must be taken in conjunction with a diet plan. 3. Emphasize the pitch that you can "eat all you want" or “eat what you like best" 1 Make exaggerated claims of specific weight losses within specific periods of time. The crux of the matter is that 'neither drugs nor trick diets nor massage can reduce you elthfcr well or safely. When they do reduce you at all, it’s only because at the diet that accompanies them •— and which yjfu might have u«ed aione about as effectively, and eertainly more economically. Headquarters for Drtxol, Grand Rapids, Flexsteel Terms to Suit You -manga- furniture BLOOMFIELD HILLS—2600 WOODWARD FE 3-7933 » OFIN 10 A. M, to 9 P. ML MON., THURS., FRL, SAT. — TUIS., WED. 'til 5 John.tell us fishermen were chosen fay -Christ as His first disciples. An Egyptian tomb dating from 2,000 B,C beers a drawing of an angler with book, rad and line. Fishhooks mode from wood, bane, shells, thorns and copper have been found in preMstoric mounds of the Americas. * ’* * The angler loves wading out into a rushing stream; he likes the fragrance and peace of the out-of-doors and testing his skill against that of the fish. Although Oakland County has some 4S0 lakes, many men and women choose to fish in Norths rn Michigan and Canada where * they can avoid water skiers and motor boat traffic. Here they sit all day in quietude on a small lake surrounded by firs and pines. Former President Herbert C. Hoover, an avid fisherman, says "Fishing is- a chance to wash one’s, soul with pure air, with the ripple of the stream and the shimmer of the sun on the blue waters. It brings meekness and inspiration from the glory and wonder of nature and charity towards tackle-makers. It brings mockery of DANISH CtEftRAttCE — Just limiting for a bite in Upper Long Lake are (from left) Julius Dudas and grandsons John and Larry Dudas of Long Ridge Court. A retired tool and die employe of General Motors Cdrp., Detroit, Mr. Dudas now fishes every day bringing in mostly, bass and bluegiUs. John will be a junior at Pontiac Central High School in September. Larry plans'*to attend Lawrence Institute of Technology. The boys’ parents are Mr. and Mn\ Rudolph E. Dudas. . ... -‘U.S. Housewives Think Small’ IMPORT CHAIR Ancient mural paintings show it was practiced ages ago in Egypt. The Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and profits, the quieting of bate and lift of the spirit." Sportsmen use a variety of baits, both natural and artificial. ' Grasshoppers, worms and minnows are good bait in trout fishing, while crawfish, small frogs and minnows are best for bass. Artificial flies used for trout and salmon are made of hairs, fun and wools' of every variety, mingled with pieces of feathers qpd held together by wire and gold and, silver thread. Many fish show little concern about their eggs or young. Eggs are deposited on rocks, weeds or at the bottom of streams and left to batch. COD PROLIFIC A cod produces about 10,000,-000 eggs annually but does nothing to preserve them. . Bass and sunfish guard theft ’ <*«*• The salmon and the shad, which spend most of their lives in the sea, ascend riven and Creeks to. deposit their %ggs. The eel returns to depths of the ocean to spawn. Some male catfish carry the eggs in their mouths until they are hatched, and the young ones for some .time after that. a it a The sticklebacks are noted for their nest building. The nudes construct nests of weeds, twigs and grass and spin a thread of mucus to bind them together. The sunfish’s nest is nothing more than a shallow cup .scooped out in the sand or earth- v The chub heaps up a pile of pebbles on which the eggs are laid; then more stones are piled on top. The paradise fish, widely used as a pet fish, builds a nest of bubbles. He then picks up the eggs and blows them from his mouth Into the nest. The bubbles harden and form a floating nest. BIG BUSINESS Next to agriculture, fisheries have been for centuries the most important source of human food. The catch by commercial fishermen of the United States annually amounts to more than 4.25 billion pounds valued at 293 million. The natural ofi in some 72-INCH SOFA Vinyl strop construction, reversible foam cushions, sturdy n 0 r d i c walnut finish; Zipper removable -deedrotor covers. Sturdy import with walnut finish frame, vinyl strop construction, zipper removable decordtor covers, Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Klim of Elizabeth Lake Road will celebrate their 25th wedding Anniversary with an open house from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. The affair will be planned and given by the Klines’ daughters Christine and Ethel. Pouring will be Mrs. Ivan Wilcox of Old Orchard Drive, Mrs. Merelyn Marshall of Walters Lake, Ctarkston; Mrs. Oliver Dunstan of Hillcliff Road, and Mrs. Edmund Windaier of Hatchery Road, Drayton Plains. Out-of-state guests are expected to attend from Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, Arizona, Missouri and New York. The first slice o( anniversary cake will be cut by Mrs. Kline’s father, Rev. D. H. Curry, 89, who was a minister in Birmingham for 30 years. He now /chides in Philadelphia. ing to build hospitals has been my vocation for many years. One of my avocations is fishing” said the Pontiac physician and surgeon. canned fish, such as salmon and sardines, as it comes out of the can is equal in vitamin D to the average cod liver ail, unit for unit. Minerals found in fish include calcium, phosphorous, iron, copper, iodine, and sulphur. In order to increase and preserve the stock of fish, hatcheries are maintained through the federal and state governments. Fish oils are obtained from all parts of the fish, while fish liver oils are prepared from the Uveri only. Another byproduct is insulin which is prepared for medicinal use. Fish meal is a useful ingredient in fertilizer but in recent yean, the meal has been widely used as an animal foodstuff. Isinglass'll prepared from the sounds or swim bladders of some species and is man-. utactured in nearly all puts of the world. Fish glue, manufactured from waste products of fish, is used in the production of halftone plates and photo engraving work. A product known as pearl essence laequer is made from the extracted substance which gives the pearly luster to fish scales. Shark skins are made into leather. In Ms little book, ’The Com-pleat Angler,” Isaak Walton writes “We may say of angling or fishing as Dr. Boteler said of strawberries: ‘Doubtless God could have made a better strawberry, but doubtless God never did’ and so. If I might be Judge, God never did . make a more calm, quiet, innocent recreation than angling.” jf By MARY ANGLEMIER earliest times has been re-* What’s mare tan than fish- garded as not just a business tag? The art of catching fish but as one of the moat alluring ' ““ ‘‘ ‘ “ ' of sports. Fishing almost daily in Crystal Lake time activities include swimming, base- I (from left), brothers lorry. Jimmy and Ricky Erickson, sons of Mr. and Mrsi Robert E. Erickson of Berwick Boulevard. The boys dig their own angleworms for fishing. Othef summer- ball, and pretending a retd campout in their own back yard. The youngsters never get discouraged if the fish don’t bite, they just walk back the next day and try again. FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEPXESDAY, AUGUST 80.JM1, a ft#*, they floated In a Hqfed. for a lifetime of proud' pooeeeeIon P fi OMEGA fuDy jeweled. IK (old bout t of many e»- th» mnuM crymJ of «bi* exquisite timepiece ■ddt high fashion i Movement it fully je Die! bat'lMC * *• maskers. One of cepdonol Omega watches in our ooOoctioo. REDMOND’S Jewelers • Optometrists 81 N. Saginaw St FE 2-3612 The Gay> AH Wrong . . , Abby Your Father la So Right! By Abigail ?a nan DEAR ABBY: I am engaged 16 a Wavy guy. He has been ■tattansd in CaUionUa, and will be lor seme due. He wants both ways, but my father won’t permit It Isn’t it proper for a. fiance to pay lor Us gift's transportation? 1 am IS and he Is JL "CALIFORNIA OR BURT' DEAR CALIFORNIA: Your "Navy guy" has had enough leave hi two years to have visited you. And if he can pay your way to set Mm, ha can pay Ms way to see you. I’m with your father. * * * DEAR ABBY: My husband and I are at odds about my atdtudo toward the telephone. I say our telephone is for our convenience, not the convent I will answer It when and if I led like it Ha says I should answer it •very time if rings because it might be an emergency. I say if it is an emergency they will call again. Early Week Special! $Z50 BUDGET WAVE........... ..... O CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP 111 North Pnrry FE 2-4361 PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL tttt s. i, ...... W Enrollments Available to Day or Evening Claw Write. Phone or Call to Person far free Pamphlet PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 I have been up to my neck hi housework when a friend has phoned to "chat." I have gotten out of the tub, rushed coiy to find that* was s wrong Or some dance studio to calling to inform me that I have Just “won" a free lemon. I have trained my husband to call at 13:1ft. I will answer the phone at that time no matter what 1 am doing. I’d Hits your opinion, and the opinion of others on this subject. MIND OF MY OWN DEAR MIND: Although the telephone is unquestionably die number one time-aaving miracle of the age, ft can also be an annoying Intrusion. If you am out. of the few who can hear tlte bell toll, and cam not a whit by whom it to tolled, then tot it ring. It's your privilege. * * * DEAR ABBY: I have beard that a red-headed woman Is much harder to get along with than a blonde. la this true? MOPPING AROUND DEAR MOPPING: Not I tan who ha ed dm table decor. Out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs.. Howard Deeter of Drayton Plaids; Mr, and Mrs. Charles Pardon, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Roland and Mr. and Mrs. William Gibson, all of Detroit. both, and tbs color of hair didn't affect ter disposition in tte slightest. ^ ^ DEAR ABBY: I have been going with a boy I like very much* except for one little radio (and It to always on), or when we am dancing, he constantly hums to. a monotone. And 1 mean constantly! He sounds like an engine. I don’t want to insult him, but how can I get him to stop it? "EDGY" DEAR "EDGY": When HE bums—YOU hum. Only hum on key. Unless he to tone-deaf, he will yield thp„ .right-of-way. If he keeps humming anyway, team to like It. Hummingbirds make good lovebirds. A „ A .‘ A "Am things rough?” Let Ab- by help you solve your problem. For a personal reply, endows a stamped, seU-ad-draeaed envelope and send to Box 3M5, Beverly Hills, Calif. Raymond Reeces Are Honored on 40th Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Reece eve hooored with a surprise wedding anniversary party Sunday evening at their Chippewa Road home. The affair was planned and arranged by Suzanne Reece of Pontiac and the Raymond Reeces of Oak Park. ~JT buffet town dinner was ervad to dS guests Crum a table featvUf a white wedding cake k ptak aad green Girl Announces HerAttendqpts Betty Crowley, whose marriage to Allan Fgrper will take place Sept. I at tlie Christian Alliance Church, anteunred her bridal attendants Sunday afternoon at panky shower. Her grandmother Mrs. Charles Pdte to*, was hostess for the affair at her South Telegraph Road- home. The brkfeefect to the dststhter of Mr. and Mrs. Lode D. Crowley of Crssthaven Road. Her fiance’ parents am tte Troy Farms of East Boulevard. Mbs Crowley has asked (tor taw French to be her maid ef honor aad 'Judy Rickard and Carol Fsruer, rioter of dm prospective bridegroom, to attend as bridesmaids. Attrefekv Mr. Earner as heat man will be Charles Brattan aad as ushers, Larry Mslcarier, Ed Brodway, George Merts aad Fetor Mavriuu. A picnic dinner was enjoyed by Mr, and Mrs. Oowley and son, Mr. and Mrs. Famer and Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Lippard, Mr. Mrs. Douglas' McAvoy, Mr. and Mrs. William Giles and family and Mr. and Mm. Chariss Crawley. Others present were Mrs. Julie lowed, the Ralph Swatzes, the Junior Robert E. Pole* and family, the Jack Potes and eon, and the George Mizes. Human eyes work Independently with no connection except in the brain. Average lifetime of a modem automobile to 125,000-miles, three times whpt it was a few decades 3I1BI MRS. JAMES A. LOWERY Mrs. James A. Lowery of flagstaff Road, Union Lake, graduates from Grace Hospital School of Nursing of Detroit Sept. 8. The former Karla M. Stoddard, she to the daughter of Ruby L Stoddard of Waterford and A. Ward Stoddard of Bloomfield Hills. LOLA BLOODWORTH Lola Blood worth, daughter of Mr. and Mm. Elbert Btood-worth of Steinbaugh Court, win graduate Thursday from Hurley Hospital School of Nursing in Flint. Mias Bfeodworth plans to continue working at the hospital.... .. ........ ,„ Newlyweds to Be in A reception in die Sunset Supper dub to Fond du Lac. Wit., followed tte marriage of Mary Ellen Jaeger to John J. Ahrens pf Milwaukee Saturday morning hi Holy ’ Trinity Church. Kewifetom, Wis. main of the' Mary Ellen larger, ^ daughter of the Norman ^*£1 Jaegers of . Kewaskum, Wis* exchanged vows i with John J. .The bride appeared in ivory silk, - detailed with Atoncon tarn ap-[ Ahrens» son pUque, and illusion veiling held of Mr. and ** * P**rt4tudded lvorY sflk pUl- ■' box. An orehid rested no her white Mrs. Don Parents of the couple am the Norman Jaegers of Kewaskum and l«r. ted Mm Don Ahrens of box. An orchid rested on her white prayer book. JoauM Jaeger, maid ef kMar Ahrens of Bloomfield Hitts, Saturday , _ aiuiuusa ai uni, auuiy u ib Kewaskum, mo* veto* and tern Fi|, Meter ef tot bridegroom, to Wee. Mary Leri, Bar- Real freaks of top* I I carried burnt < MRS. JOHN J. AHRENS Would You Rather Be His Wife or Widow? Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Warn to do all In your power togp from Jobdat America’s increasing number of widows? '■T -A # \A Then be on the loakom for the time to Ufa when your Job as a Imnrmakw becomes easy, yet, your husband's Job remains hard as ever * perhaps, « harder than to Ma younger daps because of increased respoaribfli-tfes or because of diminishing physical strength. m tone when the nma of toe She can cut (he pattern of their social Ufe to suit her husband, realizing that fence ha to carrying'tte heavier load he probably needs more rest than she does. The SPORTS With EYE-CUE APPEAL Handsewn vamps, continental styling, low boots, new colors? Larks has them oil and so many more . . . fashioned of softest kid and calf for the hoppiest shoo feeling! ’’That leaves the homemaker with s easy Job and plenty of leisure tone and the chance to do All that she can to make her husband’s to eaqiei She can do this In any number at ways. She can take over some of the extra Jobs he assumed during toe yean when her work days Were longer than his. Fall Specials on Permanents Andre's 2 Most Magnificent Permanents' Mr, Andre welcomes you to the Salon of Experts — Where service and quality reign supreme. EXTRAORDINARY SPECIAL ) Permanent now *12 SO OUTSTANDING STAFF OF RXPRRTS TO SERVE YOU ' » No Appointment Needed—Open Friday ‘til I PJf. FE 5-9257 Beauty Salon 11 N. Saginaw St. Between Lawrence and Pike Sts. across From Xtroad Heater ■She can 1 i Ufcbten load by taking a long hard look ht their living expenses and figuring out ways to cut down on the'monthly bills. She can help ter husband figure out a retirement plan an that he isn’t nagged by wony afenR tosjkne when be can no longer Mwwer by ten. Donald Kibble of Dover Road, assisted by daughter bead to find seme relaxing bob She can — wife fewer demands' upon ter time — devote herself to making a home in which her hus-“s wishes come first, and hto welfare her main concern. With conscious effort s wife can help ease her husband’s load when hers becomes much lighter than Men, you too cm help her with part of the load it you’ll read ’Happier Wives (hints for bus-*nds).’' Just send 25 cents to Ruth MUlett Reader Service, c-o The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 489, Dept A, Radio City Staton, New Pork 10, N.Y. Peter Ahrene of Dallas, Tex. was best man .tor his brother. Seating , guests were Wiliam Cline, John Norton, Frank Gorman, Benjamin Gaik, (Lawrence Murray and John T asianti. A ; A- A : After a brief wedding trip, the couple will visit tte Don Ahrens will honor her dnughtertofew-at a tea while she to hoe. Tin young couple will be at home In Milwaukee after Sept. 3. Shower Honors Lynn Summers Marlene. A Sept I wedding to phased by Mias Sommers aad her flame Rodney Earl Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rahert Evans of Dover Read. Her parents are Mm Wilson Summers of DetretL The guest list included from Pontiac, Mrs. Evans, Mrs. Russell Faxon. Mrs. Mason Rich, Mis. Guy Stotflemeyer, Mrs. M Williams. Mrs. Lyndon Salathiel, Mra George Morin, Mrs. Sven Qjsson, Mrs. EUna Reid, Mrs. Waldo Ashley, Mrs. U. C. Meeker, Mrs. Helen Thick, end Mrs. William Huriburt. A A A Others were Mrs. Kenneth Carpenter from Drayton Plains, Mra. Russell Beam from Birmtogham, Mra. Smhmers, Mrs. Leslie Geel-tbe prospective Mrs. Thomas Avery all of Detroit: another aunt, Mrs. Gordon Yates of Brooklyn,« N.Y., and an aunt, of the bride-elect, Mrs. S. F. Benson of Hendersonville, N.C. Airplane experts say the time to mr when a plane win leave New Yack at noon and reach Los Angeles at noon the same day. OES Chapter Gathers Members of Areme Chapter No. K OES gathered at the Rooaevelt [Temple Monday evening for their first fall meeting. Mra G. R. Setecf, worthy n 1 Itetofl gnssts to fa. ns, Decker a A special tribute w given to aR i present us _____ rate. Royal Clark, worthy patron, presented a proficiency class: Mra Cecil R. McAllister, Mrs. Jack D. Moden, Mra James R. Moden and Mrs. Alice Cray. Ufe membersbiji ufes granted to Mra. Ham MMkctoen. • Appointments made during the evening were Mrs. Victor 0. Boda-mer, Mrs. Lester Oles and Mrs. Albert Kugler to a committe tor Tellers William C. Pfahlert, Mrs. Eugene Perkio and Mrs. Theron Taylor, and collectors Mrs. Edward Moden LAST 3 DAYS mid-summer furniture SALE Interior Decorating Counsel at No Extra Cost BUDGET TERMS Open Thursday, Friday Evenings Jo* Sooth ef Orchard Lake Rood— free FarktogFro* sad Side of Store and Mra. Kenneth Newlon were appointed for the annual meeting. Af A A Hospitality was in care of Mrs. Eugene Elmer and Mrs. William Oox. In charge of refreshments were Mrs. Albert Holtom, Mrs. Russell Canterbury, Mra Loren Palen and Mra Bernard Garner. 25th Anniversary Celebrated by the Guilds Family Mr. and Mrs. Warren Guilds of Marion' Avenue, whose silver wedding snnlverssry was Monday, were toted at a Sunday dinner attended by members of their immediate family. The affair was at the home of their son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mra MUbum Brown of Marlon Avenue. Helping with arrangements were another daughter Mrs. Dave Boston and the couple’s two sons, Warren Jr. and Richard, who to stationed with the Marines at San Diego, Calif. Mr. Guild’s stepbrother Frank Guilds also helped plan the dinner. The honorees have four grandsons. Rivers in Australia sometimes sntoh. They grow smaller as they flow into dry areas on the western slopes of the continent and finally disappear. Church of Christ .... -~87 Lafayette St. ^ The, Church of Christ-EASTERN LABOR DAY MEETING win to held at ST Lafayette Stmt, tend Park, sept. M There *111 he Afternoon Services followed rife Congress tional stasias aad i TSK Th. Public 1$ Cordially Invited id Attend This Soria* of Gospel Meeting/ :i THE PONTIAC PRESS', WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1061 FIFTEEN* Children Must Learn Be Mean Wed Betote Rev. Johns in Lake Orion Ceremony A reception at the Wmt of the Gui A. Freemans on Lake view Drive followed the marriage of their daughter Cecilia Hose Is David A. Davidson Saturday evening in the Lake Orion Methodist Church. Pink asters and white gladioli banked the altar where Rev. Albert B. Johns performed the ceremony. wariness for your child. Every adult over 20 who has not acquired some knowledge of the darker aide of human nature,” writes psychiatrist Edmund Berg* ler, “is automatically suspected of cultivating naivete for the purpose of being disappointed.’* : So parents who get awfully upset by children’s encounters with enemies can be suspected .of cultivating a babyishness’ that enables them to complain of the other fellow instead of looking squarely at their own rosy. Inaccurate judgment of him. They can be suspected of affection to accumulate grievances. The bridegroom ir the son of the Harold W. Davidsons of North Josephine Avenue, .Waterford Township. Imported Chantilly lace Last night after I had fallen asleep 1 was awakened by something crawling over me. I jumped out of bed and put the light on and Mw and behold— bed bugs! I was horrified and couldn’t go back into the bed. I spent the night trying to sleep on a chair. I simply can’t endure this for two weeks, so please tell me what 1 can do. A: Go out and telephone your family to send you a telegram asking you to come home. (Be very careful to examine your clothes as you pack them). Why are we human parents always sad or shocked when an enemy threatens a child? Animal parents aren’t A mother often is alerted, not saddened or shocked by the bay of a hound lor Juniors Silas I fa » Minds MM# Shoppies Canter TWwtapa at Sami* Lakt M. Green-tipped white pompons complemented mint green chiffon for maid of honor Joan Davidson,* sister of the bridegroom. Bridesmaids Edith Vernon of Lake Orion and Sandra Manser of Waterford wearing {rink chiffon, carried baskets of pink-tipped pompons. Mary Lou Geliske of Waterford, in white chiffon, was flower girl. Married in California RESAU Work Pasts 60c Mtilwww Furniture 4500 !4%-24% Farmer Pontiac residents, the Robert R. Longpres of Arcadia, Califi, were hosts at a poolside garden reception following the marriage o! their daughter Surette Marie to John F. Juhring Satur- white silk taffeta styled with chapel train and carried stepha-, notis and white roses centered with , an orchid. A diamond pendant and , earrings, gift of the bridegroom. , and a veil of silk illusion completed her ensemble. SISTER IN PARTY Lorraine Juhring, sister of the bridegroom, was honor maid, and Sheila Goehler, Carol Lerch and Eloise Wellington, all of Arcadia, and Patricia Harwick of Newport Beach, Calif., were bridesmaids. Gherie Longpre was her sister’s junior attendant. Wreaths of aqua flowers and bouquets of yellow roses complemented their dresses of aqua silk organza over taffeta. The bridegroom had Joseph Kline for his best man. Ushers were Homer Preston of Lake Orion and Gary Gammage of Lake Orion. Returning from HHEML _ honeymoon at Niagara Falls, the couple will live in Lake Orton. ~ Raspberry accessories accented Mrs. Freeman's dress of beige silk taffeta and Mrs. “ _________ Davidson was attired in green brocade. Both mothers wore white carnations. 'Kookie' Look Seen on College Scene (UPI) — Cotton corduroys, suedes, poplin and knit interpret the kookie look for dormitory lounging or after-rid wear. Eye-catching, hip length tops, often collarless and loosely tied below the waist with a self belt, sre worn otjer long slim panty or walking skirts. Poncho style tops in poplin and cabin boy jackets in printed cotton quilt, as well as velveteen tube tops, are other, favorites for at-home hours among the bookworms. comes After a honeymoon at Caiinel-by-the-Sea, Lake Tahoe and Northern California, the couple will live in Temple City. , The new Mrs. Juhring is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raphael J. Longpre of Pontiac. Mrs. Grace Holliday of Pontiac attended her granddaughter’s wedding. CREDIT TERMS Velvet, collecting compliments! Making much of your transition wardrobe! Here, the high pillbox, and the breton...from our * Velvet bollectlon. Should the tissue papers be removed before mailing wed-4jng invitations? The answer to this question as w^U as correct wedding forms will be found in the new Emily Post Institute booklet, "Wedding Invitations and Announcements.” To obtain a copy, send ten cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to The Emily, Post Institute, care of 9he Pontiac Press. Underwear to Sub for Swimsuits? (UPI) — What’s new undercover is colorfid girdles and bras splashed with turquoise and orange prints. The manufacturer reports the new unmentionables, silk-screened by hand, easily can be worn in the place of a sun sid^ when soaking up Old Sol’s rays on the patio. The underthlngs look so much like a swim suit that the manufacturer suggests they be worn on the beach in place of a swimsuit. tering to short, fuller figures. Choose cotton, rayon. Priirted Pattern 4500: Half Sizes 14%, 16*4, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size 16% requires 5 yards 39-inch fabric. Send fifty cents in coins for this pattern — add 10 cents for etch pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N. Y. Prim plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. Fall's 100 best fashions —- separates, dresses, suits, ensemMes, all sires, all in our new Pattern Catalog in color. Sew for yourself, family. 35 cents. ’ Teen Size for Trim (171) Teen sizes are for girls with trim, heat figures. If you are shorter walsted, choose the 3-15 size range. If you are longer walsted, select the 6-16 size range. day in Holy A Church in Arcadia. The bride appeared in bouffant Rids of Rust Spots To rid golf clubs of minor rust spots and grass stains, rub with a damp doth sprinkled with dry baking soda. Mr. and Mrs. ! Howard Arthur j Benedict of 1 Elsmere Street1 announce the engagement of their daughter Diane Helen to Richard Lee Vore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Vore of Evadna ..Street. No i date has been set f>jr the *-wedding. Sensibly Priced >0* RANDOLPH w Harwood CUSTOM TABORS 6 CLOTHIERS UNIPOBMS ef DISTINCTION DIANE BENEDICT Hold that best-dressed Bobbies by Formfit,' designed especially for the young figure, gives you a lead on the best-dressed award. Pretty embroidered band under cups gi ves you smooth fitting; elastic center band gives you breathing freedom. Slender, graceful straps with elastic bade releases sre specially designed for youthful shoulders... gives you the most in comfort. Lei our expert fitters sqhre uses Kodel for wash-and-wear “Laiers* that blaze !~/ U r a new fashjon trail. Even a bookworm would look chjc in blazer stripes like these. Kodel keeps the cheerful fabric fresher than a freshman smile . . helps these dormitory darlings wash and wear with, never a care. Seamprufe “Lazers" in contrasting stripes and solids. Blue, green and violet stripes with-solid blue; or yellow, olive green and coral stripes with green. Shorts and pullover, $6.00. Sizes 82 to 38. Coat, $6.00. S, M, L. ]| Be thf Hit of the Cheering Section! Tbeyltchasr foe yen when you’re ail dreaeed up in your Formfit Mums Conago. Life-like pompon munu ... a MUST for fall footban game*... drees up winter costa, put apring into autumn. For . detail*, come in-today. GREGORY'S JEWELERS hoot! of Kf rk SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1061 m SITS $1*95 >0*. flCJS P.rB.tli MOMrS-74 N. Soyieew Professional PERMANENTS Styled as YOU Like It! IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 219 Auhnm Are. FE 4-2878 GENTRY’S Colonial House 5 S. Main MA 5*2362 Announcing the engagement of their daughter Jeanette M. Dockham to ' Jack H. McDonald are Mr. and Mrt. Fred Light of Kewadin Street, Water-| ford, Her 'fiance is the son of the ... Harry ^ McDonalds of Iroquois Street, Waterford. No wedding dote has been set. JEANETTE M. DOCKHAM CYNTHIA CONWAY George f. Conway of Birmingham announces the engagement of his daughter Cynthia to Thomas M. Edleman. son of the Maurice A. Edlemans, Grand Rapids. Her mother is due late Mrs. Conway. Graduates of the University of Michigan ' the couple has set no date for the wedding. Wed in Christ Church Cranbrook Candlelight vows of Paula Kau Zisman to Gary A. Rowland were FROM 8-18 TO 80 FLOWERS ARE CORRECT L wm TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMiDIATI POINTS the name on the tip of her tongue is Fashion News! The W cardigan with dozens of J rows of little loop fringing knit in horizontal ' color stripes, bound ,ln solid color. Multi-red or mufti -gold pure wool. Dashingly chic over a smooth sheath skirt of pure wool in matching Colors. Sweater sizes 36 to 40; skirt „ sizes 7 to 13. PARK FREE! HAVE YOUR TICKET STAMPED! repeated to Rev. Gerald O'Grady Saturday evening in Owlet Church Cranbrook before an altar banked with white Fuji chrysanthemums. Hie Eric C Zisman* of Waterford received some 250 guests in the American Legion Hall, Royal Oak, following their daughter’s wedding. The bridegroom's parents, the Stanley J. Rowland! of Royal Oak, are presently in Europe. • dr ★ ★ Wearing Ivory mist silk taffeta re-embroidered with Alencon lace styled , with detachable chapel train, the bride held white roses and itephanotis atop a white prayer book. A double diadem of pearls caught her bouffant veil of Illusion. 'WWW Matron of honor Mrs. Robert Hope appeared In gold satin and nuild of honor Patricia Hadden of Waterford la burnt orange. Bridesmaids Mrs. Frank Reynolds of Cteriuton, Mrs. Ronald Zllka, Mrs. John Daniels of Elmhurst, 111. wore olive green. Bouquets of Fuji lemums and cabbage rose headpieces matched their gowns. Sharon Edwards of Toronto, her cousin's Junior attendant, appeared la white organdy sashed la gold. Flower girl and ring-bearer were Robin and Rickey Reynolds. Alfred Peterson of Royal Oak was best man. Ushers were Frank Reynolds, Morey Kaatz, Oak Park, John McOoy, Madison Heights, Ted Goldberg, Huntington Woods and Dennis Clemons of Ecorse, junior usher. . w w> w Returning from a Florida honey-non, the couple will live in Royal Oak. Mrs. Zisman chose floor-length mink brown peau de sole with Chantilly lace for the wedding and Mrs. George Hockherg, aunt of the bridegroom wore gold peau sole. Their corsages were phalae-nopsis orchids. The bride attended Michigan State University and her husband is enrolled at Lawrence Institute of Technology. Canada's first paper money issued in 1686, consisted of cut playipg cards, marked with a value, and signed by the French governor. mrs. Gary a. Rowland Smith Family Holds Reunion The Smith family reunion was held Sunday at the Pontiac Lake Road home (of William E. Smith with 92 members and seven guests present, Coohalrmen for the event were Mrs. Keith Loper and Mrs. William S. Croteau. Mrs. William Ooiebrooke and Mrs. Emery Smith served as the correspondence committee. Officers elected for next year were Keith Loper, chairman, Mrs. Jeanette Haskins and Mrs. Daniel Hardenburg, correspondence. The forthcoming reunion is slated to be at M&nton. Square's Stylish NEW YORK (UPI) — H you're a square, you’re in style. A shoe firm (A. S. Beck) pays the square toe is winning out over the pointed style, Ml 6-7101 BIRMINGHAM from the CLINIC shoemakers., Romiu with BANTAM RIPPLE* SOLES nNom-njtxisLS 11 New walking-shoe amartneaa... superbly simple, ■imply superb! New fingw-flexibility and glove-softness! Almost weightless cloud-lightness PLUS long-striding, mre-footed RIPPLE ® aolea! In a word... new FOOTHRILLS! Mushroom Tan or Benedictine Sizes 5 to 10,3A to B 10.95 Tan and Green % Pauli’s Shoe Store 35 N. Saginaw St. Open Fri. Eves. 1 "" \ - /V • ' * r < ■ Touchstone Tranquilizer Latest Fad By RICK DU BROW UPI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (UPD-Look-ing for something for the man (or woman) who has absolutely everything? Then try a "tranqullizing amulet." , . Movie stars and others In this slap-happy film city have started a fad by dozens of them. WWW "Well," said a spokesman for Alfred Dunhill of Beverly Hills, which sells the amulets like hot-cakes, ,"If s simply a touchstone." - * A -dt- ii comes in either white, green or brown onyx. It's about an inch wide and 2lh inches long. In short, ifs a glorified little rock. ★ A A. And what do you do with it? You hold it in your hand and squeeze it. That’s all. Just squeeze it. "Sort of like Capt. Queeg did in "The Caine Mutiny,’" said the Dunhill spokesman. VERY RELAXING "It’s very relaxing,” be added. “Apparently the Chinese used touchstones as tranquilizers for many years.” . a a . * v Price for this relaxation is $5 per amulet. Dunhill sells them in plush little boxes usually reserved for thouaand-dollar rings. "And I’ve never seen any tranquilizer like it," said the spokesman. "People are very serious about it. They feel the different touchstones tt> see which one fits their hand." * A-i The idea when you get home with the stone is to git back, think of nothing else and squeeze until all animosities and tensions are gone. ‘‘They’re very good for executives,” said the spokesman. By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN I get volumes of mail and such interesting questions, that I Ur to pass some it them on to. you. I have a friend who swears that she lost H) pounds simply by standing up for M minutes, biter each meaL I wish It were aa Ample as that. Yew friend la dtet-mteded, and evidently cut down mete thee sM realised on her drily calsrie intake. If tt makes It seem eerier te lose weight to stand up for It minutes after eating, I am aH far tt. 5. Does skim milk have the same nutritive values of whole milk? Yea, except for a loss In vitamin A and D content. Vitamin A is widely' distributed in Dr food world. Green and* yellow vegetables are especially rich sources. Use skim milk which is fortified with vitamin-A and D. TENDENCY TO PAT 3. My mother tens me that fat runs in our family and I can’t do anything about it. I am 35 years old and 40 pounds overweight. Am I really doomed? Definitely not! You may have King-size cigarettes have about 15 per cent more tobacco standard size. But K It Help*, Go Ahead Standing Up Is No, mlfrA Diet •;>r *' :•-*#».•H Hlfmv ?! which leads to overweight, hat • more likely you Inherited some tattering eating habits. In any case, you are not doomed. If you have a mild tendency to overweight because of your glandular setup, you will just have to be more calorie conscious than others from middle age on. If you have a real problem, your doctor can help you with medication. All la not tori! Before you see a doctor — count your calories. it it Sr 4. I am confused. I do not know whether or not the water-packed fruits have the same health value the regular ones have. The hearer of had news Is never popular, but I am not trying to win a popularity contest so I must be honest. There Is no difference In health value. The ■yrup-padked cnee Just taste bettor, BUT they have many mere calories. Believe me, if you are trying to loee wright, or hold the line, you will find that the water-packed fruits are more rewarding, and will even taste sweeter to you, when the scales give you the good news. PLAIN OB TOASTED? 5. Is there any difference between the calorie count of plain bread and toast? Ahh, the true listener—an all too rare bird. Josephine Lawman suggests that you really listen to others; listen with your heart and mind as well as your •ears. ' School-Go Cottons in Colors Flurry (UPI) - Reading, ’ritk* and' ready-for-school cottons are the thre%R’s for the back-to-echool young set Cottons in a flurry of colors, shapes and clam and playmates for small fashionables, reports the National Cotton Council. In silhouette, children’s fashions follow adult lines with loose, but closer to the body shapes, flared skirts beneath long torsos and a relaxed, two-piece took for many day and dress-up designs. Many have grown-up tailoring with Paris - inspired side closings deep, inverted side pleats and lowered, gently shaped waistlines. If you must store a bouffant petticoat, launder It, roll M inside a nylon stocking and hang it in your closet. Mrs. Romney to Entertain Mrs. George Romney will open her East Valley Rond home in Bloomfield HOla Sept. U to members and guests (A the Bloomfield Hills Branch of the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Assoda-Dahlias from members' gardens will provide flower arrangements throughout the home. it A A Mrs. Richard'T. Gerathy, guest speaker for the day, will diaru— growing and use of herbs In |her talk “Snip and Snip." An in- formal harvest sale of herbs, plants and produce, tiakad Roods and Jellies will mark tbs end of the garden season. AM’S BETTER GROOMING! Children to Stride in Color This Foil ’ (UPI) — Color’s the word for children’s fall shoes. The colon range from nautical flag cottrs to sky blues, strong pastels, flamingo pinks, orange and new Jet age colon, w A A Hie use of color fc expected to stimulate sales. One Needs to Work at Beauty (NEA)—A good many women are inclined to feel that if only they had unlimited funds, they, too, could be great beauties. What they don’t realize is that women who can afford to spend a great deal on good looks to-variably WORK at it. BUSY KOUTEINE Many of them work out an hour each day at a gym. (Exercise which can be duplicated by walking, swimming and in sitting-up exercises at home). All of them have first-rate hairdressers across the country. The basis of spy Smart hairdo is healthy hair plus an expert cut. Then do what many fash-ton models do: ^learn to ret and handle your own hair). A A A Women with money use fine face creams. (But there are the same creams available to women with just a little money. For the very finest face creams in this country are not expensive). ' '. A A Women with money naturally buy beautiful clothes as one means of looking lovely. (But you, on a, clothes budget, can buy copies of chic designs and be equally well-dressed). AAA.' A great deal of money never turned any woman into a beauty. And a lack of tt never kept • girl from bring attractive if she really wanted to be. "Freshen the Impression* New classes... new classmates. new instructors -and you’ll went to. took your very best! (to through that wardrobe now end Give Gresham a Call! You con be confident you will look, your level best and every-' one will take notice from that very first day. “It's The Little Things That . Count at Gresham’ I Loom ^Linlnfi I Broken Buttoc Replaced GUARANTEED WATERPROOFING AND MOTHPROOFING SERVICE I \ SHIRT LAUNDRY I Open 7 A M. tc 8 PM. jj 605 Oakland Are. Fall News! Fashion' Vi PRICE SALE scoo* J for oar $10 Controlled Permanent *750. for oar $15 soft ell permanent W for oar $20 softy permanent Your hairdo plays such an important part in the new-season fashions, that whether you're a back-to-schooler or her mother, you'll welcome the transition now at these big sale prices. Shampoo and fashion set included. The shorter haircut for fall $^00 Personalised by donnell haircutting stylists was GRESHAM CLEANERS $25 LUXURIOUS KATHY WAVE $0 Now you eon have the expensive wave you've always wanted—the wave wtth the finest lotions at half price. Haircut extra. If ’BUDGET DEPT. Shampoo end Set $1.50—Haircut $1.50 Expertly , Uandered Cm end CARRY FE 4-2579 donnell HAIR STYLISTS miracle Miu, 4 We Specialise in Corrective FI 8-9639 . ^ ~ v Hair Coloring Ummt Met >>»»■>■ Mrt IKS Always Mawry , Tips PONTIAC PKKS& WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 4961 SEVENTEEN Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert T. , Hiscockjr., North Lake Drive, announce the engagement of their daughter Marilyn Jane to William G. Serrin Jr., son of the senior WillianvG. Herrins, Saginaw. Miss His-cock attends Central Michigan University of which her fiance is a graduate. A . Dectmber wedding is planned.. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer CLOSEOUT SALE of , FINE CHINA Service of 8 *1985 mm Febiuary vows are planned by Sharon Lee ' Nichols, daughter of Mrs. Joseph ' M. Nichols 'j . of South Shirley Street j and Use late Mr. Nichols, j to Charles I W. Grinnell, j son of the •, C. M. Crinnells of North Branch. “Please tell me why, when I aew the side seams of a garment^ on the machine, the material rides ‘ahead of the presser toot and the top piece ends op longer than the under material. "This Is especially true of long side seams.” Mrs. LB. The pushing of the top layer of fabric is natural when you realise how a sewing machine is constructed. The teeth on the plate hold the under layer of fabric, and the presser foot has nothing on It to hold the fabric In place. You can avoid this by “pinning” your seams together, Instead of basting. The fabric cannot slip past a pin, but it will If Jt Is basted. riaee your pine about 14" apart, In a horizontal positions to a vertical seam. If year sewing machine will not " DIXIE POTTERY 5281 Dixie Hwy„ Waterford OR Be sure to place your pins . so that you will actually be Lmmm " sewing over your fabric In- ■ * stead of hitting the pins. Also, V remember to always stitch the f skirt seams from the bottom h- I ■■■ ii up. I a “Dear Eunice, * . “Should the hemline of a coat be dipped In back? In: other words, should it be longer in back than sides and front? i if so, how much longer?” Mrs. C.C. 1 Dear Mrs. C.C.: This Is true with suit jackets more than long coats. A' suit Jacket Is much more feminine and flattering tf it dips; about 4” at the center back. This should be a gradual dip from the side seams and will hardly be noticeable to the casual observer. TOO WIDE, TOO LOW “Dear Eunice, “One of my problems In sewing Is the neckline. They are all cut too wide at the shoulders for me and also too low. Can I change this and how do I change the facings?" Mrs. A JP. Before cutting your next garment, experiment with a piece of muslin and make a sample bodice as follows: 1. Add %" to 1” to the entire neckline seam. You may add more than that at the shoulders If necessary. 2. Mark your 4" seam allowance, clip your seam and baste the seam allowance down. Now yon will know exactly what size the neckline will be when finished. 3. As soon as the neckline Is exactly the way you think it is most becoming, cut the interfacing and the faclpg from this actual muslin. Make your facings about 3” wide. The nicest part about making this basic muslin is that you can always use this as a guide for anything you would make with this type of neckline. SEWING GLOSSARY: Grading seams: This refers to trimming any faced edge. Trim both seams to half of their original width, now trim FACING seam in halt again. This will avoid a ridge when edges are pressed. Please send all questions and suggestions to Sew Simple, in care of The Pontiac Press. MARILYN HISCOCK SHARON LEE NICHOLS Jackie Prowls for White House Treasures TO CLEVELAND Nine spacious docks of ocean-liner luxury! Theaters ... dinin* room* ... cocktail lounges, sky her... solarium. MOTORIST*' MUTE TOUR CAR ABOARD WASHINGTON (API—Mrz. John for three months. But now I know F. Kennedy says she doesn’t plan every corny of the White House, to fill the White House with I poked into them ail. It was ex-French furniture, or .hang modem citing, a new mystery story every pictures all over it, day,” she said. The First Lady also said she * * * , wanted to “put to rest the tears of 1» 5>1«< - K“- the building to its MtrlWt period. ducovered. leaving out all that came after.” A desk presented to President Mrs. Kennedy said she first i toured the White House at the age \ of 11. • < “From the outside," she re-1 called, “I remember the feeling of \ the place. But inside, all I remember is shuffling through. There,, wasn't even ,a booklet you could | here for only a brief time,” she was quoted as saying, “and before everything slips away, before every link with the past is gone, I want to do this. “I want to find' all the people ■ who are still here who know about ' the White House, were intimate with it—the nephews, the sons, the great-grandchildren, the people ' who are still living and remember ' things about the White -House.” Now, the First Lady is in the process of providing White House visitors with that booklet. She has the help of some of the nation's leading scholars on American furnishings, along with experts from the Smithsonian Institution. “Everything in the White House must have a reason for being there,” Mrs. Kennedy said. “It would be sacrilege merely to 'redecorate' it—a word I hate. It must be restored—and that has nothing to do with decoration. That is a question of scholarship." SENSE OF URGENCY Her feeling about the White House, the magazine said, is characterized by. a sense of urgency, “like any president's wife, I'm "The White House belongs to our past and no one who cares about our past would treat H that way." Mrs. Kennedy was quoted by Life magazine this week. Mrs. Kennedy, the magazine ■aid, added, “every boy who cornea here should see things that develop his sense of history. For the girls, the house should look beautiful and lived-in.” PROWLED CORNERS Her first task, she said, was to prowl every comer of the 54-room mansion. She found many treasures of former presidents. b “I had a backache every day They'll say—“It was a wonderful shower" Are You Giving a Party or Shower? DON'T FORGET Wring in Woes NEW YORK (UPD — Automatic washing machines aside, a huge number at children each year still suffer wringer injuries, the American Academy of Pediatrics reports. In a five and one-half year period, the Boston City hospital treated 116 cases of wringer injuries. Eighty-eight of the victims were under the age Ot six. The youngsters were old enough to be inquisitive but too young to be aware of the hazard of getting hands caught in a wringer. ' PASTEL PARTY WAFERS ^2/ —• also see bur Large array of party items 2440 WOODWARD AVE. Open Doily 10 to 8:30—Sunday M to 5 P. M. STAPP'S . . . Sure Fitting, Fast Traveling Shoes Available at Both Stores Sues 124-3, B-C-D $9.50 West Huron Store Only: Sizet 8Vz-l2, B-C-D $>-*• West Huron Store Only: SizesGG 5-8 — AA-B W with fj- way stretch OiOO reg. 10.95 Playtex Mold ’n Hold zipper girdle zips on and off so easily. Girdle or panty girdle. White only. Reg. $10.95 now only $8.95 (XL $9.95) Just Say ‘ Charge it ’ reg. 8.95 Playtex Magic Controller with magic finger panels for tummy control— GircNe or panty girdle. White only. Reg. $8.95 now only $7.95 (XL $8.95) The makers of Playtex offer you exciting savings on these first quality ^ girdles. Only Playtex girdles have seven-way stretch to you can stand, stoop or sit and they won't ride up. And Playtex gives you the coolness and comfort of an all-cotton lining. Hurry, though. You save for a short time only. Our speedy Stride Hites are the smartest form of transportation going! Tidy ties, stylish straps or slipons, accurately fitted by us . . Stride Hite quality-made to bo the surest>fitting. FAMILY SHOE STORE 928 W. Hyron at Teleflraph (Open Pit. to 9, Sit. to 1:301 JUVENILE BOOTER1E 28? E.. Lawrence St., Oowntoufh (Open Mon. to 8:30, Fri. to'9) "eighteen •OX OffKI OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS 7:10 SOUTH UNION IAKI RD. CM 3-0661 ______ AP Pheiefei WHEK! . . . OOPS!—Mayor Jack Edwards fell short of Ms mark when he attempted to jump a creek while Inspecting the new runway being built «t the Marion. Ind., airport. Looking on are George Davis, airport manager, and Glenn Robinson, a board member. ALSO NOMINATED nr ACADEMY f AWARDS! Jews Allowed : AbsenteeVote :on New Year LANSING (AP)—All persons of > Jewish faith In Mlehlgaa will be | entitled to vote by absentee ballot for the Sept. It romtltutionnl ' convention election, according to '! Secretary of State Janies M. !| Hare. 'Middle-Sized' Chevy II Larger Than Compact, Has 4, 6 Cylinders DWMIltf SHIRli?"JONES' Feature Schedule 'NAKED EDGE' 7-WAYS FROM SUNDOWN' STARTS IN COLOR EAGLE THE BIG ONE FOR..EVERYONE METROCOLOR ROOM ADDITIONS THK POXTi AC HiKSS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1061 HOLLYWOOD — Feeling She still manages to tirried, harried and harassed7jcivic work, a writing Dr. Rosalind Russell has the solu- * 8erene Good Cure for Problems Sumatra has a population of .within a narea of about 183,000 about 11 million persons contained Isguare miles. Greet the Morning Real Early By BOB THOMAS AP Movie TV Witter mo that to Russell. At an age when many are canto rattle knitting needles, die maintains a bone • crushing schedule. This year she is hurtling through three diverse and diffi- < How does she do it? "By rising a half-hour before normally would,” ahe explained. "You'd be surprised what a difference that makes. The morning is a peaceful time, and you have a chance to think over your whole day. You can have a relaxed, and sizable breakfast, which is very important for getting you through the day. SLEEP OVERRATED 'You don’t miss that extra half-hour of sleep. Sleep Is highly overrated.' I used to worry be-_ cause Iwouldlie awake at night, cult film roles: in "Majority of I told my doctor and he said. One,” “Five Finger Exercise”!'Several million other people are and "Gypsy.” She plays a Jew- lying awake at the same time.’ , ish matron, a live-letter female He told me to get up and sort the and a voracious stage mother, re- lihen or straighten out a drawer, spectively, and she’ll have to;or do some other useful but dull "Why do people sleep so much? They need the re they're tense. But if they got up half-hour earlier and organized their dajr, they wouldn't be tens And they’d get a lot more done, e * ♦ Roz ha* another regimen to keep life in flw proper proportion. That’s a quiet hour at the end of the day. She amt flreddie ait down for cocktails and conversation. There are no interruptions and no shop talk, even though he to her Jfrodncer on her current “Five Finger Emrctoe.** "We don’t talk movie buiinenj unleag it to something funny," nbe | said. "Mostly we talk about peo-Pie” . , ' Australia's estimated population to now about 10 miltion and some! estimates are higher than that. • NOW!!! • nm-htlMog, half-wolf, hit courage tod cunning t ‘ in an untamed land! wuDDO® OFTHf TECHNICOLOR isfre! Cartoon and Shorts Rhodesia Says 'Sorry' to-Soapy Officials Apologize to Williams for His Punch Prom a Drunk BOX OFFICE OPEN 7KM SHOW STARTS-*7:10 MA 4-3135 SL' MB' SALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia (AP) — Officials of the Rhodesian Federation and Northern Rhodesia apologized today for the punch in the face a white settler gave UJ. Assistant Secretary of State G. Mennen Williams at Lusaka airport. Sir Roy Welensky, prime minister of tiie Rhodesian Federation, asked U.S. Consul John Emmer-son to convey his “deep personal regret for this deplorable Incident to Mr. Williams." ★ ft ft Similar regret was expressed to UJS. consular authorities in Lusaka, the capital of Northern Rhodesia, by Sir Evelyn Honp. the territorial governor, who witnessed the assault and helped subdue the assailant. ft • A ft ■aka Mayor Richard Samp-, son, who also witnessed the ind-j dent Monday night, termed It ‘disgraceful and the most shaming thing thqt could have happened in our city." Sampson said the assailant was "well known Lusaka resident land definitely seemed to be under the Influence of drink.” 1 The mayor gave this account: j “While I was standing with Mr. | Williams and Ms party on the air-(port apron, the man came up to jus. went strfight to Mr. Williams grapped his lapel with one hand am! shouting an offensive remark hit him straight on the jaw. ft Aft "The man was tackled by Evelyn Hope and his aide de camp who were standing next to Mr. Williams. The, man was then handed over to the police.” , Another .witness said the husky, 16-foot American "recoiled after the punch but stood hto gronud.” DETROIT (A — Chevrolet Division of General Motors unveiled' Ha new middle-sized Chevy H^-| ' its own line if economy and six-cylinder engines—at a press preview today,. ft ft ft Hie new series fits between Chevrolet's compact Corvalr and its standard model and givea the division “its most varied product i lineup in history,'' said Edward: N. Cole, general manager. The Chevy II line includes two-and four-door sedans, station wagons, a convertible and a hardtop Coupe. - CONVENTIONAL ENGINE j It has a conventional front-mount engine. New feature Cole said, are integral body construction with a bolt-on front end and tapered plate rear cut car weight and take less time to produce. PLUS Operation Eichmann STARTS TONIGHT BLUE SKY Cooper 7:00 m/ftNAKEDEDCE and 9:37 CILENTO G*NG0LD CUSHING*WILDING SE hSjs j&SsSBS Pfcone OKiando 2101 S. TELEGRAPH RD. FE 2*1000 OPEN 0:45—STARTS 7:45 —“EXCLUSIVE—-Super Pnnovision—70— Twice as M| Twice as Bright THC DRAMA MIO TNG PASSION OF' ONE OF TUSIPIC EVENTS OF THE TWENTIETH CEHTuayr; ADULTS 90c CHILDREN UNDER 12-YRS. FREE STARTS TONIGHT Op«it 6:45 P.M. Stortg 7:40 P.M. iVFW 5th District Plans jWorkshop on Publicity, The 5th district meeting. Veterans of Foreign Wars, will be held [B:ai a m., Sept.10, at Union Lakh. Hostess win be Auxiliary 4156- During the morning session a workshop on publicity and community service will be given by the district commander and two department representatives. BIG H0U0AT SHOW) Ml IMWHITN xodus —ADDED EXTRA— GRANO CANYON ----NOTE—---- "EXODUS" at 1:30 p.m+Only Co-Hit at 7:50 - 11:30 Main SI.25 lac. Tss Children Under 12 free It’s Strictly a Laugh Affair! A Wonderful Mad Whirl! DEDICATED TO THE PROPOSITION... l that i ^parents ansi created Sous) HILARI0U M J Walt Disney ^EVER-SEEN BEFORE—NEVER! The Mott Amazing Motion Picture of Our Time! ON LANIMN OUTER SPAGE-AND UNDER THE SEA! I UVE ATOMICAGl From The Ends Of The Earth.. Jo OoterSpace... To Seven Miles Beneath The Sea! MILLS iwLMVMty MUS MRENTTRAP! TECHNsCOIPR* aRHHBBRSSS ★ AND ★ THE SCREENS EPLOSIVELY REAL DRAMA OF LOVE AND WAR! THE BRIDGES AT TOKO-HI TECHNICOLOR ^pPimHJmmmBMmEDEHmRLomROBEin^iniHG MlCHAELAN$ARA*FRANKIEMLON zrsv HM/m miowH*CHJwsBENMEn • ALSO D FIRST RUN YOU WONT BELIEVE YOUR EYES THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30. 1961 \ NINETEEN DRIVE SAFELY FROM SEPTEMBER 1st to SEPTEMBER 5th In order to make our highways safer over the long Labor Day weekend, more than thirty Pontiac firms, in conjunction with the American Trucking Association and the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, are promoting a campaign to keep all truck lights on from 4:00 p.m. Friday, Sept. 1, until 8:00 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 5th. This “TRUCK LIQHT£ ON FOR SAFETY” program will be a constant reminder for all drivers to watch their speed and to drive carefully during this long Holiday period. Due to the all time high traffic fatalities over the 4th of July Holiday the trucking industry is sponsoring this nationwide campaign as a.public service. LET’S ALL COOPERATE! In Cooperation With the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce This Vital AnaouncMient Sponsored by til* Following Firms Frank A. Andorran Agency Archambedu Distributing Company mi Sylvertis Road Austin MorvoB Agamy, Inc.' • 70 Westtawrence Street Bake BuBdsrs Supply# Inc. 545 South Telegraph toad F. 1. lautoM Driveaway Company, Inc. 245 last Walton Boulevard City Beverage Company » 117 Turk Street Contract Cartage Company 555 Madison Avenue Detroit City Ice A Fuel Company 185 North Cass Avenue Iconomy OB Company 5541 Dixie Highway Hoot Carrier Corporation 28 West Lawrence Street GMC Truck A Couch Division V 660 South Boulevard loot Oaukler Storage A Moving Company 7 Orchard LakeAvenue Hubert Distributors 1675 South Saginaw Street H. W. Hutto nlochor Agency 518 RBcer Building Interstate Mo the freight System 117 Brush Street Tom Kiger Standard Oil 95 West Mke Street Laxelle Agency, Inc. 506 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Maple leaf Dairy Company. 20 last Howard Street Metes A Powers, Inc. 575 Franklin Koad„ . Michigan BeN Telephone Company 54 Bast Huron Street .Motorcar Transport Company 290 last Tennyson Avenue Nye Dairy ” 5B5 Oakland Avenue Pontiac Traffic Club Stuart Smith Beverage Company 1150 SyhrerHs Read Seceny MebB ON Company, Inc. 521 South Telegraph Band Thatcher, Patterson A Wemet 711 Community National Bank Building 405 Auburn Avenue 267 South Boulevard last Trockawuy Corporation * 555 South Sanford Street White Owl Ingress. Inc, 212 Osman Street v TWENTY rOTPi'.gp! Wf 11*1 Mi & The pontiac press, Wednesday, august m, iwi Pontiac, Nearby v Deaths MRS. FRED BAUGHEY l Service lor Mn. Fred (Della «.)] •Baughey, stepmother of Rev. A. 'J. Baughcy of Evangelistic Temple, Stain be held at 2 p.m., Thursday •at Pilgrim Holiness Church with burial in Perry Mount Park Came-iny. Arrangements' are by the itlhirsley Funeral Home. ► Mrs. Baughcy, 409 W. Summitt. Adrian, died in the Bixby Hoc-1 "pital there Monday. She was 62. | y Surviving besides her husband [are a daughter. Mrs. Dewey Coak-ley of Rochester; five stepsons. Daniel of Ypsilanti. Rellie, Clifford jand Donald, all of jyiriaii; and ,the Rev. Mr. Baughey; * stepdaughter, Mrs. Cora Eberiy; four brothers. Luther Gasidn of Pontiac, Denny. Elmer and J. C. Gaskin; all of Russell. Spring, Ky., and three sisters. EARL G. OOBEIL ! WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Service for IJarl G. Cbbeil, "D. E. TWey Fumnl -Home- 24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE 96, of’Lureme, former West Bloom-] field Township resident, will tie at 1 pjn' Friday at Donetson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be .in Plea Lake Cemetery. Mr. Cbbeil died Monday at his! home of a heart attack. Surviving are his wife three daughters, Mrs. Charles Stevens of Watkins Lake, Mrs. Vincent Hefferon of Pontiac and Mrf. Robert Freeman of Weed Palm Beach. Fla.; a eon, Lt E. Glenn Cobeil of Topeka. Kan.; a sister, Cora Cobeil of West Bloom-fly Township; and 11 grandchii- 151 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-1211 C. BYRON GILBERT, Licensed Director Waterford School Board Meets Tomorrow of 7:30 The Waterford Township Board of Education will meet at 7:30 tomorrow to buy. additional lobby furniture and playground equipment for the new Douglass Houghton and Lotus Lake elementary schools. * * ,* The board also will consider ommendations for the hiring of CHARLES H. KELLSTADT Radio Free Europe Has New Fund Head Release Group From N.C. Jail Arrest NYC Man on Charges of Kidnaping Couple During Rioting MONROE. N.C. (UPD—A number of participants in racial vio-j lence here were released from Jaiij under reduced bond Tuesday night but police continued to keep dose watch on the town. A white man from New. York City was arrested by state police Tuesday night on charges of kidnaping a Marshville. N.C., couple diving last Sunday's, rioting. Police identified him as John . Lowery sad said he was one would adjourn by/Labor Day and gurma Replaces Pilots \ is committed to address several Baptist meetings in Septem-LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP)—Rep. ber. fliler i* a lay preacher and is much in demand at church gatherings. IPreaching Congressman Has September Conflict is low in this session of Congreps. The Williamsburg, Ky., Republican said he assumed Congress Most dangerous day ot the week to drive is. Saturday. RANGOON. Burma (AP) — TJbe government today called in Burma air force pilots to replace civilian pihv« of Burma Airways who have gone on strike. The pilots complain (hat they are made to fly more than 1,600 hours a year- If you heat your home with oil There is no finer payment arrangement under the sun than Gulfs new insured Budget Plan. Convenient, moderate, equal monthly payments are now life insured for wonderful peace of mind. -n No medical examination is required, 3 3 and there is absolutely no extra charge 4 to the customer. Gulf pays all 4 . Yi iV premiums involved under a special 4 •S. policy arrangement with the % aasssiafi.** Connecticut General Life Insurance * „„ Company. The world's finest * * s •»»»«. healing oil—Gulf Solar Heat-ie nmnu wmnnir nirmm * RL available to you now on the most carefree, most convenient payment plan imaginable. We invite you to phone or write today for complete details on the Gulf Insured Budget Plan offer for your family! GULF OIL CORP. _____ 392 South Sanford Call as aboit automatic delivery today FE 2-9173 NEW YORK, N.Y - Charles H. Kellstadt, chairman of the board of Sean, Roebuck and Co., has been named national chairman of the Radio Free Europe Ftmd, the private American organization which supports Radio Free Europe. Kellstadt succeeds W. B. Murphy, president of Campbell Soup! Co., aa national chairman of the RFE Fund. Murphy will continue as chairman of the executive committee, succeeding Gwilym -A.) nice, , who will remain'active in [ the campaign. Kellstadt will direct the nationwide campaign to solicit contribO-tions from the American people and American industry. About 7.4 million of U.S. farmers belong to one or more farmer co-ops. Joined Negro Intesratlonlht Rob- j ett F. William* la holding Mr. and Mrs. G. Bruce Stegall at Williams’ stronghold against their will. Williams, kicked out of the National Association tor the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) years ago for advocating vto-j s in obtaining desegregation, is being sought by police and the FBI] [on kidnap charges. | The changes against Lowery] were filed before about SO whites] and Negroqs were released on a [bond reduction from {1,000 to {25 each. Earlier in the day, a Negro' [minister who traveled here as an "arbitrator” in the racial dispute was thrown down the courthouse steps by a group of white men. The Rev. Wyatt Tee Walker ofj Atlanta and two companions were entering the courthouse when they were stopped and pushed back down tip steps by a group of white men. «*■ CAMPUS FASHIONS Arrow sport shirts with authentic flair . ■ . natOralty favored by the young man of good taste. Rich, subtle prints on fine broadcloth . . . well turned out in the traditional button-down collar. You'll be proud to wear these sport shirts from our Arrow Cum Lauda pdlectfon. Charge Accounts Invited Miracle Mile Showing Center Open Dally IS A.M. 'til 9 ML *4.98 *&•* Elliott Endorses Program oi State GOP Moderates I Oakland County Republican Chairman Arthur G. Elliott Jr. [today Announced his "wholehearted support” of a 14-point legislative program drawn up by the so-called “moderate” bloc of GOP state senators. * * * [ It takes positions on mental [health, education, taxation, labor, economic growth, teachers retirement, state and local government, metropolitan area problems, civil [rights, Crime and delinquency, [economy In-government, tourism, Agriculture and safety. Elliott called the program “a positive and progressive approach to critical stale problems,” and announced he would submit the moderates’ recommendations to the county GOP executive committee for fall organisational support In September. The eight “moderate” senators include Farrell E. Roberts, ROak-land County. It * + The group hammered out the proposals at a conference in Traverse City earlier this month. * ♦ ■ ♦ st week Elliott was one of 40 GOP leaders from throughout the state attending a briefing session on the moderates’ position in Ann Arbor. “This is a program that conscientious Republicans and Demo-, crats, alike, can confidently support,*’ Elliott declared. .. if * t * * • The moderates called for the state GOP to make “a critical ap-j praisal of its programs and policies and apply new approaches and! new thinking to restore its statewide influence.” CITIZENS OF DISTRICT 1 RICHARD D. KUHN Itpablicai Candidate lor CON-CON WANTS TO KNOW YOUR IDEAS PImn clack banes aid Rail It: ' Pontiac Pims. Bax 21—Signature lot repaired DO YOU FAVOR: YES NO 1. Bath House* ef Legislature apportioned e* basis of population only? □ □ 2. Sonata apportioned generally on area; with House on population? D □ 1. State Income Tex with graduated rates? □ □ 5. Any State Income Tax? □ □ 5. Four year term far Governor? □ □ 6. Making State Supreme Court completely non-partisan? □ □ OPTIONAL NAME . ADDRESS CITY ... APPIfANCE BUYERS! OttlE FRETTER SAYS I Challenge Anybody !! . . and furthermore I promise to give you one ef the best appliance, TV or HI-FI deals in the United States—DURING THI NEXT S DAYS AT FMTTIR'S APPLIANCE STORE. Star Horst Buchholz Badly Hurt in Auto Crash MUNICH, Germany (AP)—Ger-tan movie star Horst Buchholz was seriously injured when his crashed into a tree near here] I Tuesday. , • | . * * ★ . hospital spokesman said] i Buchholz suffered a brain concus-l i sion and had not regained con- , Fran Our Trafi-in Dspt. Fatly Reconditioned 1-Yaar Guarantee Refrigerators $]^95 up CAR II FINANCED FLOOR MODEL SALE! $ 89»* STIHO.MAM. $11(95 . * 48« *149»5 »no»5 Upright FREEZER HOTPOINT Do Dr. Auto. Defr. *18995 414995 GAS RANGE . *118oo ADMIRAL 23" TV *16995 Complete Selection RADIOS AM, EM, TRANS., and CLOCK 6 Tran*, ADMIRAL REFRIGERATOR STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE WE CONSOLIDATED OUR TWO STORES AND NOW ARE OVER-STOCKED THIS STOCK mjST BE S6LD THIS WEEK! Look At Tiis Price! 100% Wool CARPET • Expert Installation • 12 Ft. Wide • Weet or Nylon lYBtYTHMG YOU NOD i 95 ____h. H- Installed END BOLL CARPET % OFT NEW COLORS 95 lllff As *3! CLOSE-OUT PAINT Super KEM-TONE net. $375 CeL BELOW CAR-LOAD TILE Vinyl Asbestos .. $6.95 cess Antic# Mastic Asphalt Cast ef 10 $3.59 GOLD SEAL Tree Ttayl in. r. Reg. 21c' Vinyl-Plastic Latex • Wator Base tAOR • Ortas in 20 * J/9 Minuter “ Rag. 15.95 Gal. ODD LOTS THIS MUST GO • 9*9 • Asbestos • Pare Vinyl • Inlaid • Rubber • Vinyl* from El Odd Lit Quarts SOc Shingle Stain 99c Gal. Kem-Tone 50c Qt. Cochran 75c Qt. Ocndes Combat Paint Waterproof ... {1.25 5 Lb. Patch and Deck ..$2.95 Gel. Homo Paint $1.69 Gal. Texture Paint .$1.49 Cal. 4 as. and 10 as. cam enamel from 14c each MASTIC WALL Till LUSTRO • Over 40 Madam Colors • New Glitter Tenet • 20 Year Guarantee In r. • Trim to Match ran n not a com-on ■ WE HAVE ran STOCK AND IT ham IK SOLD SPECIALS! UNQLEOM Vinyl Plastic . . 59c sq. yd. SARDIAN'.... 99c ** yd. (9x12) .......$11.11 9x12 Rigs . . . . . S3.95 WALL LINOLEUM 25c running ft. VINYL PLASTIC COUNTER TOP 27" wide 29p FL CEILING TILE 16x16 .9W All you need ^ TOOLS LOANED FREE OPEN Mm. • Thun. • Fri. 'HO FI 4-4266 SMITH’S TILE OUTLET 736 W. HURON Across from Mata Post Office Export Installation Free Estimates All Work Guaranteed FREEZER COMBINATION No frost build up ... no defrosting over in tHis spacious 10.39 cu. ft. fresh food section. Big 75-lb., sub-zero freezer quick-freezes and stares foods for months.. Separate door. Refrigerator unit has two "Bottle Deep" door shelves, butter and cheese bins with "Touch-away" lids, 27 qt. porcelain crisper. Automatic interior light; egg trays hold 28 eggs, 2 ice cube trays. New “Penny Pincher” power unit. Full year warranty on refrigerator. FRETTER’S $0CQ9& LOW, LOW •UDCtT TERMS ■ 30 Days Exchange ■ GENEROUS TRADE ■ FAST 24-H0UR ■ NO MONEY DOWN m Courteous After 1 II Nlrt Fulfy-Satisfied | ALLOWANCE | DELIVERY | ON ANY PURCHASE ■ the Sole Fwtlw't Carload Diatoms! Makes thg Hg -Mffrrsaca - Prove It to Yaunelf - Smka Came* First Regardleu of Price FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Daily 10 AM. 'til 9 P.M, - FE 3-7051 - Sunday 10 AM. 'til 7 PJKL 77IJ THE PONTIAC ^Rfesfe. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1961 TWENTY-ONE /ferr Gorczyza in Berlin Gets ‘Mad' at the West Hjr HARRY FUMHHON BERLIN (UPI)—Tuesday the Conunanicti and t)ie Wert fought a war of nerves at No. 28 HsM- elberger Strasse from 12:28 to 3:56 p.m. The Oommiffiirts won. The kwer was Hasao Gorczyza. who operates a saloon railed the Heidelberger Krug. It is a small, dean piaee. The pretzels are fresh. The beer Is impec-' cable. A sign On the Jake hex otters marches.*' .Then an plenty at But unless the West takes some action to prated Herr Gcrccyaa, he Is going to say to hell with free enterprise and the democratic way qt life. His problem is that when you are inside his saloon you are in West Berlin but if you step out on the sidewalk you are in Communist Berlin. When the Communists started building the concrete block wall that divides tbs city, they gra-. ciously allowed Goffczyza a thin strip of the sidewalk so his customers could come and go along Heidelberger Strasse. They ran the wall up to within 31 indies of the hunt door of the cafe thereby making entry and egress a delicate problem for such well-fed journalists as Wellington Long, UPI news manager tor Germany, who almost got stock there during the yvar of nerves. At 11:56 your corrMpondent, slim and svelte as usual, breezed through the 31-inch patssgr, tugging Wellington Long after him. There were a bad-dozen patrons in the Heidelberger Krug and the proprietor had come from behind the bar to deliver a speech' against "provocation." Also against the Western powers. “On their side of the wall," he said, “the Ot a big rubber hose. On this aide of the wall thy to only «w West Berlin policeman. What are the Western people doing? Clipping coupons and counting their money. Do any of them want to change places with me? No. sa’t i have a Mg hsue. They do not have a gas grsasde. AM you bans to da Is kb ana gas gre-aade at the Communist cops “Turn me loose, give me t stuff and I’d do it. Last night they threw a gas grenade into my place here. People ran without paying me. This morning a . Your correspondent sought the proprietor's permission to step Into Communist territory tor a brief fling at provocation. The proprietor assented and immediately was sorry. Soon there were three of us on the sidewalk sad then six. An elderly woman with her grandson yelled across the wall to the Communist police: “Why don't you come over, you dopes!" A pretty Monde on the Communist side of the fence began talking the universal language to a young man on the West side. The war ot nerves was on and the Communist police began testing the ted rubbey hose. Gorczyza acted promptly. First, he collected all the money owed him by all the patrons. Then he .phoned the Weal Berlin police who arrived and ordered all of to provocateurs to stop our provocations. In fact, they ordered us to move on. This urns the last bitter pill lor Herr Gorczyza. He had just committed the ultimate sin under the free enterprise system. He had ordered paying, customers to leave his premises. He promptly tuned on the juke box, went behind die bar and busily began consuming his own Rods Adroit Ditto**, Deny Cholerq in Chino TOKYO (UPD—Red China con- cent outbreak of disease in the southern province of Kwnngtmg, ut denied that it unto cholera. The official Peiping radio said been ^reported in rural areas of Pmisiwi Witch Idfhii NDSlIirS Witch Itfdb 4* N. Isjtesw RM»I the prorihoo, causing X deaths. Dome of the US. Capitol is § HALF SOLES Ml"© Noixa« Sh«f Itpiir i NORTH SAGINAW « At the time the Communists gave Gorczyza tire 31 Inches of the sidewalk, they-made it clear that it still was their territory, if too many people gathered on the sidewalk, It constituted ‘‘provocation.” Behind the wall is a high wire fence and behind that there art six Communist German police carrying tear-gas grenades, and rifles with fixed bayonets. They also are armed with a long, red fire hose hooked up to a hydrant. THEY ‘PROVOKED’ Tuesday morning several of the patrons carelessly stepped out onto the sidewalk' In front of the Heidelberger Krug and quickly learned that the punishment for “provocation" is to be doused with water from a. Communist hose. ' The ’water rolled into the saloon. The customers fled, unfortunately without paying their tabs. Gorczyza said this had a tendency to shake his-faith in free enterprise, but he decided to give it one more whirl and took two corrective steps: (I) He placed s large piece of cloth at the door and announced anybody who provoked --- u hosing from the Communists would have to mop up the water (*) he announced every patron would have to pay the tab as soon nn he was served. SwainsonWont Visit Pontiac in Con-Con Push Gov. John B. Swalnaon is out drumming up votes for Democratic con-con candidates, but time won’t permit him to visit Pontiac and Northern Oakland County. On Sept 5, however, the governor will be in the southern part of Oakland County helping the candidates from the «h, 5th arid 6th legislative districts. He’ll appear at coffee hours In several homes between 1-4 p.m. “Time and distance Just won’t allow the governor to visit Pontiac or the balance of the county In the short three hours he can afford Oakland County," said Mrs. Faye Moskowits, con-eon coordinator for the county. Swainson will visit the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bensman, 21621 Kenosha Ave., Oak Park, from 1-2 p.m. on Sept. 5 and the home of Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Hertz, 25133 Scotia St., Huntington Woods, from 2-3 p.m. A meeting for the last hour has not been set as yet for the 6th District,'Mrs. Moskowitz said. Venezuela is a Spanish name meaning “Little Venice." Legend has it that the country got mat name alien explorer Alonso de Ojeda sailed into Lake Maracaibo In 1499 and found Indians living over the water in houses built on stilts. LOU-MOR JEWELERS DIAMONDS LMrtte In Biiur Aren. S B—fl Arrant the Cnrner tram Kree*e's AathnrlMt ARTCAEVED Jeweler FE 8-9381 ktro Dnuj is a. k. *tu s r, is. S' '1 \ TjWjENTY-TWO \ THE PONTIAC PRESSi WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1061 Diplomats Resume Slow Dance parley. Now the WDOWE HOME, honey—uoiiatn, tne m-adelphia Zoo’s £000-pound elephant seal, greets his new mate, .Marian, with what seemed to be a kiss as the two met for the first time in the sea-lion pool at the 200 Tuesday. Marian, a. AT PfcMafu 730-pound female elephant seal caught only two months ago fat the Antarctic, was acquired by . the aoo to replace Goliath’s mate that died a year ago. Patient Kills Doctor's Wife to Get Even Over 'Trouble' NEW YORK (AP) - A pretty young school teacher, convinced that a psychiatrist was telling everyone of her Irresistible urge to scratch her lace, was charged today with shooting his attractive wife to death. The victim, Paule A. LaVerne, 27, was shot twice Tuesday as she clutched her 2-yearold daughter in die lobby of a fashionable Filth GOP Lines Up Against Aid Bill Fight Letting Treasury Borrow for Financing of Development Loans WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican leaden lined up in top-rank opposition today to Treasury borrowing to finance foreign aid development loans. ton. He planned to confer turner President Dwight tenhflfeer later in the day. This put Nixon in line with Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of York and Sen. Barry Gold water, R-Ariz., as opposed to the ot financing by Treasury borrowing that President Kennedy had sought CONFIDENT OF IKE Rockefeller already has said he Is confident that Eisenhower, who oface favored the borrowing method, now is against it. »A Senate-House conference committee, considering the foreign aid bill, swung to the Republican viewpoint Tuesday night with compromise on a $7.2-billion five-year program, financed through yearly congressional appn * Gone. Kennedy originally 1 58.8 billion for a five-year program to be financed through Treasury borrowing. * ♦ ■ ♦ Hie compromise still must go before the Senate and House, where demands could be made for further changes. The top-rank GOP opposition to Treasury borrowing teft 10 Republican senators hanging on a political limb on which they had climbed to support the Kennedy program. The 10 voted against a Senate amendment fay Sen. Harry F. Byrd, D-Va., to set up a five-year Avenue apartment hpuije. Her two sons, , sited 4 and 6, screamed while the family dog ■*. a Gnat Dane—ran away in fear. * ♦ dr Mrs. LaVerne, who recently completed her internship as physician, died a half-hour later Mount Sinai Hospital, next jdoor. h it it Almost at the moment the woman died, Ann (Mltzl) Kieman, 36, walked into a police station and announced: “I Just shot somebody.” Miss Kieman, of Mountain Lakes, N.J., until recently a high school teacher, had telephoned file victim's husband, Dr. Albert A. LaVerne, earlier in the day de-manding an appointment She had been bis patient three yean ago and at one time was in a class he taught at Fordham University. BECAME ANGRY The physician said he told her his heavy schedule made it lm-poesible to see her Immediately. He said die became ao angry that he telephoned his wife and warned not to see the woman if she came to tile apartment. ★ ♦ W ‘ Police said Mias Kieman went to the apartment house thinking that Dr. LaVeme’s office was there. Told he was not in, she united in the lobby. About two hours later, Mrs. La-Verne returned from a walk with her children and the dog. An elevator operator pointed her out, and Miss Kieman asked her to sit down beside her. As the two talked, Miss Kieman demanded that Mrs. LaVerne stop her husband from talking afaout herx affliction, police said. Then she produced a 32-caliber pistol. ,• ♦ it ★ Mrs. LaVerne ran to her children and was just lifting her daughter from a stroller when the first shot struck her in the chest. “I didn’t have any intention of shooting the doctor’s wife,” Miss Kieman said when she turned herself in to police: “I acted on Impulse. I’m sorry.” - y4 * it * LaVerne, former senior psychiatrist at Bellevue Hospital, gained prominence de ah expert witneia at a number of murder trials. Music Begins Again MEMPHIS, Tern. ^AP)-FWy Negro applications for admission to all-white public schools have been rejected in order to force hearings in each case. ieed three to a ng to music begins This time the tune is a ifferent, more aomber, because Premier Khrushchev sounds more determined. But once again the foreign ministers are beginning to shuffle toward another parley. Whether this means another full-blown and long-drawn out foreign ministers ' meeting or Just a short one to be followed fay *n-summit conference won’t be known for a while. But, as Khrushchev has kept on piling up the Berlin crisis, Secretary of State Dean Rusk has kept saying there'd be negotiations to settle the whole thing peacefully. Khrushchev has kept the door open for negotiations. WANTS IT SLOWER But slow as it all far French President de Gaiille wanted It still slower. He was against hurrying conference .with the Soviets. Sp a kind of compromise was worked out, September the West's Big Four ministers — American, Brit-French, West German—are expected to meet in this country to decide how to handle Khrushchev. Then they’ll contact his foreign minister, Andrei Gromyko. The purpose: to see whether be thinks East-West talks would be worthwhile. It would be much simpler to aend him a cable, asking that question, but apparently cables move too fast. WWW But one thing’s tor sure: if the foreign miniatero—the Western ones by themselves or the Wert-1 with Gromyko—duplicate their performance of the past two years the ana be a big, fat zero and maybe real trouble. * Khrushchev started the trouble in November 1958, when he called for the West to get out of Berlin. Between then and May 1969 both sides Jiad time to flpire out a settlement—If they wanted one. Apparently they didn't. The .American,. British and French foreign ministers met with Gromyko from May to August 1969, but they not only couldn't agree, they wound up in confessed confusion. CONFUSION’ French Foreign Minister Couve le Murville said of Gromyko’s tactics: "We are in complete confusion. We have > reached point at which neither side knows what the other is talkig about.” The Westerners proposed, among other things, that Khrushchev agree to unification of East and West Germany. R didn't need a magician to know that’s the hurt thing to which Khrushchev would let Gromyko agree. 80 Gromyko said the!Western proposals were a “hopeless tangle of unrelated issues.'’ The Senators Hoping to Pass 2-Year Rights Extension WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate leaden hoped today to win a two-year extension of the Civil Rights Commission and then cut short any moves tor passage „df other Civil rights measures. al appropriations. '62 Sales to Run High, Says Ford President CLEVELAND, Ohio (UP!) —. Sales ot 1M model can wtU top the (.{million mart, Ford Motor Co. President Mm Dyketra predicted Taeaday. Dykstra was here to attend a district dealers meeting where He said lftt win be a good pear, bat not quite as booming ao IMS and 1957. He oaM -the not necessarily mean a tread toward larger compact modelo or He aaid the Intermediates Will AH a gap somewhere between Remington-Rand fir Clary Cash Registers Adding Machines New—Used—Rebuilt Savings Grow Faster •.. Every Dollar of Your Saving* la INSURED TO $19,000.00 BY AN AGENCY OF THE UB. GOVERNMENT WHERE IT EARNS 3'/i% CURRENT RATE ot Dividend Paid Semi-Annually ON ALL SAVINGS! FEDERAL AVINGS West also wanted a five-year extension of the present Berlin attu-’ ation. Russia offered only 18 months, with no promise of what happened afterwards. This was such a total mess that, to calm down Khrushchev, President Eisenhower invited Mm to this country. After the two men met at Camp David they agreed to have a summit meeting In Paris May 18. I960. So, wtth more 'months in which to prepare for this, the Western foreign ministers by themselves April I960. Their purpose, 1 now, was to work out strategy for handling Khrushchev. The result: no new ideas. What they decided. If summed up in two words, was: stand pat. This hardly set the stage for an amicable get-together with the Rus- 1 amicable get-together seemed to be all that De Gaulle Eisenhower wanted. Both Under agreement reached Tuesday, the Senate is to vote in midafternoon on a motion to suspend its spies to permit the extension bill to be hooked to a ‘ 8761-million appropriation measure for the State and Justice departments. Suspension of the rule barring legislation in an appropriation bill takes a two-thirds majority of the senators present and voting. The move, opposed by Southern foea of the commission, was Jointly sponsored by Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana and Republican Leader Everett M. Dtrkaen of Illinois. Mansfield aerved notice he would move to table and thus kill attempts to suspend the rules tor consideration of other dvil rights measures bitterly opposed by Southern senators. to a quick vote. The Kennedy administration has not asked Congress for dvil rights legislation at this session other than an extension of the commission, which ywlll expire Nov. 9. The comission was created in 1967 to investigate violations of dvil rights, particularly denials of voting rights, and was extend- ed for two years in 1959 by a rider to an appropriation bill. Sen. Joseph S- Clark, D-Pa., skid that he will aeek an indefinite extension of the commission's life, as recommended by Pyert-dent Kennedy. Failing in that, he ■aid he will propose six and tour-year extensions. the idea of solutions and talked of laying the groundwork for better East-West relations. ★ ★ • * But then the shooting down ol the American U2 spy plane threw Khrushchev into such a tizzy that be wrecked the summit confer ence as soon as it started. This was the speediest piece of diplomatic business in years. But In 1958, 1969 .and 1960 the West had better reason to think It could stall off Khrushchev than it has now. Then he was Just talking big. Now he has shut off East Berlin and In effect tells the West it had better talk turkey in 1961. HAY FEVER SIHHS ■I bull**!!!« TakesBurn” Out of Feet Instantly TMr ta* fhrt ml m • mountain nta wtth tho iwt Ant touch at Irooty-whilo Icc-Mint. What‘a an, tth gnuotoM, BMdloatad croaja with tb* toothing laaoUa bua continual to work cU-ticr lonr to Sacs foot cool. bopnr. tlreloii! wonderful, too for Mftowba. a tinging com* end cal-louaaa. For a new experience toIpot- AT Fhotafax DEINTEGRATION — Damans Jeanette Allen, 16,-year-old Negro, has nullified the integration of an Atianita high school by withdrawing to accept a scholarship at Spelman College for women in Atlanta. Her mother said no outside Influence* were involved in the decision. HEARING HELP ffyrOnlr Guaranteed by Zenith's 10-DAY MONEY-BACK OFFER! ECONOMICAL NEW fkmuL "50 HEARING AID Small... lightweight... lull-powered! Operates tor only about 100 a weekl Convenient fingertip control I Combines famous Zenith Quality with maximum performance and economy! js!m% OR WANT HEARING-AID CENTER 11 W. Lawrence St. FE 8-2733 MICHIGAN IS LIVABILITY Yes, Michigan is good living, unexcelled—with its combination of year-around Recreation of all kind*, fine educational institutions, many cultural advantages and excellent public services. Within the state's 36,000,000' acres of water wonderland, one finds facilities for outdoor relaxation unmatched anywhere. Michigan’s cultural advantages also add a rich measure to the abundant life found here. . —<• Worker* and executives who live welt, will work and produce well—thus livability is a great asset for industry. In Michigan, no worker or executive is more than a few minutes from a favorite spot for recreation by way of the nation** best free-ways. Hunting, fishing, water and winter sports, great professional and amateur sporting events, and just plain loafing at a cottage or one of scores of state parks—all these are part of the good life people find in Michigan. Help carry Michigan’s message to the nation. Clip this ad and mail it to someone in another state with your comment. Let’s talk up Michigan and its advantages for industry. Together we can assure a greater future for all of ua. MMIIM It EKIYTlin FOB HIISTIY , . The Pontiac Press f mlm ml .m44Uu JJRJ- si ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30. TOgl TWENTY-THREK §|1 TRADE Pair PRE LABOR DAY 932 W. Huron Street OP POSIT! HURON THEATRE OPEN DAILY 9:00 to 9:00 Tues. - Sat. 9:00 to 6:00 SUNDAY 10:00 to 3:00 FLEUTY or FREE PARKING P«U it or Push It RICKSHAW $24.95 Value SENSATION AL SAVINGS ON WATER SKIS 6 Pair—BANANA PEEL COMET— *17” Reg. $39.95 ........... Mr 14 0n|y—.SLALOM SKIS, Comet and: rledlimd; Assorted — Priced of low as .......... $988 lack *19” 2 Pair—HEGLUND SPEEDSTER COMAD, rag. $49.95 ............... Mr 12 Pjair—MISC. WATER SKIS. All *12“ Sites—as low as................... Mr COAST GUARD APPROVED ADULT LIFE JACKETS $1)99 CHARCOAL LIGHTER FLUID Full Quart 2P 1962 Model NORELCO Floating Hoad' 1 MEN'S RAZOR $1fn Back to School MICHIGAN EVANS BICYCLES SOQ8' Beys* 01 Gills' 24" or 21" Lifetime Frame Guarantee NOTE BOOK PAPER 1,000 PAGES AAc (500 SHEETS) Xl| • 5-HOLE PUNCH VV LARGE Genuine Australian CHAMOIS FULL SKINS NO PIECES $3.95 59 Value LUTROWARE Cushion Soft Singla Compartment SINK MAT ASSORTED COLORS Reg. QQc 98c RAID HOUM AND GARDEN BUG KILLER -» 40-HOUR ALARM CLOCK SI 99 Ivory 9-VOLT TRANSISTOR RADIO BATTERIES 1 POCKET 6-Transistor RADIO Complete with Com, Rettery end Earphone II 88 Specie! Purchase! LIMITED QUANTITY LADY SUNBEAM ELECTRIC RAZOR With Brand Name Razor Trade No Layaways or Dealers Please! CLOSING OUT! All picnic supplies-cooler chests—jugs -picnic baskets—ba r-b-que grills—bar-b-que tools, etc. All at drastic prices. COME-SEE-SAVE! Wake Up to Miuic ZENITH 5 TUBE CLOCK RADIO Special at HOW 18* ARMOUR'S 1044 LAWN FERTH 58-T SAMSONITE BJIBT BOBBER $8.95 Value REPLACEABLE COVER Good Spring Action *5* LEATHER COVERED FOLDING HAVEL ALARM AsPL Colors... Compace $2 99 TONKA DURABLE, UNBREAKARLE, STEEL LIFE-LIKE, NON-TOXIC PAINT 04 /ARM STAKE TRUCK Rtf. $3.98... $£44 SS SPORTSMAN'S TRUCK Rtf. $3.98 . $244 06 DUMP TRUCK Reg. $3.j9l $244 05 RESCUE SQUAD TRUCK Rtg. $3.98.... $2«4 110 FISHERMAN TRUCK Rtg. $3.98 .. $2«4 12 ROAD GRADER Reg.i4.9f.. $3« Number / 18 WRECKER TRUCK Ref. $4.98 TOYS T 22 Dlxt. SpoitsBin Boat tad Truck KRg.S4.98... *3« 20 HYDRAULIC DUMP TRUCK Rgg.S4.98 . .. T 28 FARM PICK-UP ud TRAILER Rtg.S4.98......... T 20 CEMENT MIXER AND TRUCK Rtg.SS.98......... S444 40 CAR HAULAWAY AND CARS Rtg. $7.98.... $5« REMCO ACTION—EDUCATIONAL GAMES and TOYS 819 HOT POTATO - GAME $3.00 Value . 816 FLAP JACK GAMR S3.00 Value . $|44 $|44 817 KICK THE CAN GAME $3.00 Valit... 803 GIANT WHEEL Cewfcey A Indian Gum. SS Valve . 2144 $2« 131 6UHT WHEEL let Red Gaat SS.00 Valet... $244 Number 132 MMT WHEEL 0U Wail Cam SS.00 Vila. .... ^44 033 CHIT WHEEL Hiubtippi Boat Gam. $8 Valia. $2«4 404 Electric Science Kit Edvcatieval Game S7.93 Value T 702 SNEAKY PETE'S Giant Magic Skew $9.95 Vahe T Hundreds of Other Toys — Gaines—Gifts to Choose From! Buy Note for Christmas —PRICES WILL MEYER ' BE LOWER—HO LAYAWAYS! TRADEvAIA MANUFACTURER'S EARLY CHRISTMAS SHIPMENT Folding CRD TABLE SET Sturdy Table end Four Motchinf Chain, Complete Set $1088 w for game room, rumpus room ,in the home. Must be seen to be appreciated. A fantastic value at only $13.88. NOT EXACTLY AS PICTUEED UNIVERSAL—9-Cup Flavor Salactad Coffee PERCOLATOR *9* AUTOMATIC Keape Coffee Hal Unfil Served SAVE OVER 50% STAINLESS STEEL COOKWARE SALE! $2** $388 8 Inch SKILLET with cover.... 10-Inch SKILLET with cover...... 3-Quart SAUCEPAN with cover . 4-Quart SAUCEPAN 4-Quart SAUCE POT with cover.......... 5K-Qt. DUTCH QVEN $2«8 $388 $38 *3 88 HURRY! Thee# law prices good .wily while present supply lasts! twenty-four THE PONTIAC PRESS; WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1061 ONE COLOR Malayan Minister Working tor SINGAPORE (UPD - Malayan Prime Minister Tengku A^ul Rahman is unquestionably a man who likes to "think Ms.” Two and a half years ago he conceived together with Philippine president Carlos Garcia a plan for ' a cooperative organization 0( eight free states of Southeast Asia. i 'The prepaml association was Banks Prepare tor A-Attack J Although Rahman said the was to be strictly economic and fcultural in nature, political implications and internal strife have kept five of the invited nations bom joining, j At present, the newly launched Association of ^ Southeast Asia (ASA) lists as numbers only the pro-Western nations of Thailand, the Philippines and Malaya. jUST A START * However, Rahman looks upon this as s start and has hopes of expanding the association to to-elude more nations, some possibly from outside the original group of bight. No sooner had the details for tpe launching of ASA been worked out, than Rahman came up with another proposal. TMs one called far the. merger of Malaya, Singapore and the three BritUh territories of North Borneo (Sarawak, Brunei aad British North Borneo). x Rahman's proposal was predi- cated, he said, upon the fact that I Including the straits dollar and ala land area of 133,000 square miles (spread over 50,00 square ih*1— the five territories.were really too long history of British rule. and a population of aUghtly more Singapore's last ty-i-—t«g pofuto- smaU to co it stone. The five ter- » * * * (Ann 1® milliop. Malaya Itself hafejtton In 1J million on an island ritories have much in common, I "Greater Malaysia” would hewa population at about seven million tonly 217 squkre »nf1— in sine. Detroit Institutions Take Steps The three Borneo terriUities are pandy populated with only i 14 miffion persons In an kies prising more Own 80,000 square miles, FROM WESTERN EYES Seen from Western eyes, the merged nattoo would appear to be a real zone of strength against the expansion plana at the Chinese DETROIT if* — Nuclear attack, American cities — now within bombing and missile'range atom - armed enemy — are taking steps to protect their economic well-being. Detroit is mm of those cities. Banks in Detroit — and throughout the United States — have been urged repeatedly to adopt an emergency preparedness program (E-P). But until recently, the banking industry was stow to act. In Michigan, only C par cent of RS banks have done anything In the way af emergency pro-paredneaa, a I Ml Michigan Bankers Association report Indicated. Now, however, after , neveral years of Inactivity E-P programs are gaining momentum in at least seven of this city's largest banks. Indications are that this recent concern lor the vulnerability of the nation’s economy in the event of war is spreading to other parts of the country. Here, is what is considered s "target area" for a nuclear attack, almost all of the Detroit banks have been taking steps to safeguard records of assets and liabilities. This practice has been in effect, for the past decade. Records havp been microfilmed and delivered periodically to out state storage centers. Most Detroit banks rent vault space in smalltown banks in other cities and states. FILM FUNCTIONS i Recently, around-the-clock micr filming programs have copied practically ail banking functions, ranging from milUon-dollar transactions to $2 Christmas Club deposits. These records leave Detroit daily for outstate storage. Otto A.' LUI, chairman of the Michigan Banners Association' E-P committee, and a vice preaidant of Manufacturers National Bank, says most banks have adopted An E-P program. 'It eaa be accelerated or ds-Ull said, "depending on the International situation. Bat we’vs Just scratched the surface of the E-P problem,” he said. Most Detroit banks store their duplicate records outside a 50-mile perimeter of the city. Detroit’s federal reserve branch is the only bank to store emergency supplies of currency at classified sites. It keeps its records at a storage center in Indiana, which is shared by the Chicago branch. The E-P program at the federal reserve branch here has readied the stage whem the entire banking operation, including personnel, currency and papers, can be transferred into basement vaults seven minutes after an alarm. In fact, the entire financial structures of most banks in Detroit could, through the Industry’s duplicate records program, be duplicated even if the main office and afi key executives were wiped out in a nuclear biast.) His whole attitude seems to bs iat this is a good idea Md ought i be carried out and to Mazes with aV the reasons why It can’t be done. Traiu Caribbean Asks Detroit-Philfy Route WASHINGTON W-Thitt Canto-bean Airways applied Monday for route between Philadelphia and Detroit In asking the Civil Aeronautics Communists, who to their more man seemingiy couM not be less opdmtrtic moments, lies to. think1 * L they will Control almost all ol Southeast Asia by 1910. Wahmaa, a Cambridge graduate at law, has said Malaya will sWt-sr awlm with the West. Malaya, although aet a member •f SEATO, baa a mutual defease pact with Great Britala. -In Singapore, the British maintain their largest Far East base, and they have varietur army, navy and air force units operating in the three British territories in Borneo as well as units permanently stationed ih Malaya. * * * Rahman first made his proposal for merger in June of this year. Since then, politicians in all five areaa have hqd a field day discus- wssengers, cargo and i subsidy-basis mall in a DC6B aircraft or in DCS jots which it is buying. The airline entered its fifing hi >e CAB investigation — growing it of the merger of United and Capital airitoes — into the need for air service between the two cities. This week, representatives from the five territories were meeting ' Jesselton, British North Borneo, to work out a possible course of action. A great many problems and objections are going to have to be thrashed out before the five territories reach agreement. But the very positive Tengku Abdul Rah- Divorce Decrees ONrsidUM A. flaw John Dlrdn Otll A from Oeorg* 1 |uiil Harriet r. Itom Oi*M O. Cnuoova Margaret from John Mots Brenda L. from Carl O'Maal Suiaut Iran Peter Leon Lillian from Ham Kirah Madettni from Thomaa A. LaCiair Mabel H. from W. Ward Brown Betty jT from William i. Raman Harriett* A. from Frederick W. Roberta from Richard LePag* James D. from Bertha A. CottrlU Letter F. from Hm M. SMckel SmW J. from Mward L. Manual itodw J. from Carolyn A. Throoach Slmer O. from Edith Ortooew Joan from Laurtno* >. Barboau Lota H. from Jerome H. Rogers Merrldy A. from Oeorg* W. French PhyUla from H«U»M Thomaa WUBo from Oladys Lankford Cfcariette D. from HaroMjL DHtrleh Florence trow MMWwT ttodl ■ Sbtrtay a. tram limi 1 Derate KUaabeth A. trap Loula F. Moler m Labouun from Oarald X. Oath A friend to'little wheels* too. FOR irs Huron St. 2-3821 eye Will Outlast the Toughest Kid On the Block Hush Puppies' breathin' brushed pigskin by Wolverine Children's Sixes ...... .6.95 to 10.95 your Good Neighbor Ashland Oil Dealer. Helpful. Obliging. Happy to contribute extra services ... to make you and yours a little happier for having stopped by. A man whose pleasure is pleasing you ... eager to provide the kind of thoughtful service that makes for satisfaction and lasting friendship. This is die friendly man of Ashland Oil Meet him. And try his top quality Ashland Oil products. Like Valvoline All-Climate Motor Oil, World’s First-World’s Finest And Ashland A-Plus and Flying Octanes, gasolines that help tune your engine as you drive. Stop in today—and get to know the friendly man with the better brand—your Good Neighbor Ashland ASHLAND OIL A REFINING COMPANY • Ashland, Kentucky Mtn's Sixes...............*.95 to 10.95 . Worm'* Sixes ......8.95 Rugged? That’s Hush Puppies middle name. They’re HetlCat turned to shrug of dirt soil, keep their good looks longer. And toe crape teles cushion every step, steel shanks give Just the right support growing feet demand. Featherlight too —• mere 9 ounces per shoe. Look for Hush Puppies jn sizes and widths to fit almost everybody. THE FRIENDLY MAN WITH THE BETTER BRAND- THE FDytlAC PRESS, WKDXESDAY,AUGUSfr 80, 1961' Navy Man Is Groom File Thursday for Election Volt It by Mail During Saptwnbar for ASC . County Program The deadline for filing nominating petition* for the agricultural stabilization and conservation program election in Oakland County is tomorrow. * * A The annual ejectiod will be held by mail during September. Communities in the county are . divided as follows: i Oxford. Oakland; and Orion, Brandon and Independence, Holly and Groveiand. Rose and Springfield. Highland and White Lake, Milford and Commerce, and Lyon and Novi. Grouped together am Water-feed, Pontiac, Avan, Tray, Bloomfield, Waat Bloomfield, Farmiagtoa, Southfield aad loyal Oak, maklag aim rommnal-ties In all. Each community will be nominating at leapt 10 candidates of -■ which five will be elected as. community committeemen. Any eligible fanner may circulate a petition for any other eligible farmer in his community. And if the petition contains 10 signatures ami is signed by the candidate his name will be entered on the community ballot. A A ' A These petitions must be in the county ASC office, 323 Hubbard Building, Pontiac, by tomorrow. The present community committee then . will complete the community baQot and farmers will receive their ballots in the mall by Sept. 8. Ballots must he returned to the county ASC office by Sept. ini rraiwil m IS iilfp if! Hi Pi Ml HR jpp* g|P|l !|g| ] [Mayor Vetoes Multiple Houses Clarkson in Southfield Says 12 Mile Project Against Zoning SOUTHFIELD — A compromise action taken by the City Council to permit the construction of multiple dwellings at 12-Mile Road in New Novitiate in Oxford Twp. Dedicated Today The OXFORD TOWNSHIP new 3400,000 novitiate building the grounds of the Dominican Academy here was to be dedicated today by Moat Rev. John F. Dear-den, archbishop of Detroit. Archbishop Deardea was scheduled to bestow his blessing on the new building in afternoon ceremonies attended by .Catholic clergy and rsiigious from throughout the archdiocese. The DomMeaa Sisters of Ox- WINS FAIR TITLE—Mrs. Marvin Heintz, 35, of Harrison, poses with daughter Connie, 14, after being named "Mrs. Michigan State Fair of 1961” in Detroit yesterday. Connie holds the letter she wrote nominating her mother. '"To AF HwMu me, she's the most perfect mother," Connie said. Mrs. Heintz, mother of five, was chosen from more than 500 nominations. She will be crowned tomorrow night by Gov. Swainaon. Her husband represents a dairy farm equipment firm. Wiofi Honor During 4-H Show al MSU Avon Youth s Lamb Is Champ of Class A Shropshire lamb ottered by e 16-year-old Avon Township youth is fite grand champion in its class tt the 46th annual. State 4-H Club Show in Fast Lansing. The. Individual grand chain -plea of the skew’s market lamb dlvtaton to owned by Mia Reae, sea •( Mr. aad Mrs- J. Edwin Bose, C70 M. Adams Bead. John is the oldest of three mem-ben of his family who are active in 4-H Club projects. His sisters, Karen, 12, and Bonny, 14, participated with him in the Oakland County 4-H Club Fair which was held earlier this month. His winning entry was Judged yesterday at Michigan Mate University's Spartan Stadium, which has been turned Into a huge live- open house from * to 4 p m. Sept. 14 when the public will be able to view the recently' com- The 106- by lOMpot building, which teBl houae nmdaco and junior professed slaters, includes 75 bedrooms, instruction rooms, workrooms, sewing rooms, a library and a dining room which seats 200. A A * The novitiate is the fourth huge building on the 773-acre site purchased in 1948 by the Dominican Sisters. The property at 775 W. Drahner Road formerly was the Marvin £. Coyle estate. A chapel, retreat house, main house and three smaller buildings are located on the grounds in addition to the new structure. 2 Man-Made Lakes in Shiawassee Sold LANSING (AP) - The sale of two man-made lakes bi Shiawassee County is reported by the State Highway Department. William C Hiller of Flint bid 119,000 for a 56-acre site notheast of Durand, containing a 20-acre lake. Charles A. Johnston, of Detroit bid $6,500 tor a 40-acre site west of Bancroft containing a 25-acre lake. Both were created when fill dirt was removed for construction of the M78 freeway. 20th Labor Day Parade to Be Held in CLARKSTON — For the 20th consecutive year . the Clarkston Rotary Club will sponsor a Labor Day parade, fills one planned tt> be the most colorful in its history, according to Robert Jones; general chairman. The parade will begin at 10 a.m. Monday with registi-attoa set for a hall hoar before at the corner of Dixie highway aad Mli. The marchers and floats will move up M15 along a 2-mile stretch into Clarkston led by a color guard of Hje American Legion Campbell ^fc^mond Post. Floats, divided into yfiiree categories. have been entered from five area subdivisions, 15 business and industrial firms and eight or- the period to match their car vintage. All those participating in the parade will be served free re freshments by ftotariang at the conclusion of the parade. Also on the holiday artists from Clarkston and surrounding areas will present a large exhibit the blacktop area back of Community Center beginning 9 a.m. At 6 p.m. many ,of the paintings will be auctioned to the highest bidder. Mrs. Henry Storer and Mrs. Henry Ranldn are tat charge of the exhibit which is sponsored by file Village Friends of Art. Also featured will be costumed children, a pet parade, Independence Township firefighters and the Clarkston High School band, * * Prancing horses withVjj^n c y-dressed riders, from many Oakland County saddle dubs will add variety and interest to fite procession. As a special feature, 16 re* New Students to Register in Avon District Registration scheduled foi morrow in the Avondale School District is necessary only for students or tor those who did not attend classes there last year, school officials said today. Those enrolled to the district daring the 1*00-41 school yosr need not reapply for admission. rumble down the highway. The Georgia Sword Weds Newlyweds in the East WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Vases of gladioli and roses graced the altar of Our Lady. of the Lakes Catholic Church for the wedding Saturday of Georgia Anne Sword and Thomas Lee McNeive. Parents of the bride are Mr. aad Mrs. William G. Sword of fill Commer Read. The bridegroom Is the ooa of Mr. aad Mrs. Clement McNeive of UN Township. 'The bride wore a floor length gown of silk organZa over taffeta designed with long, pointed sleeves, oop neckline and a chapel lor her wedding. Her floral headpiece held veil of French hand-sewn illusion. She parried a cascade of white roses and stbphahotis. Sally Anne Sword wae maid of honor for her sister. Bridesmaids were Sandra McCarty and Mrs. Roger Clement. ' Serving'as best man was Robert Ward. The guests were seated by Roger Clement and Lawrence McNeil. . A- A A The Waterford Community Center was the setting for the evening reception after which the newlyweds left on a tour of fite Eastern seacoast. stock shew ring for the four-day cvept- John won a second honor today when Ms Hampshire ram named reserve grand champion of its breed. Other‘members of the East Orion 4-H Oidt also won top hone's in the statewide competition. Ross Waite wen Use boy’s troll class of the horseback riding division while Pamela Miraklan wan one of the top three exhibitors la the vegetable claa*. Janice Moore of the Farmington area Los Caballeros Club won the girl’s western pleasure class of the horseback competition. ' A. ;las Norland, a member of imfield 4-H Chib, was sec-(automobile driving Iktil contest, dh event held tor the first time this year at the state show. He mimed winning the automobile championship by only one point. the Jf’0 onfltf J office. Regular registration wae held last aprlag. Buses will be available for junior high school students and for elementary pupils attending Avondale schools for the first time this year. No bus service will be available for new senior high school students, who will be permitted to register at any hour to-orrow. Registration times are 8:30 a m. for Junior high students tomorrow 9 a.m. for elementary pupils. Troy Club Sponsoring Labor Day Celebration TROY — the Troy Metropolitan Qub will sponsor its second annual Labor Day celebration starting at 8 a.m. Monday at Boulan Park on Crooks Road, between Big Bearer and Wattles roads. Events will include a pancake breakfast, horsehoe pitching, firemen’s water battle, penny scram-lefeeH games, parachute Jump, pony rides and a chicken barbecue. State Road Department Paying $1 Million a Day LANSING IB - The* State Highway Department reports it currently is making payments The state show continues until tomorrow night on the MSU cam-Scheduled today were beef, dairy cattle and .sheep judging, tractor operators’ contest, sattball playoffs, rifle matches and an evening dress revue. ] OTHER WINNERS Three other area 4-H Club members also were among the top winners in the first two days of competition. Two member* of the Sterling Rider* Club, Vicki Kars of Lake-ville and Jean HalHa at Lake Vicki won the trail course competition for, girls aged 15 and under. A,. * A ; A Jean had a top entry in the pony and saddle bone division as did Irene Engle, 15, of 55245 W. 8-Mile Road, Northville. Ex-Cross Employes Fined, on Probation MOUNT CLEMENS (B - Two former Ooss Co. employes were convicted of trying to spread at entrances to the Cross in Fraser during a strike in 1 and were fined and placed on months probation Tuesday. * * - . t The pair, #Ntter Bachman Jr., i,. of Roseville, and Edward Bupte, 38, of St. Clair were convicted in Jane Circuit Judge lined Bachman 1 and Bupte $50 an Linda Myers, 18, in Lansing for FHA Conference kEEGQ HARBOR-Linda Joyce Myers, state vice president of Future Homemakers of America, is attending a council conferei Linda, along with other state at- contractors of more than $1 mil- fleers and members of file. FHA, lion a day hnd will continue this will leave Lansing Friday morning rate for the next 60 slays during to take part in a dress revue being the peak construction season. The department esttanated Its program is providing employment for nearly 16,000 workers through- T he garments to be modeled out the state.' were made by the FFfA members Filter Sewage Facility Now Decided at Romeo ROMEO — After months of con-, that as side ration and study, the Romeo Proper* Village Council last night adopted] Along with approving the a $244,000 plan for expansion of j000 ptaa, the council voted to present sewer facilities. I for the total amount A A * - aid, assuming that 30 per cent This plan, which provides tor a|ww“M ** forthcoming. The engineers riao were instruct- the River Rouge Basin area hot S^^p^Sj^tlSfiit a to draft final plans lor the been vetoed by Mayor S. James ^ |iew^ , week today, expanded sewer plaid to submit The council approved the construction of the multiple structures last week following an Oakland County Circuit Court decree that consented to the land fill of property owned fay the A visor Develop-; meat Co Tile Avista Co. had proposed several month* age to fill toe entire valley aad build single family lag proteats from area resident* claiming the meve would destroy the natural beauty of alte. tor approval to the Stale Health Department. ~ years ago the health department told the village that tan-* pc rate. {mediate action must be taken to A building will be required to, abate the pollution of the north house a laboratory, sludge pumps, branch of the Clinton River. qarkson s rejection of the prod- , " T" E™** ■** * txT‘ Depart ect came in a letter read tothe! Two council. The mavor is vacsHonlno **■ w"' 0*M** * f**r *• Mr»m, miscellaneous equipment, valves| According to the council, it had fist lowest construction] of the four plans LESS COMPLICATED It also would not require as high] a degree of skill to operate as an] activated sludge-type plant, mem-j bers said. At the public hearing engineer John Seeley of the Atm Arbor firm of McNamee, Porter and Seeley recommended this pli Shortly after that a $310,000 sew-plant improvement presented to Village Attorney Gary Corbin also has baen Instructed to contact the bonding attorneys to have them prepare information on methods at financing the newly-adopted sewer plan. When the four proposals were first presented to the public, Wayne C, Black, village president, said it could be planned safely that the project would be paid for with revenue bonds re'her than bonds on real estate. Avison then took the matter in-* handle village \growth up 5,000. * A This. was the population goal set by the council for 1980 based on statistics of growth over previous 10-year periods. The 5.000 total was challenged at file hearing as indicating how shortsighted the council was being in planning (or the future. The village official** rebuttal was that the territorial limit* of the village would not allow for growth above that figure and to court and the suggestion was made that the developer and council come to some agreement. * Last Monday the council voted 5-2 in approving Aviaon's second proposal to fill the valley only partially and then build on the higher level. The structures would follow the contours of the land. A A A ’ Clarkson, in his veto message, however, stated among other rea- sons that multiples are noncon-ferming use of property under the city’s zoning ordinance and that the council "is being forced into its position on a false premise. ■ A A A - "We don't know that we going to lose the case in circuit court," the mayor wrote. Hie reference was made to Aviaon’s suit which is still pending. Clarkson's veto of a council action was his fifth since April. The proposed development is in the Stream wood and Bell roads area. ' Plan Car Wash Benefit at Orion on Saturday LAKE ORION — The Orion Area Junior Chamber of Commerce will sponsor a car wash here Saturday from 9 a.m. to & p.m. at the comer of Eastview and Anderson streets. Proceeds will be used for the J a y c e e s’ community ’ projects, which include their get-out-the-vute campaign and Little League baseball programs. Mary Whipple Weds Mr. and Mrs. James C. Jennings of 7045 Felix Drive, Independence Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Beverly Jane to Jack Anderson. The prospective bridegroom is Ade WALLED LAKE - Mary Jean Whipple became the bride of Robert N. Perkins with the exchange of marriage vows recently at the Wesleyan Methodist Church in Pontiac. Officiating at the ceremony, was Rev. J. M. Kavanaugh. The bride is the daughter of {Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Whipple, 1118 N. Pontiac Trail. The bride-J groom is the son of Mrs. Mildred 1 Perldns of Highland Park. Fir her wedding the bride cheae a white aad piak street-length drew* with which ahe wore a cartage of white raraa-Horn. Troy Commiision OKsj Mrs. Richard Perkins, the bride’s sister, and her husband, the bridegroom's brother, served the couple as attendants. . A A A • A reception for the immediate family and relatives was held mediately following the ceremony at the home of the btjde’s sister in Walled Lake. MM. Perkins will join her hui band in October at Norfolk, Va. where he is stationed aboard the USS Tidewater. Give Contract for Sewer Work] Limiting Licenses Dance Halls for TROY - A $15,933 contract for extension of the Evergreen sewer system here has been awarded to Golchess Brothers Excavating Co. of Mount Clemens. The Evergreen fewer main will be extended approximately one-half mile north of its present terminus, City Clerk J. Lawson Lockhart said yesterday. The Mount Clement firm placed the low bid for the work, la other actiqp* the City Commission approved a new dance-hall ordinance hat tamed down a proposed ordinance which would require the deposit of a cash bond for any construction work la the city which a mounted to more than |7M. The Commission also authorized the dty clerk to advertise for bids on material for surfacing five Streets in the Tbornwood Subdivision Lockhart said the new dance-hall ordinance limits the licensing of such establishments in the city. AAA The building bond ordinance, designed to protect public property while work is being carried out on • construction Job. would have caused a hardship tQ homeowners their own work, the com* missioners decided. Avon Twp. Man Gets Drake Bachelor Degree AVON TOWNSHIP - Richard Strothers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Strothers of 331 Neabit Lane, has been awarded a bachelor of arts degee by Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa. Strothers, who majored in economics, received- Us degree from University President Henry G. m o n in summer commence-exercises in the Drake Field Rochester Hires OhmFifm to Drill New Well ROCHESTER — An Ohio firm has beta awarded a contract to drill a new well to increase the capacity of Rochester’s municipally-owned water system. the well drilling contract wap awarded to the Duabar Drilling Co. of Swaatoa, Ohio. The coot of Use work will depend oa the 'depth of the new well, according to Village Manager Paal York. Tilt Village Council, which ta studying the possibility of including Rochester in the growing Detroit water system, was advised by the village's engineering firm that an extra well is necessary to serve the immediate needs of the local system. The council approved advertising tor bids on the new well at its July 24 meeting. Murders His Landlady; Is Dented New Trial FLINT (UPD- Charlie Woods, 34, Flint, was denied a new trial Tuesday. Woods was convicted of lint-degree murder by a Genesee County jury Aug. 8. He was found guilty of strangling his landlady, Mrs. Jesse Simpson, 60, in March. mapped out by Michigan's leac at a meeting in Farmington; Mrs. Howard J. Llverance, prei land County Council of Repi Clubs; Mrs. Ely Peterson, GOP 02 Ridgewood Rond; and ibbcan National Committee (an. Presidents and rep-County Women’s Lions Sponsor Travel Series Stvwi Color Films to |te Shown in Rochester Beginning Sept. 23 ROCHESTER — A World Travel and Adventure Series, designed to provide entertainment for the entire family, will be presented here starting Sept. 3 by the Rochester Lions Club. The series includes seven color films narrated by World travelers who took the movies while touring this country and foreign lands. The first travelogue, a preview of ether film* In the series, la entitled "Thrill* m the Ool-orado.” Commentator far the film wlU be Jsliaa Greater. Free tickets for -the first film may be obtained from members of any Rohcester area service club, according to William A. Mitzeifeld of the Rochester Lions Club. ** Season tickets for the entiiu family may be purchased for fit. Single adult season tickets ace $5 and student tickets are $3 for the town. Other World Adventure tnraa. gues are scheduled Oct. 21, Nov. \, Jan. 6, Feb. 10, March ft and April 28. All will be held wt 8 p.m. Next month’s selection wft be “Soul at Mexico’’ by Remain Wilhelm sen. Adventists Plan z to Open School; -: Expect 106 Pupils The Seventh-day Adventist Elementary School and Junior Academy of Pontiac, 81 E. Howard S£ will open Sept. 5. Expected earolbnent at Pontiac’* smallest educational unit will be Ml pupils, taught bp four Instructor*, according to Balpfo B. James, principal. State Traffic Kills 981 EAST LANSING Wt-There have been 911 person killed In Michigan traffic accidents so far this year, provisional figure* compiled . by state police showed today- The total compares with 964 killed dug* ing the saqw period last year. fWENTY-SlX THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 90, 1901 F6csw op Heelth Vaccines, Calcium, Thin Bones in News This Week By IV Associated Puma Vaccines in the Soviet Union, childhood, says a Scottish doctor. r—h—, and caldum in the diet of persons with thinning SOVIET PUSH VACCINES . The Soviet Union la pushing development of various vaccines tke entire tytBm. Vaccination of children may only delay infection, leaving the adult1 vulnerable, says Dr. Thomas An of the University of Glas- GOOD FUH OR BAD? During these hot summer when the anient fisherman in the family brings home his catch, plight ask for health’s sake if he dan tell a good fish from The Connecticut Stain Depart-{i ment of Health - offers guides, have dull, opaque Among them: Good fish have gray er yellowish t bright rad gills, usually dosed, soft and limp fast Eyes are bright and full. .Scales — ^ ^ am D e% At!WK flKuS?-""*25« ** Propaganda Battle Iasi aaten (AKJ), tested fey tea for Swvivai HseK DEARBORN (API — lie stake* in the Wafa propaganda battle with the Communiat bloc native “ore no leaa that survival ttaaft” johnN. Hutchinson, director of the !7Jf. Information Agency (US1A) press and publication service, said. * ♦ * Urtthtoaaa spate Taeaday at Uaivenity of Mkhlgaa. Hutchinson said Ctenmanlwn has mHifamq of actual party members in noawrinwMtw"** countries pnqmttwg home a lingir-minded program day after day. WWW "The Communist bloc broad-casts some SJ00 hours weekly to the world by* shortwave, nearly five times as much aa our Voice of America,” Hutchinson said. respiratory Infections, say U.S. doctors after A recent trip to the 1XS.S.R. The Soviet Union is preparing a Miilaw doses of live-virus, oral polio vaccine from seed viruses obtained from Dr. Albert Sabin. Some of theae dose* are to be offend to other countries, scientists report. Most other Soviet vaooinea reported also involve live viruses as apposed to killed virus vaccines uaad widely in the United States. Soviet imearchers say they have n live-virus mumps vaccine which has been given to 50,000 children by injection with good response. They have also used live-virus Influenza vaccine which has some drawbacks, they told U.8. visitors. THE HEAVY SMOKER Why am death rates from heart* attacks among middle-aged men up to 1% times as high for heavy cigarette smokers as for non smokers? The American Heart Association's newsletter aiys a possible explanation may exist in n study by a Philadelphia research team. The team found that two cigarettes smoked within 10 minutes raised the level of some fata in tba blood—and the effect lingered for at least 40 minutes. Holiday Weekend Ahead . . . Plan Now for An Extra Day's Meals!^ stimulates the nervous system and the adrenal glands to release a fora of adrenalin that frees fits from storage areas hi the body, researchers suggest. It could explain why smokers have higher levels of cholesterol fat their Mood. Cholesterol is a blood fat which Is suspected of contributing to heart disease by dogging and narrowing arteries. A new study Indicates that abundant caldum in the diet during adult yean may protect the skeleton, especially in persons suffering from n loan of calcium, and a winning of bone. Doctors have obtained good results by boosting the calcium in the diets of arthritis patients who in taking cortisone or minted hormones. Cortisone apparently worsens caldum loss. Almost a third of the women past menopiaute suffer from s thinning of bone, involving a lots of csldqm, particularly from the spine. This boas thinning disease is even more common inr^*“ women with rheumatoid aril THIS WEEK, MUMPS A valid way to protect adults against diseases such as mumps, chicken pox and German measles may be to expose them to theae LOW PRICES plus d GREEN STAMPS FOOD I FAIR psJ Open Daily 'til 9 p.m. CLOSED LABOR DAY! FOOD FAIR—OUR FINEST QUALITY Salad Dressing ’r29‘ Dos. taeia* SALE! "Personally Selected" Sugar Cured SHANK IPORTION POY rOAST *39* 1UTT PORTION Heavy Traffic Stretches Given Labor 6ay Weekend to Bring 60 Pet. Riso in Statawido Travel LANSING (It — Motorists traveling on Michigan highways were urged to plan their Labor Day holiday trips ahead to avoid unnecessary delays on state highways. . The Michigan Highway Department said the busiest hours during tiie weekend will be early Friday evening and late Monday afternoon. Statewide travel is expected to be some 80 per cent heavier than on an average weekend. Experts said that an Labor . day, sintfefe—d traveler* will { move la a wave, with traffic hit-| ting a peak In the northern third ' at the Lower fftehwnls between ! M a.m. and 1 p.m. One exception is expected, however, in a belt along the west coast between Manistee and Traverse CHy, where the peak hours will be from 1 to 5 p.tn. The department said a 100-mile band across the Lower Peninsula from the Muskegon-Bay City line to IM will get the traffic surge between 4 apd 8 p.m. The traffic peak between 184 and the Ohio and Indians state lines is expected between 6 and 9 p.m., whOa the New Buffalo area-wfaich gets the brunt of Chicago-bound traffic, will have its rush- beginning at 2 p.m. and continue to at least 9 p.m. The entire holiday period probably will see extremely heavy - traffic at the intersection of U.& IS and U^S. 23 east of Brighton, the department said. It urged motorists to use alternate routes where possible. ChaHos Fajahoo Mode Jackson County Judge LANSING UB-Charies J. Fala-hee, 37, a Michigan Center attorney, was appointed Jackson County Probate Judge today by Gov. Swahwon. Falahee once served as Jack-non County Judge, filling the unexpired term of the late Judge Barry D. Boardman in 1139. His new appointment is to fill the vacancy created fey the rasig-ention of Judge Clarence Rumeil Glendale, Grade 1, Skinless Hot Dogs 2 & 69* One PmnN Phf.... 39s Campbell's Pork & Beans 12* 14-Ox. ”■ vC Gap* Yen Save 10c m 4 Cans Peed Mr Special Offerl Free Uptown! Tee Ort tk ll-Os. ferttiss •I Uptpwn Mil Whoa Ym Bey Mi ILOssse feattfos of FAY0O COLA far 4t. Ban 12 A Ac lottos ■Mf oJSw Vernor's Ginger Ale 6*1“ .GOLDEN ripe sweet-cured Bananas FOOD FAIR—FINE QUALITY _ Ice Cream. . . “ 49‘ 10 Dal Monte PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT DRINK... 6 SAVE Its ON 2—Mrs. OwWi Pm Fruit STRAWBERRY PRESERVES .... SWEET RED RIPE WHOLE 29-Ox. $ I 00 Cent I SAVE ll« ON 2—Tram Sunny California HUNT’S TOMATO JUICE SAVE I la 6n 2-—Family Sisa SNIDER'S TOMATO CATSUP SAVE ta—Shur-Goad SALTINE CRACKERS............ '*£• 19* WATERMELON 32-Ox. I At Can 17 20-Ot. | At lottio It dMp 59 \ ' WEST VIRGINIA HAM ... 69* TASTY FLAVORFUL CHOICE LEAN SUCCULENT HAM BUTT END . . . . *■ 49e HAM CENTER SLICES . “ 89* LEAN COUNTRY CLUE SUGAR CURflD SLICED SLICED BACON . . . . Vii 69c SERVE 7N SAVE BACON SS 55c CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS OR RED FLAME TOKAY GRAPES 2 - 29* HOME GROWN FRESH MICHIGAN SEES. PEACHES 5 LBS. DAILEY'S BRAND SWEET RELISH . r .>*" 39* . SOFT WHITE, PAPER PERT NAPKINS . . . ^ 29* MT. WHITNEY CADET-^AVE 6c ON 3 PITTED RIPE OLIVES 3 <5ii.69* TASTY PURE FRENCH'S MUSTARD . ... » 17* SAVE 4«—READS GERMAN POTATO SALAD ... . . . ’iff- 29* KROGER FRESH BAKED KROGER FIG BARS. . . . 2 & 49* FR&H SWIIT IDAHO HI SIZE—SUNKIST PRUNE PLUMS ... 4 « 59c LEMONS .....49e KROGER FRESH BAKED SLICED HAMBURG OR WIBNiR 2 *««; 39* 50 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH $I.M PURCHASE OR MORI OP AVONDALE SAVE fc ON 7 SWEET PEAS SAVE 23c ON 7—CREAM STYLE SWEET CORN TASTY CUT GREEN BEANS TASTY AVONDALE TOMATOES r. YOUR CHOICE CANS I SAVE 10*—REGULAR OR DRIP GRIND COFFEE HILLS BROS. WITH COUPON BELOW ].|£( ^AN REGULAR, DRIP OR FINE GRIND KROGER - VAC-PAC COFFRE 1-LB. Hills Eros Coffst 159* Personal sin bora IVORY SOAP...................4 bars 29c 7c off BLUE CHEER .... Giant siza pkg. 72c 20C off—economy tin t DASH Detergent 9 lb. 13-oz. pkg. $2.09 l ie off JOY LIQUID .............32-oz. btl. 78c 3c Off—Mokes links sparkling bright ; COMET Cleanser 2—2H/g-oz. cans 43c • Picnic Tim* • TABLECLOTHS .. ..........each 19c > AH purpOM detergent ./ RINSO BLUE .. PACKER'S LABEL TOMATOES DELICIOUS EMBASSY APPLE JELLY . . AMERICAN BEAUTY BRAND PORK 'N BEANS . KROGER EVAPOQATED CANNED MILK PINEAPPLE-ORANGE CHERRY DRINK PINE-O-CHBRI . a a THANK YOU BRAND BOOK MATCHES . 57* . A12* 2 %.39* . »29* 3<“h39* 3«S89* . "S 10* CANDY YAMS LABOR DAY STORE HOURS OPIN TU 9 PAL THURSDAY. FRIDAY, SATURDAY AUG. SI - SIFT 1ST. • 2ND. CLOSID MON.. UlOR DAY SRPT. 4th SO EXTRA v25, STAMPS: WUSi TWe Ceaoea fan*— •» • St.M M MOM Of APVIKTISIO J AVONDALE ITEMS * 100 Extra vI?S, Stamp* X WM TWa Caaaaa mi farteasa at * HYMA0I S-LB. * CANNED HAM Plate* M OmlaHI, Mltelfaa. SO EXTRA vaim STAMPS ! WMi TWa Caawaa aat fambaae at iVi-ia. Jtm pimnir reoiiM BEEF STEAKS Caaaaa Valle ten lal., a.*. *. WL al i Infer ta r.atl.c, Dnytoa i Plain, ana Oxter*. Mlrklfaa. W I SU^VaX ' ...IP.; RINSO BLUE King size pkg. $1.33 We reserve the right to limit quantities. Prices and items effective thru Sat., Sept. 2, 1961 at Kroger in Pontiac, Drayton Plains arid Oxford.'None sold to dealers. w m Pi THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1961 Pip \,' - • Cites Labor's Role WASHINGTON (AP)^-SecKtaqf of Defense Robert S. McNamara •ays the nation “can count on Ilia American waiter, as a production partner of Ok armed Joreoo, to meet any challenge that Ghceo jllip Pentagon that‘view In a Labor Day state- McNamara, “to playing a' vital gent military supplies and equip- There Goes AnotherMotto Down the Drain BUFFALO, N.Y. (API - Attar . yean ot wading through every thing from blizzards to hailstones, the mailman has asked for a reprieve from heavy weather. The State Association of Letter Jr Carriers Itesday adopted resolutions urging laws, that would out I pend mail delivery in weather emergencies and , cut the mailman's day from eight to six hours when Hie temperature di above 80 or drops below Mt Beginning to Believe Aug. 28 It Their Day DETROIT (API—Raymond and Flora Plasenda have no problem at all to remembering the birthdays of their four children. Their first daughter. Fiorastelia was bom Monday night, Aug. 28. All the boys—Ramon, 6; Jesus Benito, 5. and Ricardo, 3 also were bora an Aug. 28. Ca pitol Folk Worry * I > Mr. Sam Feelin' Poorly Wj aim MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON — OlfUUl Washington to frankly concerned about the health and well-being of speaker Sam Rayburn, the ruled CMgresa with a benign hand for longer than any man The speaker has lost too - -v :>•. * i \ \ ed to try a piece of watermelon i then he should ooon be due for and after making good headway an upswing. ,_iajl. is ------I__I. Mam Ttwo a H TO 111 with It ramarted: "That'o the fizat thing (I've eaten in three weeks that had any taste to It" if the speaker's health problems are largely attributable to overexhaustian, as some believe, U U|»wuip. The adjouraoaent push during ----------tog days has taken Its toil of many legislators in ' IGt tha: “to years |»» -u. that ■train wU be relieved in another couple of weeks. peace corps heads OVEBSEA8—Waving from the ramp ar rnuu of their plane at Andrews Field near Washington are the first are headed for teaching assignments to Ghana, a new republic members of file Peace dorps to leave for overseas duty. They in Africa. Fiber Flower Class to Begin Sept. 14 Beginning at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept 14, a new daaa in fiber fiowpr instruction will get, under way at the Waterford Township Community Center under the leadership of Mrs. R, C. Carpenter of Pontiac. Additional courses include bridge Instruction, to start Tuesday, 8ept 19; cake decorating, Monday, 8e|X. 18, bridge instruction, Sept, tt; dog obedience, Sept 28; beginners square dancing, Sept. 25 and ‘ my lessons, Oct. 5. Troops in Berlin Called 'Empty Gesture' by Nixon dio program “Hie World To- WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon Tuesday night called President Kennedy's ordering 1,500 extra troops to Berlin, “an empty gesture,” “Any thought that moving a few ground troops into Berlin to going to have any affect on Mr. Khnahchev to a bunch of non- OII ‘BEEFING UP*' Nixon said he thought the Soviet premier might interpret 'beefing Up” of. the U.S. garrison I p Berlin as an indication of] 'weakness rather than strength." Nixon said, however, that “I would not criticize" Kennedy’s general handling of the Berlin: situation '‘except for the fact that' I think there has been too much loose talk about lt.“ Judge Will tfood Drive for Muscular Dystrophy trim softs on baggy, and he has as appetite. Two complete physical examinations—the last one at Bethes-da Nival Hospital — indicate no cause for alarm. For a man who wiU be 80'yeara old next January, he checks through to remarkably good condition. Mr. Sam to in virtually constant pain these day* with his back. Average width of a tornado path to about 1,200 feet and average length of the path to 16 miles. Probate Judge Clark J. Adams will be the honorary chairman of upcoming annual Muscular [Dystrophy campaign. Eric Hater, 496 Thors, has been appointed Pontiac area chairman. Mrs. Edwin Goring. 1819 North-wood Boulevard, Royal Oak, and Mrs. Charles Meagher, 1415 Pota-watomi, have been appointed Joint chairmen of the Royal Oak area. Mrs. Goring will act no (h* March chairman and Mrs. Meagher win have charge of canntoters, commerce and industry. such agonizing bouts that he choee for White House physician hto favorite bock specialist, generously lent Dr. Jhnet Travel] to the speaker. She to tlDRttog Mm, and prescribing "a new type of medicine,” according to Rayburn's staff, but the stubborn pain persists. Tte old war hone who for nearly eight decades refused to pamper himself to now forced to take long daily siestas on the touch In his Capftol offlce. I don't want to be dle- tin-bed,” he tells hto loyal Doctors have found little wrong with Mr. Sam except stomach oddity- This could be improved if he would eat—which he wont. The other day ha waa persuad- f. NEED CASH \ £ FOtYOUN } ! WELCOME TO ) . \ VACATION?/ MONEY!/ Take that vacation whoa yoa need it Yaa for travel, car tope*% alettes fitaay “ sod psy to*®* M ^ "'** *"1 budget Single own sou women uh on their car, furniture or signature alone welcome to our —*25 w *250 _________________telf-yout ' and married couples eaa borrow Associates LOAN COMPANY Pontiac: 125-127 N. Saginaw, PI 2-5214 Michigan Miracle Mila: Ft 14*41 Draytaa Plain*: 447* Axis Nwy., 01 2-1207 Interest charted at I* nw nwnth on balance* «p t» to; to* p/ month between MS aad PM, and %,% per month on any remainder. A TO V? y/V»o'e AND PONTIAC CO-OP Ooraor «f North Psrry asd Madison Sts. Across frou Northern Nigh Sthool ShAO^? FRflHER’S .... SPICY REAL 5nuT YUMMY DOUBLE YOUR MOREY BACK IF THIS ISN’T THE FINEST WIENER YOU HAVE EVER TASTED! COTTAGE -■ tc CHEESE 15 1 LB. CARTON FRESH LEAN FREE SAMPLES TASTE ’EM oof TRY ’EM BEFORE YOU BOY ’EM! GROUND BEEF ONE PRICE - TOP QUALITY YOUR GUESTS Will FIND OUR HAM _ so nice JA 2 THEYlL ALIMYT ii 6 9 IS WANT -C e ANOTHER euce / GUARANTEED TENDER SIRLOIN and RIB STEAKS 79 * 2ViCAN FREESTONE m PEACHES 4 CANS Case 24-*579 GUESS the WEIGHT of “PORKY the PIG” —WIN KELVINAT0R FREEZER 13 CU. FT. UPRIGHT SECOND PRIZE 'PORKY THE PIG' HEILMAN'S Q SANDWICH SPREAD V 9‘ Ft vvust. f# % w SO GOOD MEAT PIES 6 *" 89’ BIRDS EYE CUT GREEN BEANS-FRENCH GREEN BEANS & PEAS 19 BIRDS EYE ORANGE JUICE 4*89 ill THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1961 THIRTV-O, "SUPER-RIGHT" SKINNED Shop far Hie tong Holiday ahead. AH A&F Super Markets will He closed Monday, September 4th, Labor Day CIOSSO SUNDAY AS USUAL fOK MOILINO OR FRYMO Halibut Steak » 49* Fresh Whitefish fanoaady ,,,, Fresh Cleaned Smelt..... Ocean Perch tom • • V • «£ 43c Breaded Shrimp am ; 'fff 59c White Bass mm, cuanio 45c SmaHM^aiiiR I PRICED w. ■ HIGHER SHANK PORTION Cut from 12-16-lb. Hems Butt Portion . ..........,, i*. 49c Center Ham Slices 19c "SUPHMBBHT” MATUU l» Beef Rib Steaks . . * 79c Skinless Franks itt {ft 45c SANDWICH Ot HOT BOO SLICED ROLLS ,iS& ST, 33c FOR THE HOLIDAY—POPULAR SRANDS CANNED HAMS "SUPER-RIGHT" 2 TO S-LST SIZES SPARE RIBS “49* 14.59 "SUPER-RIGHT" MATURE BEEF Standing RIB ROAST 59* Fir* 1 Ribs 65c * 69* 4th and 5Hi Ribe LB. Fir* S Ribs "SUPER-RIGHT" SKINLESS PUUY.COOKID Semi-Boneless HAMS 63* WHOLE OR HALF No Canter Slices Removed 10 to 12-PAund Hies OFEN FIT BRAND MICHIGAN U. S. No. 1 ALL-PURPOSE POTATOES 25 * 59* WASHINGTON STATE Bartlett Fears 2 « 35* SWIET, DHICIOUS, S-f111 Hooey Dew Melons 49* SAVE ISc—JANE PARKER Barbecue Sauce tf «« SPECIAL AT ADPI / Brook’s Catsup ... . 3 YELLOW CLING—NEW PACK A&P Peaches._____________4 SALAD DRESSING SPECIAL Miracle Whip........ KITCHEN CHARM (Two 2-Ct. Pkgi.) Waxed Paper —. 4 DAILEY BRAND Polish Bills ..... AfirP's PURE VEGETABLE dexo Shortening... . 3 28-OZ. BTL. 12-OZ. BTLS. 29-OZ. CANS QT. JAR ROLLS 9T. JAR LB. CAN 47. 49' 99' 55' 69* 29' 69' HOLIDAY PICNIC NEEDS Charcoal Briquettes 69* |.19 Bulk Charcoal ........ 5 & 39c Marvel Charcoal lighter • • * • CAN 49c Master Chef Compartment Plates <5mi 29c Dixie Paper Photos *****»« .. Sm 47c Dixie Cali Caps or m 27c f. of* 79c Dixie Hat Caps ......... 8*» 47c Tukon Canned Beverages YOUR CHOICI 6 ™, 49c PALI DRY 0IN0IS COLA, ROOT INK, GOLDEN OINOR A OR UM0N4MM Apple Pie •s? 39* OUR NNIST QUALITY LIGHT, CHUNK STYLE A&P Grape Juke A&P Tana Fish 4 - 99* 5 as 99c ALUMINUM TOIL BUYS HEAVY DUTY Reynolds Wrap 59f Alcoa Foil ... J«r29* DUNCAN HINES—Early American Cake Mixes Cherry Ahmed, App lota eco-Re bln, Butter Pecan, SAVI I Of—JANE PARKEt Angel Food Coke ...... 39c JANI PARKER—FRESH, CRISP Potato Chips ... ...... rox 59c RISOONl LAROE CURD Ot OLD FASHIONED Cottage Cheese S 19* YOUR CHOICe—TWO SOXIS OP * Peptide or Fudgtide .... * 49c ..... 3? 63c ■ m j| ■ Tour Choice: BLACKBERRY, a m Jelly Sale 25« Ac OFF—ARP DECAFFEINATED Instant Coffee Facial Tissue 5 ffS 89c Scat Towels ...... *. mu 29c Toilet Tbsae ahmpopt .. 4 *>“* 39c Grapefruit Juke ..4aSi99c no rmmgs appuorchrrry pkd. Scottim Napkin. mSSm 2 5% 35c Siwdrilt Shortening .. 3 can 15c Bel Point Pens 38 ■«* 59c School Pencils. . 12 25c Crayons v-» * 46 23c Mecflage urum .. . Iff 19c White Paste »««• ISf 29c Mono Pads "JSr YOUR CHOICI 3«««l*oo BTL, ONLY 19C CRINKLE CUT OR RIOUIAR—BROUN A&P French Fries 2 ~ 29* ANN PAOE, 12-02. JAR All pricet In thb ed effective thru lot., Sept. 2nd ... hi uR luctem THE GREAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, PC. leper Rurhetc POUR PONTIAC ARIA A A P SUPER MARKETS TO MRVI YOU ALL ora MOMMY1UM CATUADAT • A. ML TO . r. K. ueNonamn at madicon « oen MMb. •* e a. m.) ■ tT., DOWNTOWN PONTIAC fitter ’to • P. ML ■ 1« t. MuM. W.IM n-M .MM-It. CAM Sava a* AAP AR PurpOM Oao6a. *#fwbf Sin Sava on Ko4 Ron slTis Peschke Mich. Grade 1 German Style Sausage Hygrade's Fresh or Smoked Liver Sausage Testy Brand , Quick Frozen Peschke Lean Streaked 59*. Glendale, Mich. Grade I: Skinless Pranks Swift Premium or Hygrade' Smoked HAMS Select Shank Portion* With Plenty of Center Slices Left On Dressed & Scaled Fresh Lake Whitefish Boneless Pan Ready Fresh Sole Fillets Boneless Pan Reedy Fresh Haddock Fillets Lightly Breaded Gorton's Cod Portions Kraft's Salad Dressing Send label to Mi roc to Whip, P.O. Box 655, Chicago 77, For 25c Refund Miracle Whip Food Club-Plus 50 Stamps with Coupon Below Salad Dressing STAR KIST 49 Qt- Jar 1 00 4 Flat Cant CHUNK STYLI WHITK MEAT 39 2 -lb. Box Giant Size Can—Etna 25 Pork & Beans 52-0z. Can WRIGLEY 93 Score 'AA Butter 1-lb. Ctn. Tuna ZION—Always Fresh Fig Bars Ballard or Pillsbury Biscuits Etna Economical Margarine Food Club _ Cream Cheese Sealtest Lemonade or Orange Drink Dartmouth •n^lO* Sliced Strawberries With Grape or Raspberry 3c£ 59* Top vFrost Lemon Drink 6 Queen's Delight Zucchini Squash Dartmouth Frozen WHOLE" New Potatoes Rkg- 10* jkjjy. 5’£ 99* S99* 10-ox. 1 /"\« Pkg*. HJ 2^X39* Topco Charcoal Briquettes '£69* Fresh Pek Vlasic Dill Chunks ^29' Plain or Iodized Food Club Salt 26-«*. 1A« Pkg. |Vj Chef foil Aluminum Wrap 2Z29‘ Butterfield Shoestring Potatoes ’Sr 69” Mario's Stuffed Queen Olives "!r 49“ White or Colors Pert Papier Napkins ^29‘ Assorted Flavors White Rock Pop ’isicr Assorted Colors Kleenex Casual Napkins 2 :^33* Bna Whole Tomatoes 4214? Economical Tasty Vets Cat Food 3£25‘ Chinet White Piper Steak Platters £39* Me Biomi Hamburger or Hot Dog Relish Bell's Gent Ripe Olives 2! 29“ - -Chirm White or Colors ^Divided Plates 18-ct. O At Pkg. 04 German Style or Mayonnaise Read's Potato Salad i6-oi. « rt Con . yjJ Sunshine Yellow or Red Hawaiian Punch ft 46-ox. TOO 0 Con* 1 Chinet lOVi-Inch * White Paper Plates f Savedey » * / 9-lnch Paper Plates 39‘ ^Vlesic Sweet Snix Cucumber Slices nZ 2)9 Open Pit Bdrbecue Sauce qoe Oocvanter \J7 , £ 39' Bondwere 9-oz. Hot Cups Bondwere 7-oz. Cold Cups Homemakers Boston Baked Beans No (Deposit Gayla Pop WHOLRVS : 516-01. TOO Jar. I 6l2-ae.49‘ GET FINER GIFTS R WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS . A 10c off 2 Ban Praise Soap 10e off New Active "all" 10c off Now Swan Pink Liquid 6c off . Liquid ‘35* 69* ST 79* £39* 1ST 53* '67* Fabulous Fab Detergent For Complexion Care Vel Beauty Bar Frtdi Fragrant Cashmere Bouquet Soap 3 ”«* 49* Bath Size Ban Praise $oap, 2 45* SAVE 10c Hygrad* Party Loaf 12-41. c*» *39 SAVE 19c 25c Off Label — Chase & Sanborn ato SAVE 15c Instant Coffee 10-OK. V 1W i« | SAVE 10c SAVE 10c Del Crest Instant Coffee i04s. Aflc J" WW SAVE ON SAVE ON y * Popular Flavor! Popular Price! Elnn Coffee 2 99* SAVE ON Food Club Apple Sauce Smuckers Preserves / Wrigleys —- Plus 50 Stamps With Coupon Below Potato Chips Etna Economical JSJS Cling Peaches 4^1°° 4^1°° 49‘ 59* Strawberry 20-oz. !!■■! or Raspberry Jar :WWQUWi; For All You Baka or Fry Spry Shortening For Laundry Surf Detergent Shur Good Oatmeal Raisin Cookies Giap, Flaky Hekman Saltines WWOLKYSs ;88* Glont / Ac Sin 04 ;:39* 5:29* Fret Pancil Box With Stripe Toothpaste 10c off Pepsodent Tooth Paste 20c off Pepsodent Tooth Brush Thrift Pack SAVE 47c Usterine Tooth-Paste 2^59* GET FIN ER GIFTS F S|f=SSS WRIGLEYS IN EXTRA GOLD BEU STAMPS With Coupon end Pureho** of Ono 22-o* Betti# BtSSEU SHAMPOO 7"- v== 50 EXTRA Gold Bell Stamps Lj — . ixpiKUl SAT., SUPT. I ■ t!j BXPIRIS 8AT., SIFT. 1 jBESSjES R WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1961 THIRTY-THREE • TEL-HURON CENTER • 398 AUBURN • SIS N. FERRY • 59 S. SACINAW • 5060 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS , • NORTH HILL PLAZA, ROCHESTER it ruNTY or nun parkin* it Completely Cleaned FRYERS mi U.S. Govt. Inspected — U.S. Govt. Grade A Cut Up Ready To Broil or Barbecue Spilt Broilers Fresh Oven Ready 3*4-lb. Avg. Roasting Chickens 39* California Sugar Sweet Seedless RAPES Large Luscious Clusters Bartlett Pears Velvet Peanuts 2-49- U.S. No. 1 wolf Rlvtr Apples For Boking or Agleouci 4 39 Pascal Celery Fresh Home Grown Cauliflower «.*. 29* or Refreshing Size SEVEN UP Phm DofoiH WRIGLEYS 39* 2 Ketchup 2^39c 14-oz. Bottles HEINZ Thick — Flavorful Limit Two Par Cudomor ■xmaaa sat. aarr. a Ketchup Ice Cream DARTMOUTH • Vanilla • Chocolate • Strawberry i-Gal. Ctn. TTuRTY-FOUK ¥hR- PQ^TIAP Jttigftt WEDNESDAY, AUGUST i SSil Final Summer Holiday Includes By IIHII ODELL Pontiac PKW Homo E« What sort of festivities are you planning lor the long weekend ahead? Its 8w last chance towel |» fan i out of doors have a rectal flavor. before school and all thr 1 l Ane you h S having breakfast guests as yofer ropd Editor is? We specialize In outdoor breakfasts on summer holidays. * * # Guests enjoy cooking their own food. Have a bowl of eggs, some strips of bacon andf pancake batter all ready beside the grit). Then stand back and watch. Everyone can have eggs cooked to bis individual taste. Pancakes cooked k paw bn topping. Be sure there “ Is plenty of tat fragrant coffee add aim a dkt of warm apple mace, made from aew tart apple*. Include n bawl of 'eHced If your company comet later in le day, treat them ^to ahish kebabs. You’ll want to cube the meat and marinate it overnight In the refrigerator. Fresh green pepper squares and tomato wedges go along with the lamb. Fresh mushrooms are n nice addition. Again let everyone grill his own. I k I pound Its of Umb, cubed I cm wine rln«tar lb cap ski oil lib toupoona Mil -----b lb taaapooa pepper l. teoipo— Woreorterahlre mom 1 medium anion, thinly etteed 1 boy lee ISvnoie Combine vinegar, salad oil, salt, pepper, Worcestershire sauce, onion, bay leaf, and doves. Pour the marinade over cubes of lamb. Chill for at least 6 to S hours or ovemighUin the refrigerator. Remove lamb cubes from the marinade. Thread cubea onto skewer* Marinate Stewing Beef for Kabobs The Persian horsemen discovered It about twenty-five hundred yean ago: chunks of lean meat stuck over the fire until seared to a crusty brown make tantalizing] y good eating. But shish-kabobs have two other advantages: they are quick and easy to cook, and they can be^ inexpensive. Of course, .the choice, expensive cuts of meat are preferable, but for family fare, any meat that is lean can be used. Stewing beef, the kind sold In l-and-2-pound packages in the supermarkets, can be tenderized for kabob-cooldng, marinated in olive oil mixture with the same seasonings used by the Persians of old. *. * ★ ' This is excellent family food. Cover the chunks, of stewing beef with the marinade in the morning, leave the bowl in the refrigerator until it’s time to start the charcoal fire, then take the meat out to warm up to air temperature as the charcoal turns to white hot coals. Supper can be cooked in 15 minutes, served without fun, and everyone will love it, including the cook. . To tenderize stewing beef sufficiently for broiling, the Meat should be sprinkled with coni- then covered with n blend ef Spanish alive oil, lemon Jake, onion idea cinnamon and pepper (be sal). The combination of cinnamon and black pepper Is one found frequently In Persian recipes; cinnamon I* used frequently by the Spanish is mest dishes, too, probably a heritage ef the days when Spain was ruled by the Moors, a part of the Arable world. The effect of cinnamon on bndled meat Is Surprising: the flavoring is subtle, not Sharp or hot. It is important to add such seasoning to stewing beef because it usually has been cut from not only a less lender, but also a less flavorful portion of die steer. The meat when tenderized need only be cooked long enough for the outside to be well-browned. If it is still rare on the Inside, so much Spear on skewers alternately with vegetables, If desired. Place skewers over glowing hot charcoal, about 2 Inches from heat. Turn until well-browned on all sides, jfl to 15 minutes. Makes 5 or.4 servings. Recipes Should Explain Terms More Fully NEW YORK (UPI) — Freshman cooks baffled by culinary terminology include an interior decorator friend of Elaine Ross, a food expert and author. Mrs. Ross reports that a recipe for browning meat elicited this inquiry: "When you say brown, do you mean maple, walnut or hogany?" When less-tender cuts of meat have been cooked beyond the stage 'the meat begins to toughen and then must be cooked with moisture (stewed, braised or pot-roasted) for a very long time to become tender again. HMHI i______________________| _ To make kabobs look mobe sub- mrrcUl meat tradertser first, jstantial, chunks df green pepper, - onion, squash or mushroom cape may be inserted between the meat, but these are not essential. II you find these broiled vegetable nits left on the plate, omit them and broil the meat alone on skewers, put vegetables Into the salad bowl ip stead, or eerve them already corned but cold, with an olive oil dressing. Stewing Beef Kabobs Halve Cherries for Chiffon Pie You'll gather a big bouquet of compliments when you serve this tempting pie that fairly bursts with luscious bing cherries. It can be made ahead and ’tis an "easy," too, when you use a package of pie crust mix — and the tender, flaky crust would please grandmother! s Bing Cherry Chiffon Pie Pie shell: H package (1 cop) P*» cruet mix i teaspoon grated onion i a teaspoon cinnamon pp Beef should be cut into 1-to-lft-inch cubes. Sprinkle meat all over with commercial meat tenderizer, then separately combine oftve oO, lemon and onion juice, cinnamon and pepper. Pour this over meat. Marinate until ready to broil, turning meat several times, If possible. Filling: 1 eup ritted halved btn( cherries. dMPMd , 1 3-ounce package orange flavored pelatln ^ cup hot water1 * % cup orange juice Z tablespoons cold water H cup whipping creem, whipped Doth gslt a egg whites y« cup cucsr Heat oven to hot (425 degrees] i rj i F.). For pie shell, empty pie crust Ol tlQjnDUIQGT mix into bowl. Sprinkle cold wa- -ter by tablespoons over mix; stir lightly with forte until Just dampened. (If necessary to make dough hold together, add another tablespoon cold water.) Form intojforget to give it the attention it ball. Roll out on lightly floured deserves, says Josephine Lawyer, board to form a 13-inch circle. Fit Marketing Information Agent. ] flight Care Is Essential Ground beef may be such _w ular on the shopping list that you lag. Tta vegetable* Grill 10 to 12 minutes, turning once. Thread the vegetables on the same skewers alternating the mushrooms, tomatoes and green peppers. Baste vegetables with the marinade. Grill 2 to 3 minutes. * ★ ★ For dessert serve squares of maple cake with a maple praline topping. Thfe cake itself is made with a mix. The topping u* the baked-en type. Sugar Maple Cake 1 package augur map!* cuke mix 1 cupc water 2 cesc. unbeaten th cup firmly pocked brown auger 2 latlaapooui flour H cup chopped pecana t tetfapcsoi butter, Baited V. cup maple-blended syrup Empty cake mix into a bowl. Add water and eggs. Beat 3 minutes until batter is smooth and creamy. Four into a greased and floured 13x9x2-inch pan. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 40 to 45. minutes. Ingredients, mixing thoroughly. Remove cake from oven. Spread topping over cake In put Place under broiler for S to 3 minute*, or until topping io bubbly. (Or return cake to the oven and bake S minute* longer.) Note: If topping becomes too firm before spreading, place in a bowl of warm water. After 3 weeks of traveling, we’re glad to stay home for this, holiday. Wherever you are, have a pleasant, sate time. A rotary beater often does wonders in removing lumps from a sauce! Macaroni Is Good. Base for Summer Dishes Cooling-salads are fine eating for warm weather menus, and “ Imaginative homemaker there Isno end to the many ways they can be prepared to enhance meals. A basic and favorite salad Ingredient is dhow macaroni... the bland flavor making It a flavor mate for a host of other foods. Meats, fish, poultry/ fruits, vegetables, cheese are afl delicious MEAL-IN-ONE SALAD: — Macaroni salads sxe a summer favorite . . . this recipe features macaroni in a main course salad. Muffins and butter, along with a beverage and dessert of your choice, round out the menu. Team together macaroni, ham, chicken, tomatoes, and lettuce.,. arrange In an attractive salad bowl and serve with French dressing. You will agree, as will the family, this is eating at its best, and especially appealing for summer. M foods sro a port of nun- ^piling water. Gradually add mac-aroni so Oat water continues to boil. Oiok ritaemwred, stirring occasionally, until tender. Drain col-Rinse with cold water. ijDralp. Arrange mgcenxri, hem. chicken and tomatoes on lettuce. Garnish with pftrsley. Serve with ^lYcnch dressing. Makes 4-6 servings. 6 SMIlet ObllipSUi MH iumtU balling water Two Menu Suggestions tor Cooperative Meal JlBt A few more weeks of real summer. Unfortunately it Involves cleaning and dosing up the summer house. Yotff neighbors are probably doing “the same as you so why not pitch-in dinner and be together one more time. Tfy our Smorgasbord Peas, which delight everyone because you can have your choice of toppings. Finish the meal with a refreshing Applesauce Sundae. Cbnorgmoboard Pea* r margnrlna Heat peas in the liquid from the can. Drain slightly, season with butter or margarine. Serv? with assorted toppings. Serves 4. * * * Applesauce Sundae H cap apol* mom % teaapoon nutmeg V. traapoon cinnamon 1 UblMpOoa mgar Combine all ingredients. Serve over ice cream. Top with chopped nuts or graham cracker crumbs. Serves 4-6. A bay leaf, added to pot road at thd beginning of the cooking period, gives excellent flavor to the meat. blnatlnn to a skillet recipe de- rad keep kitchen time to a I Regardless of season, macaroni products are a staple item wise homemakers. Whether it’s jt cold . . . if the thermometer registers zero or ninety . . . they depend upon elbow macaroni, spaghetti and egg noodles to use in dishes which are flavorful, economical and nutritious. Meal-ia-One Macaroni Salad t cup gSiOMP.fBMwekteU. 14 cup Parmesan cheese 2 teas peons lessened salt m teospeics basil Add 1 tablespoon salt to rapidly boiling water. Gradually add> macaroni so that water continues to boil. Cook uncovered, stirring occasionally, until tender. Drain In colander. dr Mb ,' dr Meanwhile, melt butter or margarine. Add chicken, anion, green mushrooms and garlic; mix well. Cook over medium heat, stirring frequently,, 10 mlnuteq. Add macaroni; mix well, combine remaining ingredients; mix well. Potlr vegetable Juice mixture over macaroni; mixture; mix well. Heat ito serving temperature, stirring occasionally. Makes 44 servings. J cup dtcaO cookad ham 2 cups diead cooked chicken 4 tomatoes, cut to quarter* French dressing Add 1 tablespoon salt to rapidly Gat Choice Cuts ot SHINNER'S into pie plate. Trim; flute edges; prick well. Bake in preheated hot oven (425 degrees F.) 10 to 12 minutes. Gobi. dr d’ W Dissolve gelatin In hot water. Add orange Juice and water. Chill until partially set. Beat vigorously with rotary beater or mixer until light and fluffy. Fold in cherries and whipped cream. Add salt to egg whites. Beat until soft peaks form; gradually add sugar, beating until stiff peaks form. Fold egg whites into gelatin mixture. Pour into cooled pie shell. Chill. Shrimp Casserole a Smooth Dish Ground beef Is more perishable than solid cuts of beef. When it is put through the grinder the temperature Is raised and it has many surfaces exposed to air and light. Ground meat needs the best care at home to maintain top quality. Remove the store wrap and loosely re-wrap the meat with waxed Then put It in the coldest the refrigerator immediately. For best eating, ground beef should be used within twenty-four hours after purchase. If you want to keep ground meat longer than two days. It’* best to fieese .It. Frosen ground beef can be otored for two months In the home freeter at ■era degree*. If the ground beef h shaped Into potties before freeling, It can be cooked from Some of the best news in many wlthont Hamburger may be one of your] family’s favorite meats. Don’t fotvj get to give it the care it deserve*! when it arrives in your house. seasons for Midwestern homemakers is the summer’s abundance of shrimp. These little seafood morsels are ready-made for tempting appetizers and cool salads. In ad- ST .rSsS 5TJ: eoto* on th. Road Mad. *yhw / 5 \ pihn jP fj '.a*' Gov't Inspected-Whole Tep Treet Fresh Fryers ICK CREAM CteMtafo Vanilla, Strawberry, Split Broilers » 29* Fresh Roasters lb. 23 HORMEL SPAM „ 39" C Save 10. *- Hillside trade 1 < — * H — SKINLESS FRANKFURTERS . . . 2-.79* "BesySIleo", Smohod Whole er NH Sheet Half _ A FULLY COOKED BONELESS HAM ^59* Rom Ceeodlae Style—Whole er led Pertlee CANADIAN BACON .... . . . . -79e White er Colored SOFTIE TISSUE Save 16* OOVT. MADID U.5. CHOICE Cubed Steak Hill. Era.. mt. COVT GRADED U-S. "CHOICt" _ iOOTH'l IAM0US ___ Chuck Steak . .............*59* Breaded Shrimp £89* Se Froth Twin Peek , POTATO OUPS *r ~ 59* STRAWBERRIES 5'Clf00 Save 12* Your Choice... ONE Out of THREE! OF THE FOLLOWING ITEMS BELOW WITH COUPON AND $2 PURCHASE OR MORE! OR NATCO COFFEE C With COFFEE .. « 59* » 51 Michigan Made Pioneer e» SUGAR .. .5 39 Creamery Fresh Hillside no BUTTER ... *59 Coupon CHICK ITIM DESIRED *P. HILLS IROS._ oe NATCO COPPIE □ COFFEE '& 59c a 51c OR—Mtdiittn Mat* PlRn.tr □ SU6AR............6 a 39c OR—Hilltidt -----iai . . □ BUTTER .........;&6Sc aar« cns ssn’ssrs sssr NATCO—IN HANDY THROW AWAY BOTTLIS CARDIN FRISH FROZEN Trooswoot Froton ORANGE JUICE Tep Tette Sandwich Bins er Frankfurter Buns Ic itetiwv—in nnnvi innvw AWAI iVllhID BAKVEH rSIMI rnyAEn Beverages . . . ££,8*«?• M00 Crinkle Cut Potatoes 2 & 49* RAVI it—NATCO SAVI lie—BIRDS IYI FROZEN FfAS OR Manzanillo Olives . .^.f 39*Peas & Carrots ... 5’A?89* SAVI'ft—MT. WHITNEY CADIT SIZE TOP TASTI ENRICHID-rMADE WITH BUTTRRMILK Ripe Olives .... . 3Ht£,59* White Bread . . . 2 2£ 37* SAVE Its—AUNT JANES POLISH Dill Pickles__________... “2*49* SAVE 10«—VELVET Peanut Butter ... 2 £ 69* SAVE 30c—DEAL PACK VERHOR’S GINGER ALE STOCK UP FOR The houdays 6 24-OZ. BOTTLES ■ 00 PLUS DIFOSIT Fkg. of 12 29* APPLE SAUCE Plus 50 Extra Stamps With Coupon Be/aw Borden's Starlac . . . '*?• 79* SAVI 10c—EASY LIPI Liquid Detergent...*?• 39* SAVE St—DIAL PACK—12" WIDE Handi-Wrap ...... %?• 24* SAVE Sc—SWEET OR BUTTERMILK Pillsbury Biscuits t 3 Tubt* 29* SAVI 4c—DIAL PACK ASSX COLORS. CASUAL Kleenex Napkins. .2 3T. 31* SAVE Sc—NATCO, DIAL PACK Salad Oil________.... & 55* Charcoal Briquets 5-Lb. lag 10-Lb. Bog 20-Lb. leg 39* 69* *1” ^udt C^anIf Jind ^dresher..... ^jdiner produce! California, Jumbo 24 Size HEAD LETTUCE S Large ® - 2^ Home trawe, Crisp eed Solid New Cabbage . Heme Drown, Large She Green Peppers 4** 29* Washington, Italian Type Prune Plums . 2m 49* Heme trawe, Large 24 Site Jumbo 9 She, Callfenile Pascal Celery 2&E29* Honey dew Melons >-49* Bartlett Pears 2 49* FREE With This Coupee 1 1FREE With This Coupee ■ • FREE With This Coupon FUR With nit Coupe.1 1 I 11 si*-- « 11 11-*——| «w-u«■ APPLESAUCE II ICE CREAM TOPPING || Charcoal Light,, Fluid || GROUND IEEF II CKASS SEED II ]asrairsrj.-tr1 JupaxrarAgrjj Jacas-TsrAiS"-* j J^ssrja.TsrA.w"-* —J jj Cat_m uuUtt Sal. »ut te Un» tnt tatpat * NATIONAL; SERVING YOU BETTER Imtional SAVING YOU MORE national SERVING YOU BETTER Ctumoail) SAVING YOU MORE Sfl THIRTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1961 TV Commercialand Becoming Modern Day Hereafter ft is true that a surprising number at its inhabitants suffer from . . By HAla BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)—Some people want to go to heaven when they leave this present vale of team and terror. ... ★ ★ ★ 1 did, too, until I started noticing how the people Hve who are pictured in television commercials. Near, if I must depart this earthly scene, I want to be reborn one of them. They dwell, it seems to me, in the best, of all 1 possible worldi better even than heaven because it is more exciting. There are twi fantasy worlds onl television. One is the world shown mTV programs. It is a world of conflict and violence inhabited by gangsters. Western bad men, juvenile delinquents, psychotics and neurotics. It is- a ferocious world in which fists thud endlessly, flashing knives ate buried In human flesh, and guns bark, roar or spit flaming death. # e * Life in this world is Just one long heyday for the undertaker and toe bandage salesman. The second TV fantasy world is shown in the commercials. This is the dream world Into which any sensible person would love to retire right now and live happily forever. What are its attractions? Well, there are so many it la hard to know just where to begin. The world of the TV commercial is a world of solvable problems. Most everybody has a trouble, but it is a small trouble easily and quickly remedied. EVERYBODY FRIENDLY It is a world without cruelty mayhem, inhabited by kindly people who help one another to live better by Just a bit of friendly advice. The repairman doesn’t charge toe harassed housewife JK.12 to fix her washing machine. "What kind of soapsuds have you been using?” he asks tolerant superiority. "Just switch to GRIME, and everything will be all right.” , V '■ The housewife does—right there and torn. Miracle of miracles, It works. If the repairman evefi bothers to give her s bill, he does it oft, camera. * . * :* - In the world of the TV commercial no one worries about toe hydrogen bomb, the Berlin crisis, or what to do about Cuba. No one is afflicted with cancer, heart dt- or a runaway ex4ueband who refuses to meet his alimony payments. There is ho divorce problem in ‘no naBy major tanging against anvils In their heed*-enough to give anyone tension. But they Just pop a bubbia pill in a g}aas of water, and right away they are relieved. FUN, FUN, FUN And they are gmerally such happy, happy people! They are always buying shiny new cam and riding off to roliddng beach parties, where the beer is always cold sbd foaming and plentiful and tie cigarettes filter out everything but the flavor. Nobody gets a cigarette cough. Lonely girls ■omen find new romance simply by switching to s new deodorant gray-hair dye. Lonely anoint toelr unruly locks with s special cream, sad immediately are turned into Irresistible Cassavas. That’s the wonderful thing about this best of all possible worida-nothing is really complicated. abroad if we exported not our explosive TV programs . ‘ cheery TV commercials. They'd rtww the nil of man-lad a world wo could aU asptro to live in together a world where all problems hsvu easy We’d have better relationsyoureeil? for the beet. Woubfo’t you like to buy* a o way ticket to there right i ...r-r—-3 Boy, 6, Dead hi Sand 'Died of Suffocation' GRAND RAPIDS (D-A missing 6-yaarotd bay, whose body was found Tuesday buried in a pile at sand near Ida rural Cedar Springs home, died of suffocation, a medical examiner said. 'dr * > The body at toe boy, Brace Was, was found about one foot beneath the surface of sand tram a basement excavation. Some police and Votenbacrs searched for him after Ms overnfcht abaenoe Regulate Fund Raisdrs MINNEAPOLIS (UPD-A new Minnesota law makes it illegal for a„dbaiity to solicit money hr the state without, registering first with the aeomtery of state. The regiatnttap also must tachido a[ torn in the United States foopm for business about 100 baton per week. Think Octo Presented by FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE Northern High School Auditorium , Showisfs fh JbSI-4iSt-7iBI-|s)8 r.M Tickets ea Sob at Bax Office Lesinski Eyes Congress Seat Will Decide This Week Whether to Seek to Succeed Machrowicz • a part of Pontiac since 1931 V * FREE PARKING AT BOTH STORES DOWNTOWN (Next to the Courthouse)-Open FRt. & M0N.9 to 9-Daily 9 to 6 • TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER—Open THURS., TRI., SAT, & MON. 9 to 9-HIES. & WED. 9 to 6 LANSING (AP) — Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski may announce Thursday that he will run for Congress. “I haven’t quite decided yet, but I will make up my mind this week — probably Thursday,” Lesinski told newsmen. In question it the 1st District congressional seat about to be vacated by Rep. Thaddeus M. Machrowicz of Hamtramck. Machrowics baa been nomtaat* •d by President Kennedy to me. seat Federal Judge Frank A. Picard at Bay City. The 30-year-old lieutenant governor, who has made no secret of the fact that he would like to go to Washington, discussed the problem with Gov. Swalnson Tuesday. “The governor had no objection to my running for Congress, lie merely told me it was a decision I would have to make for mysdl,” said Lesinski. “He had no strong feeling either way, just as long as it is a fair, clean election.” , During OSMUN’S great August To]>coat Sale. We admit it. Yoy save money (and we mean motfey) during this famous annual event, But that’s not ail you-saw. You save the time and patience that must always be spent when you’re bucking the Fall crowds who suddenly discover it’s chilly. Why get trampled by the herd? Mow that it’s warm, the heat’s off at Osmun’s..Ko frantic crowds ... Ho left-overs. Just the quiet purr of the air conditioning and a willing staff waiting to treat you like a rajah. All this plus Pontiac’s largest collection of topcoats in evgiystze; style, color andfabrieyottcan think , of. So think October. Come October, you’ll- thank Osmun’s for thinking of * . you in August. GROUP A Fin* quality tweeds, cheviots, shetlands, imported fabrics & zip-lined models. IN OCTOBER NOW 59.50 & 65.00 49.00 GROUP B A choice collection of beautifully tailored coats. Imported fabrics in raglan & set-in sleeve styles. - 69.50 & 75.00 59.00 GROUP C Blue chip labels from America's top notch tailoring centers. Jhe season's newest coloring & weaves. 79.50 & 85.00 69.00 GROU P D You'd hove no trouble Recognizing these famous names. Each coat is superlatively hand flnishecH 89.50 & 95.00 79.00 GROUP E 100% cashmere! Our finest coats.,. at bn unbelievable, saving. No easier time to own this masterpiece. 119.50 99.00 LAYAWAY? OF COURSE! A small deposit holds your coat, bon’t pay’til you’re ready to wear it , CHARGE IT? NATURALLY! Charge customers invited.’ 3 months to pay ... no carrying charges. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1061 THIRTY-SEVEN Yanks Lose to Twins, but Tigers Muff' Chance to Gain| — — - - •1 1 - l,■' .• n- Twins’ Ace Allows Only 4 Hiu PascualChecks Bombers, 3-0 By The Associated Prm It’i been a pretty tough aeaeon for the Minnesota Twine, but lor Camilo Pascual, their, right-handed ace, things have been good and tough, you might say. The curve-balling Cuban haa a 12-13 record with the eighth-place Twine, and he'e been good in every one of those dozen victories although moat of them have been tough to nail. In aix of the 12, Paacual haa pitched shutouts. Three of the other six have been by one run, another by two runs. Pascual hung up that 12th victory and sixth shutout by knocking off the Mew York Yankees Ski Tuesday night, checking the slugging American League leaders on four hits, aO singles. It was only the third victory over New York in 16 games for the Twins—and all three have been shutouts, two by Pascual. He tied Baltimore's Steve Barber for the major league shutout lead with this one and replaced 'Yankee Whitey Ford as the AL strikeout leader by fanning nine, three times putting a called third strike past Mickey Mantle. Despite the defeat, the Yanks retained a lty-game edge over Detroit as the Chicago White Sox ended the second place Tigers’ winning streak at five, 4-3. The Los Angeles Angels swept a pair of 6-5 decisions from Baltimore, taking the second in 11 innings. Cleveland defeated Washingon 6-4 and Boston beat Kansas City 6-4. Pascual, who became a first-time poppa earlier in the .day, put away his fifth career shutout over the Yankees with a flourish. He struck out Bobby Richardson and Tony Kubek in the ninth, but Roger Maria was safe on a two-base error. Pascual then fanned Mantle for the final out. That extended his shutout streak through 20 innings and gave him 179 strikeouts. Mantle was l-for-4 and his 46-home run total leaves him just one game ahead of Babe Ruth's record 60 pace in 1927. Maris, 0-for-3, is eight games ahead at Ruth with his 51. Ralph Terry (11-2) was loser, after winnihg six in a An unearned run in the third, on Lenny Green’s single, and error and Billy Martin’s sacrifice fly, ended Terry’s shutout string at 24 1-3 innings. Earl Battey’s two-run double wrapped it up in the sixth before a crowd of 40,118 that put the Twins over the million mark in their inaugural season. Jim Gentile belted his 41st and 42nd home runs for the OrlOles in the opener, but the Angels took it and Steve Bilko then brought the Angels from behind in the 11th Inning of the second game and gave the victory to- Eli Grba (6-11) in relief. Barber (15-10) and Billy Hoeft (4-4) were the losing pitchers. The Indians came from behind I six-run rally, over-hauling at, Washington (frith six runs in A’a and beating Ed Rakow (2-6) seventh, five unearned. Bob Allen (341) was the winner and Mike Garcia (0-1) the ioaer, both in relief. The Red Sox also won with a on Frank Malzonrs two-out, two-run single in the ninth. Chet Nichols (3-2) was the winner in relief. NEW YORK MINNESOTA itanur p 66 6 6 TMata M666 Tvtata 116** a—Popped out for Boyer In Kh; b— : Lined out tor Terry In Mh. H New Y.rk 0M ON 006-0 *? E—Howard. Kubok, Onen. FO-A—Mow York 34-11 Mlnneeota 17.10. DP—Ver-oaBta and Iftlmi Martin. YMStHil and Klllebrew. LOB—New Yett'6. tUs-neeota 1. JB—Battey, SB—Oreen. SF— ■ a xassao iiii SK/V Gentile lb ISIS Bilko lb —M d * 6 11 AverlU s l S I i S Runt cf . 3 0 0 # Yoet lb dFUUsy l 0 0 0 Bridle, ft Leu e I S t • Spring p Breeding ft I 0 0 i aRice •Thr’n’h* w 1 AAA li tamas Tetele 43 116 1 Total* 4141 *—Singled lor Spring m Kb; b—B for Rice in 6th; (—flit by pitch I Fowler In ath: d- Struck out (or Fol In Mh; c—Grounded out for Breeding ft_____ LE-bX"i_______. ________ 1 W I tsMbnirl 34-4. (OSS ______ winning run ,cored) Loo Angeiei 33-6. AT Phetefe* DP-Koppe. Bride, and BUkp; Hunt and HAPPY PASCUAL—Minnesota Twins pitcher Camilo Pascual aSbriS£'1*HK- (left) gets his cigar lighted by catcher Earl Battey after his 34) xopps shutout of the New York Yankees last night in the Twin Gties. Pascual not only celebrated his four-hit victory, but was happy over the birth of a son yesterday. Battey knotted in two runs in the 6th inning with a double. v ■ a ex as so Hoeft (L, 4-1) ... 101-1 U 64 REP^^wT. s ■ l o * Orb* (W.l-U) ... 1 S 1 I . . HBP—By Sprint (OentUe). By H**n (Wagner). U—Klnnamon, Hurley, f-'-— ty. Honochlck. T—1:16; A—A IB. Ryne Duren (6-11) in the sixth busing. Home runs by Joe Koppe Goegan in Wings' Fold DETROIT (AP) — Defenseman Pete Goegan signed his contract Tuesday with the Detroit Red Wings for the Rational Hockey League season. Goegan, 27, a three-season veteran had his best ye*r in the NHL last*season with fiflf goals and 29 assists. Final Home Exhibition Friday Night Cards May Give Lions Answers Coach George Wilson hopes solve a mystery Friday night when the Detroit Lions meet the St Louis Cardinals in 4th exhibition game of. the season at Tiger Stadium. fi .fi fi • The questions to be answered _re — Were thb Lions as good as they showed in walloping the Browns, 35-14? Are they just ball blub as s hown by « good first half and poor second half in beat- squeeze bunt by winner Steelers, 17-14? Or, are they as bad as the Eagles made them look last week? It may have been just an off-night for the Lions. Or it may have been that the Lions received too generous praise. W Wilson expects to leant the answer against the Cardinals — team with plenty of problems of their own. Pop Ivy. the St. Loots roach, lem. But the Lions’ problem pretty much has been resolved by t part. Ivy has Sam Etcheverry, a legend in Canada where he played nine seasons of pro ball but just a 31-year-old rookie in the tougher NFL. Etcheverry had been counted to lead the Cardinals from their long doormat status. But he came up with arm trouble and just now i getting over it. The brunt of the Cards’ quarter-backing has been done by a promising rookie, Charley Johnson, from New Mexico State. He’ll star Best 3-Year Old Trotters Primed tor Hamblelonian "bUQUOIN, 01. (AP)—Thirteen horses, the cream of the natkxi’i 3-year-old trotters, were reported in prime condition for today’ 36th performance of the Hamfaie-tonian. * * fi A record crowd of 30,000 was expected for American harness racing's foremost classic, with 3131,573 in prize monef. The opening heat starts at 2 pm. EST. * fi ♦ ‘ The crown, and first prize of 379,364, will go to the first trotter Patriots Trim 5 Players AMHERST, Mass. (AP) — The Boston Patriots of the American Football League trimmed. five players from their roster Tuesday, including two of last year's regular starters., Cornerman Chuck Sbonta and eui Oscar Lofton, first-stringers oil the team that finished last to the Eastern Division, were cut along with Bob Soltis, a defensive back, rookie linebacker Dick Mueller. of Kentucky and guard John Korn para, picked up as a free agent after spending last season with the Lot Angeles AFL team. The Boston raster now to down to 38. , f to win two mile heats on the one-mile oval at the Duquoin State Fairgrounds.. Most driven were prepared, for more than heats because of the speed ready shown this year by the jority of the entrants. The field of 13 starters announced Sunday is the smallest Hambletonian field since 1955. ★ fi fi Most of the trainer-drivers consider Caleb, Matastar and Duke Rodney the horses to (heat. Caleb drew the No. 1 starting position, next to the rail in the first tier of 10 horses. Caleb will be driven by John Simpson, who drove Hickory Smoke to a Hambletonian victory In 1957. driven by veteran Hairy Fownall, also won a rail position, directly behind Caleb, In the second tier of three horses. Duke Rodneyb driven by Eddie Wheeler, drew the eighth position in the front tier. Spectator, piloted by Ralph Baldwin, and Harlan Dean, driven by Jimmy Arthur, also were re-| garded as strong challengers during calculations earlier this week; \ W it ' it Other horses in the field are Speedy Princess, Frostbite, Meadow Farr, Claire Sampson, Medal-Behave, Pack Hanover and lOrbtter. Sugar Ray Signs to Fight Greaves in Detroit Arena DETROIT ((A—former middleweight champion Ray Robinson signe&today to fight Wilfie Greaves in Detroit's new convention arena Sept. 25. The 10-round bout will be the third staged by the Detroit Boxing Club in the 12,000-seat riverfront arena. Robinson, 41. will be returning to his native city pa fight for the first time in several years. The old champion still is hopeful of getting one more crack at the erbwn he held five times. In his professional career of nearly 20 years, Robinson has won 149 fights, 92 by knockouts. Greaves Is .25 and bolds thd; Canadian middleweight title. He is a native of Edmonton, Alta., but currently fights out of Detroit. against the Lions, but Etcheverry is expected to see considerable action lor the first time in the Cardinals’ three games. He has perked up the team when he’s in there,” said Ivy. The Cards’ pre-season opener wft s 3*-7 triumph over the Toronto Argonauts, not a difficult test. St. Louis then loot Its two games against NFL competition, 81-16 to Gram Bay sod 84-14 to Pittsburgh. * St. Louis’ biggest blow so far has been the loss of John David Crow, who broke the dub's rushing record last fall. Crown broke his leg in the Green Bay "game and will miss six weeks or more of the season. Joe Childress, ja six-year veteran, is running la Crow’s spot Game time la 8:60 p.m. Friday and there are to&ts available to all sections. NFL CAMP NOTES The New York Giants trimmed their National Football League roeter to 44 Tuesday by cutting four, rookies. The four are Glenfieid Knight, an end from Shaw U.; Dale Rems, tackle from Purdue; Allen Webb, halfback from Arnold, Com.; and Francis Mariott, quarterback from Troy, Ala. State Teachers. The Baltimore Colts cut three rookies and two veterans Tuesday to get down to toe current National Football League limit of 43 play-J era. Cast adrift were .halfbacks Don Kern and Ed Kovac, linebacker John Guzik, defensive back Laur-ien Stapp and fullback Dallas Gar- 300 Wins Now Seem Dim DETROIT (AP)—Early Wynn, who had hoped tq become one of illustrious 30(^game winners this year, is through for » and i will leave for home today, the Chicago White Sox announced. 41, has had a i for several weeks and rejoined the dub Saturday after a two-week rest. But Dr. Anthony Gu-zauslct, club physician, advised Wynn to return to Venice, Fla.,-and rest his arm until next son. Wynn has won 292 games to his major league career that started in 1939 and had an 8-2 record this season. Loss to Chisox on Error Hurts Bengal Advance Schoffing Still Happy With 'Ruf Should It Continu* That Way DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Tigers—victims of a game of giveaway and flubbed opportunity— are in a rut. It’s a wonderful rut •s far as Manager Bob Scheffing is concerned. And if the Tigers May there it should mean the pennant. Scheffing shattered the somber atmosphere of the Tiger club-Tueqday night %alter his team Mew an excellent chance to gain a game on the first-place New York Yankees. The Tigers lost 4-3 to the Chicago White Sox, losing the game on an unearned run. The Yankees lost 34) to Minnesota but retained their 1H game lead in the American League. < Or it it "We won five in a row and lost lie, then we won another five in a row and lost one,” Scheffing philosophized, casting aside any gloom at losing. If we win the next five row now, I’tt be happy.” Schefflng’s point was clear and mfident. Included in the Tiger’ next five games are three with the Yankees. The manager maintained that Sept. 5—a week from Tuesday-the key date for the Tigers. By then the three-game Yankee series will be history. ■ fi ★ fi A three-game series with third-place Baltimore also will be over. “That’s the date,” said Scheffing. “If we’re still this close on Sept. 5, we can win it. Then well have 23 games left and 19 are with second division teams and four with the Yankees. "The way the schedule’s set up e can go the rest of the way with just four pitchers. We have only two doubleheadere left and that’a a help. "Of course, later on I might have to pick another date, dr it ★ The Tiger players sat around with their heads in their hands after two infield errors permitted the White Sox to end the latest Tiger five-game winning streak. Then one Tiger regular perked up and said: 'Still think the Yankees are g tog to win it? I don’t. We are. The player asked to refrain anonymous. Shortstop Chico Fernandez’ error was critical as the White Sox scored their winning run with two outs in the seventh. Pitcher Ray Herbert had reached third base lint baseman Norm Cash’ throwing error. He scored whe Fernandez let Roy Sievers’ routine grounder roll through his legs. Schefing defended Chico. "The ball didn't come up the way {Chico thought It would,” ho ■aid. “We gave them one nut. But let’s not forget tola—if It hadn't been for Chico we woulda’t even liave been In the game. He knocked ta two rent, didn’t hot” Fernandes had two singles and a triple in three at-bats. He drove to the Tigers’ first run single in the fourth and Mike Roarke's following double put them ahead 24). Fernandez' triple scored Rocky Co(avito in the sixthf when > Tigers tied it 3-3. The White Sox will again play the Tigers here tonight. Jim Bun-ning (15-9) will pitch for Detroit against Juan Pizarro (16-5), CHICAGO DETROIT •krSM el town rf 4 16 OWood 3b Fox ft >11 1 Bruton cf Tiger Averages gglF-HRININHMRIHi ft—McAullffc. C*»h, Pemandex. FG-A-Chlcago 37-6. Detroit 17-11. LOft 'Chtceta 0, Detroit 6. SB—Fox. Roark*. CatariM. ....404 100 140 .103 IT TO .. ■ 471 IIS 117 .306 ST ....hi 6> m Jn i Maxwell 523. : Bertola '. JO IS .364 I 12 >6 (4 .340 I If .366 31 M .314 | MVP to Be Player-Coach VANCOUVER (AP> -Phil Maloney, Buffalo Bison center who was voted moot valuable player In the American.'Hockey League last year, was hired Tuesday as playing coach of the Vancouver, Canucks at the Western League. ..Ill FCT. HR I ..Is a to JU T , . 10 I t to M 1 . 67 • 11 .164 1 I ' 4J 3 f iw I 1 s ii -.m • 4 37 I I .136 • • 46 6 - I .074 t -1 0 .000 0 I lM-MSIMSa ap rktww FATAL DATE-rDetroit Tiger manager Bob Scheffing points to Sept.. 5, which he says is the key date in the Tigers' bid to overtake toe New York Yankees in the race for the American League pennant, and wonders what the situation will be then. That’s the day the Tigers finish six gamed in five days against the Yankees and the third place Baltimore Orioles. * Johnson Retains NBA Title on Split Decision Cleveland ~ tan 3 0 13 Cole vlto If 6 6 6 OCaeh lb ttstmuro 3b-«« 3 t 6 • Fern'dei M ( 4 0 1 0 bMaxwell ■ 4 0 6 6 Bertol* ft I 0 1 0 Roarke c 4 3 3 6 cAlttOtk 0 0 6 0 d Morton Larv p eOeborne 17 4 I S Mata 1 i; *—saertOod for Lary ta SEATTLE* (AP)—Harold Johnson, still the world light-heavy-weight boxing champion after 15 bruising rounds against Eddie Cotton, started a two-month vacation today by visiting the naval base where he fought his first profight in 1943 while a sailor In the United States Navy. fi . -fi fi Johnson, the Philadelphia boxing master, retained his NBA title Tuesday night by a split decision over Cotton, Seattle tool and die maker whose long reach troubled ie champion throughout the bout. Despite this, however, Johnson successfully defended a second Player Pushes PGAEarnings Up to $60,401 DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) - Gary Player of South Africa pushed his 1961 earnings to $60,401 this week and increased Ms lead in the race for money winning hogors of the year among professional golfers. Player picked up $4,600 in the American Golf Classic at Akron, Ohio, Sunday. He tied Jay Hebert at the end of 72 holes but finished second when Hebert won the sudden death playoff. , ♦ fi * \ Arnold Palmer, leading money winner of 1960, added $2,600 to his total by finishing fourth at Akron. He remains in second place behind Player with official 1961 winnings of $55,499, according to figures released from PGA headquarters Tuesday. . Palmer now has placed fifth or better In 12 of the 21 tournaments in which he has participated this year. He has won five of them. Player, who took' first place it Masters Championship and other * tournaments, has 10 finishes of fifth or better in 24 events; time the crown be won earlier this year by knocking out Ji Bowdry. It was his fourth fight i in seven months and it brought Mm the greatest puree, a check tar $90,000, in his 18 yean of boxing. ★ fi fi That combination decided Johnson, who weighed 173 to the challenger’s 111, to take a vacation. i’s right brought an egg-sized lump over Cotton’s left eye in the eighth round and a cut on the lid of his right eye during the \ By the time the 13th came around, Cotton’s left eye was closed but Ms sticking left jab kept him out of real clanger. There were no knockdowns in the bout that received neither dio nor television treatment and drew 4,004 spectators to the Seattle Pacific Coast League baseball park. Receipts were estimated at $32,000. “He's one of the smartest box's I’ve ever met,” said Johnson ! Cotton, who suddenly found himself rated No. 4 among the contenders after whipping Johnny Halafihi and Mike Holt to New Zealand after 13 yean of obscurity to the Seattle area. ^ ' ike to meet again,” murmured Cotton as his handlers held ice packs to eyes to his dressing room. "It would be another good fight' Hie bout was s virtual draw through the first 10 rounds. Then Johnson took charge although a Cfttton flurry near the end of the 13th gave the partisan crowd rea-i for hope. At the end, judge Norman Kunde and Referee Junes Rondeau had It 167-145 for Johnson while Judge Sam Heller voted tor Cotton. 148-144. The AP card favored Johnson, 148-143. Others in the top five money inners are Doug Sanders, $48,-?9; ’Bill Casper Jr., $33,463; and Jay Hebert, $31,718. West Suburban Lt Registration Thursday Registrations for the West Suburban Boy's Club All-American Little League Football teams will be accepted at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the organization’s headquarters to Keego Harbor. fi fi- ★ Only boys between the ages of and 13 ahd accompanied by' ft parent will be allowed to register. Youngsters from West Bloomfield and Waterford townships and Pontiac will be eligible to participate. PRESS BOX The sixth MaccaMsb Gaines for Jewish athletes opened today to Tel Aviv, Israel, with representatives from 26 nations competing. fi fi fi Assistant coaches ■ have been moved around by Western Michigan head coach Merle Schkmer. Top varsity assistant Dick Raklo-vits has changed places with fresh mentor Tom Slaughter. * fi fi Sugar Jim Hen#y, former net-minder with the New York Rang-wifl- coach the Toledo Mercury* of the International Hockey League. ★ ♦ ★ John Van Blerck of Royal Oak was among 10 of 39 starters who quit by the nine-mile mark of the Canadian National ExMbttion’a 15-mile race at Toronto Monday. AMKUCAH LEAGUE 30 ft JR ft CtartlaaS 6, WMtilMtffli 4. night Mbuwaota 1. Htv York 6. night '-‘“SO A Dotrott J. night IS, Knnaa* City A night tfttn OAMU InnS (BnU 6-14) >nhtar 34). ami York (Stafford II .-Inal 7-11). aMM Chicago (Ptaarrn 164) —vC ______-ft. m Baltimore (Ftahor Mil Ml 6-7). right nfeissart sc Chicago at Dotrrit How York ri Mnnenota Ctatroland ri Waahhigtcn. right >Wft*aft*yL _______________ _ Louta 3-3, rttUndofftl* 4-4. twt-rigM (TnctauH 3, Ftltahiygh a night —*— * — l right, u ____(inStahl ail 64 Philadelphia (■outran 3-13)7 right nclnnril (Purkey 14-6) at Ptttaborgb (Sturdivant 3-1). night raORSDAYVMiEDVLK Title Defender Keeps Winning in Metro Event . Mrs. Midge Govs, the defending champion, and Mrs. John Menetee met today to the aemi-finals of th$ annual Women’s Metropolitan Golf Association match pity tournament at Ptam Brook. The other semifinal duel . paired Mrs. William Rodgers and Mrs. William Falco. Mrs. Rodgers, who won the WMGA’s-56-hMe medal play own July 9$ at Suimybrook, advanced Tuesday with a 1-up victory over Miss Phyllis Chandler. Mrs. Cova defeated Miss Anne Salisbury, 4-3. Ito yesterday’s other quarter-final matches, Mrs. Menefee eliminated Mrs. Charles Larson, 54, and Mrs. Falco ousted Mrs. Charles Fox, also by a 5-4 margin. County Caddies Among 32 Evans Scholarships GOLF, III (AP) ~ Thirty-two MicMgan caddies today were imed recipients of four-year Evans College Scholarships by the Golf Association of Michigan. Seventeen of the winners will attend the University 'ot Michigan, with toe other 15 going to Michigan State. Winners going to Michigan: David J. Parks, Royal Oak; James M. Rettig, Clawson; Daniel K. Pierce, Birmingham; Stephen Molitoris in, Dearborn; Lawrence D. Harris, Detroit; VJncent E. Koehler II, Detroit; Richard L. Lavoie, Detroit; Stephen A. Alexander, Berkley; Robert F. Luppino, Wyandotte; Raymond If. Cieslak, Detroit; Paul S. Papich, Groaae Point* Woods; Daniel T. Zapton, Dearborn; Lawrence R. Abram-czyk, Dearborn; John H. McKaig, Detroit; Brace J. Romant, Detroit; Frederic E. Devendorf, Grand Blanc; and John M. Groan, Detroit. Winners goig to Michigan State: Kurt M. Prescott, Oak Park; Michael D. Y a mold, Pontiac; Richard H. Warmolts, Wyoming; John Buchheister, Detroit; Gary R-Thompson, Lansing; Robert C. Do-molewicz Inkster; Robert W. Sigler, Dearborn; Lawrence M. Dra-gich, Detroit; Martin J.'Kom, Detroit; Gary F. Price, Detroit; Kenneth E. Andrews, Walled Lake; David R. Tuffley, East Detroit: Marvin J. Rossnagel, Warren: James A. Capistrant, Pontiac; and David J. Saakovich, Berkley. THE PALMER METHOD by Arnold Polmr Lire .....It 7 3.16 ns 366 00 30 III • F^rii if 13.U ssi.3 its ns im ■tnife ..... Jt 1 Ml 117.1 US 67 ft 64 Blta* .... • 6 3J1 134.3 116 (6 66 ta, Aguirre .... 14 lit 46 M it 36 ft] ' •trior KITS HI toft 16 36 ■HU ......I I UlWlliS ft 77 ....till 6.3 7 3 1 -is) Trill 66 46 8J6 lift 1144 463 374 664! ’tactaeoo iriotao* |4«nn I mSHK* mow WTO IH A OOOO I. NMAM-IHI MOST M TAUT ACTIONS, ft- run a mam, oca* ■ tm£ iau is smjac. this, or COUHf, CONCHMTHt HZMO t» OOTKf Wit—W4C OSMN or aw 04A*, thc sioft, me DtSTANCf. taw a ooao took at me OKU KIWttN V0U6 6AU AMS IM HOU, AS I AM OOINO. * IM OSAR UOOU SUCk, .YOU Will If KITING WITH IM GtAIN Ah® 7M SAli Will SOU. MOM HULY. toi&ty-Kight THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 30. 1981 SSL KocsisQualifying Leader M&JWtUWiA (AP) — Victoria Palmer, a 16-yearold Phoenix, Arli.. laaa, won the VS Girl’* Lawn Tenni* Stogies Championship Tuesday, defeating top seeded BBUe Jean Moffitt, if Lm Beach. OSHt. SJ. M. Mr Mias Palmar carried the game with severe lew ehotmaldng to eftast the dramatic closing mail of Miss Moffitt 14 to 44 to the deciding set on the etrength of ehoch volleying and warhead play. Ides Palmer, who the tide 0< action hy running 12 straight points from 2-1, 1540, to 5-1, readied match point in the 10th game by drawing the Gatt-fomian wide to the left. Miss Moffitt saved the match point by forcing Miss Palmer to miss the sideline with a forehand drive. She banged shot against the net tape, then hit ova? the baseline to put Miss Palmer at match point for the second time sod she didn’t let it get away. Rain delayed the match 31 minutes. Footing became slippery and both contestants put soda over their tennis shoes better traction. but He May Bypass Event ANN ARBOR Kocsis of Royal Oak again has qualified for the UA Amateur Golf Championship, but the veteran links star may not file Us entry. , Kocsis, six-time Michigan Amateur champion and winner of numerous other golfing accolades. rialnn he has loot his touch on the greens and may bypass tbs In ths trials. It marks the lfth Urns that tha 46-year-old Draper has quaUflad lor the USGA Pete Green of Orchard Lake, C. A. Smith ni of Newnuun of Smith art wa at Michigan State University while rifled a one-under-par 11-tMtt BUb Country Hub to set the pace In Mhsie aeetteaal quafi-tying rounds. Three members of the ywth corps and another Red Run veteran Joined Kocsis to complete the five qualifying places allotted to this section. Second Line Pitchers Help Tigers-Redlegs' The other veteran is hulking provide Tom Draper of Birmingham, who I find 71-74—145 to t * R&nED Ml 4 WHEELS INCLUDING LABOR AND MATCH!Ait •UAtANHED IN WRIfNM-»SO,000 MILES OM1 TEAM HOUR SERVICE ALL CREDIT CARDS HONORED SALE CUSTOM- COATED DAHYt-7 OPEN SON. 84 973 ORCHARD LAKE RD. I *•* tel ofIdt^aph U, Mis rmqi GOLD CREST MUFFLERS • BRAKES Green. Is a 21-year-old senior at the University of /forth Carolina. By DSN OLAN NEW YMUC (AP)—First rate performances by secon pitchers an 'smoothing the rocky road to major league pennants for the Cincinnati Reds and De- ning and Don Moasi hafh been carrying tha pitching burden tor Detroit and Joey Jay, Bob Pur-key and Jim O’Toole for the Reds the contenders are also being helped by important victories Without Ken Johneon, they obtained from Toronto of the International League six weeks ago, tha Reds would not be in such an envlabia positidn in the National League race, 3Vfc games in front of second-place Loo Angeles. ~ * * * And without the recently effective showings Of Paul Foytack and Ramie Kline, the Tigers likely would be further than 1% games behind the league-leading New York Yankees in the American League. The acquisition of Johnson was master stroke by Bill DeWttt, Cincinnati's general manager. The fast-balling right-hander has won five games and lost only two. He's bea|en Los Angries, San Francisco, St. Louis, Milwaukee and Philadelphia in starting roles, pitching complete games against the Cards and Phillies. earned run average for 51 1-3 inqings is a nifty 3.10 and he’s fsmied 29 while walking oily 13. He produced his most important triumph last Sunday, beating the Dodgers S-3 to hike the Rods’ lead to its present 3% smss. The' odd feature of Johnson’s previous big league record was he was almost strictly a reliever. With Kansas City in 1900 started only six games and came out of the bullpen 36 times. He had a 5-10 record and a 4.28 With the A’s the early part of this season, Johnson had only ont start in aix appearances and lost all four decisions. He was demoted to Toronto In May and compiled a 5-5 record for the Maplq Leafs. Labor Day Special! B Thursday • Friday •Saturday YOU'LL SAVE A BIG $10—$15 PER TIRE! DON'T BUV A SINGLE TIRE OR A SET UNTIL YOU SEE THESE BIG BARGAINS! GUARANTEE* FACTORY SECONDS Premium Treud Depth WHITEWALLS TUBELESS dnfes. took M place in tha trials with IMt-MB. Smith, varsity golfer at M8U, and Groan tied at 14T. • A Smith, reigning GoU Association of Michigan champion and semifinalist ih the 1961 State Amateur, had a 73-74 scorecard. Green, finalist in the 1960 North and South Amateur, also posted 73-74. Green lost Ms first match Mat year’s UB. Amateur at St nRM- If Kocsis declines to enter the tournament, the 5th spot will _ to Lansing’s Dave (Bud) Rentier, who finished 6th with 74-75—149. Kocsis, who awaa nearly 41 different patten, can’t get the feel of things on the greens. "If I had played two years ago the way I played today, I would have shot 1647," Kocsis said. “I’ve loot my putting touch entirely. I know what I'm dotafc wrong, but I haven’t been able to overcome Foytack, twice e 15-game winner ftxv ttie Tigers, bed a sore arm moat of last season and was on the disabled list for n month. He finished with s 2-13 mark. This season, he had only complete games in his first 13 starts, winning seven and losing eight games. However, in his last two starts Fotyack went all the way in whipping Cleveland 6-1 on a flve h i t tar and Washington 10-1 in en-hit effort. In the two games, Foytack had a combined total of 12 strikeouts and only three beset on balls. 17 ALL sms on piici____________ 7.50x14, 1.00x14, U0xl4, 6.70x15, 7.10x15, 7.40x15 BUDGET TERMS FREE MOUNTING A PHONE CAU CAN OPEN YOUR RUD0ET ACCOUNT ONLY TAKES A FEW MM-UTES- CALL FE 5-6131 AND ASK FOR HI BET Boat! FOUR WHEELS Spoeiol Toooi«y Woiaooioy *5 CARTER TIRE COMPANY 370 S. SAGINAW FE 5-6136 Kocsis went to the finals of the USGA Amateur five years ago and bowed to two-time dufaip Harvie "Ward. This year’s National Amateur tourney is scheduled Sept 11-16 at historic Pebble Beach Country Chib In Del Monte, Calif. .1I-1S-I4I I___ . ........I......71-14—14* Iha Nnmin, Wain at IHUa . 7B-74-M* IVto Oram, Orchard bake ....O-H-MT - —------■--- .73-74—M" •74-74-M ____________ ..tmUm tun Oemeron, Oakland MW 40-71—U ChuckJNtvten, Barton HlUl . .73-73—113 Oene Mir, Plat Lake ... ~ob Coder. Jeekeen ... Hunt, Or ecu .74-70—II .77-74—U _____nwuT'haw * Daw MacHorf, i—J .Prank Connolly. Oowanlo . 73-74-117 Den Cochran Jr.. Indlanvood wMmUf Ray Palmer, Oroeae Uc ... 73-30-140 MlkC Conroy, Oakland HUlc ..74-10-110 ----Dahl, Oakland H1IU . 34-77—130 __ Ahern, Bed Hun.30-73—130 Don foe*. Pium Hollo* ....73-33-11# John MUM. Oakland HUM ...*1-73-140 Her Bnrfln, Oreeec Da ..... 4440-14S Jim Sheridan. Orchard Lake *1-10—1*1 Mekerd Kins, larton HUM IM3-13J ilf,Saxa5aw«.S:;t:)S Smf^Urn!,^nto^Hertiir ft-§ SV^HTHir.:::^|U Carl SUaeea, Beaton Karb. 40-noca BUI Vina, Block Rlvor ——-Lei WcaSrev, Lonatns Tom Carmichael, tn'vood Stan LtaSaaa. ted Man John Drtwr, Atlac Valley 33—withdrew OYER AND OUT—Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Maury Wills (30) flies over the top of Chicago Cubs' A1 Heist as the latter attempted AT Phetefai unsuccessfully to steel second in the eighth Inning Tuesday at Chicago. The umpire is Augie DonateUi. The Dodgers woo, 2-L Richards Offers to Finish Oriole Season LOS ANGELES (AP) - Paul Richards, heading for a as general manager of the National League’s new Houston dub, oaid today he will go along with the Baltimore Orioles if and when they ask him to finish out the current season i Richards, who took over the helm of the Orioles in IBM altar leaving the Chicago White flat, announced his resignation as Orioles' field manager just before the club's doubleheader here with the Angels. Hie announcement came as no surprise. It eras rumored tor several weeks he was considering an attractive bffer from Houston, which begins play In an expanded National League next season. A month ago, The Associated Press disclosed that Richards would leave Baltimore to go to Houston. Richards, aratoundng he was resigning, said the contract with HoBston had not been finalised that Houston officials had agreed to his general demands. “I have asked that three additional conditions be included in the contract and al yet the Houston people haven’t a| them." he said, A spokesman for the new Texas team, borrever, seemed fairly certain Richards and the chib could get together. “We should have an announcement within 48 hours if Richards is relieved from his contract at Baltimore," the spokes- lan said. Contacted in New Ytx*. Joeeph Iglehart, Orioles’ board chairmen, **M he intended to writ Richards to remain with file Orioles until the season is completed. I'm sure he wifi," Iglehart ■aid. Informed of this, Richards said he would stay with Baltimore if requested to do so. Baltimore, Oriole president and general manager, Lee Mac-phafl, said he had talked with Richards about Us resignation earlier Tuesday and had asked him to wait until October before severing his ties with the Birds. "We would like him to stay, and he he* indicated he would do so if we request it," MacPhail said. 'So it appears likely that he will •toy.” MacPhail said a formal nouncement probably would not be made until alter be talks further with Richards Thursday when the team returns to Baltimore from a aeries against fiw Angels. Richards has confirmed being offered a contract, under which he would serve as general manager. Among his initial duties would be fiw selection of Houses first major league roster tag a National League player draft in October, and hiring of a field manager and front office The contract reportedly would run through 1966 and provide an annual salary of 180,000 or more. Richards' contract srith the Orioles runs through the 1963 season and carries an annual salary of $50,000. Planning something special this Labor Day weekend? Why not serve the best? Schenley whiskies are older whiskies Age makes the difference. The older the whiskey the better the whiskey.The straight whiskies in these Schenley brands are aged 2*6 years longer than competitive brands that cost the same. Union Ousted From Tourney 00 Local 564. Pontiac’s 1961 Class A City League b a s e b a 11 champion, called it quits for another year today after bowing out of the district playoffs Tuesday night at Mansfield Park in Detroit. The local union team aboerhed a 164 shellacking from fiw Data* Pepri Goto dab foot night to lose toe straight In the best-of-three tourney. The Motor City outfit whipped the CIO last Saturday night at Jaycee Park, then rain delayed the two-team district event for two days. Throe CIO pitchers were rapped for 16 hits with taro players getting throe apiece and live others each me Hug a pair, Pepsi broke the game wide open in the sixth inning with a five-run spree after die CIO had rallied to trail ky only oqe run, 74. , Herman Bfafeep, Aady Miles-doa, Chuck Graves and Jim Bay haried for fiw Ualoa squad with BWwp taking the low. Nkk Nairn aad Jerry HU1 each made two Mta for the losers. Doug Ferguson, Wes Klewield and Ron Roman pitched for Pepsi with Rozman gaining the win. They allowed the CIO eight safeties. The Detroit team now enters the Michigan Amateur baseball tournament at Battle Creek over the Labor Day weekend. Herrington Pitches Playoff No-Hilter John Herrington huriaf a no-hitter last night to lead Spencer Floor Covering to a 64 win over Five Spot and into the championship finals, of Waterford softball's American League playoffs. WWW Ftoe Spot gained the championship game against unbeaten Spencer by ousting. Stroll's from the double elimination tourney 2-1 ih the second game. Five Spat and Spencer will dash next Wednesday far the crows. Herrington Fanned 11 on fiw way to his no-hitter. He allowed one walk and the only other Five Spot player to reach base was aided by an error. Spencer put fiw game away with four runs in the first inning. „ Earl Bruake's homer with taro out in the last of the eighth and* first extra inning gave Five Spot its upset triumph over Stroh's.' Norm Jennings outpitehed Andy James in A battle of five-hitters. IMPORTED O.F.C.— V years CHAMPION BOURBON—S SCHENLEY RESERVE-100 SIR JOHN —10 year old IMPORTED O.f.C. 12 YEAR •Id. IMS tow Canarian 1* 2 yoor sM Soar mash Straight month oM straight wMsMas straight whiskies btandod with OLD-Twtco tha ago ol loading years oldof than othor loading BOurbon-2 to 4 yoors OMor Msndad wMi gain nautral spir- grain neutral spirits. CompaU- CanodMnsyat coots HUM m Canadians, yat coats no mora than competitors it soma pnea. f-its. 2 to 4 yaar aga advantage tar, 4 years .CM. costs maw. tt'3 tn»y tha Snoot d'"* $590 $461 $420 $503 $825 ‘ l/t ML V* m- MS ML 3/3 U3. «/• at. SCHENLEY-THE HOUSE OF AGED WHISKIES THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1961 THIRTY-NINE Pontiac Woman Win* Suburban Golf Title The Women's Suburb*!) Golf Association has concluded the 1961 season with Us annual (an luncheon at Glen Oaks Golf Chib. League play wffl resume next May. ★ ★ ★ Low gross champion for this year was Un. Syd Ayles of Pontiac while low net honors went to Mrs. Deimar Cowing of Birmingham. Other flight winners were: A—Mrs. George Schade, Detroit; B—Mrs. Audrey Herman. Livonia; C—Mrs. OanuMacorglndale, Detroit. i £ ★ ★ Officers were elected for the 1982 season. They indude: Bits. Frank S ml t h,. Birmingham, president; Mrs. Charles Cunningham, Garden City, vice president; Mrs. .Arch Simpson, Royal Oak, treasurer; Mrs. Frank Hendricks, Farming-ton,-secretary. M-MSU Game on Television Regional Viewers Also Will See Teams Battle Different Foes DETROIT if) — The Michigan-Michigan Slate game, long a television hot potato that brought considerable legislative discussion, will be on national television this year. REBUILT MOTORS Red leg Hurling Big Surprise The official announcement that the Oct. 14 football game at Ann Arbor will be televised American Broadcasting Co.'s NCAA game of the week will be made early next month, it was learned today. Michigan’* game with Ohio State New. S State's game at Minnesota 4 wffl he seen vision, it was teamed. ABC previously announced Its television schedule for the football season, but left several weeks blank to determine what Big Ten games it would show. U.S. Davis Cup tennis Player Is Suspended Carry Back at Balmont By The Associated Pram There was no pennant fever among die Cincinnati Reds their fans in early season, but weren’t so black that Manager Fred Hutchinson didn't” held out some hope. ■We could do all -right" said Hutch, ‘if we could get some pitching. We need it, because we don’t score many runs.” That will give you some idea of Just how much of a surprise team the Reds are in that National League race. Not only are they second in run totals (with 610 to San Francisco’s 627), but the pitching staff leads the league In shutouts. With southpaw Jim O’Toole and reliever Jim Maloney combining for Cincinnati's 10th whitewash job of the season, the Reds knocked off Pittsburgh 34) Tuesday night and retained s 3%-game lead over setxnd place LoS Angeles. The Dodgers, after splitting a four-game .'series at' Cincinnati, stayed close with a 2-1 victory at] Chicago as Sandy Koufax limited the Cuba to a pair of singles. Milwaukee replaced San Francisco in third place, seven games 7-6 to 13 innings on Ed Mathews’ home run. St. Louis made it eight a row with a 5-4 victory at Philadelphia in the opener of a twi-night pair, but the Phils took the nightcap 44. The Reds won their third in a mr with a sixth-inning run at singles by Vada (14-9), who gave up all of theierror by Koufax leading off the Bucs* six hits, by striking out seventh. Ron Santo singled for the pinch-hitter Rocky tMsbn with the other hit with two out In the ninth, bases loaded in the ninth. The]Sandy struck out 12, for a season Pirates left 11 men on base while total of 212. tops in the majors, suffering their 13th shutout of the! The Dodgers scored the whs-season. They were blanked only nlng run In the top of the seventh four times last year when they on a walk, sacrifice and Frank Howard’s single oft Don Cardwell NEW YORK (AP)—Carry Back, winner of the Kentucky Derby land Preakpess, has been assigned top weight of 128 pounds lor the won the opener for SL Louis and.350.OOO added Jerome Handicap at won the pennant. ★ ★ Koufax >415-9), who- leads NL pitchers in low-hit games pair of two-hitters and a couple three-hit performances, held the Cubs hitless for 624 innings for the hecond time Their first hit, i single by Dick BerteU, drove in George Altman. (1142). Mathews’ 26th home run came with one out-in the bottom of the 13th tor the Braves—their only hit after Willie McOovey’s two-run homer off Milwaukee starter Lew Burdette had tied It ninth. who had readied base on an I An error and Bill White’s triple Curt Shndtons (8-9) in {he ninth a* (he Chid* tied their longest winning streak of the year. Chris Short (540) then shut them out on two hits In 7 24 innings of relief in the nightcap. A1 Cteotte (24) lost It on a wiki pitch and Ruben Amato’s sixth. John Buzhardt (5-14) was the first game kteer. Carolyn Fast Stepper DETROIT UB — Carolyn Volo won by two lengths last night in the featured eighth race at Wolverine Harness Raceway. The victory paid $20.20. Belmont Park Saturday. LAWRENCE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY EVENING DIVISION t FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP)- ............ Dennis Ralston, one of the main «tt*buI*? . -. ; r-nrrtvi hopes to bring the elusive Davisl*"""- Je^ Cup back to the United States, brought In the other two in the [ Lawn Tennis Association’s doghouse today and there appeared to be a division of opinion on Just how long he’ll stay there. The 19-year-okl Bakersfield, Calif., ace, Tuesday was suspended by the USLTA for “bad conduct.” The immediate result was that he became ineligible for the National Championships starting here on Friday. George Barnes, president of the USLTA, issued a formal statement pinpointing Ralston’s antics American Zone final against Mexico in Cleveland two weeks ago as the primary cause of the suspension. Ralston ready had been placed oi eighth' against Bobby Shantz. Maloney, nailed it for O’Toole ALUMINUM I SIDING and I [DECORATIVE STONEI IHNMsN AIRWAY LANES For Reservations OR 3-7340 FE 5-2513 LAKEWOOD LARES Tam a Opening far fall League* MEN'S LEAGUE . MON. TRIO IS r. M —WED. » P. M THURSDAY, t r.M. r RI. » r. M.—TORS. 10 A. M. Resettle! CeckUU Ueace' 3121 W. Huron Blooperball Finals Set Friday Eve at Pierce If the weatherman cooperates, tha. finals of the-Waterford Township Recreation Department’s annual men’s Blooperball League playoffs will be held Friday at Pierce Junior High School at 6 p.m. Lakeland Pharmacy No. 2, regular season champion, is the only undefeated team remaining in the, double elimination tourney. The champs are coached by Bob Hollis. Once-beaten teams still in contention are the Whiskers, Marty's-Elmer's, Lorraine Manor and VFW. Carl’s Party Store, Ver-nor’s Ginger Ate and Lakeland Pharmacy No. 1 have been eliminated. " * Rochester 9 Eliminated McNeil Insurance of Rochester lost a 3-2 decision to Owosso last night at Flint in the finals of file Class D regional, softball tournament. Two great catches by Owosso outfielders hurt th | Rochester caiMe In the late innings, The game, delayed by rain Monday night, was resumed from the 5th inning. IMPORTED CARS V«K of OAKLAND COUNTY 1 MForeigi in Car Service 29229 Northwestern H wy. Bstwesn 12 and 13 Mile Road EL 6-9573 iftoMlr Tuning teg anil Slight Edge Gained in Women s Sailing NEWPORT, cfclf. (AP) — Miss Timothea Schneider of tfc University of Michigan still 1> in the lead! for the Adams Trophy, emblematic of the women’s sailing championship of the United States. But her edge over Miss Ruth Haskell of Newport Beach Yacht Club is only 14 point. Miss Schnet-j der fell in a flat weather hole in yesterday’s first race and finished] seventh. She bounced back to beat] out Miss Haskell in the second race by two boat lengths. Miss Schneider, representing the Sea-wanhaka Yacht Club of Long Island, blanketed her on a spinnaker run and captured the lead at the leeward mark. As today’s races started Mis Schneider had 25% points, Miss) Haskell 25%. Bert Rechichar Named Titans' Player-Coach BEAR MOUNTAIN, N.Y. (AP) -Bert Rechichar, a veteran of the National Football League, was signed ss player-coach of the New York Titans of the American Foot-sll League Tuesday , Rechichar, 31, is a denefsive back and place kicking expert. He! will help John Del Isola coach the defensive backs and safety nv giving Hugh (Bones) Taylor chance to concentrate on the offensive ends. The Titans asked waivers on scatback Leon Burton and safety-man Jesse Thomas. Burton had been the No. 1 left halfback tmtil Dick Christy was obtained from the Oakland Raiders in a deal two weeks ago. Mrs. Hume Bounces Bdck Sirs. John Hume Jr. of Essex, frustrated last Friday at Orchard Lake in her bid to win her second straight Women’s District Golf Association match play championship, bounced back yesterday at Birmingham Country Club to capture the weekly WDGA tourney. Mrs. Hume shot 4346-79 at Birmingham C.C. for a three-stroke victory margin over Mrs. H. G. Marquardt of Gowanie and Mins Nancy Smith from Beach Grove. LAB0B DAY. Week-end ★ SPECIALS ★ 1961 BUIGK ELECTRA Convertible-Bucket Seats Pull Power Demo. $3/895 1961 BUIGK INVI0TA Custom Leather-Power Windows Demo. $3/725 1962 WILLYS JEEP * C J 3 Pats. Seat-Directional Signals $2/552 1961 BUIOK LE SABRE Power Steering end Power Brakes. Demo, v $3,029 1W1 BUIGK SPECIAL Power Steering ond Custom 4-Door Domo. $2,612 1962 WILLYS WAGON DincHondl Signals-Suburbonite (5) tins *2,950. OLIVER MOTOR SALES "the denier on the corner—whe dees business on the square!" 210 Orchard Lak* IU. ri4IT.--.fetg- FE 2,9,01 winnuiu JUST$3 SOM Other Mew . Still At low eg > Mm mu TURNPIKE-PROVED* A95 ^■■*00I 1* feet. GOODYEAR TIRES tuto-typr. ^Bplus its and *M Sirs oil ustirtir 12 MONTH Road Hazard Guarantee NATION-WIDE MAO HAZARD GUARANTEE All Mew Goodyear Ante Time ere Guaranteed; 1. Asolml normal rood hoiartft-cut. - oxcopt roykoMo juncture*. Limited to erigtaal writer tar rtuntetr of aiaat*s opoctflod. 2. Agatoat any dofbeto to warkmamhlp and material tathatri llntit •« to lima or miloa|0. doalor (aver 60,00 to aR DO Utetet) will w dopth temahdm tad currant "Ooodyoor price." HO MONEY DOWH! JnttUSaimk coodAear MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON GOODYEAR TIRES THAN ON ANY OTHER KINO Brake and Front End SERVICE SPECIAL THOROUGH CHECKOUT 1. Align front and, corrtct camber, taster, toe-in | 2. Balance two front wheels and adjust steering. | 3. Repack front wheel bearings and add braka fluid. | 4. Check and adjust brakes, test entire system. BRAKE SPECIAL WE DO ALL THIS .. . ^ 1. Remove front wheels, adjust brakes ) 1 Repeck front wheel baerii** 3. Check froese seels, tiro weor 4 Add brake fkrid eed taet drive 119] P11TTW j SHOCKS . Hm ! Goodyear .shock absorbers for o RP iiii smoother, safer ride. Free instal- (J lation. *frfr*^*^*t** AHUM* W**W*’* fW * •¥• W •V************ * ** GOODYEAR MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON GOODYEAR TIRES THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND Open Friday'til 9 GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE, ''Goodyear Tires Are Mode in Michigan by Michigan People" 30 S. Cots ft Lawrence FE 5-6123 FORTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 80, 1961 Check Used Rifles Before Purchasing By DOW VOGBL tottae Pro-Oetdeer Writer Michigan's firearm season for deer doesn’t open for knottier It weeks, but tbe stores and mall order boom already bare started pushing used military rifles. Rifles appearing this year, in order of numbers, are the infield (JM British), Springfield (S0-00), Mauser (I am.), Swedish (l mm.) and Japanese Arlsaka (6.5 mm.). The majority of these rifles, particularly the Infields, are not checked and graded for safety before going on tbe open market. Betel outlets dealing hi need rifles are tarrying meetly the Brttiah weapene aad Springfield*. Mall order houses AtfMf the Out dect- "frail Bear to Appear at Opening Session of Bow School A good many foreign made military weapons are sold br private citizens each year. If these rifles have no Indication of having been safety checked, the best thing to do Is leave them alone. Some are all right, others will be passable, and the rest Just plain unsafe. The average firearms buyer doesn’t know enough about head space, barrel wear or actions to be certain whether the weapon under consideration is safe to take on the range or In the woods. BITIB SHOULD BE TEST FIRED Before any rifle, new or used, Is purchased, it Should be fired. Hew guns are cheeked at the factory for safety and accuracy before being sent to the dealer. All the buyer need shoot them for Is to test recoil and proper fit. Any need weapon, whether It be military er factory made, should be safety cheeked and fired before It is purchased. Sometimes It is Impossible to sheet a few test rounds. Following are seme methods ef checking out a rifle. - Many rifles are packed with grease If stored over long periods. This coating should be cleaned from the action and bore. If the seller doesn’t want this done, forget about It. They are more interested in making a quick dollar than they are over the fact that the rifle might Mow up In a shooter's face. If the gun has a bolt action, wiggle the bolt and other parte of the receiver for looseness. Then close and lock the bolt and do this same thing. Looee actions are dangerous. ★ it it Cock the rifle and push as hard as possible on the cocking piece with the safety off. Then repeat the process with the safety on. The cocking piece should not move In either ease. Nest, try the trigger. If It b loose or drags while being fired two things can be wrong. (I) The action Is out ef adjustment and can be corrected, er (*> the parte are worn eat. Teat the trigger pull. If it la under throe pounds, the rifle will Are too quickly. The beet method of testing Is to place the rifle on the floor wlth.the action cocked, run A cord through the trigger guard and acraaa the trigger and attach to a amallj' container that has been weighed empty. Then, slowly add sand, or some other material until the trigger works. Weigh thfe can and subtract the weigh of the empty caxuThle should dive tbe correct trigger pull. It le better to repeat the process several times and strike an average. METHOD FOB HEAD STACK CHECK “ Head apace can be tested by taking the correct caliber shell, remove the bullet and powder, and slide Into the her with the mtmle of the gun on the floor. Do not use a spent abeD or one ready to fire. _ Cal n piece of metal from a thin rasor blade, the thin Gillette is a good one, gag1 place It ever the AgMied eng. ef the shall, making site It is slightly smeller, and try te close the bait. If the bed doesn’t close there is Jest about enough bend space. If H closes, put another piece ef thin metal on tap the first one. If ftt belt dates on twe pieces there le toe modi heed apace. This can be very Grayling Archer Is Well Known Big Game Expert Four Sessions Planned at OCSC Indoor Rang*; Starts Naxt Tuesday Fred Bear will lead off The Porn tiac Press bow fauntteg school next Tuesday at the Oakland County Sportsmen’s dub In Waterford. * ★ The archery equipment manufacturer from Grayling is nationally known for his ability when it eontcs to taking the largest of North American Mg game with a If there le difficulty doling the bolt on the shell without any metal there Is not enrmgh head space. This, too, can cause trouble. Check the ejection mechanism by kicking shells out Lever end slide action weapons can be checked In much the same manner, but It is more difficult to test tha * ★ ★ „ it Used barrels can be In good or poor condition. Damage to tbe barrel and excessive rust deposits In the bora Should be checked. A badly, worn or damaged barrel will impair accuracy and might br dangerous. Stocks on military rifles arc nsually poor aad sc arc the sights. Bat thew an handicaps that an Ml toe important sag can be esenetod. Many actions on military rifles can be rebarreled gnd made Into Bln looking sporters. But for the average onto a year hunter, this would not be practical and far too pensiyc. The actions mentioned earlier are all sound ones when new. Exceptions are Mausers made in Germany during the 1944-45 period and gpringflelde with aerial numbers under •00,000. it it it The German Mausers constructed during the last two yean of World War n are very poor and Sprlngflelds made with serial numbers up to 800,000 are on the weak side for to- Msnnlteher-flhoencuer actions are good, but the Mann-' rr-Carcono [(Italian) and French Labels an not neom- X-Ray Study on Deer ibirth' The objective is to count the Tl» taia Gun. .Jid n* bL *“* CUnmuioo has attained a poR. "W* -111 * I able X-ny machine to be used to number of fawns observed for determining the toss ef fawns with each doe in the summer to before end Lmmedtetety after i determine losses. wammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Bow Hunting School TMs Is an advance registration form for thorn persons planning to attend the Pontiac Press bow hunting school at the Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club Sept. 5, U, 19, 96. It should be fllled out and returned to: Sperts Department Tt» Pontiac Frees gg West Harm St. Peotiac, Michigan. Then Is a $1 tee per session for adults and a N cent charge for boys and girls under 15 years old. No money need be sent with this form. STREET ADDRESS ................. ................ CITX .... ................................ .. . .1 (Check the following): Have own equipment........ ttadar If ^ Hagtetretlons will be taken at the range before each si am scheduled — Sept. 6, It, 1» and 37. It to spec to these wishing to tears more abact boating with archery equipment. A fee of $1 for each session rill be charged for adults with 50 cent tee for those under 15 yean old. Boy* and girls under 15 must be accompanied by Mt. Each session will start at 7 p.m. and test about two hours. The sohool will take place in the indoor range building on the OCSC club grounds. * * * A form located at the' bottom o( this page can be used by those wishing to register early. proper tor them if they wish t All (hose attending he school are tjtged ‘to bring equipment to each. Brian. Bear was originally scheduled to appear at the test session. But he has switched places with Hetman Haedricke, district Conservation Department supervisor, who will peak on bow bunting regulations. ★ it it The other two sessions will have members of the Michigan Bow demonstrations and archery shooting by area experts. Bear will display proper equipment and a selection of clothing for tenting. He also will go into methods of stalking, how to build good blinds and demonstrate the killing power of a bow. In addition, he will show a on big game hunting. The evening will be concluded with instruction and tenet ggectlce. Take Group Honors in Macomb Show Dogs from Pontiac and Drayton Plates turned in good showings at the kfocomb Kennel Club show Sunday. golden retriever, Mickey, ______by Chariaa Barnes of Drayton Plains sml bandied by his 15-ysarnlri granddaughter, Christine Griffin, was judged bat of die Christine and the deg also placed seep«ri In graduate novice obedience with JttVb points. Alan Heeler of Pontiac directed Ida beagle to first place te tbe hoaad group. Mrs. Reginald (Barbara) Armstrong of Pontiac bested her husband in Open B obedience. Both handled German short haired pointers. Barbara was first with Heidi and ha husband was third Blaze. __«ir children won first places in Junior showmanship. Put Arm-jjested-JaneU Griffin-of .ttd Plains in the novice divi-Both are nine years old. ncy Sue Armstrong, II, was ,W.the open division, beating Drayton 1 Nancy first Pu^ Logsdon of Pontiac was lird In Novice B obedience with Hid, a wire haired fox terrier. Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed Mob, ha been prepared by John Alden Knight. Plan r days so that you will be fish-to good territory, or hunting in d cover during these times. Grouse, Woodcock Populations Increase Michigan’s bird hunters can look for qwre action from ruffed grouse and woodcock this tell, but their pheasant shooting success may take a alight dip front test year. * * te Results of the Conservation De- BIG WALLEYE — Louis Warrington, 2482 Winkleman St., Pontiac, caught this 3214-incb walleye on Sunset Late near Iron Rivo. It weighed 10 pounds. Warrington hooked die fish, biggest walleye reported in that area of tjie Upper Peninsula In many years, while trolling with s nightcrawler harness. It took 15 minutes to tend the fish. Bluegills, Perch Hitting on Oakland County lakes Time Is test running our on the 1961 Pontiac Press Big Fish Coo- tm The derby for die heaviest blue-gill, rainbow trout, black bass and northern pike ends at T a.m. on Sept 13. All entries must be brought to The Prees sports department for weighing and certification by that time. * * ft.......... Current front runners are a one pound, four-ounce Mack bass and 13-pound, 14-ounce pike. All (tab mast be caught te Oakland County by residents ef the county. Two local anglers traveled hundreds of mllea to make good catches. Louis Warrington of Pontiac used a nightcrawler harness rig to fool a lOtt-pound walleye on Sunset Lake near Iron River in the Upper Elizabeth and Union Lakes. Crickets sure the best bait, fished deep. Good catches of perch are reported at Pine Lake south of Pontiac. Many of the perch are running up to 10 Inches' and are being taken in good numbers. a ** Bass continue to Mt on this lake. Just before dark is the best time, but die fish are on the small size. Best catch test week was a four-pound largemouth taken by a Detroit angler. Night fishing for rainbows and calicos continues to pay off. These fish are often found in tin same place, only the calicos will be just below tbe surface while tbe trout stay near the bottom. Any one of the lakes stocked with rainbows is a good bet If fish-know the right “sped” and proptr technique. Pheasants Show Drop partment's annual summer mail carrttr survey show a 10 per cent decline in pheasant broods a this year in Southern Michigan. t brood counts were partly toned darn by extremely heavy oarer during the July te Governor’s Crash Plan Seeking New Easements in Wisconsin Program By The Associated Pirns It’s been quite a while- since the man who wanted a glass of milk thought he had to go out and buy a cow. But the mas who wants to shoot a dock still thinks he ought to start out by buying Saskatchewan, and maybe North Dakota. ★ * ★ So It te with the upland hunter, the fisherman and die camper as well. And lor decades it has been the thankless task of conservation officiate to attempt die acquisition for recreational purpoaes atone of lands of vastly greater and ever increasing values in other uses. Baf now comes a concept that may he the greateat boon te since Invention of the ft million. That proposal turned Mt to be suty the beginning. Hamkl Jordahl of the State’s Department of Resource Development found the new use for the old tool of easement, a legal device as ancient as the yearnings of im-land couldn’t afford to buy. It ft It Jordahl found precedent in the cento easements that accompanied the Blue Ridge Mountain Parkway, to a couple of in California, and hi the real father of the Wisconsin plan—the New York State “fishing rights” i ment that has provided a public-access strip along some 900 miles of trout streams in that state. usage of toad la aB that’s required, why not buy Jute that macht \ This te the “recreational easement’’ idea developed during the pari few months, appropriately enough, in Wisconsin, where Aldo Leopold gave wildlife management a name and a purpose. ft ft ft Under -this system, the state would buy specific easements from landowners, wMch under covenants running with the land would jpubttc rights in perpetuity. Except for tbe specific usage provided In the easement, the arrangement would not interfere with the of the land, with its sale or trans-wtth its position of private ownership in the tax base. ft ' ft ft These are all major drawbacks of large-scale state acquisition of recreational tends. In addition, of course, it would cost only a frac-j tion of purchase. The pragmas, Incorporated te Gov. Gaylord Nelson’s IS-yaar crash program for izMoeroo development, proposes to aequtro “•cento easements’' along mubo MM nritou of state highways to the next decade, at s cout ut sad? County Dogs Win Two Field Events Oakland County dogs won two-thirds of the honors Sunday in the Michigafi Brittany Club’s ten trial te the Highland recreation area. ♦ ft -ft Genie, owned and handled by Tom Higgins of Royal Oak, won the open all age. Earl Cardinell of Pontiac directed his dog, Sparky, to first place In the puppy stake. Banner, owned by Henry HoUeyoak of Wayne, was first in the derby. Hie Brittany Club has scheduled another ten trial Sept 10. It Iwffl start at 9 a.m. In the Highland area at Teeple Lake and Ford of this year's wheat erap was stiB standing when tha earaey ended; te IMS, approximately by that Ouse. Allowing for this, the depart- upwards of 960,000 pheasants this L Last year, the MU was about 915,000 birds. Mali carrier counts indicate pheasant production was down some 20 per cent from test spring in the Thumb area and South-Era Michigan. In Allegan and Ottawa Counties, It fell about 14 per cent. Carrien noted a 40 per cent increase in brood numbers in Southwestern Michigan. Their tal-bes for the central sector of the pheasant range were essentially the same as in 1960. ft ft ft Ringneck production Jumped nearly 100 per .cent In the northern fringe area of the state’s pheasant country — Gladwin, Oceana, Mecosta, Lake,' end Newaygo Counties — according to limited observations nude there. days averaged M In the 19 area; Sri la Baattwreatera i Igau; SA la the central ae la Allegan a ‘ i; IX lu the a ef the state; aad Mi hi tha five northern counties. Final figures from the department’s June-July ruffed grouse brood survey show these birds are up from teat year. Although brood numbers in the . Upper Peninsula do not measure up to those of 1959 a earlier indicated by June counts, they are slightly higher than test year. Hunters took 200,000 ruffed grouse above the Straits in 1969 and 131,-000 in 1980. ♦ * ♦ ■ In the, northern Lower Peninsula, brood counts jumped shout 35 per cent above test year when hunters bagged some 194,000 ruffed grouse in this part of the state. Spring tallies indicate Michigan’s woodcock population has advanced aome eight per cent since 1960 when hunters killed 84,000 timber doodles, by tax tape for tbe nation. William Fleming of Drayton Plains tried his luck on Lake Chemung in Ontario. Using a spinning rod and crawler harness, Fleming boated a 1714-pound muskie. The fish was 43 inches long. ' Here te Oakland Gouty blue- B.F.Goodrich Eagle Lake bn the north edge of Waterford has bun the scene of | some nice bulegill catches. So have NEW TREADS Guaranteed A F01 $1790 - Fees are payable at that .time ....natey jseturisr VM. bun Sow IS: IS 4:00 l»» j .f| ,*fL- ..Mt.** >“ ** Novice Pointing Dog Field Trial to Draw Over 200 Over 200 pointing dogs are e pected to be entered in the Detroit Sportsmen’s Congress Novice Field Trial on Sept 16-17. The trial will be held at the Ferry Seed Farm, John R and Au-bum Roads. It Is open to all | pointing dogs that have never placed in a registered meet. The | handlers must never have directed a dog to a placement in registered | competition. ' ^ * Dogs eligible for tbe trial are TOngHriy Irish and Gordon setters, I Brittany spaniels, pointers, Ger-short haired and wire haired 1 printers, Weimaraners, printing griffons and Hungarian Villas. I Eliminations will be held on Sept. 16 with 16 dogs entering the I finals the following days. Live pheasants will be used and blank < cartridges. There will be special , .^ me i’s handler stake on the sec- * : ond day. j 1| Additional information can be,1 [obtained from the DSC by phoning). X 1-1500. Post entries trill be f* 11 jeepted. WHEELS ALIGNED • Scientifically measured and correct castor and comber •'Correct'lee-in and toe-out (rite chief cause of tit# wear* BROKE RELI0E Uly Uniat- 1.000 mils adjustment free. As tow as $1.25 a week. 1 year — 20,000 mile guarantee. I«!H MONKOE-MATIC SHOCKS Aire Mare Large Seles*!— of New Treed* tor AN New Foreign and C*af*lt Car* — Free Mounting t "Free Pickup and Delivery Service to City" Motor Mart Safety Center 1|1 -123 I. Montcalm R 3-7145 — FE 3-7846^ Pre-Labor Day Special TWOm* MONEY 1 U.S. ROYAL TUBELESS NYLON WHITEWALLS 33 7 JO-14, Tubeless. While. FtotToa and ! TreedeMo Tim*. Per late Model Chev., Ford, Fly. THE AIR BIBE. Frauen-T-peted NY10N hr Super- strtngth, smooth ride. “Mow Car” the (rood dodge. EASY TERMS I MUFFLERS FOR ANY CAB THIS WEEK ONLY |J)QQ COUPON WORTH j FREE INSTALAATtON \ Guarantee* as leaf u yea earn Ike ear. . KING TIRE CENTER mm Tease 60 SOUTH TELEGRAPH RD. U.S. ROYAL 0 US LOW PROFILE TIRES WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL Op— Deity 1:10-5:30, Friday 7 F.M. U——mi——JHSU B 1 I I It I I SI THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; AUGUST 30. lOfll FORTY-ONE Highways Helpin Solve City Traffic Puzzle DRIFT MARLO IBditor's Bats On it Uu bit problem. In Michigan', hlghwey »• tte Jsmup In InMhi »rm. la Ha* Mated of a mtn * flro artteka bj Homer Bowdy of tha runt JawnaL ho toll* ho* auto otrytnt to keep tbo mala atroata through traffic off tl of Mfchfcaa conoBui By HOMER DOWDY Fliat Journal Staff Writer Written far the AP III the Lansing office of Robert Van Hoef, chief of the State Highway Department’s pfantog division, unprecedented attention is being given these days to the plans that cities have for rebuilding their downtown areas and eliminating their shuns. This regard tar local projects that are rotated only Indirectly to stole traffic reveals a tare attitude among the Batten's highway agencies. Building trafficways without giving serious consideration to other elements of a complex dty, Van Hoef says, only makes efficient and an eventui pointment. ’’We ate working with cities to help them get through traffic off main street,” Van .Hoef adds. Through the use of paired oneway streets and some construction, plans are being developed for looping the central areas of Cold- water, Mt. Clemens, Ctayboygan, Pontiac, Jackson. Port Huron and others. » lying la state assisted street WUe a start haa been made an piercing dty traffic congestion by moving vehicles along on better routes, the bulk of the urban program is still ahead. MOST FOR URBAN ABBAS State Highway Commissioner John B. Mackie estimates that 60 per cent of state trunkline expenditures in the next five years will be devoted to the urban areas. ■ iMksMdm , Muskegon has Us new seaway drive that funnels traffic to west of downtown, but even a pair of wide one-way streets that take it from there leave the route incomplete. Some day, file route must be extended through the heart of town and rejoin the bypass highway north of Muskfegon. Saginaw has tried s state-sanctioned one-way-' loop around its business” district and has verted its main artery into a long, slender area for angle-parking of can. The plan haa stirred up considerable controversy and probably will lie Junked for something else until an adequate connector in be built between the inner dty and the 175 bypass. Midland haa a stab penetntor from the new U.S. IS treeway, aver which assay Daw employe* travel each day tram Bay Ctty. From the end of the Baatted-ne-eeaa penetrator the rente runs over existing streets to the Dow plant and downtown. A major project ahead is to set ep an adequate route that wifi connect them areas of congestion with U.S. 10 north of the city. Battle Creek has a start on an urban connector from ISM, but before maximum benefit can be Rotten from the limited-access penetrator, « new rout* wifi have to be built from the southside end of the penetrator to downtown. CONNECTOR ROUTE connector route is hi the planning stage that, will whisk traffic of Lansing and East Lansing southward to 196. , A part of the "Kalainaxoo — M” plan — much of-which the Area Births The following is a list of births recorded recently in the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Louis Ariosos Jr.. 1M IdtUi Donald R Bradbenry, 71* Vausht Dwayne P. Naramor. SM Juniper Denver Jones Jr., SSS Raeburn Bobby K Oerrleon, MSI Wstklns . Andrew L. BaMck, tel R Princeton ChoHSS W. Butler. MS M. Perry Robert W. Courser. Mil Hendrick Pool J. Belisle, 12 Stoat. PI Richard H. Ruaaell, 102 Elm Lawrence R. Seabolt, 20 Lorraine Corns Ha us TIUman, 309 Branch Karl L. Zmleh, 12SS Loche John I. Englund. MS* Camelot Richard 1C LuadsrsOL U»_CSjhlltO Bobby K. Whitmire. 1711 Orsftoe Lafayette Berner. TO r 8am H. Jouaa. MS ttoc Esnosflt V. Pontons, .. Ed far M. Bauer. TS Orand River Arthur A. Bentley. IS S. Paddock Ronnie L. Kao. 22* E. Robin Creek James E. McClellan. 17S Earlemoor Lawrence Pena. 117 Carr Leonard O. Barker. M7 Berwick Larry L. Payne. ISO* Silver Bell James E. Csrtar. SSS Joyooll (twins) Oerald T. O’Shaughnessy, 1240 Wsyner Herman Walls, Iff mekoryLan* Norman O. Aulaeybrook, 4SS E. Bird. Peltle L. Taaaley, SIS B. Wlleon Jordan Tenjarse. MS Madison (twins) Marvin O. Krueger. SSI W. Tale Jamas H. Lsdforth, III Lounsbur; Jimmy Patrick. 114 B. Howard Clarence S. Griffith, 71 Poplar Harold R- Muxlow, 172 Sswsrd * Darrell D. Bottom. 2M1 Richmond Charlos R. Twltty. 270 8. Blvd W. Charlee L. Irwin, 2S*t BUIck (twins) Roger W. Jaekeon, 327 W. Prlncetea Lloyd R. Pearsall. SI Putnam Tommie W. Waybtt, USS Meadowlawn Amos B. Hoolihan. 21t W. Longfellow Ned Womack. M7 Harrison Marcus R. McCray Jr.. 1SS Norton Charles H. Shepard. SS1S Slmmone Ralph L. Spiry- Ml "” Elmer Golding, to Arturo Setae, 404 JR Carlton A. Brisks. SM TUdsn _________ _____ (MS Bdgsorgs Dave Rayford. SSS Branch Richard ML; Altered. 4T7S Oroer Kenneth J. (S*SP, SSJ1 Otter Paul O. Hlekmar, MSS LlttMtoh l it Oossmoif, 4S7S f Cordon N. HmSta^sSsi Sargent Paul B. Hodges. MISS Telegraph Leonard L. Lick. 30000 Southfield . Bruce A. BlodgeU. 20M7 Weethaven Jamas H. Jackson, 2M3S Northwestern Highway Ralph W. Barley. SSSSS IS Usnsld A. Korth. asm Daniel T. Cntis, 2042* ... ... John A. Lam. MMS Marshall Robert J. Ball. 17221 Robert jtereoodC. Allan. 2S7SS Fairfax Walter R. Tsrbert Jr.. TfSSS Lexlng-ton Parkway John A. Ipskaall. M7M Parent view Clarke P. Taylor, ISMS N. Larkr 'Was David WllUamaon. 41201 Donley Kenneth D. Manning. 41117 Mars city hopes to Implement by 1*1* district. IF is.'Kalamazoo's theory, although not original with it, that the day is soon coming when the heart of a city will not be able to take care of the cars pouring into it via the new and Improved nudes of penetration. It is this thought that lies behind the building of the Kalamazoo downtown mall, the first in the nation on a permanent basis. “If you can't take care of downtown auto traffic efficiently, keep it out,” is the philosophy. “Make it easy for motorists to reach the area and provide convenient parking on the edge. But reserve the inner space for pedestrian traffic.' The goal of most cities is to make downtown easily accessible, regardless of their opinion on what to do with the traffic when it gets there. Unrivaled in -Michigan in its scope is a study by local, state and federal officmls that swould give Flint an urban freeway that could change the city’s com piexion. , Next — Highway pi Mu lag *‘ln Depth.” * Dr. LM. Levitt, Ton Cooke and Pkfl Evaae ST OUR ANCESTORS By Quincy By V. T. 1 T 4a B-ao S Liter I Edgeorge 4 E. Shelf! Edward C. Hayei. >17 Bttaabsth Laka Frederick W. Hudson, 111* Eason Oordon 8. Allah. IBS Hiufitld Hobart L. Bowen, Ml Cameron Lteaat H. Fosert, 43b Linda Vista Karl B. Orsen, (27 Brown Dertd L. Rousseau, MSS Oak Knoll Richard P. MUlsr.SM K_._ Perry______ ’ Sylvester J. Salvador. *71 Hlllelilf Baal T. Oonsslss. 4M Midway "Aadraw O. Amirs* 201 VoorbaU Richard C. Britton, 1*2 Plngrse ’ oerald J. MW, SB S. Josephine •* Richard J. Detmsr. 1M Vtetoft . . jams* T. WMteman. 4»42 Irwlndals Charles W. Ostfoi Si, »rd William M. McOurs. 4*« Chestnut Jamas R.Woodburrs. 14*0 HoUand Data O. BoransSh, 1244 Cols AIM JC Platt, *23 N. Eton Oeorgt A. Jafano, 1(44 Bowers George N. Ford. MM White Pine JUchafd c. Patterson. MS Bmannu* ------- 1. WaifsrsiMteL MM Sprues s J. wouersneim. ewe Joho J. Lac lave. 17M HoUand Hubert R. Boglehsrd. MM Stanley w *Bookmyer, 1^1 Pierce | Blrwood Thomas Itwtasi . Philip A.JI ■w.M w Hits, uss rviHRw WUUsm R Ctemsnce, »«">urr Victor J. KnafNQtli ^ !• PE a Stuart t Mackls. :2(7 s. Cranbraok a J. Cavanaugh gSS^ iDiton, W OrasDvld ShS FOWwlM’ ErsoUawn $&h. jSSZ. wuuam J. EsUey ir., lM> Imswima W Ctrl. H TOWfl Htll Sw?-* dson L- Nftew. teO”* sraM A. Htlns. H4 Dj»« rasjhJ-Cwo»or«a...M2.IL_OuD° SHTa. «Md ft B^.A> 34U ssjurn ^sa wT Mason. 1*71 Atourn 'chut L McElwee. 727 W. Hnmh Ih ■v n Carlson. 7*4* Colony ertek D Simon. l«l Plcfcford ri iTlLl Ito -BErsEbl lit —y- 1 o. BBL nn ifiBr d C. Sshlltor. M* Oak W S J. Weaver, 42471 11 Ml IlC tew" 7HS Lttopoh L. ooworm* tm Lssmvi s. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPyEgDAY, AUGUST 80, 1961_ BgOBp> -Oam future supped to their lawaat levels of ttw season today to eariy dealings on the hoard of trade as the market extended Hi general downward trend in to the third successive day. a United mostly to small tractions of a cent hut pines In rye ran to a cent or spots. Brokers said the pressure appeared to be n continuation of outright liquidation and that it showed no toga of a turning point * * +■ Commercial demand was light or absent One denier said, though, that union purchases are urgent consumers will be slow buyers! while prion are in a decline. Grain Prices MARKETS The foUowtag are top prion covering sales of locally grown BQe by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations ere furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Friday. {Delay in Strike Aids Auto Stock Detroit Produce K HJfc*v.v:.7.v;.v.?.v. » aiu*b«rn*<. 11 p. ......... In ________:: run, cispp* Fa»orit* F**r», Bu*»r .......... Plum*. Burbank ........ Watermelon .......... NEW YORK (It — Reprieved by postponement of the auto strike deadline, motor shares rebounded, pacing n stock market advance in quiet trading early 'this afteraoen. Oalas sf fraettaaa to a paint or CHICAOO. Au*. IS UP) HES?8 . ft K MM Sal* .. 3.11 S|»- 88.. ■ ».MH War .... 1.13% May ... .... USH Z tarS (drum*)— aUifc"" & iBean*. green round ........ Siam. Kentucky Wonder jeon*. Lima ............ ---- wax. bu. ....... ■reran, ta. ....... do*, ben*. ........ Cabbac*. curly, bu........ *prout. bu. ..... BSSajja. r*tand*Vd varttty amt*. irdMWmm arrot*. m R/W": _eNwnr, da*. ... Celery, do*, stalk* ... Mey, I to I ids. . i. ~il*ry. Patcal . wry, root . ,JTB, awaat- baa .... lucumbar*. Urges Subsidy for Railroad on East Coast WASHINGTON (APV-The Interstate Commerce Commission day recommended direct federal subsidies for the New York, New Haven A Hartford and other railroads to help 'them maintain aential passenger services. The recommendation reversed the commission's position against federal grunts In the transportation Arid. The commission made Its recommendation In connection with an Investigation of the New Haven's financial plight. In Its report today, the IOC said It is "highly improbable that the New Haven can emerge from reorganization and continue to render essential transportation services hi the absence of direct federal grants.” ________ pickle *lM vreratar*. •near*,**. IB. doc. beb* ;. S&asc. Colbert resigned as president, board j Chairman and chief executive of- I fleer. •' \ j No board chairman or chief ex-! ecutivt officer ums named to succeed him. ft' ft ft In a letter to shareholders, George H. Love of Pittsburgh, chairman of the newly formed executive committee, raid: "With1 this ktod of organization it not thought necessary to designate a so-called chief executive officer or a chairman of the board.’’ Love reviewed the almost yearlong search by a committee of di- j to find a replacement for] Colbert, who had come under in-; Creasing fire from'disskleht stockholders. Police would i__— —t tSS SnC-^jProctical Nurses big estimator. “'r-^iWillGIraducrte i-*11™ Uf City Hospital on Hall’s shirt cuff Monday. It is < bring analyzed at the State Police crime laboratory In East Lansing. Eight student practical nurses {who have completed their months of affiliation at Pontiac will graduate . _ Dtilrolter Mobile_______ .vprr-i *p* will he held i ®®®4ro*ilc# C*plt*l ...... exercises wui oe neiu ^*^,001,., international in the Ann Arbor High School Audi-torlum at 8. H Pontioc Boy, 9, Iniured Ho*Pi1ta1' t* . » • • t t»L 11 {Thursday evening, t' : 10» 3 m Explosion of Snell I Graduation exercia Stocks of Local interest Figure* niter Scdmnl point* »re eighth* llld Aakei ACF-WrtfUey store*. Inc.....17 IT.! Arroqulp Corn. ........>0 30 ! Arkuua* Loul*l»nm Ol* Co. ..BA J*. B»Mwln-Mont. Chem. CO. Pld. 11.7 If Bornwa Food Store* .........M It Curtlu-Wrlght Corp..........tf.4 lf.i Daeldaon Bro*...............U _• F*d*nl Mogul-Bo**r BMdni* 311 M. Or**t Lake* Ch—ittel ...... 3-7 S HooT.r Boll dt Bmrlng ......31.3 31 foonord Beflntn* .... .....134 IS' Oltn Mothlexm Cbomlcol —*0 I Prophet Co.................31.4 j Rockwell Standard .........3* ] Toledo BdUon Oo. ..........MJ 1 ovra tbs ootifftsa stocks Tb* following quotation* do not O- . ewartly repreaent actual tesaoseUoed tat or* intended at o guide to th-prowl—to trodto* range of tk curl tie*. Amerlcon-Marletto mwr 31 A 9-yearold Pontiac boy was injured Tuesday afternoon when a ti t 122-caliber shell was exploded by e >M friend who dropped a hammer on Ip lit, Pontiac police said. m Ray Miller, eon of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Millar. 108 S. Roselawn Dr., - IJ ’jwas treated for chin cuts at 3t!t I Joseph Mercy Hospital and re- Appraisers Plan to Hear Royal Oak MESC Man Merrill F. Walla, assistant manager of the Royal Oak office of the Michigan Employment Security Commission will address the Oakland County Chapter of the So-ciety of Residential Appraisers Sept 7. The dinner meeting begins at •:I0 p.m. at Devon Gables Tea Room, Long Labe Rond and Telegraph. m— cnotc» hatter* 33.71-31.3*; mo*t Stef la gin IT tfJITT' 'tendtrd half-art M.tS-n M: uttUtr helfar* 17.10-33 M: utUltr e**» ll M-ll.oa: frw up to 1SJS; eaaaara tad cuttar* tl.M-llJO. Hoc*—8*Ubl* ISO. Butcher* and tow* matte ataady. IBtteaaaa J»c higher; mott u.a. No. i itg-fig lb. Mtatan M.SI-1S.7I; Mo. 1 and 1 100-130 lb*. piiklMi 110-100 Iba. 17;7t-ll.3l; NO. 3 300-300 lb». 17.00-17.00; No. 1, 1 tad S 100-400 lb. 00*0 14.74-11.7*; 3 and I 410-oat k. aav* U.TS-14J0; boar, uzs-isio. ________ Vaaler*—Salable »P Fully (I “a^yb?^r-Nothin, oo, Rhode Island produces more than one-half of the lace menu-factured in the United States today. New Wage-Hour Rules Go Into Effect Sept. 3 ot No Ry !!j 5 US Rub ....!. IS.S Rwna*#r Pop 34.0 van F—' “* Htrcb Choc .lit Employers in Michigan were reminded today that the amendments to the Fair Labor Standards Act, generally known as the Federal Wage-Hour Law, becomes effective Sept- 3. .The reminder came from William S. Singley, regional director qf the U-S- Department of Labor’s wage and hour and public con- Magtoy saM that employes who are new revered by prnvWoM of the law trill be entitled to a min Imam ssnge af at least 9LU an how. The lew confine* to ap-pty la empfiyes wsgagai In ln-torAato commerce a* the pew dacUaa af goods far Iteeeetato Coverage af the act has been udendsd to stepfoyti of laige m- the production of goods for TMroe, Stagtey stated. These > covered employes, mosttyhi the retell and service trades, trill be due a minimum wage of Jl an hour. Also covered ere employes of some gasoline service stations, local or interurban transit systems and construction enterprises, ft ft ft Singley noted that the act's over-time provisions trill continue to apply to workers who are already covered. They require time end for all hour* worked over 40 in a workweek. For employes who are newly covered, overtime pay will not be required until 1363. ft ft ft Exemptions continue to apply to such establishments as hotels, Is, restaurants, hospitals, movies ■d'a few other service establishments. Singley added that the retail or service establishments exemption . effect will continue to sf-pty to establishments which are not in n Jl-milUon enterprise, or If hi end) an enterprise, heft? foes than <250,000 in annual gras* sales. The graduates are Carol Crock-right, Eldonna Dearborn, Martha Kuppart, Mrs. Mary Carrothers, Mrs. Wanda Ellis, Mrs. Jeanne Harkness, Mrs. Ruth Hopsher and Mrs. Ruth Martin. A tea was held at the hospital recently honoring the Ittident nurses. It waa sponsored by the Cancer in the U J. kills mere Ann Arbor Practical Nurse Alumni, mj | children from age* 3 to 15 than; and gifts were presented to each tit!any other of the known diseases, student by the hospital |j— , 7. —T— --------------— j f,Local Business Returning to Normal, Figures Show ; li.l if. uj „ . .31.4 33■' .. 13.4 17. ,33 41. Wlnklaman* Wolrertn* Shot ........ Wyandotte Cbamteal ... Mata. Inveator* orowth Utu Tnrntor* Trutt .. Putnam Oratth ............ .. S.41 3.11 ..13.14 13.34 .1(33 30.01 ..1SJS 11*3 *Nomlaol Quotation*. atd ou oiu* m i 87 snd-Fotk ... 5*7 Swift * Co . M l Tout Oa> .. S i Ttxadb ...... S* two am .. S'* Tu In* ....... S 7 Textron ..... 3rj IWiM ..... .... | Tin* R Boor IT-.I SIJ Unit Air tlo __________wait* Mot ... si.' tea (teas .... too wu*oc * Oa 47.1 Inf Bu* Mch Woalworth ... 7» lot Harr .... S3.4 TH* * Tow 31 -M ntek .... S3.4 Tnsrt ah * T IN it Paper .... 314 Zenith Rad . 1SI BOW-WNBS S PM AVERAGES M Ind*. 710.04 op 13* SO RalU 144.33 Op 1.71 If Utlla. 130 47 up 0 47 04 Stock* ljg go up l.» Votam* to 3 p.m. 1,130.000. Moon Wad. Prar. dap . Weak a#* . Month ago Taw sap mi Msh .. looi low ... Induat RalU Ctll Stock* ...•is?rsi +j ....307.0 U14 133.0 Mi ....MI.7 131 lS.4 ____370.0 It.7 00.1 3*0.4 s«!o S07.0 114 SIS.4 8:5 & American Stock Exch. • atstnii* cal ei Pw ... Oahu Elac ... ::: Fly Tlser ‘ Oca Baaaf .. ran Lamp .. r.'*' m , liJ .pm IIM 34 J ta* N Am 35 4 BM Ml . U.7 MaaO John 34 k Mabawk Alrl . w» ISM 4U m£» .. .34. , If MNJB Ltd U . U.l slick Air .... J . Ol Tgctnloo — *7- Pontine’s buelneu pace continued to climb back toward normalcy during July as economic activity on many levels was either higher than in June or equaling the 1990 pace. ★ ★ fo pnph activity was about « million less than in June, but toppqr the 1900 mark by more than $2,000. jgniMing permits were ahead of Jane In number and more than $1 million ahead in amount with the beginning of work on Pontine Osteopathic Hospital's now wing. Bus patronage was down but an all-time high was report-] 7; JO and 8:30 p.i ed by North Central Airlines at Pontiac Municipal Airport. ' dr ★ ★ Figures indicating business trends in Pontiac during July were reported by Community National Bank, Pontiac State wank the 'poet office, the city water and inspection departments, Consumers Power Co., petroit Bdison Co., Pontiac Transit Corp. and North Central Airlines. Jaiy 1001 Jane IM1 Bank debits to customer* accounts (exclusive of public funds) ... ...100.784.041 $89,907,557 postal receipts ....... $97,490 $127,730 Total building permits— Number..................... HO 110 Amount........... $1,769,184 $420,258 New dwellings Number.............. 91 . U Amount...............v $178,000 $112,700 Oa# consumption (eo. ft) ............174,107,100 252,585,700 Electrical energy (Con- KWH) ........ 23,714,809 30,097^94 Water consumption ig.it > ........... .343,488,700 $48,336,000 Bus patrons .............. 57,203 68,259, Air patrons (outbound) 140 90 Detroit Edison CO. eleqtrlcal consumption for June 1961-10,730582 KWH; for May 1981—11,819.910 KITH; for June11960] —12,363,569 KWH; for May 1960—12.420494 KWH. ★ fo 4k Total electrical-consumption (Consumers Power Co. and Detroit Edison Co.) for June 1961—40,817,978 KWH; to May 1M1—47JOS,071 KWH; for June 1980-^48,062,625 KWH; for May 1980—48J83J78 KWH. News in Brief Ranutaage Sale, Fri Sept. 1st, . a.m. C.A.I. Bldg. Watnrferd. O.E.S. No. 394. —Adv. Sometime after I p.m. yeater-l day a $40 cement donkey was stolen from the front yard of Mrs. Natalie Rothe at 5850 Rowley St.,1 Waterford Township. A pair of lounge type lawn chain coating $40 was stolen from the] front yard of the Perry Dick resi-i dehce at 1739 Eason St., Waterford Township sometime between . yesterday. July I960 $86,571,443 $104J85 131 $326,698 17 $123 J0Q 148,131 J00 34,835,432 394,044,600 63J74 Business Notes ; Cramer E. Partridge of Par-tridge A Associates, 1050 W. Huron ] St, has been appointed the local; representative of the National. Brokers Council for this area, ft ft ft Dale R, Davis of Davis Motors, Rochester, has been re-elected to a one-year tern; on > the national dealer council of the Studebaker-Packard Carp. . Of the vegetables and fruits In the UJ. that move to market, 47 per cent of them are conveyed by truck. OK SEPTEMBER *, 1M AT Uft a.m. the undtrilgnad Win tall at public 9| fir mail oo* IMS Far* 4 Door. MSI No. B4FV133114 at Wwrjjatgw Fart Barm, Mid ySnurTA! Am- x n. i»4i OIL COMPANY WILL LEASK OR BUY Your SERVICE STATION Write All laJooaaiiMi to PONTIAC PRESS BOX 18 BIG OFFER FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOLERS! Listen-and learn touch typing in just tan days. Now Smith-Corona offers you a complete audiovisual typing course: 5 LP records and an easy-to-read instruction manual. Yours with any colorful new Smith-Corona portable. More people buy Smith^Coronas than any other portable. Try on? today. FWITH ANY SMITH-CORONA PORTABLE Complete line of Smith-Corona portable typewriters in stock at Discount prices. Financed over 12 months as low as $7.47 per month. SEREIU PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W. Lawrence S». PE 2-013S Gtt entry blanks and full details at GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W. Lawrence St. FE 2-0135 color color COLOR This year — vinyl binder* in 8 colon. Gay—.mluindy — sad to practical! Plastic foM wear sod tear marks — edgn tlttironicdli sealed (no rite — no atitdims) sod a mckri-plited metal with opening lever. Wa bay la targa quantitto* ta saR direct ta sdreals . . . consequently, ear prices are usually lewerl Wa stack ever 12,660 different items su it is impos-sIMa far as ta 1st ream oil... avarytMag from • pan paint ta a desk! 3-RING BIMDE1S as tow as 35^ Catered Vtoyi MUG BINDERS 89< Zipper liif Binder $1?6 GENERAL FAINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY n\w. LAWRENCE ST. PI X-tyllS TKK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1901 T m FORTY.THREE CLASSIFICATIONS ' INDEX BmM MiftW ANNOUNCEMENTS Cud of Thanks .........1 In Memorials ......... 3 Flowers ...............3 Funeral Directors .... i Cemetery Lots .......!.. 5 ftST ££.»* EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male... Help Wanted Female .. Help Wanted ........ Employment Agencies . . Instructions ...... Work Wanted Male.... Work Wanted Female . SERVICES OFFERED Building Service ....... Building Supplies ...... Business Service ...... Bookkeeping ft Taxes ... Dressmaking A Tailoring . Garden Plowing ........ Income Tax Service ..... Laundry Service ........ Landscaping ........... Moving A Trucking....... Painting A Decorating ... Television Seiyibe .... Upholstering .......... Nursery Schools ........ N&TICES Lost A Found ..... Hobbies A Supplies .. Notices A Personals . Death Notices ia Serisa; bauqhby. sod w. st-----I jav. Fred Dewey“(Brndiai oSun: Slr.*r tea wlll l. kAa aa.LfT.’'1 •* U ill, ElCfe Hdp Wwtto< MJ, tti H«W W1M FWJt CARNIVAL .U2SIWW.STL -! ! n*rt appearing and have a or. Tip*. Mterfst m you Stay be able Is qualify tor s I »*«m*nt SO coiled! 2*5 to*Isrf (fir*mr*'wMka*ad ; oSShty^bOMA. ww&_ _ . . sUU retain your regular. Job. For SALES LADIES NEEDED, NOW Information MS MA 44411 after | Manager tflUBS/yO T> MU 4 p.m. ______________' Bellevue Sdi~ Tdedo U. Ohio. _*“*' A P AjfTTlME JOB 2 m asri—iill j_ 'i iii i ii i‘ : Haw, os Orchard Lake. T»u5?*ort^; j Canvassers 5*L?,V. HSS huobondof Agnes j EXPERIENCED FOB FURNACE CLEANING _ A ND __ GENERAL j ROW — »Ttti Oral indtet^AOED LAtiy. aAst srr and light homework. FE 4-9083. OFFICE M A N AO E R. ' RETAIL chain outlet, general office experience preferred. ertH tesla. Write Boa aa , Pontiac Fun. OFFICE GIRL, TTFINQ AND BOME bookkeeping, billing automobile Sou* MoTmtenR office 'week, •toady. ffirar "" ' ”—*-JBffenon UlU Martin. I MR. WISE rnends ________ ________ ____ „ SPARE TIME OREETINO HEATINO 2 LARUE nAAH. I uA ruft aha At home Show INO TRUCKS Hi Ite e».*»-A!tea-a. Fonaral I CAN placi I MEN OB WOMEN, i in Olto. mgftl MTV. PonUftC ITM |o -nil ClUtomgrg U\ ii r# tA9 Th«r«day. A us I with ttfftrtftMd bou»»- §£$»3H & I REG 1STEREd"nURSES tetot in 8t. Joseph's wctlon ot DIE REPAIR MAN. 183 ELIZA- -■aat tan Cemetery, Orion bath St., Like Often. *"*“»>» Allan a I DEALER SALBSMAK. 2Mt MAR I f nATff** .M^J*** ' ’ rled. food car. Take ordert. 4.000 JJ COSBL WO. X. 1M1,_KARL O., etubushed custom* rs, jiljl _p»r ________________ ' our now t«U Chris'mas and all occasion I reel -Ins coslo and sin*. Taka their orders and atm to 100% profit. No expgrhma* aeeeteary. Costs nothing to try Write today for samples on approval Regal Greetings Dept MS. FerudaH, , Luaerne, liieh. _ ____I . 14 htteband of Ida M. Cobell: dear 8 15 Mr^v^ri.^-‘“„!?*’.“‘ Sight CTiW k plui eipenie allowance. , sort time work. os hBI . mum rtime run i f*twl Befferon. Mrs. Rob- I Over an It MI I.1A44. ert Freemen and Lt X r*1-- \IJVI age " o* o-toea.. , Cobeli; dear broliwr of Conc£ FART 6k WlL Tdte. IT hell; also eurvi red by. IlSaid ------------- “ ^ ,gl children. Funeral cervlce will b supervisor and 1 general atwS nurse la Pontiac area. Superetaor position will be on ■ hiH tmo relief hosts aa afternoon and tve-ntng shifts. General staff nurse lor days or afternoons. Paid va-MUtUf and sick leave. RoapUali-sattdn and life Insurance plans. Retirement benefits. Apply at Per-sonnet office Oakland County Of aapgtetai ir 1 p.m. ehllhien Funera 1 service • *1 bald Friday, Sms. L at 1__, MMI 1>! from the Donclson fohii Funeral [ 3-3547 a If 'SSM^MMMIMtt' St ---- . 20 Cemetery. Mr. CobeU will lie in 1) ■ tat* St the Dopelson-Johnt Fu- • **i neral Home afterr n.m. today • a ^*»» ACO '». Mil. FOREST 23 ? • 1M Erie Road; age M; beloved ’ £s fiSSf*- ®* A- Ifwi; he-241 Ipyed con of Barry E. La ms on. qa! Funeral service WlU be held ,_______ I___ •J®t Thursday, Aug *£ at USO p.m. reatlon: . , 25A >wa*r»i I fiSB' 'AiktM>"IiiBO are nrflBT- F^.'^a.m. ' Do~1*onJ«»lD. I to getaheadT -Funeral Borne. j learnteg. Amily w. »■ —------- jn Mtmorfan. 2'1 lorn T. Dunn who passed away ] Miu St. Roebaeter._________ NEW PRODUCT TO BE ADVER- RELIABLX WOMAN; Wtd. Contmcte, Mlgs. 38 j Rent .. ability I **!82f‘ a“*ru" *"**• n M* =___, „_jPWteangagfs. 13 ROOM APARTMENT |li A, Don't teas that home Are gdor 1 oeeft, jattHio MWiiSidr SSmartL peymenu loo ifwfe Ht |JUf Mil l ROOMS AND BATH. CTtuffli JW^WjnE^W- to* I . furnished, *U wagk. Ft S-I4S). ASS8^i*ALfiT‘ i ro6U4 1 rnttmifm iM3^^EtemhateRMd !.« ____5143 cass-l _______ ABSOLOtELf raS*FSSnB8r AC-! — — —— • oewtrsMt. as | II Reattor Fsr- ISMit. Huror ._._____ ._t CONTRACTS CLARK RSAL ESTATE _ 3101 W. Boron FE 4-4M . FE 2-7SSS ■ r ..._ Brewer Real Estate HAVE BUTERS FOH CONTRACTS pe Or -----------—*“* CASH . Load Contracts, homee. equities \VRIGHT .45 Oakland Ave____FE 1-0441 ca*h for Land c6ktRAcrs. ■ J. Voa Wait. 4040 DU it Boy. OB3-I2QA IMMEDIATE ACTION OT any good tend ooalracu. NOW Of seasoned. Your cash upon satisfactory Inspection Of property and tttlt. Ask for Eta Tampltteo. 003-0000. 3330 Orchard Lk. Rd. LAND CONTRACTS TO BOY OR to sail. Earl Oarrelt EM Mill North Ferry. FE 3-3003. TKoms and BAW. WTkTt. *31 In«. M3 Baldwin Aon. oUerbock'a auto Forte vicinity 2-2U0. 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND •igJLoUZfWy*-y'% rfflS5frvi~j' "and oroom apartments, leayeallwl loaatlod. ------jjO W. Huron. 1 ----AND 1*111 >■ 2-4370 . ----AND BA North Saginaw StrsaL masKWsrwmrytutt. ■SOU. 4 or 2 roams. Pot. entrance. 071 sad Ml mo mm Leach. Aobam HMo. WLS3M. ■ COLORED - OFFER 3 NoOUr Fl R N i IH E D AFANTMeNT I _ _ ROOMS. ADULTS ONLY Navrtjr dac orated. M Fort on MA lltOOME AND BATH. NICE LAWN I Only Oboa^uUy ftmtlehed aport-I meats left. Immaculately cnu. ■oca ^ OMHjpMit ew^hte _r~ ' %?ss PLENTY OF WORK !SM .. v/vr nuATirtli ut-irn SHIRT FINISHER — BIRM1NO- > NOT ENOUGH MEN j ham Cleaners 1253 8. Woodward Salesmen 25 to 55 looking ter bet- MI 4-4020._: ■ FW - fytu*y. Sd I i*te. .A FRODtlCT ONCONPI-1 j l‘M I “’Imagine how much • MbBthalKkoMMIh he makes than us baby sitters— ork unarmed! ” ANNETT - 27 In Memoriam WANTED Wtd. Children to Board . Wtd. Household Goods,.. Wtd. Miscellaneous .. Money Wanted ......... Wanted to Rent ....... Share Living Quarters .. Wtd. Transportation ..... Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. ... Wanted Real Estate ... August 30, L.. Gone, but not torgottsn. SoSte wlogod te Wo, Dorothy. Funeral Directors 4 Donelson* Johns COATS ft FUNERAL BOME I DRAYTON PLAINS OR MlVoorhees-Siple m\ ------ 36 n ABC-TV Bob Oommlngs , snow. H you wookl like to lappfa-men! your Income by SIMOOM per mo. daring pour epore time from ycur home, obcac M»l4M. PART-TIME STOCK BOY ' EVE-nlngs. It or over Mb driver* 11- [ cenee. Apply 550 N. Perry kU^jWdnstted odver- ONCfuJuNO" lor oil woman TOY CHEST THB FIRST AND ONB OF TBS FINEST TOT PARTY PLAN IN MICH TOP EARNINOS I per cent commission to yc lotus season bonuses abeolutly nothing to but TOP HOSTESS PREMIUMS Work Wanted Mate II, Need 3 i sport* tuna* REAL ESTATE SALES PEOPLE | Ambitious, full time Exparianoe preferred, but not essential. Top I compilation paid. Ask tag Wideman. Smith—Wldeman DEMONSTRATION AIDS 'Uant company training Free Color catalogs .. . THE TOY CHEST I-1 Delivers^ -.Collects — Services ■t„ Pontiac. I ' CALL_PBT«47il___ OP TO 1100 MONTHLY KM wearing tor-’- ■*-- --- 2 LOTS, VETERANS OARDEN. . _ Oakland Hills Msoorlal Cemetery phone FE I low. ------ —ifuSSETTATF g o LOYS. MASONIC BEAUTIFUL LOTT Fl Mount Park Cemetery Call 'ERRY I after RENTALS OFFERED Rent Apts. Furnished .... Rent Apts. Unfurnished ... Rent Houses Furnished .. Rent Houses Unfurnished . Rent Lake Cottages ...Cl I ~ r~“ -----—— j For Rent Rooms ......... 42] Rooms With Board .... 43 Convalescent Homes....44 Hold Rooms ........... 45 S3 oK space "J?) Tell Everybody For Rent Miscellaneous .. 48| ’SS' other Mica expertenci R J. Valuct, J45 Oakland A*c em- FE 4-1**' ”1 I RALE8ML.._________________________ willinf to caavaac. For Interview Frocks to friends. No li _ canvassing or tgpaitenoc nec< aary. Fashion Frocks, Dept. SALESMEN OVER 20. PULL TIME, i WOMAN WANTED PC —-------_____-----—.— — work. Apply at Big B„ 2500 Dixie Highway. _ OPERATOR. WHITE HO^IUnPER. ' WItILE y axparlancad a i:vr1l month, utiu-1 1-3 BEDROOMS. PARTLY FUR j nUhcd. laketront apu. OR 2-OlM. 1BDROOMS. VERY CLEAR, ->se N Rte r“ -------------— mlddleaged c< FE HOR. 3 AND 4 ___ St. FE 4-5200. 15 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH AND WICYWRSRAM ... ^ - all cash Ot OR FRA EQUITIES f you are leaving - y C|^ 2JBS* ■ MAN irtTR WIFft A]h> CRUX) j WATERTORD TREE *tewwfrtg~|T»0 W. Wapio* MAyfalr J-SMQ 3j® win do aav kind of work. Coll trimming and removal. Frog oa-i AI I EASH anytime beforg On. FE 0-0003. Umatea. OR 3-B738 or OR 3-SQ46. -Uent f« PAINTING-INTERIOR AND E3CTB-1 WATERFORD TREE SERViC^l rter FE BOMfr - 1 “ ----- --------------- YOUNO MAN DESIRES WORK OF 2 LAROE ROOMS, UTILITIES stpve. refrtg. rum. AdulU. 032 201. ri.wi.aa. FE 3-0830. ?5B1 any kind. FE 0-1204. Work Wanted Femal* 12 ». j ^ ^ LISTINGS NEEDED Moving and Trucking 22 Hava a number of buyers ter I ^ | and 3-bcdrodm homes. For gutel A-l MOVING SERVICE. REASON-1 ACTION MU us jmjt** I Brewer Real Estate ,..c*^aL.^2^°' tt?i - ii ROdfiW."'FhrVATE_ 1ATH "aRd entranaa. 017 wk. FE MM, OR 3 roomo and nath. deoerated, beat, hot watoi. __ ;g 3 AND t-ROOM APARTMeRTS. til Whlttcmore, 1M and 104 Baldwin 3 ROOMS AND BATH, REFR1CP 3 RO< _IFE 4-5101 Eva., 1 1-1 IRONINO SERVICE. REFER- ..?JZHJ!Z.£bt.KrJ,ov\£A}Jk.. i Lis-ftnoo-coLORfb SMITH MOVING CO. FE 4^004,LH. Middleton FE ^ HAUUNO A N D RCSbIBH. <2. Bl’ECIALIZED REALTY SERVICE — anytime. FE 4-0264. | Louis -— M R RUBBISH. NAME ------------- price Any time, >1 0-0005 tinov lfihinm and Y AR~: —-^rtPOOW ORLMoir IMP 1-msnQOnM ARP' MM3- rvnth* vAin'.TiiA11 vmi u. tam ' ^TrPrt- iTr®;.. •”1**Di* *“* LADY WISHES STEADY FIVE-DAY week houeektaplsg or oaavates-mnt care. Prefer city or Birmingham am. Refereecea. FE 1-0075 ifter 0, all day Sunday. removal. Reasonable. Pros astl-mates. UL 2-3100. iFHlAN~W53FSr~rBS^IIi®SE a a* Call after 3:00 P M FE I-11M WOMAN DESIRES RESTAURANT work. 10 years' experience. Call FKM7M, Building Ssrvlct! >l Date C t 3-4033. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE For Sale Houses --Income Property ......... 50 For Sale Lake Property .. 51 For Sale Resort Property 52 Suburban Property 53 For Sale Lots ......... 54 For Sale Acreage ....... 56 ■ For Sale Farms .........56 Rent Farm Property ...» 56A Sale Business Property .... 57 Rent-Lease Bus. Prop. .. 57A For Sale or Exchange .... 58 ] About it with a i Pontiac. Press Want Ad BARGAIN I additions. MM . Mb ga-4M . porches 030) • cement Apartments^ l BEDROOM DELUXE HOT-- "t» apartment. Newly diOOTOMd. . ..rat floor, parking at door, fas Painting ft Decorating ------S----------A-- 1 :BEDROOM, L I V I N O ROOM. SiS^L ^r.n«» Tat Huron location. Ml month. FE EMM » rf 2-ism' HStaun bIMrcn In bldg. ' SHIRLEY APTS. * IIS E. tem FE mu 3 ROOM, FULL BATH ON MAIN flute. *“- —r-i ■“ ■ “* 3- OR f —u Adult*. UUI. J8, BATH. MOD—... -- rater, itova and ratrtsarator. Tlo^wumu fUrMUIOS — <-HB- *» WBU—'?■ Utilities 111 vsst. West ____ 1 HM. T I Mem atoMHI WBftTk Saginaw 4-ROOS iWi Rotrlg., ill « ROOMS AND BATH. IN DRaV! ton Plains. Hot wdter,. beat, r»-frlftrator and atova fura.. SM . LADY ihTERlOR biSORATOR Papering. FE S-0343. | NY ERIOB AND SXTXIUtXi Mtetlag.^wall^yMhlng Free if! ^.teOfer couple. FiE 3-7425. ’ ________ LI BKlRboiti. bAkTLY F0S! E R 10 R - klihtll laketront apt*. OR HIS. That's because of the greater selection of every- FINANCIAL Business Opportunities . Sale Land Contracts ... Money to Loan........ Credit Adviaors ..... Mortgage Loans ...... MERCHANDISE Swaps .............. For Sale Clothing ..... . Sale Household Goods Antiques ..... Hi-Fi, TV ft Radios Water Softeners....... Far Sale Miscellaneous .. Christmas Trees ...... Christmas Gifts....... Machinery ............ Do It Yourself ....... Camera* ft Equipment . Sale Musical Goods -...-Sale Office Equipment . YOUNO MAN WANTED TO TRAIN . fay 1 Drlva b ALTERATION ____ LADY. cocas and qualified ter *■» on i (inert quality faihlon merchan-disc. Alvin'*. 6*2 W. Huron. i , BABY SITTER, LIVE IN. MORE thing from automobiles to «or|~ lust Dial. FE 2-8181 ■OM^qwaUflcatloa.^ abllltle* and photo not returnable. Aft. phone number and addre**. Write ron- ----—----— . tlac Fre**. Box M. »*nAPDlri.**HlftwM WANTED: WOMAN ' TO WORK 22 01x1 * HI»BW*y I part time In labor union office. for clerical and lecretarlal work. Hdp Wanted Parnate ? ££ S^dt^M 2 WOMEN WITH SALES EXPE-1 cal5'No. 100, ^ E. Lawrence rl^MJg^bothjkm^M^mnd chtl-1 statlnx ouatlflcrtlon*. Help Wanted 8 EXCLUSIVE SALES Mr. Floyd V. town. Mato manager of Salle, for one of die World1* lariort com pan!** of Hi MM, will be boldnls lotervlewi with Individual* deiirooe of en-tertng oxelurtve rtat* franchne permanent *eUtng campaign. No financial purebate required. WlU ecoalder only tbeoe interested In see king permanent unusual income and advancement No experience Lost and Found -flrgplafo'.~dr»iBiL | FOUND: LAUNDRY. 3DRNTIP A-l BRICK. BLOCK AND CEMENT work. Also fireplaces, OR 34402. CONCRETE DRIVE.' PATIO, CALL I OR 3- I WOMEN TO SELL 3-D FIC-tures, tell Umi. For Interview: Rd, Apply In periteo. -COIX3RED-LADY FOR CUBANINO Motel room*. MI 8-1548. DOMESTIC. WHITE. PLAIN COOK lng~Bundry and cleaning Noon to i p.m. Tue* , Wed., and Thar*. Ref. Orchard Laki YlUage Ana. d»a-2H3. Fabulous New Plan for Toy Demonstrator dartre to sooceed into a permanent fotttfs with hlsh.maoma bracket. Mart own ear and be willing to travel state of Michigan with sales manager. Applicant must be over thirty year* of ago- The ooe selected WUl be tMSBt the builaess while wwktM at gaate. Coo tart Mr. Lown Tuesdaymruofb Thursday at the • -- W t-dlM ! DOUBLE TOUR PROFIT. SEI-L brand juu. TOTS, oirrs AND HOUSEWARES AT CAX.L HOME ; —— UBEWAI COUNT 1PRICES; PARTIES. QIC. I n 8-gSB8- FULL TIME SALESLADIES TO J sell 3-D pictures IAN OR WOMAN WITH CAR. ean 12 to 13 and up pur hour. Nationally advertised Watkins Food rout# Experience unnecessary OM age no handicap. Foil Or part time. FE 2-3053. •t2w°oR [ REAL ESTATE SALES Have room lor 3 experienced men ___ or women. lull or part time. Call Interview I Mr. Ralph (or mUrrview. Hag- DEAL WITH BUILDER, OARAOE. additions, recreation room*. R. VanBIckle, Bldg. Co.. EM 3-»85d. FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR-lng Will finance. R. j Munrs Efecrlc Co- 10*0 W, Huron._______ Htog. flceosrtl^uUy' Moipp!l.*Pre* estimate*. Russell Marlon. FE 3-72M. EXCAVATIONS—BULLDOZINO Septic Sywmi EM 3-0M1 HOME. OARAOE, CABINETS. AD-dltlon*. Licensed OUfldtr. FRA equipped pi 4-8450. L. A. Young. ROOFS: WEW, REPAIR EAVESTROPOH1NO FE 4A444 . lug. OR______________________ LOST: SMALL FEMALE TER- “ short Mack ‘ ~ Ilte spots. Vicinity of B -....d Fbrest. FE 2-11M. LOST: LADIES BULOVA WRIST- . watch. Lost Aug. M St Dlxl* Ear. R*w»T 14-ft. Cresthn* csbtn ____ w. ONI MSI. NOW 4*34 One 14-ft. Lone Star Flamingo Cost Mil, MOW ONLY MM. On* mw 0HBtilH*Mwrt*ns 14-11. COrt 1735, NOW ONLY MSI.. Two muss MOte, IT, tin—14-ft •ftt- ~ Oator Trailer Ml lb. Hgrtttf I1M Little Dude Trailer ism lb. ... Ml KEIXY HARDWARE Busmens Service IS Sale Sporting Goods ..... 74 Hunting Accommodations 74A Bait, Mitmows, Etc......75 Sand, Gravel ft Dirt.....71 Wood, Coal ft Fuel ...... 77 Plante, Trees Shrubs .... 78 For Sale Pets .......... 7»l Dogs Trained, B’rded____ 80 Hunting Dogs .......... Hay. Grain ft Feed .... .. >2 FARM MERCHANDISE For 8alr Llvestock .... Wanted Llveetock....... For Sale Poultry ...... Sale ntrm Produce...... Sale Farm Equipment . BOX BEFL1EU At IS s.». Today there were rinUM at The Pita office ta the feUoi 7, It, IS, If, te, *4, | «, ss, M, M, «#. 7*. as. j M, M, SI, M, 99, m, 117, j 1RL FOR “COUNTER AND GEN- I '^25 eral work - In Cteoaera. Apply | BALESktEN OR WOMEN. FULL OR __ _______________t day* wk. EM 3-2*34 OIRL FOR OENERAL HOU8E- child wclcomt. GENERAL. NO LAUNDRT. SUN- WANTED: REAL people, we Ml Moat have |o — , enced preferred but 1 Auction Ssles ............ 68 AUTOMOTIVE For Sale Housetrailers Rent Trailer Space . • • Auto Accessories..... For Sals Tina........ Sale Trotk Tires...... Auto Service......... Sale Motor Scooters --For Sale Motorcycles .. For Sale Bicycles.... Boats ft Accessories Fiberglns ............ For Sale Airplanes ,. ■ -Transportation Offered Wanted Used Cars . .. Used Auto Parts ..... Comm. Ttalters ,.........M2A Sale Used Trucks ....... 103 Used Truck Partr ......NBA The Foatiae Pren FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From I sjh. U I P-tn- AH errors Mould bo ro-ported immodlswiy. Tho press sssumts no (MN slblllty lor erron othor (bon to c*ne*l the charges Mr that portion of tho fTr*t lna*rtliui of Iho advortloo moat which h** .baoa (so-Sarod vaiuoim* throup im error. Whoa eonceUotlon* are mod* be sore to get your ''MB number. Vo adi-jstmenlt WlU M given without K. Closing ttmg fur advortuo-menU containing tvpo gtem larger than regular agate . MSS.te MVMto day ffivtes ADVERTISERS 1b* d**dH»* tor tmMono-tlon of tmaatewt Wont Ads to t o.m. Ski day of pubtleo- CASH WANT AD RATES Ltam l-Dey 3-Doy* d-Dovs 71 si» sift m ii « IS POWER and SAILS Employment Agencies 9 EVELYN EDWARDS “VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE” 241* Sort Hurra Suite 4 Phone FEderal 4-0584 I OFFICE j ' TRAINEE TM« man and 21-34 to tea office and credit work. Mart ftryfe i A BETTER PLUMB0*0 JOB. RE . .™ pairs, alteration* sad saw. wan. protect Licensed muter plumber. JJ*1 — ' 8-3633. If BO ans. M3-1I23. Lowo*. , Flumblag Service. ___________1 We have the Experience and Co- BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. - °«,erit'2l ?' B?.nrf!?r,t0”‘ -*-Awt. . Daaeftnnhla ! COMMftB OT ClU lOT _ a HOM1 APFOlimCXNT : City Adjustment Service PINTER'S 6et 6ut of~debt" | ^0XTn“ Regain Peace of SUad through weakly poymeat plan ____ ..wet your lob tad Credit. JU I Avoid OarhtshmeaU and Repoues- _____ FE 4-3I8L HOTPOINT. WltntLFoOL AND ztf wrTtw HOUSlFLANS DRAWN ECONSkP leaUy. Orad. Res. Wider. M8U. W3-3I30 gam Warwtob it. Signs Psinted Truck* lettered. MY l-Wf *AW8 MACHINE SHARPENED. Manley leach tl B«iUy St. 92 w Huron roowEc, siicu OPPOSITE MAIN POET OPEICI MICHIGAN Mbit COUNSELLORS 1M Pratt*c_JUU _Hank Bldg. Pontiac' Stew of marine M» Pouts and flb*rgl»s ms- wrtal*. WE REN'f BOATS. MOTORS. TRAILERS PAUL A. YOUNGTINC. OPEN T DAYS A WEEK . ISM Dtxte Swy. - Oe Low Uk* OR *4*11 WANTED: BOAT CUSTOMERS Bookkeeping ft Teem 16 Whether you want »L motor-boat or a sailing * vessel youH-find exactly what you're looking for SECRETARIES Aged 14-IS W* h*V* Immediate pwn(R4S ewMU?1* I ‘ iereTr.-LSr Instructions 10 at the price you want to tJ%*&t gggg rS>.?15w UI w pay in classification 97 Wortc Wanted Mala 11 Of • . ■ I LA WALL WASHWO. CARPET. ggte* m«chln* cleanbd. wTi-lin. 1ST CLASS LICENSED BUfLDER ___ Free ortlamte*. MLSitl, THE PONTIAC ”■ IAA WALL WASHUxd BY MAClt Bug*, upholrtgty. FE S442S. Repair a SpuclOlty PRESS WANT ADS IS BA as m gw 3A EE 2-8181 __ Small FE 5-2841 u* r-m eras. BLOCK LA7TINO. LICENSED CE------------ ^WTchti. patio*, atepa. ''d.ilipkY Hg — 5-334* __________________.13L.L30M Drassmsldnf, TtBoring 17 DRESSMAKINO. TAILORING, AL-terattens Mrs. Bodell. FE 4-W53. EXPERIENCED DRESS MARINO and tallertog. Crtl M34131 •UllloSx.—.TMfllOSm^ *. it. Urattoas. Edna Warner ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, AU-gust M. 1ML I will not be responsible tor Ur debt* contracted by any other Used Beats'Miter* - From JU up „ j CLOSE-OUT ON SOME BOAT tofgost budglt -Q „ YOURMLjr* DOCK BIB With Wood or Atom Dock, YOUR EY1NXODK DEALER Harrington Boat Works I S. IWtri “ (gj — draperies. MY KMC Qatdaii^isivHag^ PLETE gradlnf. J! CUSTOM SLOW.' DRAa, DISK - I Oardcp. yard; OE 2-IMS. J Landscaping A-l Marios Special Buy now at Auaurt prtoe*. Thru Labor Say only. 35c a PULL yard mu. OrvlU* ’ Let Elam, ffll _ „ _ _ South Bivd. Troy, Michigan. Building Modernization riLL THE KIND GENTLEMAN; & sath ,«sssrLi;|“»ssr sxfe *°?be» and Dorar Rd. in A of. 14. piMaai, WORK. ALL TYPES OP CON- —“ “---- '* STRUCTIOK. FHA TERMS. NO MONEY DOWN. G ft M Construction THE BO-PEEP FRE-SCMOOL, Lt 1 SMS MsU Ewy *«»““» censed, open fir enrollment. Por'OAIUOES. OOWCEETE A DDL lnformaxian, Fh. UL LUSt. TOMfENO MONEY DOWN I Wtd. Children to Board 2S Wtd. Honschold Goods 291 1 CALL SELLS ALL. MORE CASH w landtei uf apphi — 1 tain House, FE 34MI. otwi^ ?&BUuniW; COUCH AND CHAIR, (MS, Uf- rssrss ___________ htesi. _________fertilising. OB 34250. ,-i marion Slue sod. deliy-ered dr jtekad up. end '‘“J “—■■*. fit jjM" .CE TK___________ STUMP REMOYAL • iw» roteovs' ‘ bid. 683-2810 _ - _ ... al'S complSt* landScaNino Seeding, sodding, black dirt. Yon soil, tree trim Flng and removal Cement wort, patloe and fee-*— ^>1 dfttobrOETMft , COliFLEfEn®NirirtmKrOAR- l FAT UF TO SM CASH FOR — sewing LLKdBi Wtd-MtscsIUnsOMs 30 OFFICE FURNITURE AND RUBIOS** equipment Portal Printing «t>d Office Supply. Ml 1-381*7_ d'tRLB 2T* snolisH-ttp* BIKE. —- —-m,- |ig Skars JLtvlwg Q—rtsrs 33 ELDERLY LADY TO SHARE home free with gam*. FE 4-83*3 TEACHER. NUrBE M' idBUUbls liable relerences '« a«*2S“ ».• Apt. No. IM. Cement Contractors w: ALTERATIONS, ALL OARMENT8. Inc , Knit Droaabi OE LIM3. THU SPACE RESERVED ________Fencing ANCHOR FENCES Aluminum—Steel—Wood NO Money Down. FHA AptOVOd, FREE EBTIMATEg. f¥ l-74Tl Pontisc Fence Company ............... ■say terms. Ff*U Eel. OR 3-6595 - lit FINE HOOF BOARDS 4c lln. ft 1X2 FURRINO STRIPS 21 BB.ft. &uFtShUi'v.rjfri 4x2“ Fag Board ...... fSJB 4tX’ V-Orov# Mnbognny . S44t 4x1x1b Hnrdbonrd . . MBS «L PONT1AC LUMBER CO. OABB AND CARRY 331 Oakland Avn.~ ''FE *4812 lxij'wMt*p2S°bonrtSi]tt* Un. ftl 2x4 No. 3 ftetirtB rT m S. it. 2Vs TD casing ... Me lln. ft. 3V« TD bMa ......«s* E ft m — 8 STit. (tab . *•% off Waterford Lumber 3MI AirtSiu^ ^----------- Plywood raw.wew mob S3 SO ALL TH1CKNBS8IS ANL _______ Ont our prloes before you buy I EHEET OB CAR LOAD Plywood Distributor m H. Oaae_________ft 2-4430 "ataCML TRU WEEK ONLT I tS> fir plywood .. (4.75 abort pteuaoi .,(*.71 St $mSr F..::™ I whit* Mr ... I N tort j spruce .... 3 SIH fort 3 spruce ..... S .U fort _1* sprue* .. | .U foot 2*12 spruce .... I 48 foot AIRPORT LUMBER AND SUPPLY CO. Mower Service AUBURN ROAD •jije * service 1413 W. Auburn Rood UL L1SB7 iBetweeo Crooks and UvoraWsi ^Aoroto from Avradnlo Hltb TH» APACE RESERVED FOR YOUR BUSINESS FOH YOUR BUaiNL OR SERVICE AD TODAY! -UAL FE MISt tU.AfltiUNO FREE ESTIMATES prUeTOri Ed MB Stomps for Coltectors STAMPS ON APPROVAL . Squirrel Stomp Shop _ . >» MM_________Auburn Heights BOAT NUMBERS 'site 3 tort - # grt II nteeoi I S. CM* Fj 44S3S- Television. Radio and HbR Srvtce MICKEYSTRAKA TV SERVICE DAY OR EVEN- FE I-12H Ted Rental RENT TOOLE AND EQUIPMENT. Tree Trimming Service BOB'S TREE SERVICE ” Trimming sad roaovol. 331-2324 EXPERT TREE” TRIMMING AND removal. Rgnaooable. FE S-MStf EXPERT TREE SERVICE^ FREE General Tree Servk* * rRnnnNo gR rehoval. tedtv- Track Rental _ Trucks to Rent AND EQUIPMENT _ Dump Troakii (wwnlw Pontiac Farm end Industrial Tractor Co. ^ Upholstering ^^&raFERRr»r FE 5^W8 Wracking Service °«ffi!f".J8Srrt?J£.0» ——l|l(l ................ HIlllMiiBlifioii A^iCAFdra..BULL&bfiNTT 1IV» N Sagu.sw *?T 2442* or soddly 1*0^ seed In; EM 3-34U ; FE 3-7*3*^^^^ ^ MfflMRNI' - 1 SOD DeUVred #E**I«7 ACTION Laid [ ^^JSST-fTK -iV ' ; ; . ; % ,1 f* :r THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. AU( JU Iba winter, cool to tot •urnur AmU iMBdlT tocUtttM. E. . Bride Fhit—HeateM js-tTw ** *“**““■ ITS PEKliwtH FE 4-7833 — JSSSflS- \, JOHNSON J *»t*mtb-wi 5?R& Mk ' - tjl? pJTVJS? COLORSD^ Wuta"" R00648 AND BATH PULL BASX- 11 Hlfewt Phone I R—t ****** (STALL OAiyOE^^DOWNTOWN. l.tM mam root. wMfeMt imirnmii. -$ paneled officu. ■*• • r doator. «•»«<« rt- met. Cloe*. to- Mltacle ON & SONS _r_____.ih-iaupiuiiqi 1744 ■- TELBORAPH Ffe 4-2533 _____war^.__________n WW other MMHHO. Oe» beat-XI ¥olf»i«. Artotogtl* hot water day and night, flewljr decorated. In e One opt. building. (MI Mgr. Hi mmi, .000 SQUARE ROOT STORE, AIR-eeodltlooed. I penotod office*. Meal (or doctor, architect or *t-tenter* office Cleae to Miracle Mile Bheppta* Center. Rent Re-deeed. A. JOHNSdN & SONS REAL ESTATE INSURANCE itNjK TELBORAPH FE 4-2533 For Sdk Hsmsss, < risi£2u'#&!ri«^ TIZZY RiRBt Ofilco SjP«» _. 47 Ml WEST LONOFELLOW AND 235 — — 1 bedrooms, bate- *7t a month. Will ....... ,..town Vacant. I*- mediate poaieietan- Open - Walk la aad took. Call Mr Wafnrr daft WO MW. Evenln**. TO Mail May Tdaaaaomant _ _ PREOMORE to Hwy. OB 3-1300, _______ DENTAL BUITE USED BY DR. tor 11 year*. «Md DUte Highway. Drayton Plain*. OR I-110*. •‘mJ i BLOCK PROM DOWN, Pontiac N*w paneled of-ncea, got and up. All nasties and parklna Included. PS KM ncy pmlieV. t«5 per mo AtoO »f»m *1>VV mint ^rowodnoor^ Pboo* FE MODERN i'iOTII AFARS5EI»» J£^JZSZ*rvn*x. *fS^MrwTw>er and dryer jfwSiiLlli Oneida. tlOO month, SifwT DECORATED [bOOBB. —_*t_ A.«ttaha4 fumlshMd^or jj S-34«r evening* COLORED 3 bedroom 1 itory frame. Pull . ment. fenced extra lot.'Mtora Included *11 a Month. Imme-poaaeaeton. Ml Freeport. Je lr “* * ““ Broker*. PE t-OMl. ____call PE MM. CONSOLE MM - CLARKSTON, 8S I with tot down. Vacant. Im-dlate possession. Open — Walk aad look. Call Mr Wagner. dajTwO 1-3360. Evening*. TO NEED SLATER APTS. iSjgE”"” AM If. PARKE STREET. ROCHESTER I BEDROOM AFART- ment Efrt V .WLWHr Mf rtSodLlncoln OAlTl. ®S5fXS?SJ^a,2St flnir TT ‘ "t i -_ DEEf.tei pTmn. pill* utilities. PE 6-MOO. YEAR"AROUND ABEDROUM. late. UtUltle* furnished. **• ■ Sue Pf- 1-MU —*-- Cl6§E IN — 1 BEDROOM BOilE. — **‘-*<1* aged couplt y preferred *50 Z Oakland Pnol h Paint. 43* chard Lake /.?*■ FB M160. For Sal# H oases 49 St-ACRB — 4 ROOMS and BATH On MIS. newly decorated. MR SM down. M month lnetuillpg soo. Boor rThi-^—' Jwood Realty Ml Perry MHM hath'. haooMont. g*» new*, ww down paysM. Note* »M « month. Owner. PE UNItfM. PS MtU. • Middleton Broker. buolaoot (rontogo. H |MH ~ Mlto and ReUcriot. Owner tot. 1-bedroom bouae. full basement, larao tear «»rat*. tor«# town aid »hade tree* WU ton part. Between Middlebelt — K—* Lake Road*. Own M' ___. GOOD BU Y Nortbeod off Baldwin. 1 bedroom*, bath, pavad street, near acbooi. immediate possession. Low price, (t.Mt. Term* arranged. _ PONTIAC REALTY 731 Baldwin - PR MW INDIAN WOOD LAKE Lake Oripn Roman trick and atone bilevel homo, 1 bedroom*, I Vi bath*. **• ramie Ul*. Drapes aad carpeting, elite. Rot water baaeheat ma IMrStopan* windows. I natural fite-l-car garage attached and UaaradTtoMMMHMMlli fully plaetei Beautiful ana. basement School Owner muet eell. MY uni. »onry porche* Pall, tued For Ssk H—SSS 49 fThii lodoip t_, _______ . m both*. I cer garage an lari nicely lendeeaiprjMi’ S«» beach on paved atreet. W1" “ da eegr term* er trad*. 1 BEDROOM Basement, garage, eacellent city toealtoo. Pnead at lit.M0 pha financing available. WATRR. PORD REALTY. OR 1-413*. PE S*Ut. nHMBHMS. EASWttRT,. OA-rage William* Let* privilege*. By owner, PE 3-7*11. 1-BEDROOM HOME. $3M DOWN. extra*. 111.Ml, tow down payment. OR 1-0071.____ LARGE 3 BEDROOM. LIVING R1 .salt, separate dining rm., ha* ment, E-*ar garage, alum, ajdln —-* —Tien* on black tc. . FHA term* Tal*. Carpeted Alumtnum etSrnu and acreana._jOarage._mr* tot^ fully wtat Ettchen vent fnnhood. Wo* Mg lot with aide .drive. Low rooC BrV t&imm gt.AS1 2 BEDROOM LAEE-PROttT HOME. HEAR PONTIAC OENERAL Hospital. 3 bedroom* and both, up; 1 bedroom, % bath down. Living ---- "iiiriitM neauuiui owe iw.. w* -- ter furnace, birch kitchen cabinet*. colored bath apt, lOOkUO* lot. MOO down. OR 3-33TI. 3 BEDROOM CEDAR 8HAKE homo — full hnoomont — i“- — garage — anchor lone* — Idhdooaptng — awning*, ole UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE rf* u«M I| no On*- PE 6-703! OR 3-3*11 MODERN 2 BEDROOM, j^tege** *13* M. *By*owner. EM Far Sals Hows 49 ’You can tell me you like me or don't like roe, lYiddy. but stop' taking the Fifth Amendment! ” For Sale Houses 49 For SRto H—ses 49 room, fir*place, large dining - 2 ear garage. Beautifully pad and must be even appreciated. *3^.500. W1U SYLVAN SHORES DRIVE Country living flv* minute* (torn i million dollar shopping center. Walking distance to parochial aad public achoola. 3 targe bedroom, fireplace, to mtg. r bedroom house west side. close to tebool*. *E>rl— M Reat Laks Cottafs 41 A»*oclate Broker*. FE'-------_ __ LARGE RIVER FRONT HOME, fireplace. acroMtod porch, l eaf rig*, baaemeot. Available Sept. I yearto^te, IW* me. Com- M1DDLE STRAITS LAKE FRONT. Modern. Ftreptoee, 2 bedroom*. ------ £-- ■ **g 8-0837. * ROOMS. LAROE PORCH. SAFE beach for chlldren. EM 3-4706. AT SQUARE LAKE. MODERN, excellent beach. FE H17B. _____ LAKEFRONT COTTAGE AT THE ^Vtoebim. FS 6-1336 after kitobes- ___________IS beach, uliyamuad. me ooais and (toeing- Free Tv, air sss«Lr te. Stress Hwy 1 adl*d north of Pontiac, next to Reward Johnson'*. Dray-tea IHato*. OR *4311. ____ For Rent Rooms 42 l*hln* interior.. Only 61,W0 includes n *0x3*7 corner lot. Privitogtt. on 2 lake*. Peterson Real Estgte MY 3-1681 OPEN EVBNINOS______ OFF JOSLYN. 2 BEDROOM. basement. 66.600, MM down, ao------- — —irtgBge. FE «-0«30 okrNER movino.__excellent OAKLAND LAKB PRIVILEOL 3-bedrm. brick, (all b**ement, gee heat, alum, lurna —1 —r—"* near school*, • eluded ^ Cjjjj 5-4246, after 't.tm p.~. -BEDROOM HQME, OAK FLOORS. borhood. 1 waU to wen C--oma. mixed atlgb- ltb-car garage. PACE nxiAT.TV OR *-04*3 BUILDER MnER. iJteDROCM*. NAtURAL fireplace, atom, aiding, atorm*. giii egn* util, rm., garage. 1* MTU let. fenced, iandeaiped. Near MBPO. $4,500 dn. FB 2-7017. Walk out rocreuUen mom, 3 fire-placea and I bath*. Carpeting, drape*. Built-in featur**, owner. „ I ___baaemant, attached garage Lot »*1*« »1^> adjoining lot avallabto. *13.600. with t both*. | ment. Iter OTf at 71 Tr***— eat H< Rosa Romas at OR 3-1*31 tor A BARGAIN BY OWNER, CLOSE to mw shopping center. I nemo end bath down. **m* np. Aluminum storm* aad *erw#n». Water softener, gat Real, large yard COMFORTABLE 1-ROOM APART-ment, everythlag torn.. *3* mo. PE MEM. ROCHESTER—♦ rESEWOOM. OA-ret*, ga* heat, modern. OL 1-7601 MS WTThird. _____ SMALL, OAKLEY PARK BEACH. Commerce Lake, retired couple pretorrod. 31S* Woodlawn. , ^ CLEAN TEAR ROUkB, ■ass EITCBEN WtmiAMES OLDER aSKris A‘si LARGE PR pieterred n 6-633*. ____________ ROOM FOR OENTLS- , Ref. PE *-*788. Lexington Place. I». W^SMS- BUILD Your plane or our* OR 3-604* Art Merer Rum McNab By owner on a %*m 1ST frontage i on Feint Creek, 3-C*r attached garage with hot water bant, new vacant. « mile* north at MSUQ on Cairn Croaa Dr. Ph. 838-1I6T. tember through June. Modern 3-bedreem. gat heat, *** per mooth — Near Cnuy and Burt Scheele. I M>» creetouven. OENTLEMEN — CLEAN MOMS. home style meals. FE 2-0318. ICE AND CLEAN WITH HOME nrtvUece* near TM-Huron, Hm tor njgnt-ehlft. FS A3338. REASONABLE. BOARD OPTIONAL l«Hb Oakland Arena*. FE MIS*. ROOM AND. OR BOARb. 13tto Convalesccsit- Homes 44 MULTIPLE LISTINO SSRVICB STRAIGHT AS AN $40 ARROI 8 Rooms Basement and terrace. Faeelnating kUchen walk-out taaamant complete with • picture windows, fireplace, plantar. built-in bookeaaas aad cork tiled (toon, I very large bedrooms, its ceramic til* bathe, 1 car garage. Excellent surreund-MIDDLI STRAITS LAKE—Privilege* Charming 3 bedroom hem* located In alee «ui*t neighborhood ewey from traffic. Large 31' living room, ha* wall to wall carpeting and drapaa. separate dining room, attractive knotty pine front porch, 3 ear garage, new oil furnace. Only *11,6*6. SWIMMING POOL—In your own back yard. Ptret Um* offered for this 3 bedroom brick. You win be amaied at the many extra*. Elevated family room wltb bar. lower level baa fireplace and planters, large 15x20' living room, 1th beth*. I ear garage. 3 ga* furnaces. Bathouae. Only *17,4*0. UNFJNI8HED-—7 room hom* only 1 block from Elisabeth Lake. ' Live in the basement and finish the uustatrs. Excellent opportunity for the right party. Beautiful corner lot. Total price. *(.(60. TED MCCULLOUGH. REALTOR PHONE 682-2211 *143 Cats-Elisabeth Road Open *-* Sunday 10-S BEDROOM HOME - cellent condition. Ska---- large recreation area. Ceramic tU* bath, large I ear garage. Beautiful comer lot. North aloe. Only *12,(— --------— Golden Real Estate 3*33 Orchard Lk. ltd.. Eeego Harbor PHONE 682-3200 CALLS TAEEM 3* HOURS A DAT LAKE ESTATES ^LCMLALS Wrf^M-'lWa.'oW StS* dally except Thuraday. iludlng Improved 1 . SEATING CO. rStisMfi 3 fveni each. Oil furiaiie. bacement. 3 ear garage. Paved (treat. ApartmenU new renting for (II each week... Owner ■ay* sell for (MM. I1.M* --- will handle. Terms. Dorothy Snyder Lavender 7001 nOHLaND RD. fM**l, 3-3303 DATS MU *-6417 EYES- BY OWNER. 3 ROOMS AND BATR. *600 down, rm 3-MM. BUY AND HATH AN DICOME-Frame 3-famlly. « room* and bath down. 4 room* and bath up. Frame 1 family, ttvbx. din-fito end kitchen dovra. t bed rooms and both up. On *Afoot-wkl* adr >Jointn|[ lota. _P*ved street, eloae PACE wxlAt.TY OR a**M BUILDER price for 'ItANCH. TRI-LEVEL B1-LEVEL To be told by builder. I bedroom*. basements, garages, large tote. (12.MQ-*22,800: Trade er “ tal option considered. N< Building. Oil.3-3181. SEMI-FINISHED We hnva model* of 1 bedmom homes »«b ««««*, ment*: Soma nearly OnUhed will furnish material to finish. Or WU' build on jrovr loti Ttrm* to suit A. C. Compton & Sons asm tv Huron OB 3-1414 *m w.. ---- IEDROOM 1 . ____old. Ceramic Pull basement, ga* t $9,500 Will bund I-bedroom raoch-rtfl# home « your lot. Fun batammt, oak floor*, til* hath, Mreh cup- . bo*rds OR 3-(0«S. _ ___ BUSS MeNAR -ART METER Pina Lake aad 2-bed roomhouse Eeego Harbor. Call W2-17M. Immediate pocaeaeton. MS* .. ■ ...... cLARKSTOr^rYnwnFiJLrai-tovsl home. Extra large let. Moot MfftoaT l lecxe todreemi, 2 baths, family Mem, — vrindowa. marble ailla,_— . .. carjwtlng and drapes. Call MA COLORED. VACANT 2-BEDROOM home. Newly dooonted. Ga* beat. “ -------- — »Mto! nortgage. PACE West Side . . . i-bedroom bungalow on Olendah — near Tel-Huron. Deep lot. largi garden spot. Living room, natural fireplace dtnlsg room add mod-irn kitchen, oil heat, fun base ment. 110,600 to the full price BETTER CALL ON THIS ONE Tel-Huron .. . Just a block from this POUR-BEDROOM HOMS! Newly decorated inside aad out — very attractive. Full dining room, 2tx 2* family roam, full basement, ga* heat. Large fenced yard. lMr ear garag*. BEST of ALL —\eea he bought for tll.tnO! $500 Down . .. Humphries FE 2-9236 g| H. Telegraph Open Eve*. 1877 Sq. Ft. $11,990 It sound* unbelievable but true, the exterior Is *11 elumiaj Georgian 1 Colonial ^etyltog. I, stain thar* i* 3 bedroom*. Bvmg room, kitchen and dining room. Downstair* ua 18x2* tomfly area, an llxtt ft. beau room which can be used a* a bobby room or is convertible into I , bedroom*. ***| move* you tote fjli etarillng house. M* per month. Include, principal Interest, tax#*, and insurance. To *ee the Oeorg* Town, drive north on Joslyn. 4 mile* past Walton Bird. Follow the Can. diewlek Woods atof" J* PSlfi-D Lorah Build inf Co. FE M122. SCHRAM GI-«—No Down On the** ntw 3-bedroom homes, with llxl« living roonte, 18x11 kitchen, lull basement with oil FA beat and, nil city convert lences. Priced at only $“ nd BEST OF AHtar tW> MINTS TILL JANUARY 1. West Suburban f j bedrooms with tlM floor* Large k Leggett and Isnac Crary »' — Priced below reprodi cost* and pra term*. Approximately 2 Acres rClose-In, exceltent building itte. Priced *t only SI.IM. IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor EE 5-9471 1*2 JOSLYN COR. MANWTIEIJ3 G.I.'s No Money Down W COMPLETE COfr wUl NEAR CASS LAKE Large » room*. Utility .npd 2 qar gamg*. OoMiatriy r**MA-Aid and modern to .toe.mtoXM-Excellent EMC* Harbor tocatlop city eewwr to bwtalled. Only M - jSc£ Eweiand4 1M Com Lake Rd. Fb. 8t2-12M TEMPEST RANCH ROME $29.00 CAN MOTE YOU IN YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO RENT' WHEN YOU CAN BUY IN THE CITY OF PONTIAC $55. A MONTH Excluding Taxes end Insurance 1 3 Large Bedrooms All Carpeting Included ““'asae1™ .sraSfasMc*&t MODEL at 108 N. EastBlvd. Block N of Pike on Baet Rlvd. Open Daily, Sun. 12-9 Model Phone FE 5-3676 SJ.B. BUILDINO CO. GAYLORD WISHER SCHOOL AREA for this six room bom*. Only I7.8M with tovy dew* payment. Enclosed large perch, ltt car garage. Jndl basement. Call FB 8-*683. EXCELLENT CONDITION la thla good bom* with three bedroom*. Full basement, Choice West Si3c Brick carseUbg * » d toe Uke-new ear- nd drape* to Bring .jutog rwao* and *P*-rtchly half bath*. Sxcaltont basement with fully Iliad floor and plastered celling Sdft-ener and Incinerator. Large iTniSMKS § priced. See it tednr. _ Leslie R. Tripp,'Realtor “ — rtmJtoBM SUfiL ' FS t-**22 For Sale Houses 49 Ktedtotoi new MSUO colle*, area Only *2l.*«e cash ta men *»*«• WM T. (TpMl ’REAGAN WEST SUBURBAN 4 New Model Homes gtoaaed-tn n basement down payment. . WRIGHT °"^ET5^T >UI * * O'NEIL KUL11FLE LISTINO SERVICE ty of cabtneta In « decorated. Total prloe *1#.-600.1 blockt to grade *obool. FE MM. NEW ROME. Move right In. IF* vacant. Owner decided to stay to Detroit. A 3 bedroom 34 * M ranch hom* with a large kitchen, sun porch and all beat. ..Lake privileges....on Square Lake go aim with this house. Also 300x100 ft. lot, 164 (8 PER MONTH par-meat* for thl* three Dedans” Insurifne a "^Total price only 67.200. This priced to sen quick to a .smart buyer. call FE a-Mti. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD 13* E. Pike at City Hall , FE 8-9693 ____________ SfS^T.k id inelndea *»f" —t 3 "Uful carpeting at -h I3.IM down. W* Mocks of LeBaroo Madison Jr and Northern Hi. Excellent 3-bedroom rtgnreod half bungalow. Flattered, faulted _walls. " * Nice landscaped yard- Aluminum tunings, aluminum and aertent aad water .softener included In sailing price. Onto iLW* down and take over lew lntetort (IK, per ^eent) mortgage. Hurry BRAND NEW AND LOVELY TO LOOK AT to thl* « built tri-level borne. urea 3 kedreewe, Ito hatha, a simply metwaWni . family room with attractive fireplace, wall-to-waU carpeting, —WTI r earai, _. HH * lake * BIRMINGHAM IS THB LO- RED BARN SUBDIVISION No Money Down ljuat Mortgage Cost) The Orion Star Face Brick-One Heal ^ Tlie House of Ease The Oxford Squire 3 Itodroom Tri-Level Pace Brick — Oat Heat Select Oak Floors The Expandable « Bedroom* — JtoB Oes Beet — Birch CtbineU Large Walk-In closet* Jurt Wert of M-14 on TEELIN behind Alban's Country Cousin between Luke Orion and Oxford. open u n.n. to I p “ B^ly SPOTUTE BLDO. CO. FB *8*1* yard. The owner** in Europe and ear*, tell. Terms can be arranged, WUl trade! fI 3 • bedroom ____ borne located on nearly an acre lot with breeseway and attached 3-ear garage. There to » rec. room In the basement and large, eating are*. No reasonable offer refused ' RAY O’NEIL. Realtor Designed for.Today! 3922 Percy King IN Lotus Lake Estates SLAVIK REALTY MU *Ob’ 3-0881 Val-U-Way Furnished Lake-Front dee* in. 6-room cottage, nicely furdtoked. On a well landscaped lot with sandy beach. *1,00* dn. Colored Income Sharp J-tamtly kriok. He* toe^m* of *386 per month. ■xeeHent eon-i ditton and location. Only tl.MO down. $250 Moves You In Like new 3-bedroom hom* with fall baaemant. Otonmtng oak floors, painted well* and gas beat. R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 346 OAKLAND AVE i ONES M Clarkston Mill Pond aluminum siding, In * Owner leaving rt ftee for *16.006. Webster School DORRIS WATERFRONT - Pebulou* describee^ this ^home^ l^bed- basement with private dressing room, swimming pool and a boat house that is out of this world. 3 ceramic bath*. bu!!t-la oven WEBSTER SCHOOL Area to the handy location of this frame 3-story home, 7 rooms tastefully decorated for comfortable family ttv-Rm, a 10x13 kitchen wMh natural cupboard* plus Ux-13 dining room. I spacious bedrooms, go* baat and a . 3-car garage, til,*88. Consider car dr traitor to trad*. ' decorated^ '1 isS ' eVed'V breakfast bar am/^S- unlquely ( - (n living i Partridge IS THE "BIRD" TO SEE COUNTRY COLONIAL Spacious ( room whit* frame colonial located Wert of Portia* no paved read. * large bldfevesi. I Vi baths, full baaemant. Fireplace — on nicely landscaped grounds of lam. AddRtoswl land available. Only *3,000 down or will trade. Bee it today. 1 PARTRIDGE AND ASSOC, REALTORS 10*0 W. HU BON_FE 4-3681 CLARK LAKE OAKLAND RETORTS. Lak* privilege!, playground, bathing beach, beet wells, first Umt ef-fered, owner trnneftrred. Beautiful 3 bedroom brick ranch, (nil basement with recreation room, new gee furnace, attached 2Vi ear brick garege, nicely landscaped lot. eanrttofdiaper Included. 117.100. pysnts. tM mo. tael. Taxes aad Insurance, g per cent lntetort. high ON A HILL. Attractive ranch home on large landscaped tot. Bay window lo living mem. 3 fireplaces, large recreation room. Very large rooms throughout, large kitchen with toads of cup- ATTENTION EXECUTIVES Largs 4-bedroom custom-bail raneb. Built-In bl-fl and Inte Family i * ___lake prtvUeges. We al large 7-room, 2-bath home with awnings, swimming pool In same are*. Give us a call today! OFF JOSLYN New 3-bedroom brick-front ranch. Beautifully decorated. Shiny oak floors. Built-in JcF*-— *---- ment, ga* heat. Only ttoo down . Paved streets. WILL BUILD ON YOUIt' LOT OB OURS your Flah OR OURS Rev* 3 bedroom, lVi bath, fun Don McDonald licensed builder OR 3-2637 TEA* AROUND 3-BEDROOM FUR-ntshed cottage. laiieUt atWood-ruff Lake. Low 3-3708 — w dn. paymsnt. MY HIITER LITTLE FARM (-mem bom*, kitchen, family W* have several heme* to choose from. In town and out. Some with basements and garage*. Call today. Be a home owner tomorrow. WILLIAMS REAL ESTATE - INSURANC P BALDWIN FE 44 GILES 4-Unit Brick Income A (too rental la an excellent north aid*' tocatton. BvurytMas private, fall IVt 1 wtih fl re- tort* Barn aad other .out-banning* n att* place for horaee. 130,000. FOUR BEDROOMS—1 full .bathe. Iptosterod walk. targehRehem full basemaiilL 3-car garage, large norner tot. 6nly *1,70*. terms. Bal. e*0 a month. NEAR CITY BALL,- 3bedroom oldeV home, excellent coodtttop, fuU basement. SeRjr rsis Eim Lh. Rd ■ ' LATEST NEWS IS LISTED ON THESE FAOEM New* of Wbat Feert* Rev* to SELL * RENT or WART TO RUT..Order your Ad on the g Day. Low cart Ftoa *»*J , Oemeet When Ratoga *— Obtained •s the Economical basement, 4 vportatton. Only 48864 full price Can be bought on poo tract with tow dew* payment. Call tor' further Auburq Heights 'ideal home tor retired couple. Constats of 4 rooms. 1 bedrms . onto, nil furnace. t oar garage. Only 44.100 full prtoe. with GILES REALTY CO. FE 6-8171 331 BALDWIN AVI open 8 a-m.-e p.m._ MI^TIPLE LISTING SSRVICB « I<* ? oenroom home. _ —* —. Fredericks. There’* 6 room* in all, fall baaemant. gang* aad real nice fenced yard. (16 a month Include* your taxes and Insurance. FRESHLY PAINTED -I Inside and out. Almost new 3-bedroom, full basement heme. Extra tone sharp family kitchen. Tito beth. Like new wall-to-wall carpeting, alamiaum combinations included al the tow. low price of (11.800. You qualified veterans will need -about *66* to move you la. This to HOI! 11 and recreation room -There’s a Mg fenced lot and lak* prtrltoges. (U.4M full price for some lucky OL on main floor. 3 additional bedrooms' up, basement, all -beat and 3-car garag*. WEST SUBURBAN I^toU room bungalow, oak floors, storms and screens and ton basement. This is a custom built home with only the best of materials. Consider very reaaesmbto term* to reliable party. *8,*60. LE FARM - LAROE 3* X M galow wltb full basement, tment finished for living, lrt r unfinished. Her* to e good l for handy man. An acre ol I. Abort 3 mile* from city Its. Priced at only *1.Mt. EXTRA SiPECIAL — Easy terms and priced right. Large bungalow In A-l condition. OH AC fur—— Outdoor grill. Some fruit, large tot* and attached 3 ear garage. All for only *11,71*. -NICHOLIE Drayton Area rt roe .bedroom bungalow, living and dining arott, kitchen-utility room. Automatic heat. Newly decoretod.JfBMK Large tot. THRERTO tfROOSB FROM - Abort (3**.** move* — ” Vhy Pay Rent ? Norte side or Norte Suburban. Twabedreom bungalow, if- and dining area, kitchen anu utiUty space. OH HA heat. Newly Mgrtatad. Vacant Raaar able down payment. Batonne Northern High Area —-— *—dromn bungalow. Ltv-dining area. Full base- ’a 658 Parkwood Three room borne. Bedroom big end dining nns, kite end bath. eURA beat Va, Quick- possession, *500.00 d Eves. Can FE 48131 or FB 3-7373. NIQHOLIEx.ua RGER - 03*4 W. nBR A . • FE 5-8183^ tomorrow with all bultt u pllanee*. Large M x 3M fl I New carpet!-- 3LM3 . Easy LOW FHA WOIMB Full ksHneaL stairs attic. Paved rt bath. Atamtaam Ceramic tiled 1* *180* dn. CLARKSTON SPECIAL — —- — | lifetime and It will last yon the real of year Mf*. Large M x 4* BRICK hxagatow With full basement. CIHtom Mtt. lit bathe. Large tot. Thl* to brand new and you can hare very liberal terms. Complete with storms and screens. Large “* Excellent neighborhood. CUSTOM BUILT BR1C K— Fully modem aad duly lyrs. old. ORCHARD 1AXX DISTRICT. Fan basement. BuIR to oven, mag* and etc. Large family room. Large artgbbor- I. Priced at I27.6W L. H. BROWN, Resltor ------ -----v. Ikx Rend - FE 1-4110 , large tof with full basement. 3-car garage, gas heat, brlqk and treme construction *st quiet atreet instruction os elite both Lai____________ t rock bottom. *12,60* p Drayton Plains Income Large 3-famlly bom* with full ' basement, Individual bathe and furnaces, situated on tort* com* tnerclal tot. *300 down. Rolfs H. Smith, Realtor ____*44 s. Telegraph Fl I-W40 MA 5-8431 MILLER CONVENIENT TERM! North tide 3 bedroom home exceptionally nice, lb baths, carpeting aad drapes, lge. screened porch. Basement g*« heat, * car garage. Her*'* value. *10.000. NORTH SUBURBAN Ctoec In. Vi •ere lot, « and hate. 3 good lernlaed WEST SUBURBAN. I cheerful living “ —d drapes, Basement large bedrooms carpeted living room*. Priced 823.508 far be! room wl% carpeting lge. screened porch, rec. room, garage. fru» irccs ana Mtoen amt. Ideal lor retirement. 18,150 — Terms. VVilliant Miller “ Realtor FE 2-026.V 070 W. Huron Open t to 0 ow reproduc OnJj Hrt on, plastered walls, black-road. Owner will trade this a free and clear an 3 bed-i ranch type heme. FE 3-7(11 Res. FE 4-4013 CLARK REAL IRTATK 81 W. Huron Open I to I MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE COME LOOK! COME SEE! COME BUY! 8E3UNOLE HILLS; Back to School Special - Lovely white aluminum aiding, family heme. Living mom with fireplace, large dining room — kitchen and breakfast neck -family mom - carpettjtg and jSEm ftT~wtas*~~dining area "kitchen with buut-hi even end range. 3 extra large bedrooms aad Bt‘v on the first floor, new carp lag. 3 bedrooms and fun bath the second floor. Lovely family mn£' "BE mmmm — Rome like new. Priced at- ** {00.00. Shown by appoint highly mrtrietod Long Lake Snoras. A fcltohett *“* to woman's dsRght. oven; dishwasher. . . dlepeeel. refrigerator,. all __ to. Three big bedroom, living room-wlth fleer to eeUtog windows end a Mg B4t family room. Many other fsaturee. 83*, OPEN HOUSE Bvtok two-story, • i JOHN K., IRWIN tag room, family »_ __ ntog room. Large kitchen. Olassed-ln front porch rma *fed°igsjr**" SCHOOL TIME IS HERE! features 1 bedrooms —le toy i ad-FuU base-Partly fin- SMITH WIDEMAN 412 W.' Huron st. OPEN EVES. FE 4-4526 HAYDEN IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. (63 00 pCT^mwrte rt 4ft percent tat. to- 4 rooms aad ba£Sflnr gas fu” ■ace. Carpeted Bring room. B> ear garage. Good aorta side la- S»rrt*" ***■ *• MODEL OPEN LUm family n ft. m living space. W-WV -wssn et.‘ rySsn^^nr «r-» finance for yon an liberal contract (erma No mortgage cost. For Sole Houses 49 THIS PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30. 1961^ umowart oowtmoctioo Custo^i Builder g> Movei You In CHESAPEAKE BAY MODEL 965 Carlisle 3 Bedroomi Family-Size Kitchen Vanity in Bath open: daily 11 to 7 THE HUDSON BAY Basement Models $100 Moves You In SPOTLITE FE 4-0985 3 BEDROOM HOMES Facebrick Front Paym’ts Less Than Rent $10 DOWN STARTS DIAL No Mortgage Costs OSf heat, carpeted Urine room DON'T WAIT—NUT NOW! LIFESAVING Fallout Shelters (ortiooki) . No Down Payment 698 CORWIN ' For ^sh Haswea 49 FQRTY-JT> K TRI-LEVEL STARTER SfiFwrwiEm. B-j- - -b. YOUNG-BUILT HOMES - MM better Ml no vomer down UOOM I Mmm, walk-in eloo- Brand now. In on* of PMIM'i exetaeiv* location*. 3-bedroom with walk-la cloeeU. gleaming oak floors, (Ml boeement. MOCK FRONT. family .teed ■Nolan only »T3M a moot!. RUSSELL YOUNG ANNETT $5750. Terms Nanai— Brin kitchen. I basement, (as IMS. carpeted LR. BR and baU. Williams Lake Privileges 2-bed rm ranch, lilt eq. It MM area, tedg eetooe tire-place n l|e living rm.. Ida ball Tim bmement, fully lasniated. ou beat. Aina. '-----fBW Terms. Lake-Front Duplex 4 Aires, 4 Bedrooms KENT Establlsbed In ISIS inMaW________________ I bedrma., 3 baths, large carpeted lie. rm. 3 fireplaces. Roc. rm. tower level. 2-car garage. Large shady lot. Teu’U like ||-i location. CaQ Uf il,_■_ appointment to cos this. Owner moving and anxious to sail. LAKE-FRONT INCOME — 2 modern homa. Two 5-and-bath homes. I mmmjm n Waterford area. Mail ir owner plus 3 homes now rent-1 for |lib per month, (ill lor stalls. Only SIMM. Terms. moat be seen to b For Sole Houses 49 c LOOKING FOR Sjvn n^ ___n payment? '___ i call tar we bare what Mum tor. A 3 bod-O wl 1 car garage WEST SIDE ' Boro lg a nice « mom___ Oak noon up aid down, fun baa am ant gas boot 1 car garage. also NlIS garden apace. Orapa arbor, pear tree, in airy tree, berries. Lot Mealy landscaped. All Ibis for B.IH. Terms. TRI-LEVEL 3 Bedroom*; master bedr-- walk-la cloaet. Lam ttvtac rm.. wall to wall carpeting, kitebtn paaa^W^VaUr**soft *0*^*1 "car gamga. Thlt property la |3.o«o SCHuEt? FE&458 NOW TRI-LEVEL Vbodroam, paneled family raam. garage plastered walla. Attached 3 ear Don McDonald UCmyP BUILDER Only $35 Per Month Cteod block and dost borne Dial* north of Ctotkaten, access to goad fishing lake, bring rm . Iff. kitchen, full ban, 1 eedrm. — -=L*-”1ji3 ns HAROLD It 1 Union Lake ____ for couple. mo. More flat In. FRANK, Realtor 2» ----d. KM---------- Income Property 50 Pontiac Oeneral Hospital. n» to settle eitate — will be itment. Apply u'EStY 2 Acres, Brick Ranch Hot I bedrma.. master Its , IT, also paneled family rm. suitable for another bed-tm. living rm. 15x28, sandal kitchen With 3 bullt-tn o»-ens, dishwasher, disposal A • ' blender, Florida rm. 3MR 3 tile baths, aalm radiant beat. Oarage Keep a pony If yon wish. Outstanding value at SIMM. Terms. WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. Reoltors It E Huron St Open Erenlngs and Sunday 1 - 4, FE 8-0466 KAMPSEN Three-Bedroom Brick $1,000 Down, $85 Month Waat Suburban — an Immaculate home. IT Tiring room, lnrga kitchen nod dining ares — ■ tached garage - Mg lot ■ Quick T“——l-“ Templeton INCOME ntshod. Plus o kTT Templeton, Realtor For ShIn Lake Property 51 14 ROOMS. KADf STREET LAKE Orion IIT 2-1134.___________ B1AUTT BFOr. pANCH TlfV* nor round beam at Wallers Lake, l spacious bedrooms, pi den. Carpeted bring room, i PA boat, largo corner lot, on 33.730 With easy tarns. I mile new Chrysler Expressway. Tri-City Real Estate clawboh — - — HANDYMAN SPECIAL LAROB S bsdroam - 24*3f - OaBy fhtlsbed homo - Ml _ meat - cn | laic — lake aiM> leges - 35,300 - 11.000 dfWn. bedroom* - Large, living room, be seen to appreciate all the fin* points of gracious living — Asking 313.330 - Term* A Jim Jam Dandy GI—Nothing Down Brand now carpeting la ana of file many features to be found in this 2-bedroom bungalow, fully Insulated, gas heat, attached garage, Ma- ys x 200’ on the water, ss-elusive, same wooded. Buy new, build when you are foaay. Easy terms, call Commerce, RM 3-OUM for information, Lakeahore velopment Corn.. 1134 B. 1 land Rd. JHigh. 3 NT ■ In. the city. Owed ■ ---'to now N osraLtfS REALTOR FE 4-0528 FE 8-7161 TELKORAPH OPEN EVES. i i- Sims to-------- I real STKAL UI tteg per i low ae 34.3M w& JSMte. I BATEMAN REALTY ’ FE 4-0528 FE 8-7161 I UV g Telegraph — Open Eyes. ; TRADE 70 ACRES Large modem country bom e. T .boms ten and oteor in tedld-togs. 127,530 Term* WU1 accept tree and clear property Mr gown Tfarence C, Ridgeway BROKER n>7MI IN W. WALTON RLV* i'$* For Sale Farms 56 M ACRES, LAPEER COUNTY — Black top rood - goad modern MMhsV’-- craps ■ and snssl- '.ATS: 22 ACRES - Could mais s amsb lake — Ex ceUent building sMe--Si MS - iwni." — ..... Large older type term omptete ombunding — Ct — 111.MS wMh 32.- I ACRES gnddiM Partially remodeled » c— —- ----- J woods- at rear of paretl. ibnal) finwd at 327.IM ter snick' vale' Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 304 S. TELEORAPH PE 2-7040________, MA 5-0431 2 ACRES frontage on small lake. te Tv**** ell Ue .11, |arage. trees. 111.250 with 32200 2% ACRES With I rooms, largo living room, glassed front porch, fruit trees end close tat. Rouse in good shaun targe garage. I12.2M with 32500 dorm. - 62 ACRES „ V: room bmta. barn and out buUdiags. coed soil, trente un main maid in smab town. 320.3M. •Firm equipment avabable. CRAWFORD AGENCY IM W. Walton FE 0-2300 300 E. FUM • MY 3-H«2 Webster LAKE ORION—OXFORD Redumd for quick sain lit acre farm in Manta oountryNds. 4 mttaa from Oxftrd. Large I bedroom homn 3 baths, large foment. barn and other built including almost ■ new cei bldg. Land is robing I the low prlos of 320.000. MARMADUKB By AMeraug 4 Lemming Sals Hea—h>M Oaada jg COUCH AND 1 CHAIRS. roli-a-way bod, FE Mill. ELECTRIC^ STOVE. LAROB WES'F IngboXn Uke new; Croaley abel-vador ref rig., goad condition. U1 EAST 8P1NDRY. MY, 323, CA MO, Temale 3 TVre'th nuthin' worth* than a kithin' aunt! Sale Land Contracts 60 LAKCFRONT, sold Sept, sen down, principal discount SLIM, A—> —• Commerce Itead, Orchard Lake, Mich, EM 3-2511, EM * *— YEAR AROUND. ~"~rS Sale Business Property 87 HOLLY, MICHIGAN Upstairs offloes not rented. Good income for to little Invested. Make offer. 313.000 Paul M. Jones, Real Est. . LOANS $25 JO $500 On year signature so other security. H m octet to repay .pur service Is task frtendlyand beltdul Visit our of flee orpbont FE 34121 HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N Ferry S>- Oomor E, Pike century finance company Lake C MY 2-1522 M-ll 2M FEET FRONTAOX. 323 A foot. Coffin, LI 34143. Rut, L*s9 Bus. Prop. 87A n clearance), suit- able ter nuteteohita. t .. storage, warehouse, ____ tori, garage, ate. Shown by appointment, OR J-7034 liter S p.m. IT______ —=ass—TSn GROCERY STORE. BEER AND wins licensed. Equipped. For lento. FE 34S14. WE8T SIDE. NEAR NEW SHOP-ping center. Ask for Tom Bote-man. PE O-THl. Business Opportunities 39 BAR WANTED - BATE LAROB Equity In beautiful home -land contract and other equttlea. Pace, OB 4-0423. DIXIE CREAM Donuts. Main Street location. Easy to operate. Reasonable down iTfcHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. L^ANDMESSJER, JBROKER Signature Up to It monlha to (way. PHONEFE 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Company i Bank Bldg, BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pontiac — Drayton Plains — Utica Waited Lt„ Birmingham. Plymouth TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS Vi TO SIM string---- LIVESTOCK , ’ HOUSEHOLD OOODS OL I FOR SALE: RESTAURANT. , . . —------ fast growing Ntegl town. Mo- 3'v 8. Saginaw dern equipment, large Mating ~ capacity, living quarters included. Borrow with Confidence GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance Corporation of root lac For Sods Clothing 64 OIRL'S BUB-TEEN CLOTHINO. ate tt IE 44347. Sale Household Ooo OAR OARAOS —. WEU, LANDSCAPED LOT WITH ' SHADE 1RREB . MM Sown tofha »*ohT. WRIGHT 243 . Oakland Ave. , Open ’fit 1:23 FE 5-9441 WANTED: 060O TTRINOEik TYPE 17” Munts ................ 323.35 Si” Olympic .............. 344.85 21" Blond Emerson 878.35 Ir olFortabte ............. $33.36 31“ vfytvwrtn lowboy ... 3133.35 Blond stereo. Ukt new ..... 333.95 ___ 30 sets to choose from WE TAKE TRADE! OPEN 0 TO 0 Walton TV FE 3-2257 813 E. Walton, comer " 17" TABLE MODEL ^ gmdfiten. 333. APIECE DhflNO ROOM SET. OL 1-3771 I X 11 FOAM BACK 313 jT also tweeds AdmltA^PRltem Prtgldalre RebuHt^bv^our^Ssrvlce Experts WKC 133 N. Saginaw FUENITURK OF ALL KINDS. — FALL SPECTALS - O. B. DRYER, Now ..... f M— GIBSON IS ft. Refrigerator 3133M east iraahar ......... 3 RCA Whirlpool ftaglMy , 3 O. E. Portable ITT ...... 3 OOOD_________________ . ” of Pootlac »1 W. HURON PE 4-1333 rURNlVURX FOR BALE. 1333 -------- ■ HVHVn, Ml I s appliances PREIOHT DAMAGED 3 PIECE. bimd.'.>odreom cote. Raul them Out at 300.03, Foarton't Furniture, 43 Orchard Labe Ave. FREEZERS—OFRIONT. FAtlOtrt name breads, scratched. Terrific valets, 314838 **“ No phtne — White few last. OIBSON DELUXE ELECTRIC range, reasonable. UL 2-4868. OAS STOVE, NOROE RKFRIOER-ator, 3 piece osiHigital. brown, 31" TV, stereo hi-fi. AU likt mw. 32 Phitmo. GAS FLOOR FURNACE. US OR OATELEO TABU! lit 6tlh-•tuffed divan and chair 3M. OR3-7133._________________ O E ELECTRIC RANOE, PULL ' . att onto* mT MA MM** . FURNITURE POR __able. 3 piece 4lntnr room set. corner table, step table and cocktail tabu. Fireplace fixtures, Lounge^chalrs. Toaster nM JUST ARRIVED!! 50 5-Piece Dinette Sets FACTORY CLOSB-OUTS WHILE fHfeY LAST! * $33.88 $49.95 Value CRAROB rr OR USE OUR CON VENIXNT LAY AWAY PLAN. KRESGE'S DOWNTOWN 66 N. Saginaw: •• KBLVINATOR ELECTRIC RANGE, cheap. PR 2-0578. LET US !UY IT OR SELL IT FOR TOO. OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTfON, QA S-M31.____ il Commerce Road, KM 3-4114. MOVING, BENDIX W, 'ASHBR-DR Carpeting. 25 CUBIC FOOT UPRIOHT AMANA Birdseye I ________J, ifib d davenport and chair. ORP3h3Mg **“ POUND AT L * S SALES. A little out of the way but n leaa to pay. Furniture and appliances of ab kinds, NEW AND USED. Visit our trade dept * real hnrgoteg We buy, teb cr trade. Come out and look around, 2 aerea of free parkin*. Phone PE 8-0341. OPEN MON -SAT O. JO • FBI, f TO I " a* Mwngn fat 4 tafias E. of Poetise or 1 mils E. of Auburn Heights on Auburn. MM UL HEIl APARTMENT md STOVE, «55 2-1132 after ATTENTION We carry s targe selecttec of rebuilt radios and Tvs. All am fusrantead at least M days in SUM and up Wc take — Or oteor articles EaBo"sM TV, Lake Road. FE tag 31 lopS *2rJiii 347 Cherokee. 318. BETTER BUYS Adjustable bad frames .. M M Bollywood headboards .. 04JO -merspring mattress .... 8M.M pc. bedroom salt# .... 3M.M pc. bring mom state... 301.50 BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4733 Dixie . Drayton Ptaino OR 24713 Open 3 till t:3Q Mon, fin 8:23 BEAUTIFUL 81NOEB IHWXNO machine wMh tag mg ta itahhod walnut cabinet. Looks sad tuna tike now. Butane# 331 or tabu over payments cl S3 per MS. Universal Co , FE 4 0005 Berry Garage Door Factory SeamdE 0 nSjT .. _ PIECE 8ECTION- riZr’StWtt! MOY1NO BALE - MAPLE s6PA. studio coach, chrome kbcksn set, 111 ea.; dining table. TV. crib, drapei. Clothing, mlsc. MI 3j717_. ___I___ AUTOMATIC SEUriMd machine. Take m payments of M M for 1 months. TunTbo}—0t only $43.33. Button botes, fancy work, without atang attachments Just dial. Alto in modfra cabinet. Call Capitol jteWta^Omter for Norge ant SUM tig washer . flag Frlgldalre electric dryer, ineludtaf free wiring ........-8133 Bcniib FM rotates . ....... 313 WATHECMUHMT4__ ejum Hi-Fi. TV ft R.4H08 66 373 FE 3-23M, COMFLBTB RADIO AND to -r'l---- ter ml*. PI 8-1435 after » except an weekends. HI-FI IN CABINT WITH SPEAK-er, jsnarota IS MM3 arnattfler AM-PMtnner, QAlUUDl-msd OB dtamond picx-up. * sstra cabinets, hi-fi jpmBMU far IP mote locations. Complete engineer design system. 0103. 361 O-tlOl, For Sale Miscellaneous 67 hardware. 3-70-13 1 3230. 1 DINNER Bi l^oburn^M BT r LONO. M dHh%ZiSm. 3x0* fly IT, 38 cents each. 2xSe Dr IF 81.30. A. 0. Compton * 4-^L^ftr4" lc6P^gR pipe 10a. ToUete 318.00, O. A. Thompson. TW MSOWota. I jj-jj Utap PWtaP* ............ 333 30 _ &VEA jftmfBINO SUPPLYji#t I HOSPITAL BBDS P C24350 31M PER MONTH FOR ALMOST SSo.^tSlr C3*M0* Totol* cash gric*^ QtU Capitol Bowing Center. —, *Mjg76ah> mas aad fittings, 334.33 up. ry trays nag stand aad t. mil. Cash and aany. 3-2103 TV ANTENNA TOWER 100 PER dtNT AUTOMA'nc WA-ter softener. Flberglat tanks with - m-r- 10 year warmate/fiSm m______I of our 24 years' onponoaeoi Ml Inclutaag normal installation, i i for 423. FB pftoPAHi 6as Xluminum SlblNG STORM BASH — A WRINGS No nuui tai m as sad m Deal direct^ ANCHOR FENCES Hardware, elect. eapaHe*, >d tap* and fitting*. Low* i Paint, suyer Kamtec* -buooy: bassinette: - —— “—agb1---------- CASH WAY BEAJtUfT ALUMINUM WINDOWS For Sfd» adding machine*, check' BKOiee-ter* Oft K0T07 aad. MI 0-1010 Porbm Frtntlig ft Office Supply. PENDULUM ciocxs AMD CHIME 8PRINO-AIR tt MAnUtftSS 1 Al box^eprlnge. like BOW. |tt < iftAtL grfSWIK'l cok>Lrrr with tauoete and emtate*. 3M 50 value 32* 30. lavatories eemyiet* with faucets &Uk tebote suToo. Michigan FTneeOMsnt. K Orchard terxe mskcginy cahtnci. Will a. tii.ee. ran noou*. Thompson, TOM MM skoFgkWi 2 cords Wtikm- wood, velved drapes, howBng bab 4*S03S1 >tMa>’1 ref. Iron/ FE TALBOTT LUMBER p”*? ___________4 Bond paint. L. ____ luc it* no drip wall paint Ham U Ore. plumbing, eleetrleal euppbee and lull bo* of lumber Cteoa S II '01 3:20. Bun 3 to 1 1M3 Ouktanta Are FH Mill TO REST A glWOB 2 TBeiiHi . FE 34311 Stager Sewing Canter ----------^----- ----- WORK BKitcnfi. 3311 WALDON Read OR 24011. THE SALVATION ARMY ~ RED SHIELD STORE _• 113 EAST Everything to Clothing, Pun Furniture, Appliance* VEHTILATINO PANS POR «TCH-en* and bathrooms 34343 value MMS. — largo eeleeiou tamr ---factory prism. Mlahlgaa —- “ Orchard Lake yr* *M, mod, 040; ---'iTMMw'l*' YORK ONX-IIUNDRCD AIR CON-dlUoner. |33. Adjuetabl* copper Machinery BAT dTT DRAOLINE. M FOOT boom, MWaStaft-' and cable. good oaodltlan. FB 343M. CONVEYOR, 21* BELT. SELP-Pow. ered, gas, EM 2-0402. TANDKM TRAILER WITH VACUUM brakee for hauling donor. 3725. KM 1-4433. Oordoo Ptattelf. Camera! ft Equipment 70 4x3 % Plytssr* Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY IBM Cooley Lake Rd. ' CRIB. RATHUfiRTB, CHILDREN'S clothing, ladlet' -taUtataf phonoxraph. 353-3271. A wl.'pb'. Y FINISHED PANELING Oak AMUM 4’xF . Oak AMUM 4'*T ........... use Rustle Birch FsF ....... |7J3 Oray Ash 4'xF .......... 87 N Brown Nokom 4'xF ....... 3743 Mahogany 4'xF .......... 3343 PONTIAC PLTWOOP 00. 14M BALDWIN AVE. FB MM3 fre!k 8TAND1NO TOILETS 318 8S Double Bowl Sink ......... 33.(3 r* copper, 30 tt. teaateo lie ft. }t" copper, M ft. Ihhu ., 37c ft. it" copper, M ft. eon .... 40c ft. 3 pc. bath cate with trim .. 180.38 White or colored Ruta SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY it! S Sasan-w FE MIN FORMICA. PLUMBrNO. F kih T. glass, wiring. Opes 7 gays, PE 34712. Mcmtcalm Supply. 150 W. OO-CART WITH TRANSMISSION. HOT WATER R^UtwR- 'm or MTMML _____RANOE POR ELE< renye^B.^B Munro Electric RtPRIOBRATORS. ftMSjft: WI SUM and up. Bwoot't Radio and Appl., 422 W. Huron, ft 4-1122 JENNITE J-16 LONO-LASTING PROTECTION PCM ASPHALT PAVEMENTS, upa from* U»aw damagu, a* well i enflmUrg eltect* of tat and ail. Give* n smooth acita fisskfitam. 5-Gallon .Can $9.95 RP^OERATOB 330 EUfcTlUC etove, MB- Quo water beater. Ilk* new. 333. IT* TV 3*3, Oaa a».a.S6ssL*tt tJ$. HarTta FVMTM. REBUILT VACUUM* 31283 UP IWf NO I__„_____I _____ etas to sB._Now._psd sod I pousesod. Over 73 model* _ ehooee from. Mm etert lager portable*, 813 Jl. tac mg cqtap-ment. Osrrt AppUsneei. 3U1 SIEGLER 0A3 — OIL taOStE HEATERS , Pay* tor ttetaf " With the fata ft ***** I MONET RACK GUARANTEE _.'HICK'S MT Mill spcciai 6x12 ruos, sKXTIio- —■ WtodbaM «4 ~--- >w Ted’*. FE wsz Used Tride-In Dept. tferm rocker ....... 32**0 —renpert aad ettalr .. $20.50 Ccr. tabte, Eiywiii Wakc- "’able buffet and « chair* ... -Pc. eectlonal. foam nttg thSias 'economy** 36JL Saginaw________FE 34UI ^REFIUOER FIUBTTER8 aPPLUMCS CHROME blNETTE SETS. AS-tembte years*If. lavs, tear chair*, tabte. mu valm NBAS. Mow 1M1 detlgnt. formica tep*- MteU-len^Ptuorateent, 2*1 Orchard Lk. m% clb miu aSrrSi VACUUM CLEANBft — A BRAND new Itet took type with ab av-ftemudg. Clou itat 315. Revel Distributing Co. ruM aad trap XUM. ; Also Large Selection i » of Used Guns Cliff Dreyer & Sport Center Jf/SxSSSiOAW. banxKratm on*a pour and Sunday if t&SSRMTT*? wokiih id OwwIt PIrt 76 I TO 1 MILLION TAMM OF * __M.J----* ... klAdb dIH IMAM. BEACH..SAND, #0-40 OR" gr»vfl n. 9 ydi. djl. I — Cushion rand. Ujdta* «2 8. winiABu LA. m. cm wan.__ CRUSHED-STONE. BAUD. OHAV-el Earl Howard. KM HU1 bn AO "IT:N E, '" BULLDOZ1NO. • W MtPI. tREE PEAT ‘ both Lake R4. At William* LA. loNTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply, tend. grave! and dirt. Clemen! * mortar, mmi |.Mt t DARK CLA • flU dirt KM WWS___________ tpkcIAL- WASHED BEACH RAND Ite yd. M a ravel, H yd. Road • Orayrl. Me yd-^PA *000 AOd ' Overslsed Stone. Mjd. PUIDin, 1 Re yd. DellTtry extra. AMEIU- CAM STONE, Oil ■*“*•*« • ar Mttwi. ; Wood, Ccd 4 F—177 slab wood on msiwci wtod. I cord, tn del. Alberta • tide. Vto ^**T| ! PI—to, Treei. S hr Mbs M TRAWBM m.t For Sale Pets - STOPS JAHEIM'B REQ. PE 3-2535. * cSSibe puppies. M ALaQ 8IAMZ^E ) Dellwood. comer of Maple-- H Hatchery Hoad. WUUaau ^OOPLE^POPMES^ AKft BLACK. Parakeets guaranteed to ■ registered. OL MM~ Dog, Trained, Boaaded 80 UcWaRY'S TAttWAOOER EEH-nek, lIMMSf. *■*“ mlng. OL 1-0634. t; H—ttnf Dogs 81 iT WITH TWO 1 STALLION PONT WITH SADDLE and bridle, >100. MU 4-4303. Sale Farm Produce 86 PEACHES - —ACMES -_______ . tiM Bataan Dr. on bUL « Telesraph Rd from Mlfael* Pears and Tomatoes MU Ceoeaer Ed._______W H-- red ha##m peaches. y6u pick or wa pteA. Manta Middle- ton Sr. MIS Prod---Bd Orton. MT 3-1001. Sale Housetrailers 89 tATOKS, rOR liftLY cam-n(. $1.5* bushel. Brin* basket* M Otddtawe Bd. FE M—T Er Coats Bd.. Oxford. OA By TQDLL^S^WTO™QfTinfflBSS WITH QAI Stocking Inboard aad outboard your traitor, any M’ TO WE HATE BUYERS WAIT CALL OS TODAY 1 , BOULT MARINE A COACH BALES 15310 Holly Rd . HOLLY. ME t-dTll VACATION TRAILERS MB- ippiiee. Repair Ban. PINTER'S Sale Farm Equipment 87 j ■RACTQRB. MOWERS EQUIPMENT FARM AND INDUSTRIAL TRACTORS and equipment. ALL ABB PRICED TO SELL. WE GUARANTEE TO SATISFY ON MONET BBPUNDED. CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE KING BROS. PE 4-mt PE 4-1112 PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDYKE Rent Trailer Space 90 OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR PONTIAC MOBILE ROME PANE, For Sale Tbca 92 -t used nan. mjs up. wi bay. eeU. Also (MeAerib, Mat Tiro Bale*. Ml a. Saginaw • FE 4-4607 or FE 4-463I. GUARANTEED USED TIRES. 13, It, 16 inch. Auto DUcou ' ” ~ Royal tlree. Eaat Med. 0*75. FARMERS SPECIALS sofeS Deere medal A MSS—BM doeer Made and I u$s Peed, .von aha Frrguion JO HRvSMRH,. rhanlcally and rubber perlect, MM Oliver heavy duty farm crawler, sen. International Me • mowe[, Itt. Trade* accepted. Ea*y monthly paymenta. Pontiac Parse and Industrial Tractor Oa. Oliver and Mawey - Pergueon Tractor* aad EMalpRiont. *# Woodward Avo. Pb. PE 4-1443 KUHN AUTO SERVICE — W. Huron_______PE Hill LOOKI *50x14 BlJtClE TiltESi~ALL name braadc. Off new can SIMS plus tad add tsobange. state Tire Trade la oa Svneral Safety Tlree. taro op to H of Mig.'e Hat price. Black or whitewall*. ED WILLIAMS tti 8, Saginaw at Baobarn Wheel Horse Tractors BOIcna riding mowers. orbtt-Alr wawtra aad tutors. Several uted riding IneMaMM Equipment. 6507 Dixie HWy. MA 5-137*. AUCTION BALES to MILE SOUTH mirr r**~ West of Xmlay City at — Borland Road oa Prtday ORANEBHAPT ORINDINO IN THE car. Cylladere re bored. Zuck Machine Shop. SJ Hood. PImm FE ■P_________jt beginning al Large quantity at boutahoi <»ludlng furniture, anti*Be wool Mankato, IS pair _ _____ _ pillow M trieb Saeo teble cloth*, k power Iowa mower and eater Item*. James Cooke. Pool Hillman, one- ISM I.AMBBNATTB ■ scooter. —. Lloyd Motors, •iary-Coia~J i s»tm. B 6c B EYEBY WEDNESDAY ... 7:Jt p.m. EVERT PIUDAY ...... 7 p m. BV—T SATURDAY ---- EVERY SUNDAY .. OPEN 1 DATS "TY-SELL- BE t PRIZES EYL_ _ -j Boom Odor Every >0M DIXIE HlQgr ci/5 TRIUMPH; NORTON. VESPA. used. Matchless aad Barley. ANDERSON BALMS * SERI ~~R E. Pike_______ Ft 1 | For Sale Bicycles 96 GUARANTEED USED BIK1 Row SedWinaaike*. Stilt —arletf* Bike aad Hobby I 10 E. Lawrence. FE J-7M •acrifico at larto d count,' FE 4-77M. Travel Trailer. Mace A M LIGHTWEIGHT liar. Maes ISM. Ouar- it Watty Byam'e exciting CLEAN CLEAN CLEAN > Closeout on All * 1961 CREES 16/,- to 29-Ft. Now in Stock! , “Liberal A Discounts" SMM Several other good boys STOP OUT TONIGHT! Holly Marine & Coach _____trailer" Cheap. EM J-tTtl.________ SHORT'S MOBILE HOMES It ft. to M ft. Gem travel trai on, Wotveriae track eaapor all -JMNA-MUd-aMMMHMBOfr'OML plete line of parti and bottle END-OF-MONTH CLEARANCE ; For Sale Poultry 85 J* WHITE BOCK PULLETS. $1.71. IPS HM Laroe hens, btartwo to I ofr'«lckne»*. MU Oooiey Dr. EM » WNM. _______________________ Pontiac -SO. IP wide, front kitchen. S bedroomi .......ti.Mi •M. IP Wide, J bedroom*, tettv-end and art-up ......tt.MS Also, a large eelectlcn of used } and S bedroomi at graatty raSaeod HIM. Toe, you will oavo tioo* at Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. tMI Dixie Highway, Drayton Flalne OR J-1JM Open 7 day* a Week SPECIALIZING IN "TRAVEL TRAILERS” Sale Farm Produce 86 ssfiaEp 3m Orei . -_-0d. Pick your wws. JOc per , wound. Open dally. Kalmbach'i * HantaUM SSkt Oraham Rd . Im-! my City. I mtlce X. of kU. t » —oAoRUlorSML_________ , SUWUNK PLUMS. U BUsrfEL rBod Aftrtcbao apple*. Leonard ^’^mSSK' M N. Squirrel. UL Smple'te and parti ... line of hitches. ______ ____I parts. Book your trailer aow tar door raoion. fall aad wlntar vacation*. Trailer repair. Jacobson Trailer Sales and Rentals NBW MW CREE S MANS TOUR REttRVA$TON*°Pl* TODAY. DOWT DELAY Cliff Dreyer’s Holly Marine Sales ittit Koiiy Rd. ^ ■ mb tan HOLLY, MICHIOA* BANK TERM (OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY) TRAILER RENTALS Campon aad Houeatratten OOODELL TRAILER SALES ENOINE AIRLINER. NON-STOP* Los Angoloq, Ban Francisco, Sen Diego. Ut M..Hawaii. MO M New fimlOltBl ttUMif Service too, OR J-lMt. FLORIDA BoCnD — HATH TRAIL-er, can take boot. MUMS. RIDKRA WANTED. LEA VINO FOR AS ' MUCH AS CARS AND TRUCKS, WRECKS OR JUNKERS, ROT AL AUTO FARTS. 1 B-aitt. ___ nUsi sad truck, w .______ Phone OR J-M7I. Night* . MJM. Trtpl* D Tlra tervlc*. Sale Motor Scooters 94 MOTOR For Sale Motorcycles 98 UMA. M0 OC, OL Allot. WE NEED CARS! Especially late medol Pontiac*. Cadillac*. OldsmobU**, Bulck*. CMvrolM*. For tow dollar oa ttwio nedal* aad omen call u* M & M MOTOR SALES MOt Ptxto Hwy. __OR UtM WE REALLY NEId CASH Boato & Accessories 97 TOP RUCK—JUNK CAR. TRUCK, PONTIAC WASm PE S-MM. WANTED 61 PONTIACS AVERILL’S M90 Dili* Hwy PE MOW ■* “■“ it-FOOT RAVEAU with to hon* M*r< tllvcr lower unit. S REBUILT TRANSMISSIONS OEN- —'^ Marura, *tc. OB MMt. If LONESTAR, IMS. 3t HP, JOHN-«on. Sip. MU Pontiac Lake U FOOT PONTOON BOAT AT IHJ New r by IP Kayot pontoon boat With canopy. UH, five othkr model* to moon froo*. OMt to StnrwhU* tnoy la*t. Price* eat to the baa* oa bow INI Johnson motors. Starcratt, Lonutar and i^m—**~**1. Bay ^•raat Soo'frwt."^ t wo will b CLOSEOUT SALE OK ALL 1961 , Arkansas Travelers and Winter Cruisers ALL BOATS, MOTORS AND TRAILERS MUST <301! Holly Marine & Coach llllt Holly Rd. me tarn HOLLT. MICHIGAN BANK RATES Open Dally and Sunday* FOOT THOMPSON OFFSHORE, Evtnrude Motors and Lawn Mower* DART SPORTMEN CENTER ggaBiiTO Open Dally S Slmday* 7 ~ — -* - — All New in Pontiac ORADY jrarm LAPSTRAKB AQUA SWAN ALUMA LAP WHITEHOUSE, VENUS CRUISES WEST BkND MOTORS Pnrta Ccmpcr Camp, MW J Wood. Alum ., Plbergla*. S Ml It SCOTT MOTORS AND HERVI"” CRUISE-OUT BOAT AALBS “ Tmirsb mm mo Dally N SUBday K Boat and Trailer Sellout ’ Re l J'llor «e ckl, ( rap** SLM and u>. ed curiilon*. gt-tt. Everything for mo ooat OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES SM Orchard Lake Arc. Boat Discounts DUNHAM'S LABOR »A VINOS FOB _ YOU OB BOAST* MOTORS, TRAIL. “i_____ craw EVES. AND SUN. UNION low nu Union Lk. Rd. Worms Insurance Agnacy PB S-VMJ Boats and Accsssorlcs 97 Wood. Aluminum. PtbergU* Boat* -and Aooaaoawoa "HARD TO FIND” •Xissrata™ —- MA praee , KI BOAT, ckMrr POWER KL tic. condition, rarrtno*. UtM. ■dkiMK" .______. SE* RAT SOATd ~~ JOHN!------- only thro* month* qM. uisne* with aceoraotto* Including ecnvcrUhl* top. $3,100. Johnson 7t-hor*e tea King, ala* only thra* months old. VahscA at tMM for sm w.m. Tram. Offered 100 Cottftel. 1-3717. I. Call UL Wonted Used Cars 101 $25 MORE -----1 high grad* wad ear, *ee u* before yon *«U. H. J. Vaa Welt, UtS DU1* Highway. Pbon* Si J-lJte,_________■ OF1 •M AUgTTN BEALY. PSBPBCV »**—*■. Privau owner. OBtt aftor t p.m. PTE HIH. AUSTIN KBAL1 .J'mr OB 3-3370 Mill aftor d p.m. VOIJCSWAGENS! NEW AUTBOR1EBD DEALER WARD-McELROY, INC tut W. Huron OR MM |N DOWN 3MSI MONTH MAZUREK STUDEBAM . w« Trad*" a. Btvd. at Saginaw. Fop Sals Csrs_____106 ___BUICK SPECIAL 3-DOOR, dyaaflow. a lot block beauty with nylon whit* wall*, no nut, on*, owner, private, “ “ REPOSSESSION UM Bulck 4-door baidtoRjuU price UM. Payment* ot 111 a mo. Pint payment dtt* Oct. I.__ Lakuld* Mtr*. HELP! HELP! HELP! wa BRED EXTRA CLEAN USED CARS RIGHT NOW! "TOP DOLLAR PAID" Glenn’s Motor Skies W. Huron St.___PB t-TlTl Ui$d Auto Parts 102 ’M PONTIAC. GOOD PARTS. SM 3-MW. 'M PONTIAC ENOINE, matte tran«mla*lon. pd t-7111. UM CHEVROLET IMP ALA CON-vtrtul* V-3, automatic, power •liering, radio, baatar and whitewall tire*. llJSt. NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. MM (. WOOD-WABD. BIRMINGHAM, MI t-3735. Sale Used Trucks 103 CHEVY SPORTS COUpE. ctoaii^ OSHWt C. Man- llto CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR htrdtop. v-3, aatomsiw traaamU-sion, power (toering, radio and Mater, whitewall Ure*. Stiver-blue. Thl* ear 1* Immaculato. it—. NORTH CHEVROLET CO, 1000 S. WOODWARD, BUUHNO-HAM, MI --------- Better * Used Trucks GMC OAKLAND AT CASS 1IH CHEVROLET Ml TON PANEL, t cylinder, etandard shift, ttts NORTH CHEVROLET CO , ION - WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM. 1IM CHEVROLET ■ 14-TON PANEL JWSmidiub* dcan- ___ 1038 Baldwin. PE 3-33M. IP FLATBED TRUCK WITH RACK. ‘ ' ccndlttcn. MA 33331. FORDl CAB OYER WRECK- Mlt-TtM.________________ UM FORD Vi TON PICKUP. V-t. Superior Auto Bales. trust** coln-Mercury-Comet, 233 8. Sagl- Ht FORD Vi TON P*CkUP, V-3. standard ihtft. MOO NORTH CHEVROLET CO, 1*M S. WOOD-WARD BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-273S. _ POkD Mr TON PICKUP;__________ cottont caotUtlon. Many ostrte. PB i-3373. Aftor * 1000 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-—'two v-3, aatomatlc. power ring aad hnasL tdas hdaL whitewall*, whit* with red i, 13300. Nolnv CHEVROLET, I B. WOODWARD- BUtMINO. Close-Out ON 1981 CHEVROLET TRUCKS CAB AND Save EXAMPLE: t£*Ton Pickup motor* Signal*—Wadtow All Tax** aad Plat*, $180 DOWN $12.72 Per Wk. FE 5-4161 Ask for the TRUCK DEPT. Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oakland at Cass Auto Insurance 104 $37 FOR 6 MONTHS SM.MS LIABILITY , *1,000 MEDICAL . 11.000 DEATH BENEFIT BtW UXtoturod Motorists COMPREHENSIVE (111*, 4MA. *!•) COLLISION (SMS doducttbU) ROAD SERVICE STOP IN OB PHONE FE 4-3535 ANE A ANDERSON AGENCY t Jo*tm ps tsr Eves. PE 3-tlM or PE MM NOTICE B* It hereby known that at any time aftor publldilng at thle notice. one UH FOlD, Series— Bf*1 «n*ev VICTORIA HARDTOP. Saitol No. MlyvIlMlf* win to UqrndaUd tar the balance due at |M7. ThU rax may b* claimed by taking over weekly pnynrant* at HAi. Abao-luuiy SO ca*b needed until first payment I* mad* mto In October, 1M1. Thet balance dm may also bo paid off in cash if wra-fsrred instead of taking over INSCRIPTION: Color: BIu* and Whit*. uMof: Matching. Body condition: Good. Equipment: Automatic trantmll-rion. radio. hMtor, f owtodH. This oar I* bring it*—1 aad! cos be mcd at Klag i. Cut Motors, Liny-Comet. 333 S. tell- ing end l_________ whitewall*. 33.000 actual mile*. Extra Clean. MS. NORTH CHEVROLET CO . IN* a WOODWARD ■IRMIKOHAM. MI t-37M. 3H BUICK _________________ Superior AW Mte. ____________, OP BOOM - Pmkri Putt at Money When You Sell Tour Surplu* ----- ----I M Ad* . It^g Thtoi^h KanX A >k tHEVROLET IMPALA CON- •teerlng and brake*, radio, beater, and whitewall tire*, white with red trim. tltU. NORTH CHEVRO LET. 1000 S. WOODWARD. BIRMIHOHAM. MI t-3735. H CORVAIR. DELUXE. WHITE watt*, radio. Tory good eond. tl.350. OR 3-33BI * “— special. I1W UL i-HW. •H CHEVROLET t-OOC OLDS and CADILLAC . SALE JEROME “Bright Spot” Orchard Lake ot Cbm ■tO IMPALA. CLEAN, it I tin lth. pemos«hrator. *33st. NORTH CHEVROLET CO, 10N 8. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM. MI t-3T3t, 1*56 CHEVROLET 3 DOOR, RA-DIO, REATOt, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTBLY NO MONET DOWN. Auume payment* of 33333 par ma. Call Credit Mgr, Mr. Parka at MI 4-78N, Harold Turner, Ford. M> CHEVROLET. BIBCAYNB » Judi*radii**nl tejic'wXwrii CHEVROLET Co! {o00 8- WOOD-WARD, BIRMINGHAM, lg 4-3738. MI t-3731. MO CHEVROLET. t-DOOR IM- pala. power itoonng and brahra. excellent condltlow. Phone PI MiU. ___________ 55 CHEVROLET WAOON. PULL prlo* MM. Lloyd ltotora, Un-coln-Mercury-Comet, B3 S. Bat- tnaw, PE 3-dlII. .......• 1M CHEVY. RUNS A-l. FIRST 450. • appreciate. Chtt between 1054 AUTOMATIC ckKVT i-DOOR, I. good condition. UK. PE SAMS. Oafl aftor »:M. •56 CHEVROLET, t POWEROLIDE STOP! BUY! SAVE! N Brick Convertible (MM ll Pontiac Vowtura ..... 33304 „|T Ford tJbaar ...... .... 1*04 Corvalr SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK Rochester QL 1-8133 Opts til o p.m. or later CtoocrWodTmTMd ssl, t ».m. NOTICE Be B hereby known that at _ tiev m^lf^bPLl^UIT?huSei —STATION WAOON, Serial He. iqwu win b* HqNdalsd for the balance dm d p. ThU car may b* claim ad ¥y Uklng over weakly paymenta of M.jaT'Akra payment |* made late m Oct. loti. The baXnce dm may ala* m paki qff ia mah lf pmenod Eg^ri^tn. mra Pay-rat. Color : Slutlte Blue Interior: Original vinyl. Body condition:-OmIT i*ripmmt: Rodla. healer, white-watt tin*. TU* car to being stored by and caa ha earn* at King Auto SalM, k Lot, at lit 8. SAO-Pmttoa. 1 Modi s. of vo, sap time from t p.m. dally, exeept sun - John McAuliffe, Ford 333 oahlaad An. PE t-ill UM CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 2-door. $ cylinder, standard shift. Metallic bra* finish. An exeipuon-*1 car. 11,100. NORTH CHEVROLET CO, 1000 B. WOODWARD. BIRMINOHAM, MI 4-3330. CONWAY'S AUTO MART —S s f- hydri ............... $iat •M Chevy*. _____Lk. Bd. PH 333-7303 DODOB. 3, 3 POOH. 1 OWNER ’‘Verier T| Bulck. 1IM FALCON S-d6oR. RADIO, heater, automatic traaam1—•— •harp hght blue. Full pri** Lloyd Motor*. Llncoh-Mi comet, 333 B. Baglnaw, FE urn, hcatkk, new top. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Auume paymonU at $33.71 per mo. Can Credit Mgr, Mr. Park* at MI *-7500. Harold Turner, Fojd 'll I*aL60N 3 DOOR rnisu itandard transmission, won only (3,100 actual miles! Factory J EROM E-FERGU SON ROCHESTER FORD DEALER OL 1-3711 1334 FORD 2 DOOR. RADIO, MIMION. ABSOLUTELY MO BEATER. AUTOMA1IP TRANSMONEY. DOWN. Ammo payment* of 310.M per mo. Cril Credit Mgr, Mr. Park* at Ml *ua neeser.____rwwr, i condition. i% 4A103. Ldoor Palrlane aodao. Radio, heater. Pordomatic. whit* rido-waU Ure*. $3N, John McAuliffe, Ford 330 Oakland Av«. PE Mill ltM FORD 3-DOOR. 3-CYLINDER, standard traumUalan, radio aad beater. Pall price »1U3. Lloyd Motors, Ltncoln-Merounr-O— -■ 333 B. Saginaw. FE Mill. Tb^[? WN. Ateume | 'to FORD FAIRLANE "600" Radio, hooter, whitewall*, and a very sharp aeto^ SCHUCK FORD m*4 at buckborn .lake ORION MY 1-3*11 13M FORD STATION WAOON, RA dlo. heater, »uto. trar "*■— TE *-4186 or FE 5-7545. FORD 13M BUN LINEN* CONVERTIBLE STRAIGHT sen BIO toons. 5 000 ACTUAL MILES. SALE PRICED AT ONLY $2295 1-Year Warranty Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S, Woodward ~ MI4-4485 . Yi engine, full prlo* $34* and pay mint* of 331 a mooth. tE&mi? ^ &rai m to. Montcalm 1958 FORD r sedan, radio, heater, auto i transmission, whit* side- 135* FORD i-DOOR VICTORIA 3 &5W " Llncoln-Mercury. Abeolately no cash me* ed until first payment lx tn late la October, 1M1. Tb* k_ a nee dm may also be paid off la aaah If preferred Instead, at Inc ever paymonU. rascupnoN: Interior: MatchUte Vinyl Running condition: Excellent Equipment: 3 cylinder automatic, radio and hMtor Body condition: Very food Thl* oar io bring stored bp and caa to seen at King Auto Selce, Lteridattoa Lot, at 1U A Saginaw, in Pontiac, i block a. of Auburn Avo, any time tram • a m. to t p.m. dally except Sun- 347 FORD. FULL PRICE tUT. NO cash down, Mr Aato Sates. 131 8. Sa^teaw, PE 4-3314. .... HOMER HIGHT Small Town Trades: UM BUICK 3 door hardtop Etoetrh. UM PLYMOUTH S door. Radio and boater. Automatic transmit •Ion. t cylinder. Sharp .....$11 UM FORD convertible sunllnei. Power qteortag and, brake*. Radio aad beater. Automatic tnne-mtorioa .................. 33.1*6 1M3 NASH t DOOR Rebel. 1 and beater, power ateerin* brake*. Standard trai______ . staa ....M........... 11,713 Transportation Special* 3M sad up . . . Chevrolet -Pontiac-Buick Dealer “U Minutes from Pontine" Foir Ssk Cm 106 M DODO^n. SHARP. SIM. *UL GIANT' VALUES Under. S100 •to MERCURY Hardtop, Radio, 1 Poll Price .... ■33 PLYMOUTH I Door Hardtop. Putt Price .... t Doer with V3 Bargain, In P Surplus Motors TRADHS 17! S. Saginaw'. FE 8-4036 FISCHER BUICK FOR USED BUICKS 13 MONTHS WARRANTY 133 i. Woodward B'bam Ml 34W ACROSS PROM OBBSMPIKLP'B WILL ACCEPT Boats, motor*, gun*, echo oft • steam whistle, sunshine from a beanery, exbaast fumes from ea outboard motor, or almoot any Bill Spence, Rambler 33 8. Main St. (Mli) CLARK8TON OPEN EVES. . MA ‘ •— REPOSSESSION 1131 Ford Moor, jutt *rie# $141 payment* at M a month. Pint Laknlde Mtr*. 1M-1U1 213 W. Montcalm good, $165, save Aria. PE ( ■M FORD STATION WAOON, RA-. DIO. HEATER. PORDOMATIC ABSOLUTELY MO MONEY DOWN. Assume payment* o' $17.M per mo. CPU Credit Mgr, Mr. Park* al M14-13M, Harold Turner. Ford. FORa r^STICK. MM. •M FORD 3 DOOR FAIRLANE sedan, with M down. 337.M per month. Lloyd Motors, .Lincoln- whit* Interior, radio, hooter, pawn •tee ring end brake*. A real clean car two only 31.3N. WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward BIRMINOHAM MILE- trade. OR 3-3223 after gTTORD t vnora, ra, *oro- M FALCON t-DOOR. LOW MILS' age, automatic.' ralte, beater. Will take trade OR 3-3333 after 3. BUYING OR SELLING BEE US BEFORE YOU DEAL HOUGHTEN & SON at H. Mala.' Rectoetor OL 1-3731 MUST MOVE OUT OVER 1M CARS AND TRUCKS No ReaeontM* Offer Refused ECONOMY CARS 33 AUBURl i dm BIG $AVlNG$ A0 Rambler SEDAN ..0***4% HM 57 Chevrolet WAOON -OT 33 PLYMOUTH SEDAN . 33M 54 OllDSMOBILE SEDAN tat 33 PACKARD AUTO . MM M Cushman Clean 1 . ***» RUSS JOHNSON LAKE ORION MY 2-2371 MV 2-2381 1334 MERCURY, tlM, NEEDS KX- UM MXRCURY S PAS8XNOER ---------------------- UM MERCURY MMOR -**?«>. beater, power eteertn*. Putt price HIM. Lloyd Miton, llncotn-Mer-cury-Comet, 333 S- Saginaw, PE 3-3131. 1336 NASH RAMBLER IlfEIUCAN. 313S . OB----- ini coafsT* Damn j-door, ra-dlo. heater, whitewall*, midnight blue finish. 31M6. NORTH CHEV-ROLET CO.. IMS S. WOOD-WARD. BIRMINOHAM. MI t-3733. M COMET, t DOOR AUTOMATIC. *54 UUMMUBU* VLUD RADIO, HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRAN8MISSIOR ABOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay CredH Mgr. Mr. tPartaT*i REPOSSESSION IBM Ford. A real Mack beauty for the full print of $6M and per-menu of Ml a month. Pint payment due Oct. 3. Lakeside Mtr*. 133-131 1353 FORD' WAOON, TWO TO choose from. 3160 down and ft low 313 a week paymenta. Lloyd Motors. Uneola - Mercury-'----- 333 8. Saginaw. PB Mlto. IBM FORD OALAXIE t-DOOR. V-t, automatic. Power etecrtog jind brakes. Radio, beater, and whlte-wsto. »1.7»5 NORTli CHEVRO-LET O0~ UN IT WOODWARD, BIRMINOHAM. MI t-3735. '64 FORD, t DOOR. 3 PASSES-ter station wason, very *i»an throughout. EM 3-MSL S. Con-way Dealer. REPOSSESSION 1MT Ford station wagon 4-door— tomatlc V$ power brake* end steering. Ml price $«M. Payemnt* of 333 a mo. Ilrit paym—• -*— A_ i 313-7131 clean. *li60 Phone Oft 3-3362. Pto LARK t STANDARD. $1.11! 333-3733 after 6, ■67 MERCURY t DOOR RADIO. Heater. Power Steering, Power Brakea. Full Price $7M. Lloyd Motor*. UneatoMcteurr-Oomet, 333 g. Saginaw. PM MMI, •57 MERCURY 3 DOOR. AUTO-malic, very clean. $4M. PE 3-tgTI. HASKJNS BACK TO SCHOOL Used Car.Buys v Low Down Payment For Son 'Or' Daughter With Co-Buyer •65 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR 3 door oodaa, with VI engine. Paw* xnde transmission, radio ai Beater. Beautiful turquoise ai ■M CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERTIBLE,'* VI -engine, Power-gild* transmission, power steering and power brake*. Radio and matte transmission, radio, heater, like now with * solid wEKe IK Uhl Financing No Problem HASKINS CHEVROLET - OLDS MU AT u. a. IP TOUR CROSS ROADS TO SA VINOS MAMMt , CLARK8TON money-saving bargains. Place your own profit-making ad by pbaaa (Pa MSI la the upmber to eatt), by mall, or over T ter to THE PONTIAC -SPECIAL- 1959 PONTIAC STATION WAOON equipped with radio, boater and automatic transmission. Power eteerlng and brakes for your driving comfort. rS?u........ $2595 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens Corner: Cass and Pike FE 37954 WO OLDSMOBffiE M 4-DOOR, HT-drsmatto, power etcorlag aad braket, radio, heater, wMuwxll*. besatlful blue finish, $32*5 NORTH CHEVROLET CO , 1000 8 WOODWARD. BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-3T36. CLOSE-OUT 1951 MODELS and Demonstrators Rammler- Dallas 1001 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ' ' OL SU111 DODGE-CHRYSLER-SIMCA DEMO CLEARANCB Good erieettan models and colors. Priced to sril how. TOM BOHR. INC. 1M S, Mato. MUtofd MU 4-1TI6 BY OWNER. 1051 PLYMOUTH. YI. automatic, good condition. Sara anytime. Phone M3-1334. REPOSSESSION 1MT Plymouth hardtop, Rower brakes and steering. Putt price of PPM. Payment* of 136 a month. First payment due Oct. P. _ LakesidejMtrs. Mn|)lr>1[|| B*-TU1 ■M PLYMOUTH 2 DOOIt'' WWh p Cyl. Standard Transmission, $795 Lloyd Motors, Ltncoln-Mereury-Comet, 333 8. Saginaw Street, FE MUl. 1353 PLYMOUTH CLUB SEDAN, RADIO. HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Call Credit Mgr.. Mr. park* at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner. Ford. 153 PLYMOUTH. RUN NINO. $65. Save Auto. TE 5-3273,_ 153 PLYMOUTH, t DOOR 8UB-urban. equipped. Good condition. qgp-aut.____ „_______ 1150 PLYMOUTH STATION' WAO-on. radio, heater, whitewall tties, perfect family ear. $1,143. R.$197 1957 PLYMOUTH- Straight stick and m I cylinder Full*Price........$247 SOUTHFIELD ; • MOTORS lit East Bird., •» Auburn FE 8-4071 ABSOLUTELY NO CASH NEEDED Little as $6 a ^lonth 18ccllcnlY1conStlon. OL 1-U41. Mi polrrtAC t door habd-top Hyitramitio/ ' Bajte. mater, whitewalls, White with blue loam. Tom ,IL ‘fa. ‘43 PirBowa payment Haupt Pwtlae sale* Clark,-.too. MU. 1m»* north of UJ. u. MApte 5-5541. Open Mon.. Tuea.. Thnre. MU * P-te. LOOK! LOOK! Ult Volkswagen Micro-hue, real clean, Witt trade. ___. PEOPLES AUTO AALBS 43 Oakland ________FE 3-3351 TEMPEST STATION WAOON. UBI. TI POtmAC. RADIO, HEATER, whit* walk, power brakes, tripower. floor shift. (3.391. firm. 1I5P PONTIAC BONNEVtLLE CON-verUbte. P3.P3S. Pii ttapT 55 PONTIAC RARDTOP. 3-TONE. mhIk tivj IS EHmuetii Li must sseriftee. MA V3SM. aftor 1*5* PONTIAC CUSTOM 4-DOOR hardtop. Hydramahe, power eteor-lag pad brakes. PE 3-4313. REPOSSESSION 1*55 Pontiat 3 door, stoadard troao-mltslon. 33(5 full price. Pay only git a( month. First payment due Lakeside litre. 33S-TU1 13*0 PONTIAC SPORTS SEDAN, hydramatle. radio, boater. Light blue. A 1 owner car. M months ------------- MAple 5-5533. Open Thurr - - - IM4 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE; ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments at $11.(3 per mo. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Parks at MI t-TUt, Harold beater, whti* walls. 14.tit n 1 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DOOR _____ ____ ___________3-1331. Stranahan. ■M PONTIAC • 4 DOOR STATION WAOON, Radio. i Heater. Power 5T 1360 BLACK BONNEVILLE CON-vertlble. like nod, loaded. Pft 3-3730. After 3:30. 30 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVERT-ibi*. OR Mdt* after Ppm. ■*1 PONTIAC 4-DOOR WHITE BON- NKW ECONOMY SPECIAL! 'll Btadubaker Lath, heater aad defraetor. Accessory hit, white- watte. PUSS. _________ MAZUREK 8TUDEBAKER SAT,Eft "Wa Trade" MM ' Battoaw. Transportation Specials P FORD 2-DOOR . BEATTIE WATERFORD FORD DEALER Al the stoplight la Waterford ORl-1291 UPP PONTIAC, • PAS8ENOER. $3.450. M3-t7It. '53 BLACK PONTIAC CONVERTI-ble. i Power brakes, Tri-Power, E-Z Eye glass, Bonne rule trim. 1353 RAMBLER AMERICAN STA-tton wagon. Radio and heater. 8olid blue flnlah. (1.035. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1300 8. WOOD-WARD. BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-2735 — MfCA SEDAN. RADIO. HEATER, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payment* at 131.32 ptr me. Call Ask for Barbara. MI 4-4373. KESSLER'S Inside Used Car Lot Att Inside—All Sharp - M N. Waahlni *^ob SPECIAL How •« car. radio, boater. tl.ttl.M. $83.20 down. MI.N per m to this column an snhjBtliii te chaags without nodes TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 9:99 (V) Movie (coal.) (4) Broken Arrow -"(7) News, Weather (9) Popeye (56) Anthropology 4:11 (7) New* 4:34 (4) Weather 4:19 (2) News (4) News (7) Silent Service (9) Yogi Bear (99) Ordeal By Fire 9:49 (2) New* Analysis (4) Sports 4:41 (2) News (4) News 1t99 (2) Malibu Run (4) Dangerous Robin (7) Brannagan Boys (9) Pioneers' (59) Biblical Masterpieces 1:19 (2) Malibu Rua (coat.) (4) Wagon Train (7) Hong Kong (9) Movie. “Stand Up and ‘".‘1 Tight.’^ (l939>. Slavery. feud between stagecoaches and railroads, form background of melodrama set in Maryland. Wallace Beery, Robert Taylor, Charles Bickford (99) Philosophies of Education 9:49 (2) San Francisco Beat . (4) Wagon Train (cant.) (7) Hong Kong (cant.) (9) Movie (cant) (59) Muricale 9:99 (2) Danger Man (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Ozzie and Harriet (9) Movie (cont.) 9:99 (2) Angel (4) Mystery Theater (7) Hawaiian Eye (9) Superior Sex 9:19 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (9) Big Four Playback 19:99 (2) Circle Theater < (4) (Color) It Could Be You (7) Naked City (9) News 19:11 (9) Weather 19:99 (9) Telescope UAW 14:90 (2) Circle Theater (cont.) (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Naked Citf (cont.) • (9) Golf Tip 14:44 (9) Sports 11:44 (2) News (4) News (7) Decoy (9) News 11:19 (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Movie. “Vacation from Marriage.” (English; 1954). Young couple who are boring each other to death are separated when husband is drafted. Robert Donat, Deborah Kerr. 11:99 (2) Sports (disports. 11:21 (2) Movie. “Riding High. (1943). When show folds, burlesque queen turns up at her father's silver mine. Dorothy Lamour, Dick Pew- Atlanta Schools Quiet as Negroes Enter Woman who is secretly married is asked to wed foreign actor, to keep him from being deported. Diana Barrymore, Louise AUMtton, Walter Abel. 4:99 (2) Meditations. 4:11 (2) On the Farm Front 7:49' (2)j Spectrum '61 (4) Today (7) Funews (2) B'wana Dob. (7) Johnny Ginger. 9:19 (2) Capt. Kangaroo. 9:99 (7) Movie. 9:41 (2) Movie. (4) Ed Alien (4) Consult DT. Brothers 4:44 (4) Gateway to Glamour fc|4 (7) News 14:44 (1) I Love Lucy (4) Say When , (7) Jack LaLanne 14:94 Q) Video Village (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Jackie Cooper (9) Billboard 14:49 (9) Junior Roundup 11:49 (2) Double Exposure (4) (color) Price Is Right (7) Gale Storm (9) Romper Roan 11:19 (2) My Little Margie * (4) Concentration (7) Love That Bob THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:06 (2) Love of Life (4) Truth or Cdhsequences (7) Camouflage. (9) Tower Kitchen Time 12:94 (9) News 19:94 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (color) It Could Be Too (7) Number Please. (9) Sole 12:49 (2) Guiding Light 12:05 (4) News. 1:44 (2) Star Performance (4) Journey (7) Seven Star Theater. (9) Movie. 1:21 (7) News (2) Aa World Turns. (7) Ufa of Riley. (4) Faye Elizabeth (2) Amos ’n’ Andy (4) (color) Jan Murray. (7) Day in Court 2:24 (2) House Party. (4) Loretta Yeung. (7) Seven Keys 2:44 (2) Our Miss Brooks (4) Young Dr. Malone a) Queen Sir a Day (9) Movie 9:49 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These Roots wron am Wlri ltmr. Winter wwS, Bm WJBK, Neva_____ CKLW. Van Karas WCAR, Man*, Mar. wron. Nava Sparta «:St—WWJ, Biuloeu New* WX7X. Ala* Drier WJBK, ttabart E. La* WNS. Data Wtth Marta 7:4S-WWJ. Fhona Optalon WXTZ. IT. satmattan !*:**— WWJ, World N liaa-wwj, Hava WCAR. O. Conrad CSXW. Ir, Opawr ' WXTZ. Nava Walt ISMta. Nava Ifaata WWJ, Nava Marta WXriS.Wotf.Nav* CKLW. jtava fobr On rid w£on! aSty Morn.. W0VI WWJ Neva, jsbrrt* WXTZ. Waif. Hava CK'.w. Sava. Oartd WCAR. New, WPON N«wa Masle wxvfa. Nava wmt VJB. A**? . safirLSTSB. tas-WJW. Jack Barrla 10:10—WPON. Otaan, Nava Itas-WJB. Health WWJ. Nava. Lrakar WXTZ. McNeelef WJBK n5v*TRaid wcar, Nava B. ttartyn wron, oins IMS-WJtt, Tima Par Marta THURSDAY AFTERNOON tas-wjs. Nava Pam WWJ, Nava, Lynker WXTZ. McNaatejr, Nava CKLW. dan Van WJBK. Nava Retd WCAR, Nava Pvraa wpon. Nava Lavm CKLW. •WJ% Tim ,W, Have. i tor Marta Oartd wwj, liava Traa stanr WCAR. Nava Mis WPOM. Lavta. Neva IAS—WWJ, Tlfar Bate ball WXTZ. MeNeeley, Hava MMHR Marta HaB wrrx, Hava WbMar CKLW. five, Dsrtaa Wjqj, Maata WPOH. Radas JrtS-WJK Neva Marta ■ WWJ. Sear, board WXTZ, winter. neve CKLW. Nava Oartaa WJBK. Muste _ WCAR, Nava iBartdia wron. Carrteae Trade ,S7JRvT WXTZ. Wtatar. Nava CKLW. Sports, Dart** WJBK, jNava Traffle wiSE -— ftwrcs MS—WJR. Mart* RaU WWJ. Bteemnee Amass SSi.BS.-KS. of silence today trying to get information from accused Kentucky and Ohio operators. All they got was a monotonous repetition of 5th Amendment pleas. Hebert C. Cullen, of Cincinnati, refused even to aekaswlsdgs that toad County school district included in approvals Aug. 29-29. The hugest single borrowihg approved was 6750,000 for Battle Creek. Van Dyke School District in Macomb County had a 6300,000 loan approved. Wayne County borrow-approved included Inkster, 6400,000; Dearborn Township and CHy, 6350.000: Soutfeate, 6180,000; and Mrtvindale-North Alien Park, 6150,000. Stanley Schoemaker of Highland Heights, Ky., and Richard Busker of Cincinnati, described as gambling establishment partners, de dined to acknowledge that signatures on government tax farms were theirs. And despite direct orders they declined to sign their names on pads. * Louis Efkeman, editor and publisher of the Louisville (Ky.) Daily Sports News, wouldn't Laming Pilot, 33, Killed in Jet Crash at Kirtland ALBUQUERQUE, N M. (J4-U. Cmdr. James A. GuggenbUler, 33, of Lanrtng, Mich., was killed Tuesday in the crash at a twin-jet navy plane an take off at Kirtland Air Force Base. Lt George F. Biehl. 31, ohLake Pine, NJ., also died in toe crarti. Witnesses saidthey noticed flame around the engines of the A6J-1 Vigilante Just as the craft was aixborae. It banked sharply to the i LAP)—, Senators lag yoqr government” aad taunt-lag It. Darkly, he suggested that hei didn't think they were really big-' er than the government. There were suggestions too that Eflwman's paper would be barred from the mails. McPtoiton, laying his committee should he given more respect, demanded that the witnesses say “I respectfully decline to answer" instead of “I refuse to answer." The witnesses tried. But Busker’s version was that he “respectably" declined lo answer. ■. G * * FACE COCA-COLA! (Regular Size) f With inch Purchase ________ of Om or Mora Rofio or TV Tubo* During . . . 10th JUntlVEBSUT CELEBRATION of the Oakland Coasty Hectmta landottm Bring your TV or Radio tubes in for testing Hcnrs thorn tasted by expert technician* *>n proioooional tubs testers at ns charge. Or call on* af tbs OCEA Doaloro Urtsa bslsw tor sxpsrt ssnrics. Btbsr way, a FREE 6 pack sf Coca Cola is yours with tbs purchase of one or morostubss. Rely on rrsfossional Electronic Technician* tor ALL year oervico noods. This after good until 8spt. 9. 1891 tnm die following OCEA Ssnrics Dsalsrsi latimsr TV-OR 3-2652 fMfS TV Saroka-Ot 3-1217 Janes Radi# A TV-612-1350 StotoasW Rndto ATVFE 24H7 Arnold A Stavsr TV—Ul 2-3160 Tslavisiaa Ssrv. Cs^MI 6-3500 . . tw WsHsn Radi# A TV-FI 2-2257 Johnson Radi# A TV-FI1-4549 sua. wdtoo “ ** wa*m WKC, Inc, Sorvks Dept. 34114 so w. ao*t iUl FE 3-7114 Dafty Radis A TV-FE 4-9102 CLOSE-OUT on Wother*, Dryers end Refrigerators Bargaini while they lott Easy Terms—No Down Payment ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 W. Huron Sf. PE 4-2526 4-DAY SALE! Widnssdoy—Theradey-Fridoy and Sotordoy Only ALUMINUM SIDING iLL FREE ESTIMATES hi Yoor Hssm sr of Oar Showroom ■- -*-oo- -o ttt.8 x aa— mvnnvMi ir riCKM wf flwxisg sad Storm Wiwisw Sain 919 Orvhord Loka Ato, I Mack East ol Telegraph td. r rrtSey NS S r.M. GET OUT OF DEBT! WITHOUT A LOAN CONSOLIDATE and Arrange to Pay All Your Bills Past Due or Not - Haitian- Bank Director Now Exiled in Jamaica PORT-AU-PRINCE. Haiti UM Joseph Qiatalaln, former director of the Haitian national hank, left) today for exile in Jamaica dT nine months of asylum in Brazilian embassy. * * ..i*j, * : He was accompanied by ifoj. Robert Basils, former comntander of the coast guard, who also had been granted refuge in the embassy. The two aakad asylum during One weekly payment pays oil your bills, avoid garnishments and repooies* sions and keep your good credit rating. No cosigners needed. Michigan's largest credit Monogemcnt Company. NNET U BSSOCUTIM, lit. mm m confused with imitators 1111 W. Him FE 4-0951 Additions! Offices rhroagfceet (Uh Mocha Weal of “ Msrtbsr Fmtfoe Chamber of ■_______________ /„ MMMAITS LARGEST COMPANY i —f SALE HOLIDAY WEEKEND SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Lightweight, Wash V Wear Jackets Regularly $6.98 f%99 You Save $2.99! J Unlined cotton ripple-weave Jacket with knit bottom, cuffs, neck . stylish raglin shoulders. In black, tan and olive . . . sizes smalt, medium, large. Require* little -care. Get yours today and save. Shop tomorrow ’til 9! Continental Style Men's Slacks 56-in. Wide and Fully Washable WOOL-NYLON FLANNEL REG. $2.98 Lightweight, Lined Jackets FOR BOYS OR GIRLS SPECIAL Soft, nlce-to-wear blend of 85% wool, 15% nylon in a full range of flattering fashion colors. Retains its shapes, and It drapes beautifully . . perfect for the new blousy styles. 8ave 32c a yd.„ Synthetic Prints .......Me yd. Amel and cotton ......Me yd. Just right for the first chilly mornings. Assorted plaids or bedford cord In red, navy, green, gray qr tan. Washable 100% cotton Including flannelette lining. Side elastic for good fit 3-6x. 811m and trim continental style with plain no-pleat front, adjustable waistband. Made for leisure wear. Wash ’n’ wear . . . 100% cotton. Choose from assorted fancy plaids. Save! Men’s Sportswear, Main Floor CHARGE IT SALE! 19” PORTABLE. TV PLUS CART (Overall Diag.) NOW BOTH FOR NO MONEY DOWN Handsome beige metal cabinet is compact, easy to catty and to store. Dipole antenna brings in sharp picture on big 172 5q. in. viewing area. Up-front speaker for easy listening. Set locks on solid-top cart with brass-plated steel tubing legs, walnut finished shelf, 3” casters. Direct Drive Chain Saw NEW 12-INCH DAVID BRADLEY Sears Low Price SALE! 6-TRANSISTOR RADIO Powerful 4-HP industry rated saw with hard nosed guide bar, automatic clutch, positive chain oiler, single diaphragm carburetor. Shop- tomorrow nlto ’til 8! Other saws from $109 to $199.88! Sear* Fencing Dept., Perry St. Basement 9x9-Ft. Umbrella Tent BREEZY FOUR-WAY VENTILATION NO MONEY DOWN ON SEARS EASY Self-adjusting frame sets up fast, ends tent sagging, gives you more open living area. Nylon «preen door and 3 windows with Inside storm zipper flaps-8ave at Sears! PAYMENT No warm-up! Thrifty battery set lasts up to 400 hours. 8 transistors for fine reception. Gray o n 1 yi Batteries, earphone extra. Radio iiid TV Dept* Bear* Main Fleer PLAN .22.99 No Money Down Shop Tomorrow Night ’til 9 ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦♦♦ £ SALE! Heavy Duty Bulk Oil + 4 i t I £ f *n Tour Own Container 4 Offer delightful outdoor liftng on shady patio. SALE! Allstate Mufflers CHARGE IT Allstate with Double Detergent cleans as it lubricates vital parts . ... exceeds the American Petroleum Institute specifications. Designed for use at all speeds, for long, short drives, and for all climates. Give your car the best care . . . change your own oil regularly and save! FOR ’49-’54 FORDS Fits ’49 to ’68 Chevrolets. Built to same specifications as original mufflers. Get yours today and save at Sears! CUSTOM ^WNINGS OF REYNOLDS ALUMINUM FOR WINDOWS, PORCH OR PATIO ALLSTATE OIL FILTER REFILLS Fits Moat Cars '. "i ' HEAVY DUTY MUFFLERS Chevrolets, ’58-’61, installation extra ..8.49* Plymouths, ’49-’59, 6-cyl., installation extra 8.49* Fords, ’58-’59, installation extra .......9.98* CERAMIC MUFFLERS $12.49 Ford, 8-cyl. Chev. 6 and 8 Ply. 6-cyl. ’55-’59 cylinder—’54-’60 ’49-’59 ; onhkmm Long-lasting investment In protection and property improvement, and they require NO maintenance! DuPont enamel finish won’t chip, crack, peel or blister. NO MONEY DOWN, 38 months to pay, so CALL TODAY TOR a FREE estimate ee the styles and colors. Awning and Shade Dept. Scan Main Flow 154 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 5-4171 Satisfaction guaranteed wL TORtV-ElGHT' THE roXTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1881 Crash Injuries Fatal » j to Nine-Year-Old Boy 9QUTO HAVEN (I) — Robert Wetiey Wells, S, died at South Baveo Hospital of injuries suffered today la an auto cram' which injured eight others. AU occupied a car driven by prefer Ca$h ^ ^ 4in# Stanley L. McFarland, 30, of Route;, \ . 4, South Haven. jin Furniture Buying Allegan County sheriff* menj NEW YORK- . hmi —48 PAGES ~Z~J&S5£PiL Returns to GM Appears Near j Showdown Goulart Leaves Pqris as Cracks Occur in Opposition to VP RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) — Brazil's three military ministers today agreed Iq accept Joatr Goulart as a figure-head president with a prime minister to be ap- j pointed by Congress until I 1963, a government source | said. RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil! (AP)—Brazil's presidential] crisis appeared headed for ENGINEER WORKING—High above an Alpine glacier an engineer, Works on cables atop cable car to allow it and its passengers to be lowered to safety following a freak accident near , AP Fhololax Chamonix, France. Tuesday. Above-him istbe severed end of the traction cable which was cut by a French jet plane. Helicopters Rescue 81 TELLS OK PROPOSAL - William E. Simkin (right), director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service tells newsmen Tuesday of , the proposal he made to the United Auto Workers |B Showdown today as the Union and Big Three asking them to consent to a nation's three military one-week extension of contract talks past the chiefs vetoed efforts to in-| stall leftist Jbao Goulart. L* . , * A . Vice President Goulart n.«aJflulck Arrests Nip Protests off a three-day wait in Paris and left by air for, New York apparently cn route to Brazil, where the military leaders rejected a congressional committee plan to Set up, Goulart as a' powerless head of a parliamentary form of AP Fhotafax * strike deadline. The union and auto firms later agreed to go along with the request extending the contract to Sept. 6. With Simkin are (from left) Dale A. Ricketts of pie mediation service, assigned to GM-UAW and James MacPhersfon, regional director of the FMS. Four Atlanta Schools Integrated Safe After ‘Awful* Night CHAMONIX, France (AP) -icier by a freak Rescuers today completed-remov ; killed six others. »l of. 81 sightseers who .spent] "We've had-an : tours of terror in tiny cable, carslwe're glad it's 0 ►tailed high abbve an Alpine ,gla*jcommertt of ...night °! little leg loom andl i freezing “cold..................................on............the _ slopes of iwful time and {Mont Blanc, " uvi-rnu.™ ATLANTA (AP) — Nine Negro I— tumbled, reluctantly perhaps, pupils strolled into classes in pre-but quietly.' The heads of the army, navy Ljously white Atlanta schools to- Total PubIic «'hool segregation and air force were united In their day and WJltchful police, nipped i"®" "mains in only three- Deep opposition. But cracks appeared quickly any hint of trouble (South states—Alabama, Mississippi ^ wrrr *•* thus the traditional school seg- South Carolina, eeted to the (lumber of Dep jri-gation barriers — in force in At the first indication of lies as if rushed debate on the Georgia and Atlanta for 100 years trouble at the four high sd plan vetoed by the mUltar.v. ! —---------------------------- Acting President Rainier! Maz-s over, was the | .Helicopters ferried the last sur- j ar|!l v iSS™p. J!,l™*! ftring.,,<|>e Briton numbed by;vlvors back to the warmth of XS, Ihn ,, s°ullhernj ,eir Chamonix hotels. IT t0 T . . , port Goulart. The decree also iSome-of them had spent nedriy sacked the command.' suspended hundreds of fantry division and a cavalry dl- slow-Jviskm. • | ! ■ congressional committee ca®*\' a • ! . v . - ' viofMmly jtoOk issue ‘with the service flh cable was snapped at 1:10 I chiefs who fear that the assum-l , , ,,,,,, . ...... ... .. I».m. Tuesday by a French air ling of the presidency by Goulart j A veteran UAW Official last night took issue With the force >et combat plane fi.vbig low (would threaten the security of the | one-party political endorsement* by the Oakland Coun-through the valley between big subtropical country. ty AFL-CIO Council and assured Republicans they’d be Blanc and Aiguille du Midi. ( URGENT TALKS . i considered tOO, in 1962. Most of the passengers seemed War Minister Odylio Denys | fatigued by the experience to I went into urgent talks with his' ST hours feet in the.ai ly. wound in ;G0P Con-Con Delegates Exchange Wit With UAW In a witty exchange with seven GOP county con-con p muefi to say, other than that Itop officers. Denys returned the Royal Oak YtyCA, C. Patrick Quinn, they were glad to get back alive.(from Brasilia Tuesday night fol- A coordinator for the international union from Com- * * * j lowing reports that one armyjmerce Township, seemed to*—*-------------T---- ' A German family of four andlcommander had. thrown his *u»> um<, lh- pfortinn nfi an -Italian.man and his son were P011 behind Goulart. \ir Dnmn„, Af| Chairman Arthur G. Elliott Jr., killed when their cabins fell hun- Labor parly dreds of feet after the traction j Andrade- one cable Was snapped. SIX ARE KILLED They were the only . (George W. Romney, one of 0IH. 0( ttU) w OIM,adon«*d the seven. candidate*, News Flashes ksualties' among the 87 pe bleway; Raymond Jacquot, prefect of the Haute. Savoie Department, said it was a miracle more people were! not killed. “This testifies to the effective-, of ’ the safety measures on Spectacular cable railway aid to education Mil. linking France with Italy across ( > 1 highest Alpine range. Continued on Page 2, Col. 31 j "l know .you’re going to be up Fred V. Haggard, council presi- •---;—...... — there (Lansing* regardless of how dent. Elliott said [the union (hard I work,” Quinn said as 40 should have given the Republi-Republicans applauded and cans a hearing before making WAKHINGTON llb-A powerful coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrat* today voted to prevent House consideration ulmlniMtration'w federal (laughed yvith.approval. "I’m not *o sure and that’s I why I’m here tonight,” replied Motor* Oorp. I* working out the I final detail* of a new contract ! with Quinn'* union. Quinn. 3296 Brookneal St., appeared at the last .of two public forums, arranged by the county aboard a Cuban coastal ship. G0P t0 Kive its candidates an un- ar fh.t.1., RESCUED IN THE ALPS-A passenger on one of the cable cars Ifeft dangling after the, disaster lit the French Alps at Cham inox is rescued with ropes. Three other cable cars crashed to the snow-covered ground in (the White Valley below the mountains. A French jet plane severed A*cable sending a group of persons to death. ’ /.' Waterford Twp. Teen Summer to Saved by 2 Friends ^ Se^fber „ ' Creeps Upon Us • Two Waterford Township teen- i . ..... . .. . firemen for saving the life of a !Pa,rttac area for the-next few; day* sharp-pointed rock known as Gros companion while they were swim- with temperatures averaging ~3 tojRognon-Big Kidney. The plane, j ming in Elizabeth Lake at noon 6 de8roes above "the"normal' fug* flying only a few inches below the yesterday. ; of 76 to 81 and normal low of 54 ! armed with pistol* and sprarfbih-| Ing equipment, took over the ves-I net and forced It* captain to put i Into Jamaica today, die National P Broadcasting Co. reported. derstanding of what special interest groups like the union want written into the new state consti-tution. COULD NOT ATTEND The county council, which has! endorsed all Democratic County —A former Democratic state representative and president of the old Wayne County CIO Council, Quinn acknowledged that it "wasn't really right” that the local council had endorsed the Democratic con-con candidates without first giving consideration to Romney, Elliott and the others. being desegregated under federal court order*, police moved Into action. They dl*per*cd small knot* of spectator* and whisked to police headquarter* *everal person* who gave them argument*. An hour before classes began, police at Murphy High School confiscated two signs urging a boycott of the schools. A man posting a boycott sign in a yard nearby was ordered to remove it or be taken into custody. The sign came down. * * ★ t y officials and police had made elaborate plans to prevent disorder and the opening day started Quietly. A long campaign by civic groups, city officials, educators and religious leaders for a, peaceful transition,-paved the way for the change. COUNTERS MIXED School integration was the signal or merchants to desegregate downtown lunch counters under i agreement reached months ago. extremists made last-minute efforts to arouse resistance to -hpol integration with a few boycott signs. Their efforts had no effect on, registration which was reported norma). The Atlanta school system ha* n.ooo white pupU* and 48,000 Negroes. Segregation remained in effect at IS white high schools, five Negro high schools, 73 white elementary schools and ft Negro elementary schools. A man who identified himself as (Continued on Page 2, .Col. 8). ‘You send a letter-to Mr. Hag-gard in 1962 and if I'm. around then 1 assure you you will ‘get the same consideration others," Quinn said. More than 100 Alpine guide*, French army mountain troops, poller and rnhleway worker* cooperated in the reacue operation. The lift runs along'a thsee-inc ___ thick traction cable strung fori WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. more than three miles from the j John L. McClellan, D-Ark., to- d a y accused 5th Amendment- candidates in the Sept. 12 election, | The Ireland-born unionist said ! pleading witm-K»c« in the Senate (turned down an invitation to at-j the council was too busy with the Abend 30 four-seat cabins run! rackets hearing* of “challeng- tend the first hearing heRTin Pon- present auto negotiations’to have j simultaneously in each direction, tog your government " and taunt- tiac t week ago. called the Republicans in before pulled by a one-inch hauling cable Ing It. This prompted County OOP * (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) which runs in. one piece through| —-----------—;—----------—— 1 ------—-.......... -——--------------: ........,—-—■ -....^— all the cabins going up and downj ■ ■ ■* „T>*e weight the descending Rev# James B. Guinan cabins is used to pull nrrninting cabins, up the slope. 8NAPPED CABLE Planning Freedom Ride carrying cable, snapped the up-ward moving traction cable at a point about 800 feet above the Gros Rognon. The three cabins moving up to-] 87 to- ward the Aiguille du Midi between the Gros Rognon and the break-1 ing point were flung backward If by the snap of a whip. ■ Most of the ' sightseers » were I French, Italian or British, ’ but there were a few Americans. Hugh Putnam, 20. of Milton, Maks., gnd Ms cousin, Katherine j Gary , dement, 14, 5410 Sarvis < w, R-. * St., suffered an attack of cramps | The. mercury will drop to about v in his arms and disappeared (67 tonight and rise to Under water about 50 feet from (morrow. ^ ’, ’ 1 The.weatherman said Friday Both- Jeffery Janik, ’ll, of 739 will be somewhat cooler but ■ ^tyte St. and Eric Lutz, 17, of 751 Saturday Will again be warmer McDougel SI .- noticed the Clementj with not too much change there-vouth was missing and dived under, after. the surface to find him. | _ , - ■’ ■ ,, . . . Precipitation will-total about 2; - ft® 5 tehths inches from showerslBlodgett, 19, of Grand Rapids,! . The youth was dragged, up onjoF tounderstewers,both fhursday Mich., weije stranded for 15 hours, shore, and his companions admin- ^ Saturday nights. They got down via a rope and istered artificial respiration until ;M . KxltiiWMterly WiIxi> at took their ordeal cheerfully. Sd S2laS 10 to 18 m-P*. tomorrow. , ***— Bluett, but then iWk- -Hospital, treated ana released. W w tt ly relaxed. We had an American , ... -X- \ , , ',. _. j . .-»• . . ' newspaper,with us and spent part A1 threei boys had taken a life The lowest recording M down-|0f ^ liter doing the crossword saving course,, pi • Hie Waterfordi town Pontiac preceding 8 a m. waslpu^ip j m!brt tha, ^ Township Recreation’s prOgra mj65 degrees. The (hermometer read- darknesk feH the, puzzle was -still yt.farlier this summer: J • | i.ng «t 1 p.m. was 85. [incomplete.” A Farmington minister will be one of three Episcopal clergymen aboard a bus of freedom riders to leave New (Means X- a Jrip to Dearborn. Rev. James B. Guinan, rector of the Trinity Church in^Farming-tonf Rev. Joseph Dickson, rector of St. Joseph Church, Detroit; and Malcolm Boyd, soon to take up duties as chaplain at Wayne State University, The Rev. Mr. Guinan, sou of Mr. and Mr*. Gerald Gntoan of 140 State St., Pontiac, was ordained in 1*48 and took over the ministerial duties at the Farmington churchy in 1952. He attended Pontiac Public' schools and graduated from Kenyon College in 1942. His first] pastorate whs in -Belleville. The RC Hev, Richai^s S. Em-rich,-bishop of the Episcopal dio-..eesc of Michigan, said Mr. Dickson his family at Oscoda, be reached tor the trip. He Hveo at 2S747 Ely Court, Farmington. Bidfop Emrich said, "I am not I have to respect the consciences of men in important social matters will make the euch as this. “T do not inject Myself unless question of diocesan policy' or matter of faith and morals is in- \ volved.” The trip is to end in Dearborn, Sept. 16—the day before the opening in Detroit of the 60th general convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church. The four, sponsored by the Episcopal Society for Odtural and Racial Unity, Atlanta, Ga., will visit six Episcopal colleges hr the South. Merchant's Plan Pontiac's Debut Coming-Out Party Set for Sept. 21-23 includes Rides, Free Breakfasts to lake Charge of Negotiations Says Auto ,F|rm Must Give to Gain Settlement “ by End of Strike Truce DETROIT (UPI) — Walter P. Reuther today pledged the United Auto Workers Union to an “intensive bargaining schedule” in efforts to reach a contract settlement with giant General Motors before a government-inspired strike truce runs out next Wednesday.1 ■ But Reuther said, “GM is going to have to part With some of Its money bags" if an agreement is to be reached before the new I strike deadline of 10 a m. (Pontiac time) on. Sept. 6. | Reuther arrived at General Motors headquarters this morning to resume personal command of con-" tract talks at the company chosen Tuesday night as the union’s strflte target. He aald GM was “the richest company In the world” but that there wu a “tremendous gap” between It* present offer to the union and the precedlnt shattering profit • sharing agreement reached last week with American Motor*. GM Vice President and chief bargainer Louis G. Seaton, who insists the GM offer is superior to the gains in the American Motors agreement, said the General Motors offer would put an extra *11,0)0 id the pay envelopes of' employes over the three years” new contract.. [ • He also said it ‘"'doesn't matter too much to us''that the union had singled out GM’ for1-strike action If the talks fail, ‘NOT INTERFERENCE' Seaton said GM did not considea Tuesday's request by the Federal Mediation Service, which resulted in vstaving off a strike threatened ton midnight Thursday as “interference" by the MvernmeljL The company believ4)| along with the' Mediation Servlet that the contract extension to Sept. 6 was necessary-ibecause there was no) lime to reach an agreement before the scheduled expiration of current contracts at midnight Thucsdayr Seaton said. C The union and the big three companies of GM, Ford and Chrysler Tuesday night agreed to go along with the Mediation Service request lor a contract extension to Sept. 6. Federal Mediation Chief William E. Simkin sent telegrams to the big three companies and the union late Tuesday urging the contract extension, just before the un-' n met to choose a strike target-. TheUAW Executive Board went ahead with pinpointing GM for a strike, but also voted to accede to the Simkin request. Reuther even agreed to extern! . the Ford and Chryator pacts be-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) The Downtown Merchants Association began 'planning its 1962 Pontiac Coming-Out Party Tuesday. The association's committee met at the Waldron Hotel to outline plana tor the annual fall .promotion. Chairman of the event is Robert W. Snee, manager of the downtown Pontiac J. C. Penney ^Store. * * * The Coming-Out Party is slated for Sept. 21-23. Plans thus far include amusement rides to be set UP in the W. Lawrence Street municipal parking lots between Saginaw and Can. There will be free customer ( parking in all municipally owned authorization agency, tots wnd a free breakfast each momthg in the old county courthouse parking luL x ' Naturally, the “debutant” will i the 1962 Pontiac. - Plans are being tpade for Pontiac Motor Division to display its 1962 models. FALL FASHIONS Merchants wjll go all-out to show the new fall lines in everything from fashions to appliances. Sidewalk selling, a colorful feature of the annual event, will again add. to, the festival spirit. Outdr style shows are also belt g planned by. downt merchants and promise to' .be 'a big attraction,-according to, Snee. In Today's | Press So Legal Khrushchev twists phrases |§ I to sound good—PAGE a. 'Sorry, Soap/ Rhodesia apologizes to Wll- s liams—PAGE 18. Satisfied Hoping foi- 2-year exten- I , sion op civil rights—PAGE 1 j 21. Immunity Judge says Cuban freighter 1 i , should be returned —PAGE 1 rut ' ; ' v State Highways | I State higtovay officials A ^ helping solve city traffic M ?:(j problem—PAGE 41. - 9. 1' Ares News ...... as || Editorial* -..........« I - I Markets .............48 i 8 Obituaries .....•.....as B I Sports .......... SI-48 I s ftMtui ............ -id f ' TV 4 Radio Program* ..47 S ii. Wilson, Bari .... 47 % mrTTp' \ "■ j - THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1961 May Ask Soviets for Berlin Views »EAST MEETS WEST—This is An aerial view of tie Brandenburg Gate and the Eastern sector of Beilin. Once a bustling center of East-West activity, it now stands nearly deserted. West ar Fh»uf«« German President Heinrich Luebke paid Berlin a surprise visit today to inspect the barbed-wire and concrete barriers erected by the Com-ipunists. Russ Freeze All Discharges Warn Aggressors Will Be Wiped Out if War Starts Over Berlin MOSCOW (API—Again the United States and its allies tor the current world tension, the Soviet government says stopped reluming servicemen to civilian life and warned that aggressors will be wiped out "once and for all" if war starts. ' it -k ★ A statement issued Tuesday night by the Communist party Central Committee and the Soviet Cabinet said Marshal Rodion Malinovsky, the Soviet defense minister, had been ordered to hold up demobilization of military person -Ml whose service would normally end this year "until the conclusion of a peace treaty with Germany.” A * * The number of men involved was hot announced, but Soviet Premier Khrushchev said July 8 that a military cutback of 1.2 million men which began last year was being halted because of the Western attitude on Berlin. How far the cutback had gone was never announced. Khrushchev on Aug. 7 warned that Soviet troop strength might have to be boosted even further. He accused the West of pushing tint world "to a dangerous brink" in the conflict over Berlin, which astems from Khrushchev’s pledge to sign a peace treaty with East Germany's Communist regime by the end of the year. The communists contend a treaty would give East Germany control over Western access routes to West Berlin. * •* * President Kennedy responded to the Soviet diplomatic offensive by ottering to negotiate but stressing the West's intention to fight for Berlin if necessasy. He called far the biggest U.S. troop buildup since the Korean war, including the right to hold military men In service. „ Swims ‘Canal the American sector. Shortly after midnight the' Communists opened _____ | up again when a group of Western BERLIN (API—An East 0^.1 youth, started catcalltog. man swam to freedom today .. - -______________. the" Teltow Canal under a About 5 am; bullets from Communist'er cannon at Treptowerstnuse border guards. He climbed out' ___|____M ... *>atro* Depart mentTuertay. the west hank of the canal unhurt,^^Luebke J * * During the past week, Commu- Wegt Germany was in the city to- The expected site of the parley nist troops have killed two men! trying to swim the 60 yards across the canal, which forms part of the border In 4he divided city, Beriin-now call it the,"Death Canal. ’ Berlin’s of Death’ Need Lowdown for. West Parley) U. S. Ambassador to Return to Moscow This Weekend WASHINGTON (APj-U.S; Ambassador Llewellyn E. Thompson may seek an appointment in Moscow early next week in an effort to learn Sovjet views about Berlin negotiations,- diplomatic sources said today. i The aim1 is to get the latest line] the Kremlin approach to East-talks before the Western Rig Four foreign ministers hold Berlin. * * * Presideent Kennedy arranged a: noontime White House date for| West German Ambassador Wil-| helme Crewe. Grewe arrived from Bonn Tuesday night bearing! a' letter from Chancellor Konrad Adenauer.. * * * i ‘The President had an opportunity to air his views on the German crisis at a late afternoon news conference. | The Day in Birmingham Charter Issue , i d rv j BloomfieldTwp. Okays to Be Wscussea (Muifiple Zoning - Question in Waterford Overshadows Con-Conj^jgg ordinance affecting five on Sept. 12 Ballot |«ites has been adopted by the BERLIN m—A U.8. Army *e-daa that had been halted Under the guns of Communist police came out of East Berlin today after three American tanks and four armored personnel carriers andrinenstrasaeT rushed to the city’s Iron Curtain border. Police reported that Communist guards elsewhere on the border flung tear gas grenades and fired water cannon Tuesday night at about 60 persons gathered at Alex-Kmrzbcrg_.in - Call UN. Troops] Into Congo Fray Bloomfield Township Voting tor a constitutional cqn- TrU8te*S- + * % VfnUo" 5 The new ordinance, the Ant pro- iL’afprtord Townshto VkUng for multiple dwellings in the ballot in Waterford . township, states that no more than Township residents will be called I,______________k. u..u. on to decide if their community High School'. The meeting slated tor 8 P-m. Is sponsored by the Greater Waterford Community Council. The change represents a step] from rural government to in- The multiple dwellings will serve corporation into a city-type form as a buffer zone between commer-of government. [rial and residential properties,, ac- I A panel of tour speakers will be]cording to a township spokesman, at the meeting with Waterford] * * * Township School Supt. William A. The township also has awarded j Shunck as moderator. contracts tor three paving projects Rush Reinforcements to! Township Supervisor Elmer R- °° c , ... , Johnson will compare costs of gov-j of Birmingham lor *118,390, ManleyVIlie, ocene 0T emment and public improvements gnu, be paved Mounting Tension I under the present and proposed schemed f„ paving by Nov. 1 forms. are streets in the Long Lake Shore . LEOPOLDVILLE The Coneo' Emphasizing the needs of m* and .Bloomfield Heights'subdivi-! , A , , {township will be Gair Johnson and Hammond Lake Drive, j I Ilf QQ n|fl/j QlllfiflV Johnson "Anderson Engineers, j _ MAV SEE GROMYKO Informants said a Thompson meeting with Soviet Foreign MinJ ister Andrei Gromyko in Moscow soon is under active consideration a means of providing the West-] i foreign ministers meeting UB — The United Nations rushed with whatever information the §o-|350 Ethiopian reinforcements viets wish to supply. Istanleyville today as tension be-linc‘ The ambassador is vacationing] tween U.N. and Congolese troops Dr. touis Frledland, .head of in West Germany but is due back mounted. the political science depart- Moscow this weekend. ' | The United Nations announced meat, Wayne State University, that Ingram Englund, its chief of- will explain the state charter Stanleyville, was.threat- act. ened with arrest over the week- Advantages 'and disadvantages end while having talks with An* wj(1 ^ pre8ented by Robert Rob-toine Gizenga. ■ ** -1 A Congolese soldier burst into le room at Gizeriga's office and pointed a rifle at the chest of Englund, a Swede, and told him under arrest, Another contract was awarded to Hickson and Costignn of Detroit to construct a two-story brick garage on the township hall property tor the storage of township vehicles and ' voting machines. The firm, lowest of U bidders, received the contract for $57,840. In another actidh the township hoard has taken" the position that homeowners around a well site must agree 100 per cent before the township will allow the area to be of Lah*er and Maple roads; used for winter recreational pur-and the southeast and southwest poses. 1 • corners of Telegraph and Maple WWW roads. | Property owners hi the area also must furnish a liability bond before the site can be used for ice skating. The board also agreed that in-the future the township will not take over the maintenance of a well site if its dedication contract contains a reverter clause that provides that the well site be returned to original owner if not used. Four Atlanta Schools Tentative plans for-a meeting of the foreign ministers of the United States, Britain, France and West Germany in advance of the Sept. 19 opening of the U.N. General Assembly fall 'session were announced at the State Reuther Pledges Intensive Effort (Continued From Page One) yoqft ttept. 6, ' but said of GM: We will not extend ttyir contract beyond 10 am. (Pontiac time) Sept. 6." TO MEET NEGOTIATORS He added he would meet with GM negotiators today and "stay with them in an effort to arrive an agreement" by the announced deadline. The Federal Mediation Serv ice’s intervention in the contract talks was viewed as possibly the first open indication .of concern by the Kennedy administration that the industry might be tied up by a strike right at the start of a new model year, But Simkin denied he was acting at the request of President Kennedy or Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg. W W W His actio, Simkin said, was "absolutely necessary to avoid a strike" and was a routine step. Reuther also denied emphatically that he had encouraged ^the federal intervention. More About Berlin I Pages 3, 4, 21, 22 day for a look at the situation. He arrived unexpectedly after breaking off his vacation.'-After talking with Mayor Willy Brandt, Luebke planned to visit ■fugee reception center at Marienfelde and take 'a look aflhe barbed wire and concrete barriers erected by the Reds along, the border. EASTERN BLAST Luebke’s visit was attacked by the East German official news agency ADN as "provocative activity.”' The commentary said West Berlin was "not within the competence of Bonn politicians. is Washington and the expected date a few days before the United Nations convenes. ____^ supervisor oi Meridian Township, which has had its charter for two years. A question and answer period will follow. In addition, District 1 ... . .. , i con-con candidates John Coleman But the U.N. officials Ethiopian!^ Richard Kuhn will speak escort threatened to use force and _ the Congolese backed down. y^ing the council in meet- FAMILIES KVCUATEd ------------. mgarrangements are the Lake- The Wea Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly fair and warmer today, tonight and tomororw. High today 87, low tonight 67,-high tomorrow 89. Southwest winds 8 to 15 miles today and tonight and 10-18 miles tomorrow. Davatwra Tmi laaaaii UMI UwnSm MtMaa » HmWu NATIONAL WEATHER—Generally fair weather is forecast for most o( the East (or Wednesday night except for showers in Florida. Then will be some thuhdersboweiy in the Upper Mississippi Valley, Eastern Dakotas, the Rockies and Southern plains, wtth some light rain along the Washington coast It\ will be Slightly coder in extreety Norltyrn New England and the northern tier of *t|tes from tty* Upper Mississippi, totbe Rockies. Seventeen families of U.N. officiate in Stanleyville have been flown back to Leopoldville as a safety measure. U.S. Consul Thomas Cassilly flew back to Leopoldville Tuesday night after being expelled from Stanleyville. He returned amidf reports that State Solon Calls Hike there has been a fresh break be-• / r% x • • l I tween the central Congolese gov- in Michigan S Deficit Prnteent Of Prime Minister Cyrille Sees Trouble for Taxpayers Brazil Crisis Appears Near (Continued From Page One) supporter* In Congress, told the Chamber of Deputies of the army spilt in the south. He oaid an emissary from the commander, GeU. Jom Machado Lopes, told Denys that Machado Lopes would 'take orders "only from President Joao Goulart." Goulart, en route home from a visit to Communist China when President Janio Quadras resigned last Friday,; flew to Paris Saturday and said he planned to stay there until the situation firmed He slipped out of his hotel York. The decree issued by Mazzilli removed Machado Lopes and named Gen. Osvaldo Cordeiro de Faria to succeed him. But-in view of Machado Lopes’ earliar defi-of Ijenys, it was questionable whether he and his associ-would abide by the dismissal decree. De Andrade told the Chamber of Deputies that Goulart would fly to Montevideo* Uruguay, then the south Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, his home stronghold where Machado Lopez’ army is based. The governor of the state, Leonel Brizzola, has already pledged support to Goulart, who is his brother-in-law. Symptom of Disease LANSING (UPD—Serious trouble is ahead lor the taxpayers of Michigan, Republican State Rep. Rollo G. -Coniin of Tipton said today. Conlin said he would hold a special meeting of the House Taxation Committee he chairs next month to compile “an analysis of why we continuing financial difficulty.” The Tipton Republican said the Increase In the state’s deficit to 871.5 million was a symptom of a deep-seated “disease . . . (which) goes to the heart of fiscal policy in Michigan.” “Thn situation c/tnnot continue without very serious consequences for the* people of our state,” he said. “They must either accept very drastic'cuts in expenditures they must cut their .way through the state financial jungle and make sense out of our tax system." # * W Conlin said reductions In expenditures would mean less state aid to schools, arbitrary and lege enrollments and lower welfare and mental budgets. 1 for one am disgusted with budgets which are billed as ’balanced, but turn out to be deficits," he said. Adotila and .the Stanleyville authorities. Word from Stanleyville was that Gizenga has formed a land Optimist Club,*. Waterford Junior Chamber oiI Commerce; Waterford-Drayton Rotary Qub, Waterford Lipiis Gub, Drayton-Waterford Kiwanis Gub and the Waterford-Garkston Business and] Professional Women's Gub. Senator Tosses Ash Tray I GOP Leaders Urge Nixon to Run in California WASHINGTON (UPD - Republican congressional, leaders today urged former Vice President Richard M. Nixon to run tor governor of California next year. Nixon and other party leaders also agreed that the GOP must build its strength in the 1962 elections, “to put a brake on potentially disastrous" policies of the Kennedy administration. Nixon, the 1960 R^ubljifan presidential nwninee, gave "ho answer ]to those urging him to seek the | California governorship next year. He- reiterated that he would make a decision late in September. j'Don't Forecast Deaths!' j 'Continued From Page Qne) Bill Cody of Arlington, Va., was taken into custody at Grandy High School 10 minutes after the Negro pupils entered the building. Cody told a police officer, "I want to picket, and I am going to .picket." it it ★ He was taken to police headquarters. Cody was wearing a brown shirt with black lapels. Within minutes after fro Negro. girls entered Murphy High,, police moved hack small groups' q!" young white men who approached the school from both sides. Three , were reluctant to. move' back were taken to police headquarters when they refused to give their names. - At Brown High, two men were taken into custody by officers but were not detained. They told police they were just spectators. Police at Brown made, another man car- ist Sen. Aniceto Rodriguez set olf i series of fist fights in the Senate’s gallery Tuesday when he tossed an max uwnga »» .vmwu -» ^ hecklers, injuring political Party violenfly fhem. Six pergon8,were Western and anti-American. {fVctril ' CONSUL BEATEN |-----—<-----------------------— Cassilly was arrested and beat<- DETROIT iff) -— An appeal not rying a earner* move on because SANTIAGO. Chile (UPD—Social- to forecast high death tolls tor he di^d not . a PnHHtniP* set off a the Labor Dav weekend was made Officers a( Northsiae Hign the Labor Day weekend was made ---------- J today by the Automobile Gub of stopped two men Tor loitering but Michigan which said such fore- they turned out to be FBI agents, casts "serve no constructive sale- Three young men . were taken ty purpose and are based on I away in a police car from in front guesses, usually inaccurate." I of Grady High. ’------------- ■ 1 Reach Accord on Foreign Aid en by Congolese troops after Iir<>-]Sei)aterHou8e Conferees OK 5-Year Loan brands haranguing a public rally had fold the crowd America was] behind the seizure of an Air Jordan plane bringing uniforms and I food to the town from Cairo. Cassilly was at the airport to members Tf'ttie^plane crew^He! WASHINGTON (AP» — Senate-1to wrap up their work. 'n*®com'|T^8t -acc6mmod>Uon of was arrested and beaten about House conferees have .approved a promise then goes before the Sen- dineren v . hillinn ■”* <*»*■« rSr isrT 1E%./‘’p;?0'!11 . ... 'President Kennedy said the com- LineS Up IP GOP, Pg. 22 [Mthoriration. in years, GOP Delegates, UAWpromise waa "*** “ttaH Meet, Exchange Wit He halted it as "an important Mansfield,, D-Mont.. predicted to- that House conferees .. decision for the United States and ^ 0,81 b®th the and ^"‘Ivinced the House would insist on the free world.” ate will approve the compromise anntial appropriations from Con- . The conferees; who have been which he described as “the most gress to finance the development (Continued From Page One) ironing out differences between reasonable that could be worked loan program. Democrats were given "a blanket Senate ' and House, foreign aid °ty• ’ .. . . 1 Kennedy originally asked $8.8 emtorsement" Aug. 9. -------bills, announced the loan pro- ■ »g. a .“fW )bUliuii for a five-year program gram compromise Tuesday night.] Train Kills, 5 Pedestrians WUPPERTAL, Germany (AP) —Five persons were killed Tuesday when an express locomotive slammed into a group of pedestrians at a railway crossing. Police said the accident occurred after a railway electrician legedly pressed a button opening the railguardk without authorization after a freight train , had passed. Reds No Longer Interested Separate N-Ban Pact Out GENEVA (UPD — Western ne-gotiators said today the Soviet Ui* ton had served notice it is no long-lnteretted in a .nuclear test ban agreement separate from a general disarmament pqct. U.S. Ambassador Arthur H. Dean and British negotiator David Hrmsby-Gore said the Soviets had brushed-aside'all foe latest Western proposals and insisted a test ban agreement can be settled only within the framework of gerieral disarmament. 1 Dean toda^ presented two further Western proposals to the 338th session of ti)e deadlocked nuclear conference. One of them meant to' Tttake unnecessary the Soviet demand for a three-map troika" administrative council to supervise control operations. During the one hour-and-45 minute session, Ormsby-Gore pressed Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarap-kin on whether (he Soviet govern-mejit had lost interest in the idea of an agreement to' ban nuclear xins .tests under strict international control as a first step to-nrapd disarmament. )’ / _ _★ "*★ . fr Ormsby-Gore told a news conference after> die meeting that Tsa-rapkin did not answer the question directly. But the implication was Clearjer than ever before that ttyf Soviet Union is now withdrawing its offer of %h independent nuclear test* ban treaty, observers said. $4,253,- 500,000. Senate Majority Leader Mike por ^ays j, had been obvious Saying “Haggagd delegated me to come and speak for him," Quinn criticized Elliott's organization for sending out press releases before Haggard receives copies of the letters. Holding up a copy of the AFL-CIO News, Quinn said it - wasn’t true, as Elliott alleged, that only Democrats in the con-con election have been endorsed.. He said the Lansing firea union council had endorsed five Democrats and two Republicans. Pontiac GOP con-con candidate j Raymond L. King, an attorney. Nought to find out from Quinn If | the Oakland council had determined the position of his opponent, Leslie H. Hudson, on the ! crucial legislative apportl onment issue before be vAis endorsed. ; King has charged that Hudson,! i former state representative and city hardware dealer, has pressed views on this controversial issue "(hat would curl the Gils Scholle." Scholle is president of the Michigan AFL-C10. King said all he -was wa* "an opportunity to be by the union "on an equal jthe Prerident the longrenge au-i finance Dro„ram _nd With the major obstacles be- "It’s not a case of ^ Approved t£ b^w^^thority. hind them, they m«pLagain today]you, want but rather getting' the| ^ q^cp^erees’ compromise, the Senate yielded the borrowing' autlMHity while the House agreed to a five-year program, instead . of the one-year, $1.2 billion program the House had voted. Reporting the compromise after a pight session, Sen. J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., told reporters it was "not exactly what I wanted but a compromise." He said he hoped to call the measure up in the Senate for a vote Thursday; Under the agreement, Kennedy, receives authorization for $1.2 billion in development loan funds this year and $1.5 billibn for eaah of the next four years. Experts U.S. -^p OK Plan Lending Boost to Detrdit WASHINGTON Iff)—Approval foj-n oVer-all economic develxqiment plan for Detroit is expected from the Area Redevelopment Administration, Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., says. ARA approval. Hart said, while not automatically granting pid to Detroit, does make'the city eligible to submit projects to tty ARA. Loans and grants ara available under the ARA for incrastriaj and commercial projects as well as public facilities. 18 THAT AN EGG?—This hen at North’Qarolina State College at Raleigh registers surprise at an egg shaped like a child’s, building block. College scientists developed the cube-shaped eggs as a stunt to hfelp advertise North Carolina as “the good egg state." A template with an eggless shell wap placed With the hen, who obligingly .deposited a ibell around tty template-, But- A was uncomfortable for Biddy, so the state will ke^p’the standard shape. ' >-i ^ by/ SELF- ^STYLING HAIR SPRAY $1.50 SIZE Reduced for This Wttk On If 96' msm 98 N. SaginaW —Main Flopr George F. Conway of Birmingham announces the engagement of his daughter . Cynthia to - Thomas M. Edleman. son of the Maurice A. Edleman, son Grand Rapids. Her mother is the late Mrk Conway. Graduates of the University of Michigan, the couple has set no date for the wedding. But If II Help*, Go Ahead Standing, Up Is No Diet . By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN I get volumes of mall and such interesting questions, that I like to pass some of them on to you.. . I have a friend who swears* that she lost 10 pounds simply by standing up for 10 minutes after each meal. in Christ Church Cranbrook Touchstone 1 wish It were as simple as that. Year friend Is diet-minded, and evidently cut down more tlpan she realised on her dally calorie Intake* If It" makes It seem easier to lose weight to stand up for 10 minutes after eating, I am all for It. 2, Does skim milk have the same -nutritive values of whole milk? Yes, except for a loss in vitamin A and D content. Vitanfin A is widely distributed in the food world, Green and yellow vegetables are especially rich sources. Use skim milk, which is fortified with vitamin A and D. repeated to Rev. Gerald O’Grady Saturday evening in Christ Church” Cranbrook before an altar banked with white Fuji chrysanthemums. The Eric C- Zismans of Waterford received some 250 guests in the American Legion Hall,"Royal Oak, following their daughter's wedding. Hie bridegroom's par* ents, the Stanley J. Rowlands of Royal Oak, are presently in Europe. FROM 8-18 TO 80 FLOWERS ARE CORRECT > DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS die name on the tip of her tongue is Fashion News! The cardigan with dozens of-rows of tittle loop -. fringing knit in-horizontal color stripes, bound in solid color. Multi-red or multi-gold pure wool. Dashingly, chig over a smooth sheath skirt of pure, wool in matching colon. Sweater sizes 36 to 40; skirt sizes 7 to 13. ... CARDIGAN .14.95 SKIRT ...... 8.95 PARK FREE* HAVE YOUR TICKET STAMPED!. Ml $-7101 BIRMINGHAM Wearing ivory mist silk taffeta re-embroidered with yUencon lace styled with detachable chapel, train, the bride held white roses and stephanotis atop a white prayer book. A double diadem of pearls caught her bouffant veil of illusion. Matron . of honor Mrs. Robert Hope appeared in gold* satin and maid of honor Patricia Hadden of Waterford in burnt orange. Bridesmaids Mrs. Frank Reynolds of Garkston, Mrs. Ronald Zilka, Mrs. John Daniels of Elmhurst, 111. «|ye olive green. Bouquets of Fuji chrysanthemums and cabbage rose headpieces matched their gowns. Sharon Edwards of Toronto, her coualn’o Junior attendant, appeared la white organdy sashed la gold. Flower-girl and ring-bearer were Robin and Rickey Reynolds. Alfred Peterson of Royal Oak was best man. Ushers were Frank Reynolds, Morey Kaatz, OakNPark, John McCoy, Madison Heights, Ted Goldberg, Huntington Woods and Dennis Clemons of Ecorse, junior usher. Returning from a Florida honeymoon, the couple will live in Royal Oak. Mrs. Zisman chose floor-length mink brown peau de soft with Chantilly lace for the wedding and [Mrs. George Hockberg, aunt of the bridegroom wore gold peau de sole. Their corsages were phalae-nopsis orchids. The bride attended Michigan State University and her husband is enrolled at Lawrence Institute of Technology. Canada's first paper motley issued in 1686, consisted of cut tplaying cards, marked with a value, and signed by the French governor. MRS. GARY A. ROWLAND Smith Family Holds Reunion The Smith family reunion was held Sunday at the Pontiac Lake Road home of William E. Smith with 92 members and seven guests present. Cochairmen for the event were Mrs. Keith Loper and Mrs. William J. Croteau. Mrs. William Colebrooke and Mrs. Emery Smith served as the correspondence committee. Officers elected for next year were Keith Loper, chairman, Mrs. Jeanette Haskins and Mrs. Daniel Hardenburg, correspondence. The forthcoming reunion is slated to be at Manton. Square's Stylish NEW YORK (UPI) - If you're a square, you’re in style. A shoe firm (A. S. Beck) says the square toe is winning out over the pointed style. from the CLINIC shoemakers,,. with BANTAM RIPPLE* New walking-shoe pmartnaaa,.. superbly simple, simply superb! New finger-flexibility and glove-softness! Almost weightless doud-lightnem PLUS long-striding, sure-footed RIPPLE® soles! Ina word... new FOOTHRILLS! Mushroom Tan or Benedictine Sizes 5 to 10,3A to B 10,9*5 Tan and Green^ Pauli’s Shoe Store. N. Saginaw St. , Open Fri. Eves. Tranquilizer Latest Fad By RICK DU BROW UPI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—Looking for something for the man (or woman) who has absolutely everything? Then try'a "tranqullizing am- ulet." Movie stars and others in this slap-happy film city have started a fad by dozens of them. "Well," said a spokesman for Alfred Dunhill of Beverly Hills, which sells the amulets like hot-cakes, “It’s simply a touchstone." It comes in either white, green or brown onyx.-It-’s about an. inch wide and 2V4' inches long. In short, it’s a glorified little rock. And what do you do with, it? You hold it in your hand and squeeze it. That’s all. Just squeeze it. "Sort of like. Capt. Queeg did in The Caine Mutiny,' ” said the Dunhill spokesman. VERY RELAXING "It’s very relaxing." he added. "ApparentlytheChinese used touchstone* as tranquilizers for many years." * Price for this relaxation is $5 per amulet. Dunhill sells them in plush little boxes usually reserved for thousand-dollar rings. "And I've never seen any tranquilizer like it,” said the spokesman.. "People are very serious about it, They feel the different touchstones to see which one fits their hand." The idea when you-get home with the store is to >sit back, think of nothing else and squeeze until all animosities and tensions are gone. "They’re very good for executives," said the spokesman. King-size cigarettes have about 15 per cent more tobacco than [standard size. TENDENCY TO FAT 3. My mother tells me that fat runs In our family and I can’t do anything about it. I am 35 years old and 40 pounds overweight. Am I really doomed? Definitely not!..You may have-1 Inherited n glandular system which lends to overweight, but more likely you Inherited some fattening eating habits. In any . you i If you have a mild tendency to overweight because of your glandular setup, you will just have to be more calorie conscious than others from middle age on. If you have a real problem, your doctor can help you with medication. All is not lost! Before you see doctor — count your calories. 4. I am confused. I do not know whether or not the water-packed fruits have the same health value the regular ones have. The bearef of bad news Is never popular, but I am not trying to win n popularity contest so I must be honest. There Is no difference In health value. The syrup-packed ones just taste better, BUT they have many more Believe me, if you are trying to se weight, or hold the line, you will find that the water-packed fruits are more rewarding, and will taste sweeter to you, when the scales give you the good news. PLAIN OR TOASTED? 5. Is there any difference between the calorie count of plain bread and toast? A’ Ahh, the true listener—an all too rare bird. Josephine ■ Lowman suggests that you really listen to others; listen with your heart and mind 10’ lor out 120 softy ptmauat Your hairdo plays such-art important part in the new-season fashions, that whether you're a back-to-schooler or her mother, you'll welcome the transition now at these big sale prices. Shampoo and fashion set included. The shorter haircut for fall | Personalized by donntll haircutting stylists 100 $25 LUXURIOUS KATHY WAVE 12" Now you can have the expensive wave you’ve always wanted—the wave with the finest lotions—at half price. Haircut extra. 'BUDGET DIPT. ■*., • Shampoo and Sat $1.50—Halieut $1.50 donnell HAIR STYLISTS MIRACU Mill FE 8-9639 We Specialize in Corrective Hair Coloring jj&j ■ »!■■■!■> mu i wiiii 111111111 iimi" iii liii WHOLE HAM......49c lb. HAM SLICES.....79c lb. TtiOE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 30. 1961 Vaccines, Calcium/ Thin Bcin News This Week Propaganda Battle for Survival Itself By IV lawteM Pmw Vaccines to the Soviet Union, heart attacks in middle-aged smokers, and calcium in the diet of 'persons with thinning bones are subjects for focus on health; SOVIET PUSH VACCINES 4. The-Soviet Union is, pushing development of various vaccines Ugainst influenza, mumps and respiratory infections, say U.S. doctors alter a recent trip to the U.S.S.R. • The -Soviet UMn is' preparing a billion doses of live-virus, oral polio vaccine from seed viruses obtained from Dr. Albert Sabin. ■Vmw of these denes are to be of-lend to other countries, scientists report. Most other Soviet yaccines reported also involve live viruses as opposed to killed virus vaccines used widely in the United States. Soviet researchers say they have a live-virus mumps vaccine which has been given to 50,000 children by injection with good response. They have also used Jive-virus Influenza vaccine which has some drawbacks, they told U.S. flora. THE HEAVY SMOKER Why are death rates from heart attacks among middle-aged men up to m times as high tor heavy cigarette smokers as for non-smokers? The American Heart Association’s newsletter says a possible explanation may exist in a study by a Philadelphia research team. The team found that two cigarettes smoked within 10 minutes raised the level of some fats jin the blood—and the effect lingered for at least 40 minutes. Perhaps nicotine from smoking stimulates the nervous system and the adrenal glands to release a form of adrenalin that frees fata from storage areas in the body, researchers suggest. It could explain why smokers have higher levels of cholesterol in their blood. Cholesterol is a blood lat which is suspected of contributing to heart disease by clogging and narrowing arteries. BUILDING BONE A new study indicates that abundant calcium in the diet during adult years may protect the skeleton, especially in persons . suffering from a loss of calcium, and a thinning of bone. Doctors have obtained good results by boqsting the calcium the diets of arthritis patients who are taking cortisone or related hormones. Cortisone apparently worsens calcium loss. Almost a third of the women past menopause suffer from thinning of bone, involving a 1' of calcium, particularly from the spine. This bone thinning disease is even more common in older] women with rheumatoid arthritis. This week, mumps A valid way to protect adults against diseases such as mumps, chicken pox and German measles may be to expose them to these diseases in childhood, says a:vulnerable, says Dr. Thomas An.->might ask for,health's sake if he Scottish doctor. ' * ' * jdenon of the University -of. Cfias- can tell a good fish from, a When these diseases strike" old* [gow; , spoiled one. » er persons they can be.severe and!good FISH OB BAD? The Connecticut State .Depart- spread through the entire system. I During these hot summer days hteh.f" of Health offers guides: Vaccination of children may only|.whe„ the anient fisherman in the Among them: Good fish have delay infection, leaving the adult family brings home his catch, you1 bright red. gills, usually Eyes are bright and full. Scales adherent. Body, is stiff and tail rigid. Flesh is flhn. The fish sinks in water. Bad fiah. float, have dull, opaque eyes; pile "gray or yellowish brown gills,, a I. soft and limp feel, . DEARBORN t AP) - The stakes in the. West's propaganda battle the Communist bloc nations np less that survival itself,1 John N. Hutchinson, director of the US. Information Agency (USA) press and publication service, said. iual convention ef the tor Education In (AEJ), heeled by tike University ef Mdrfgaa. Hutchinson said Communism has millions of actual party members non-Cbmmunist countries pounding home a single-minded ideological program day pfter day. The Communist bloc broadcasts some 3,000 hours weekly to the world by shortwave, nearly " " w , • five times as much as our Voice] HutrhinaOn spoke Tuesday at lot America," Hutchinson said. J Holiday Weekend Ahead . . . Plan Now for An Extra Day’s Meals lAlAO Htfttffi Open Daily ’til 9 p.m. CLOSED LABOR DAY! FOOD FAIR—GRADE "A" FRESH urge Eggs FOOD FAIR—OUR FINEST QUALITY Box. m. bhC beta, Salad Dressing ^ 29 WITH COUPON mow SHANK PORTION BUTT PORTION bhf CH0I6* POT ROAST 39 SALE! "Personally Selected" Sugar Cured 5^^HA Heavy Traffic Stretches Given Labor Day Weekend to Bring 60 Pet. Rise, in Statewide Travel LANSING (#1 - Motorists traveling an Michigao-'ltighw&ys were urged to plan theicjgabor Day holiday trips ahead to avoid unnecessary-delays on state highways. The Michigan Highway Department said the busiest hours during the weekend will be early Friday evening and late Mooday afternoon. Statewide travel is expected to be some*GO per cent heavier than on an average Weekend. Experts saM that on Labor day, southbound travelers will move la a wave, with traffic hitting a peak la the northern third of the Lower Peninsula between 10 a.m. and t p.m. One exception is expected, however, in a belt along the west coast 'between Manistee and Traverse, City, where the peak hours will be from 1 to 5 p.m. The department said a 100-mile band across the Lpwer Peninsula from tile Muskegon-Bay City line to EH will get the traffic surge between 4 and 8 p.m. The traffic peak between 194 and the Ohio and Indiana state lines Is expected between 6 and 9 p.m. while the New Buffalo area—which gets the brunt of Chicago-bound traffic, will have its rush beginning at 2 p m. and continue to at least 9 p.m. The entire holiday period probably will see extremely he traffic at the intersection of U.S. 16 -and U.S. 23 east of Brighton, the department said. It urged motorists to use alternate routes where possible. Charles Falahee Made 'Jackson County Judge LANSING Uh—Charles J. Falahee, 37, a Michigan Center at-, torney, was appointed Jackson County Probate judge today b? Gov. Swainson. Falahee once aerved, as Jack* •on County Judge, filling the unexpired tarn of the late Judge Harry D. Boardman in 1939. * His new appointment is to 'HfT the WBcancy*er>ated by the reoig-natkm of Judge Clarence Russell Glendale, Grade 1, Skinless Hot Dogs 2 £69* One Peenti Pkg_______39c Campbell's Pork & Beans H-Oi. Can 12* Yon Save 10c ex 4 Cent GOLDEN RIPE SWEET-CURED Bananas. , ... 10! FOOD FAIR—FINE QUALITY Ice Cream. . .-49' Feed Fair Sptrckri Offer! Free Uptown! Yes 6«t Sis 12-0*. boHl.i of Uptown FREE' Whon You luy Sis 16-Ounto bottloi of FAYGO COLA for 4fc SAVE All 12 4* | Bbttles 49* Dol Monte . 29.0*. J | QO PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT DRINK ... 6 Ce«. I SAVE tte ON t—Mri. Owen'i Fyre Fruit - |fl.O* I Ac STRAWBERRY PRESERVES ......... J.r ‘ I V SAVE 11< ON 2—From Sunny Cnlifornlo jj Qt ■ HUNT'S TOMATO JUICE ................ c*n IV - SAVE 12c ON 2—Fondly Site 20 Oi I Ac SNIDER'S TOMATO CATSUP.............. Botti.' IV SAVE Sc—Shur-Goed | Lb ■ A* SALTINE CRACKERS ........V.... Box* IV SAVE I to—Chenk Peek Light Meet A $i/2.0* $ I 00 BREAST-O'-CHICKEN TUNA............4 Can. * I SAVE 4e-Ju.t Right With A Mild lit. IB Oz OPEN PIT BARBECUE SAUCE ...... Botti. 33 SAVE 17e — Orortgo, Grope, dr Funck a I/. fi.l C ■ AA RINGO FRUIT DRINKS...............3 Jug,* I SWEET RED RIPE WHOLE WATIRMEION 59: 'T““ DEL MONTE Fruit Cocktail California Fruit in Heavy Syrup Vernor's Ginger Ale 6^$r° Pricts effective through Saturday, September ?md .. . We reierte the right to limit gtumtitiet. * MIRACLE MILE Shopping Center TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD r f I FOODI FAIR I DIXIE HWY. In Drayton Plains CORNER WILLIAMS AND WALTON LAKE ROADS FORTY' wMMmm 7? THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30. 1961 Com Futures Slip to Seasonal low CHICAGO op —Com fut slipped to tMr loM level* of the ee—ob today In early dealings an the beard of trade as the market’ trend In to the' day. Declines were limited mostly to small fractions of a cent but losses in rye ran to a cent or more spots. Brokers said the pressure appeared to be a continuation of outright liquidation and that it showed no sign of a turning point. * - * ' * Commercial demand was light or absent. One ttenler said, though, that unless purchases are. urgent consumers will be slow buyers while prices are in a decline. Gram Prices ft ** v cowering sates of locally grown produce by growers and mid by them. In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Friday. Detroit Produce Sab, Ducbet* . 'I fgsr I& BE te Mttfc *»y ...r. ■ k 85: ; ... Cm News in Brief ■____ ___. ..^rford. O.EJ8. No. 394. —Adv. Sometime after S p.m. yesterday a $40 cement donkey was stolen from the front yard of Mrs. Natalie Rothe at 5650 Rowley St, Waterford Township. A pair of leaage type lawn chain costing $40 was stolen from the front yard of the Perry Dick residence at 1739 Eason St., Waterford Township sometime between 7:30 and S:3Q p.m. yesterday. markets [Rails and Autos RiseonMaiket NEW YORK UR - Rails and big three autoa were tip as the stock market rose in quiet trading early today. usa* ... I BItk . i. cimw rs sntueky Wonder . Carrot!, dot. bch*. ..... CerroU. cello ptk .... gj^ertT**;. *,Y; 1 Celery, dot. tUIkt.. Celery. I to I das: ...... Celery. Peecel ....... Celery, not .......... Cucumbers, dlu ...... Cucumbers, pickle slse , f.SK.' Okrt, pk. ...... Onion, dir ...... Onions, green. Onions, plckllns Pnrtley. curly, d Parsley, root, de Parsnips, cello I Pens, binckeye Peppers, ctyeans General Motors, picked as the target of the' possible strike, was steady. Ford spurted "about 2 and Chrysler advanced more than a point. American Motors and Stude-baker - Packard showed little Business Notes ' Cramer E. Partridge of Partridge A Associates, 1060 W. Huron St„ has been appointed the local representative of the National Broken Council tor this area. WWW Dale R. Davis of Davis Motors, Rochester, has been re-elected -to a one-year term on the national dealer council of the Stude baker-Packard Carp. Potnteei, 50-lb*. ......... Kffii"* black "......... fUdlatie*. ted, dot. beht. IlSdm white, dot. Wh MwA Mint. ML .............. SQMtih. Buttercup ......... Squash. Butternut ........ ■queen. Dellcloue ......... Squuh, lit inn. V* bu A. Bqantb. euramer, H bu. . Tometoei. bu. ............. Tametoel. 14 Ibt........... Turnlpt, tapped, bu........ Turnips, dot. beht......... Rails were helped by the Interstate Commerce Commission recommendation of direct federal aib-sidies tor the carriers. New York Central advanced doae to a point. Penney Ivanis Railroad nee \k to IS on 5,600 shares. Small gains were posted by Baltimore A Ohio, Southern Pact tie, Illinois Central and Chesapeake A Ohio. Thiokol, Tuesday’s fnost active gainer, dropped nearly a point on profit taking. Revlon continued its advance with a gain of about point. Great AP was steady following nfws it is considering the food concession of a proposed discount e in Illinois. New York Stocks Figure* after decimal point* are eighth* Allled Btri .. AlllaChtl .. Celery *»bbse« lectrole. bleached, Dl Lettuce. Bibb, pk. —i. Beat in, dot. i. heed. dss. a heed. bu. . Birmingham Man Named Manager for Parts Firm Albert Savino, 1444 Holland. Birmingham, has been appointed a territory manager for The AP | Paris Corp. of To-I todo, according to ■ Ken Richcreek, I sates manager. I AP Parts man-I ufactures automo-1 five exhaust sys-I terns. Savino will I serve AP custom-its in the Detroit A zone sates nanager for SAVINO Sealed Power Corp. for tiie past 10 years, Savino started in the\ automotive parts business in 1938.' During World War II he served in the U.S. Army and was awarded the Purple Heart. A native of Royal Oak, Savino is married and has two children, tie is a member of the B19 Automotive Boosters. •' To Ask Forces Buildup OTTAWA (UPH — Against the background of the Berlin crisis, the government will propose to parliament when it meets next week that the ceiling on the Canadian armed forces he raised from 120,000 to 170,000, it was learned here today. Poultry arid Eggs DKTBOTT FOULTBT DITROIT. Alt M (ATI —Price* , aund delivered to Detroit for H quellty lie* poultry: Henry type h*u 1114-11; Ufht typo tut 1-10; heavy typo rossten over I ia*. IS-StJ broiler* tad frveta J-4 Be. White* lt-17; BorrodBooH M-....... keys:]Hens 23-1]; toma llH-ll. DKTBOIT MOB DETROIT, Aut- M (API—Sft price* aid per doaea bp fmt reeawa~- — vered to Detroit, looee In M nee, eeosumer* trad* (lurtedltu ___ WhHe--Grade A eatro ISIS* 4IVS-47; Ion* 4i-45; medium 30-M: Muon M “ Brown* — Orad* A extra terso medium 19-Jl; amall JO; Grade check* 35-37H. Livestock Mi Mori« w*»t ! S* Nor Am At .. is*:::;- “* Qwen, cm Owen* 111 Ol . PacG&El .. Pan AW Air M.M; ____ ____.. __Jpta very liberal Tueeday, quality Improved over tt —Dost don. Increased showing of • to MSh choice yearling ■ ttighter ateers and Mian vary * ..yady to (troug; ootr* open log _________. steady with Monday’s daphne, bulls •toady, around I mod* mixed high choice dad prime 1MS-1IM lb. yaorHng fi----"0; ten bead 1040 lb. wetgh’- It choice ate* re 24.2V 25. L_. It high good end low ehoteo _________ AJdln JUk---------------- ■■■■“• heifers 22.75-21.20; good to ______________ heifers 21.75-22.75; utittty cow* 19.90-10.50; ladlvtdaal strong weight utility to 17.00; canners and cutter* 1MV1I.SS; utility buD* up te 21.50. ■Hoc*—Salable 400. Butcher* wader B b*. tec lower: weight* over S99 lb itaady. sows steady; mixed go. 1 and . tnd few Ml moetly No. 1, 100-220 lb. 400-000 lb. tows 11.75-14.25: bOoraH.N-u£ Vealers US. Fully otaody. prime U.M->0.00; good end choice SS.SS-SMS; standard 24.00-20.00; call and utility Sheep-Salable 40b. BUughter lamb* strong to 59} higherslaughter — New Wage-Hour Rules Go Into Effect Sept. 3 Employers in Michigan were reminded today that the amendments to the Fair Labor Standards Act, generally known as the Federal Wage-Hour Law, becomes effective Sept. 3. The reminder came from William S. Singley, regional director pf the UA. Department of Labor's wage and hour and public contracts divisions. are now covseed by provisions ef the tew wfll be entitled to a mis-i wage ef at least I1.U aa exempt Coverage of the act has been extended to employes of large terpriaes engaged fri commerce or the production , of goods for com-•rferce, Singley stated. Theee newly covered employes, mostly in the retail and service trades, will be due a minimum wage of $1 hour. Also covered are employes Of some gasoline service stations, local or interurban transit systems and construction enterprises. ♦ ★ : Siqgley noted that the act's overtime provisions will continue to apply to workers who are already covered. They require time and half for all hours worked over 40 in a workweek. For employes who are newly covered/ overtime pay will not be required until 1963. * * - * Exemptions continue to apply to such establishments aa hotels, motels, restaurants, hospitals, movies 'and a few other service establish-lents. Singley added that the retail or aervioe establishments exemption now in effect will fcontimie to apply to establishments which are > a $l-million enterprise, or if in such an enterprise, have tea* $250,000 in annual gross sales. M |‘6y CrackyTm MriiP- Wm —rf--—s—r Thefts Hit His Purse By DK'K HANSON When John -jtfontgomery. - I After all: .the Tj [its soil bankjjCheoks by mall. Mont-’ ««>mery bought a new mail box flay- _ John Mont found the fan ben and other parts |missing from his tractor in the! bant last month, he didn't think) "T"““ , . ■ muchMit.^ ^ # Hang on to Littia Bo/ He no longer was. using the trac-!Ovor Edge of Quarry tor having placed all 80 acres of) Holly Township farm pa Rat-j MADISON Wis. (KP) ~ Three • hoys formed a human chain Tues-a»atPOld from slid- |lB(pS5~i .. The boys held ' tite" yfibo I more than a haH-hmte befdre Bremen used aerial ladders to lower lull four to safety. Then, a few Say* later be fin covered that Ms wheelbarrow j also teas missing from the burn. [ He reasoned that he i It anymore either, being crippled by arthritis. RAILROADED — One 1)1 50 GMC pickups equipped to ride Erie-Lackaw&nna railroad tracks like section care is shown here. Each unit can Next to dipappei Jhe tracks or over regular Igomery's barn \ roads. The special rail wheels position the truck on the track, then retract when it leaves the rails. 50 GMC Pickups to Ride Erie Railroad Tracks Fifty 4-wheel-drive GMC pickups! Erie-Lackawanna Railroad Co. especially equipped to ride on top Cleveland. of railroad tracks like section dars have been put into service by the Checking Bars on Hall Murder The trucks are model K1500s built by GMC Trade fr Coach Division. GMC furnished cabs and chassis, while other conceits en- jn Colorado larged the cabs to accommodate six persons and equipped the tracks ON SEPTEMBER •#. 7081 AT 11:25 s.m. the undersigned wilt sell «t public sale lor cash one 1959 Ford 4 Door, Bertel No. Btmttll* at Werhoops; ----—--------- Mile Rood,- Otles. ■ i U stored end m»y l tY , .__.. , , , ,, ot nipNMfl ti nn Mldmi- | No need for the old bell now [ associates discount coup , i either, he thought, since he noi portHHurohAVMtchiu«n (longer work* the fields. V i ' r. o. : whittakbr . He got a tittle perturbed, how-TJ.............. • *«• **"**•**** (ever, when he found some 20 of notice of public tmaitiiio' his laying hens were gone later in hewing m behew nt'VtSweiBy . I the month Township Hull, 90 N. Main Street. - inc monin. Clarkston. Oakland County. Allehlian. But, then, considering the tow 11*a.T.^Tuesday.°septemher X'to j price he was getting for eggs, dothf" upon tbs imum ,01 - i L.__.____ - 7. .. w .. 7* and/or hearing obmUOM to eoiti or , Montgomery felt these chickens i lighting certain public highway* is the. 1 Freat Iom. either. ' MVTttfJSSis&Jll. ' , _ , But when someone‘stole Mont- treS*K*^kwtbM Ot GotOS Rubber Firm gomery’s'mail box from the road! ntrt • | in front of his house Sunday night, ] ig^A»»ssmuw *t ti is dit si ; J he got mad—mad enough to finally I shfpy of th# t“d»penssi>e4 t**b-j report the loss to the sheriff's de-[ ' Howard altuah, Ex-Waterford Man783, Dies C.C. Gates Was Founder j . 744 1st Shoe .. . SO 1st Silver . 5*1 1st T*1 A T* « J Jsase a L . • 74.5 Kenneeott .. - fl-J Bate Ok ........■■ ’ li? Kre***. as ...21J • Si Kroger ........*J0 2 : in-r- r Ti m abuub . i«i.i |LockhAlrc ... 411 •■G** M, Lone a Cess ... 24.3 jqg-i....Bi Lorlllsrd . 57.J n Smelt ... 61.4 Baab Trk BO 4 aSTiT*1 .igi Srunco *4.1 "Toh- ..‘ t!4 MtsdCp . .. 44.1 Merck __(6.1 Armour A Co . Boeing Air Borden ___ BrtetMx™. Brunswick . [ M^nn MAM 16 Modus Ch ... M. Mont Ward ... M. Mot Wheel .... 14 Metsrols .... 11. Net Cash R . Net Dairy ... :: ; NT Centrsl . Cert-Teed Cheedsoh .. Chock FN ... Chrysler ..... Cities Sve Clark^uip Colg Palm .. CBS ....... Colum Os* . Con Edit ... Con N On .. However, Brabant, who is working on the case with Detective Harold Ernst of the Center Line post, said there are"'’loopholes” in the story given them by a suspect tenance operations being held in MaconAb County Jail in the slaying. Police would not reveal the name] of the suspect, but said that he a 46-yeawdd painting contractor! _ . _ - -. ^Xa.rt0,HaU,,'ap"ntlHas More Area for Public Police also discovered scribbling! _ i Hall's shirt cuff Monday. It is) being analized at the State Police) »4 Ml Phelps D . Si phneo crime laboratory in East Lansing. i m RCA ... __________’ Jj4 Republic com css !!!. 3' Coat on .......55 Ms C Best Doug Aire .. Dow Cbem . sfTtoE *' B A Mus .! Baser Rad .. Firestone ... Bead Mach ., Ford Mot .. Freep Sul ... Fnseh Tra .. Ota Dyoam . _ Baa Drug .. Ml Rey Met .. u * Bar Tob .. s i an Si S •mi South Fee ... «* Boo By ... h arM :. . ' Std Otl Cal .. 1* atd on ind g, Sid SJS-^io Si ' Pontiac Boy, 9, Injured i Explosion of Shell A 9-year-old Pontiac boy was injured Tuesday afternoon ivhen a 22-caliber shell was exploded by a friend who dropped a hammer on it, Pontiac police said. Ray Milter, son of Mr. and Mrs. CBri Miller, 108 S- Roselawn Dr., was treated fdr Chin cuts at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital and released. a Mstore .. 44.7 ...li s? Texaco*'... Tex O^Bui Textron ... Thiokol ...., ---- R Boar 174 Orah Palg* ot a a p . Ot No Ry . Orevhouod . Oulf C " 43* UUt Fruit . 2 5 Do Oas Cp . 54.7 OO MA M -41 TIB Rob ........ 14.7 M.IM mi 17.7 Opjohn Hammer Pap Ml Vaa Baal B—|------ — West Uo _______^____ Waste • Hooker Ch ... 41 Wteto got ... .... Ate Rood .... *0 4 Wtlroa A Co 474 tat Sue Meh . .IIS Weolwofth ... 71 = -— “ * Tale A Tow U _Tnget Sh A T 101 tat Paper .... 15.( Smith Bod its (ONES It NOON AVBBAGCS I. 120.19 up 0.29 05 Stocks 129.71 Stocks of Local Interest I decimal points a ACF-Wrigley Stores. Inc. ... Aeroqulp Corp ’............. Arkansas Louisians oas Co. . I Food BU -Wright < m Bros. _ . _ ______Btarlags 114 29. Ogoto litw^abamloal ......... 2.7 j Hoover Baa A Bearing ........21.2 si. Lsaiwrd Refining ............12.4 ll. Oita MethteimCbimlcal ....99 M. Prophet Co. .................*1.4 rt Rockwell Standard ...........SS 15.. ~oledo Edison Oo. . • -•--M-* “•* OVER THE COCHTBB fjWpfS The following esmtetleos do not a etaarlly represent nctunl tIBBtaatll bat are intended ns a gride to the i proximate trading rang* of the American-Mariettas Co DstroKOr Mobil* Homes . Electronics Cartel . International . Trsnaemtlnantal O. Plpo Una M4 SS Vernon Oinger Ale ..........• 5.1 Affiliated Fund ............at. Chemical Fund .............12.54 _ ------onwealth Stack ......15.52 20.0 Savestors Growth ..19.19 1M Investors Trqtt ....15.45 IfJ „_____B Growth .,T7.,......19:99 29.1 gMHHRiA iRpHtetot A'„r.. Ail. i.7. Wellington Bqutty ........17.17 1199 WUtastm Find ................IMS 17.92 with "hi-rail” devices. I Former Waterford resident, partment yesterday The hi-rail installations enable Charles C. Gates, founder and the trucks to travel either on high- president of Gates Rubber Co., in) ways or tracks. Denver, Oho., died early yester-, iday of a hearHattack at his home' Each track hat two retractable ^ He WI1S 83 Police Trying to locate) * * * a east. W is j . _ |to»ered, they bold the track o" Gates had headed the giant rub- Anyone Who Talked to, ] toe treck se H can proceed on L r ^ since itl foundinfi tn m\ 0f Saw Victim * ^ * |The company is the nation's sixth’ The special rail wheels are raised [largest rubber manufacturer. | when the track ieaves the track. ,B „„ 0atM and hta Mtr ^ ; Railroad officials said the tracks Hiaaed the Colorado Tire and Were obtained a? an rtficiency| lather Co. for $S,M0. He built measure. With their on- an(L off-1 the firm Into ti wiq^timlUion —** tr-WIMMTT CImMt 1-tWldT Chuul 7-»WXTX-TV •- Cfcanstl 9—CKLW-TV Ctnawl M—WTt ; ;; '' : • .................................^ r’ *v: ,w*3r* ■ •*». ■ ' \ ' •, ’ ■ ' THE PONTIAC PKKSS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, vm TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS *:n (2) Movie (coot.) (|) Broken Arrow * ” (7) News, Weather (9) Popeye , (56) Anthropology 0:15 (7) News 0:tt-(4) Weather «:30 (2) News (4) News > ' (7) Silent Service (9) Yogi Bear (56) Ordeal By Fire •:4ft' (2) News Analysis .. (4) Sports C:4S (2) News........ (4) News •7:00 ‘(2) Malibu Run (4) Dangerous Robin (7) Brannagan Boys (9) Pioneers (56) Biblical Masterpieces 7:30 (2) Malibu Run (cant) (4) Wagon Train (7f Hong Kong (9) Movie. "Stand Up and Fight.** (1939). Slavery, feud between- stagecoaches ' and railroads, form background of melodrama set in Maryland' Wallace Beery, Robert Taylor,' Charles Bickford. (56) Philosophies of Education •:00 (2) San Francisco Beat (4) Wagon Train (cont.) (7) Hong Kong (cont.) (9) Movie (cont ) - (56) Musicale 9:30 (2) Danger Man (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Ozzie and Harriet (9) Movie (amt.) . 9:00 (2) Angel (4) Mystery Theater (7) Hawaiian Eye (9) Superior Sex 9:30 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (9) Big Four Playback 10:00 (2) Circle Theater (4) (Color) It, Could (7) Naked City (9) News 10:18 (9) Weather 10:20 (9) Telescope UAW 10:30 (2) Circle Theater (cont. (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Naked City (cont.) (9) Golf Tip 10:45 (9) Sports 11:00 (2) News (4) News (7) Decoy (9) News 11:11 (2) Weather (iPWeathtT; (9) Movie. “Vacation from Marriage.’*; (English; 1964), Young couple who are boring each other to death are separated when husband is drafted. Robert Donat, Deborah Not. 11:30 (2) Sports (4) Sports 11:35 (2) Movie. "Riding High.” (JL943). When show folds, burlesque queen turns up at her father's silver mine. Dorothy Lamour, Dick Pow- e You Woman who is secretly married is asked to wed foreign aflGSr to keep him from being deported; Diana Barrymore. Louise Allbritton, Walter Abel. " THURSDAY MORNING 9:59 (2) Meditations. 9:55 (2) On the Farm Front 42) Spectrum '61 (4) Today (7) Funews 7:99 (2) B wana Don. Cl) Johnny Ginger. 9:15 (2) Capt. Kangaroo. 8:30 (7) Movie. 0:00 (2) Movie. (4) Ed Allen 9:30 (4) Consult Dr. Brothers 9:45 (4) Gateway to Glamour 0:50 (7) News 10:00 (2) I L6ve Lucy (4) Say When (7) Jack LaLaime 10:|0 (2) Video Village (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Jackie Cooper 10:40 (9) Billboard 10:45 (9) Junior Roundup 11:00 (2) Dpuble Exposure (4) (color) Price Is Right (7) Gale Storm (9) Romper Room 11:30 (2) My Little Margie (4) Concentration (7) Love That Bob THURSDAY AFTF.RNOON 13:00 (2) Love of Lite (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Camouflage. (9) Tower Kitchen Time 13:30 (9) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (prior) It Could Be You (7) Number Please. (9)' Susie 13:45 (2) Guiding Light 13:55 (4) News. 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Journey (7) Seven Star Theater. (9) Movie. 1;35 (7) News : tu (2) As World Turns. • (7) Life of Riley. 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth !:"00 (2) Amos ’n’ Andy (4) (color) Jan Murray, (7) Day in Court 1:30 (2) House Party. (4) Loretta Yeung. (7) Seven Keys 0 (2) Our Miss Brooks . (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day 1 (9) Movie 9 (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) Fran These Roots ' (7) Who Do You Trust ( .(2) Brighter Day. (4) Blake Room tor Daddy (7) American Bandstand. I (2) Secret Storm. -I (2) Edge of Night ‘ (4) Here’s Hollywood. (9) Adventure Time. • (2) Movie (4) (odor) George Pierrot „ (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles in Boofland (56) Discovery * (7) Rocky and His Friends. (56) Industry on Parade 1 5 (56) News Magazine o (9) News Union Must OK Early Pay Hike bySteel Firm DALLAS, Tex. (UPI) — Lone Star Steel Co., wants to give its 3,300 workers a,premature pay raise as a reward, but has to get union approval to do it. The workers, members of the United Steelworkers of America, wilt vote'Thursday on whether to accept the pay raise. .* * * E.' B. Germany, president of the company, offered the union men an average of eight cents an hour beginning Sept. 1. This is the increase due under a new contract which goes into effect Oct. 1. W * * However, Germany said Lone Star made the offer to put* the pay raise into effect one month early as “a reward for very good relations with the employes.” * * * Under labor law, however, any pay increase not called for in a contract must be approved by the recognized bargaining unit. UWiUii i ^ FORTY-SEyK\" TV's Election Night Is Every Evening eU, • Previous Phi BY DANIEL MELNJCK NEW YORK (UPI)—Those of qs involved in developing network TV programs and putting them air will be awaiting the ne i’s premieres with special interest. We'll be asking ourselves whether we’ve guessed 'right. Will toe new shows be accepted by the public? Will toe returning shows tinue to hold up? Have we slotted them advantageously? It won’t take long tor toe answers to rome in. Every- night Is election night In TV. The viewers and critics cast their ballots pretty quickly. However, our primary concern right now is not the viewers’ verdict on our 1961-62 offerings. Program decisions, for better worse, have been made for the season that begins in September. The greater part of our concern and effort at the moment is what ABC-TV will put on the air for the 1962-63 season, and even the year after that. Network TV program planning is always done at least a year ahead. LIVE PROGRAMS The 1962-63 season on ABC-TV I wiH be characterized by, for one thing, a resurgence of live programming. This is presaged this year by the return of Steve Allen to television. The following season will see more live entertainment on ABC-TV-rdrama as well as .comedy and musical variety. Another program category that will loom larger on ABC-TV in ’62-’63 ' h the anthology and quasi-anthology. In the upcoming season, these two types are 'represented by 'Alcoa Premiere,” to which Fred Astaire will introduce a different type of story each week, and "Bus Stop.” based on William Inge' award-winning play. * * + The former will draw on such top-flight talents as Alfred Hitchcock, Alex Eegal and Eric Ambler. The locale in toe latter series will serve as a continuing "character.” as well as backdrop, for the .different .stories that arrive oi the bus. each week. The basic fact of TV is changi and that is why we. continually seek new faces, fresh approaches. That is why' our door is always open to every possible professional source of entertainment—writers, performers, producers, packagers —all with talent or a new idea. MOBILE BOMB SHELTER-—Earl W. Reichert poses beside the armored Car which he and Ms steel firm employes built to provide transporta-lion—in event-of an enemy attack—to the Reichert underground shelter to Battle Creek. Armor AT rtatotu plate was constructed over the tranck’s body and steel plates protect the wheels and motor. The door leads to the interior of the vehicle which can hold 20 persons. 'Salesman'Mute at Arraignment Charged With Bilking Oakland Township Man Out of $20,000 A pica.of innocent was entered for BJelvto Powers in Circuit Court Monday after the 21-ydar-old accused swindler stood mute when arraigned on a charge of taking money under false pretenses. Powers,' Who told the Judge he ran it* from Atlanta, Go., Is j accused of joining with live other "magaslne salesmen" in bwta-dllng an elderly Oakland Township man out of at least $30,000. Powers’ trial was ordered held to October. , Frank R. Cook, 89, of 1860 Dutton Road, told state police he paid about $20,000 to fiVe salesmen, including Powers, believing he was buying stock in a magazine subscription film. He said he bought I the magazihes from the men to I be sent to veterans hospitals and charitable instituions. The tsetse fly shaped the politi- ■ tol division of southern Africa to % the fate>.lHh Century. Flies cany- S tog .the .parasite that cauaao-sleep* tog sickness halted the- Boers' northward expansion in Xcliwvaal. Humap Actors Gelling Nervous TV Going to Dogs, Horses. Chimps Another member of the alleged I ring is to custody to California I while jjolice were headed for Ab-jbington, Va., hoping to bring back to Oakland Cbtytty a third person, I Two others are sought. FREE! —with purchase of 1 or more Radio or Television Taboo STEFANSKI TELEVISION and BADI0 SALES and SERVICE 1157 W. Huron F| 2-6967 AIR CONPITIONER SWEET'S RADIO and APPLIANCE I W. Boron FI t-llM. BCR COLOR TV SALES end SERVICE lav Year TV From a Technician CONDON'S TV By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP TV Radio Writer HOLLY WOOD-. TV Weot-ems became adult, it is now AP* parent,’ when the cowboy heroes started riding anonymous horses and turned “Old Paint,” “Tony’ and “Champ” into pasture. But the wheel turns and* the lovable actor is back again, stronger than ver this season. Or i‘. Or O*’ The foil schedules are so load-1 with animals that tt may go into television history as 'the year of the trained beast.” There are so many animals and their trainers around the studios that they make human actors nervous about their careers, and employment prospects. ’Lassie,” as usual, will be bade saving lives and performing other good works. "National Velvet, with a horse in a major role, trill also be among us for another season. Ed Sullivan, of course, would not think of producing a Sunday night show without at least one trained ahimal act. MR. ED’g BIG ‘SHOW’ That’s just the beginning. Among the new network shows is CBS' "Mr. Ed,” a-horse and I the first talking beast since Geo, I All this may be part of a cpn-the chatty basset of "The Peo- certed effort to increase the size ple'S Choice.'’ of the home audience by attract- There is also “The Hathaways,” tog family pete to the set. I don’t an ABC series with the Marquis totok it will work. All the cats chimps co-starring wiTh humans and based on an old show business adage that monkeys are funnier than people. Incidental but important animals will be featured to two other new series—NBC's "International Show Time” which will bring outdoor shows of Europe into American living rooms and] bound -to emphasize animals,, and CBS' "Frontier Circus.” ! Last but not least is the freshet] of animated cartoon series wMch will constitute a whole menager-NBC’s Walt Disney Show will have his usual lovable animal characters plus a new one who will act as host, Prof, Ludwig von Drake. ABC's "Bugs Bunny” will be back, and there is a new one; 'Calvin and the Colonel." Calvin is a bear and the colonel a fox. ABC’s "Top Cat” is all animals, especially feline, except for one humair character, a policeman. CBS' "Alvin Show” was originally called “Alvin and the Chipmunks" which provides a clue. and dogs of my acquatotanc already TV-watchers, but the peo-1 pie who live with them tell me they don't like anything but sports and news. They all hate trained animals—it's humiliating. United Nations experts believe ie-tenth the human race—220 million—live to China’s Yangtze river basin. . --Today's Radio Programs- WJBK a MS) CKtW, VkB K 7SS—WWJ. Phone Opfiflon WXtrs, X. Morgan CKLW, Jsc Leood WJBK. Bellboy WCAR, Conrad Sioo—WPON, Music Data S: IS—WJR, Baseball •:M—WWJ, Faye KUaabeth •iSO—CKLW. Knowles »:*•—WWJ. Conert »:at-WWJ, News IS: WXfZ, i. Sebastian WWJ. V^orld Row* 11:00—WWJ, News \CKtiW. Hop wood WPOp, Meflow Mood). . WCAR. D. Conrad THURSDAY MORNISO 00— WJR, Voice of Agrl. CKLW. On Opener WXTZ, News. VoU 1:S0—WJR, Nfws, Music WWJ, News. Roberts WXTZ, Wolf, News CKLW, News. Toby Dartd WCAR, News WPON, early Morn., New: l:te—WWJ. News, J-Blrdl WXTZ, Newa, Wolf CKLW. Ntsra, David WCAR, Nawa. atwrtdan, 8:00—.WJR, Slews. B. 0 WWJ. News, Roberts ' WXTZ, Wolf, News t:0O-,WJR, Newa, Murray -WWJ, News; Martens WXY*. New*; Wolf WJBK, Avsry WPON; Clt *Hsj£ *Mu»lc , 0:00—wjr. Karl Baaa. WWJ, Hews. Martens WXTZ. Braakfast Club CKLW, Joe Van WJBK. News, C. Reid WXVZ. McMeeley CKLW. Joe Vann WJBK. News. Reid WCAR. News, B. Martyn THURSDAY AFTERNOON •- HWb-^WJR,. News, Farm'.- • WWJ, News. Lynke) WXYZ, Me Neeley, News CKLW, Joe Van 7 WJBK. News. Reid „ WCAR, News. Purse _ WPpN. Newa, Ltwu 12:S0—WJR, Time for Mule CKLW. News. David WCAR, Newa, PUrsa WXTZ, McNeeley, News WPON, Lew s. News WCAR. News, I 0:00—CKLW, Joe Vafa WJBK, News, Lee WCAR, News, Purse WPON Music. News WXTZ, McNeeley, Newt 0:M-rWXTZ. Winter. Newa CKLW, Davies WJBK News. Music WCAR, News. Sheridan WPON. Carriage Trad# »:ia-WJR. Nawa. Mutle RAO WWJ, Scoreboard WXYZ, Winter. News CKLW. News. Davtea WJBK Music wcar, Newc, Sheridan WPON. Carrlagt Trade S:CO—wjr News. Jim CM WWJ. Newt. Allison WXTZ, Winter. Newt CKLW. v Sports, Da vies WJBK Newt. Traffic WCAR, News Sheridan WPON, Carriagu Trad# This Cinderella Story Has Unusual Twist By EARL WILSON HOLLYWOOD — When I was young, the Broadway and Hollywood Cinderellas were all from Ohio or Texas. But now all the Cinderellas are from Chicago. Would you like to meet a Cinderella from Chicago? “Ann-Margaret” Is her name, and I mean, all of her name. Nineteen, beautiful, brunette, sultry, Swedlih-born, brought up In Wilmette, 111., she knocked the Olson off Ann-Margaret Olson. "Why?” I- asked her. She’s already an RCA Victor record star and a pet of George Burns and Jack Benny. "Because I don’t want my parents to be WILSON involved in bad publicity. "You’re planning to havg bad publicity already?” I asked her. TV Features By United Press International HONG KONG, 7:30 p.m-(7)'Girl named $uki, imprisoned for murder, convinces Evans witness can clear her. Rhonda Fleming. DANGER MAN, 8:30 p.m. (2) Story of terrorism to Africa which threatens to explode into'mass uprising, MYSTERY THEATER, 9 p.m. (4) Singer asks Steve Ballard toj protect, her from murderer. He agrees—on(y to wake up and find] himself prime suspect in heri death. —>* NAKED CITY, 10 p.m. (7) (Re-1 in) Roddy McDowall stars as unemployed actor who turns to robbing taxi drivers. CIRCLE THEATER, 10 p.m. (2) Rerun) Dramatization of typical [automobile hit-and-run case. rab W Oto Lansing Pilot, 33/ Killed in Jet Crash at Kiriland j ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. oh—Lt. Cmdr. James A. Guggenbiller, 33, of Lansing, Mich., was killed Tuesday 'in the crash of a twin-jet navy plane on t&ke off at Kirt-land Air Force Base., . ★ * ★ Lt. George F. Biehl, 39, of Lake Pine, N J., also died in the crash, j Witnesses said they noticed flame i around the engines of the A3J-1 Vigilante just as the craft was airborne. It banked sharply to the left and plunged into the ground.! very evident,’! Ann-Margaret said quite adultly "that when somebody’s in the limelight, people are just going to wait for something to happen.” * "Did you become Cinderella by winning a contest?" “Not I was on the Ted Mack show when I was 16. But I lost. A leaf-player won.” "A leaf-player?” “Yes, he played a leaf.” One reason that so many Chicago Cinderellas (from Carol Lawrence to Salome Jens to Brigit Baslen to Paula Prentiss to Nancy Dassault) are outnumbering our Ohio and -Texao Cinderellas nowadays, Is that North-western’s so active. Haitian Bank Director I Now Exiled in Jamaica | PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (59-Dr. I Joseph Chatelato, former director of the Haitian national bank, left today for exile to Jamaica after: nine months of asylum in the Brazilian embassy. . He was accompanied by Maj. Robert Bazile, former commander] of the coast guard, who also had been granted refuge in the embas-l sy. The two asked asylum during] strikes against the government last December. Yep, Ann-Margaret went Northwestern, one year: ’59-’60. ARLENE "I was afraid to go into the drama department. The other kids had so much experience, I was scared to go on stage with them.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK . . Patrice Wymore’ll lend Errol Flynn’s yacht, the Zaca, u his son Sean next spring ... Singer Arlene Fontana was boosted to star billing in the touring “Slower Drum Song.” The Pat Boones sent for their N.Y. "decorator^ to work on! their new BevHills home . . . Adm. William Raborn, head of our Polaris missile project, wrote a song, "Close to Heaven”! '(wlht his sister, organist Beth Raborn) . . . A Yarned comic, drawing unemployment insurance, reported he’d managed to get one day’s work doing a TV commercial. "How much did you make that one day?” the insurance officials asked. "Oh,” he said casually, "—$12,000.” Bandleader Ray Anthony is taking! flying lessons. ★ ★ ★ EARL’S PEARLS: Every man needs a wife—because many] things go wrong that you can’t blame on your secretary. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Georgie Price says that when he! travels abroad and sees those “Yankee Go Home” signs, bfc|] adds underneath them: “. . . and send money.” WISH I’D SAID Til AT: Definition of an executive: A man; who talks golf In the office and business on the golf course.l That’s earl, brother. (Qopyrifht, 1961) (Regular Size) With Each Purchase ^ . of Ono or More Radio or TV- Ttibvi During . . . 10th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION •! the Oakland County Electronics Association Bring your TV or Radio tubes in for testing Hot* them tested by expert technicians on professional tube testers at ne charge. Or call one oi the OCEA Dealers listed below lor expert service. Either way, a FREE 6 pack el Coca Cola is yours with the purchase el one or mere tubes. Rely en Professional Electronic Technicians for ALL your service needs. This oiler good until Sept- 9. 19SI from the following OCEA Service Dealers: Latimor TV-0R 3-2*52 SUM Hsaksbsw—Drs/len Jones Radio 1 TV-682-1350 Stofamld Radio l TV FI 2-6967 IU1 Orchard Lake—Kvcfe w- H*r,n Arnold l Stover TV-Ul 2-3100 ***** 4,1133 Hod',i R^dto " 4^ TV-FE 4^5841 J*****"' jH*.44344 Wilton Radio A TV-Fi 2-2257 SU B. Wallen - WKC, Inc, Service Dipt. Poor Applimco-iM 34114 m w. Allay •111 Commerce—l’nl#n Likt FI 3-7114 Dolby Radio A TV-FI 4-9102 MS Lthleh CLOSE-OUT Washers, Dryors and Rofrigorafors Bargains while they last Easy Terms—-No Down Payment ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 W. Huron St. FE 4-252d 4-DAY SALE; Woduosdey-Thuridey-Friday ead Saturday Only ALUMINUM SIDING HU! ESTIMATES h Your Homo or at Our Showroom Installed or Picked Up MU fflwning and Storm Wiadow Sales 919 Orchard lake Avo., 1 Block last of Telegraph Rd. n s-iete dm Meets? tens rndsy m i r.u. n *-nee GET OUT OF DEBT; WITHOUT LOAN CONSOLIDATE and Arrange pay All Your Bills Past Due or Not . One weekly -payment pays all your bills, avoid garnishments and repossessions and keep your good credit rating. No cosigners needed. Michigan's largest credit Management Company. BUDGET III ASSOCIATION, IM. DON'T BE CONFUSED WITH IMITATORS 1011 W.Hiron FE 4-0951 DEAL WITH MICHIGAN'S LARGEST COMPANY Additional Offices Throughout Michigan Indereed b* (IV2 Blocks Weot ef Telegraph) a * Member Pontiac Chamber of Commerce FWu SALE! 19” PORTABLE TV PLUS CART (Overall Ding.) TV Set .144.95 Gart ... 10.98 NOW BOTH FOR 139 NO MONEY DOWN Handsome beige metal cabinet is compact, easy to carry and to store. Dipole antenna brings in stilarp . picture on big 172 sq. in. viewing area. Up-front speaker for easy listening. Set locks on solid-top cart with brass-plated steel tubing legs, walnut finished, shelf, 3" casters. 9x9-Ft. Umbrella Tent BREEZY FOUR-WAY VENTILATION Self-adjusting frame sets up Was $69 95 fast, ends tent sagging, gives ^ * you more open. Jiving area. Ny- am fafa Jon screen door and 3 windows . /■ with inside' storm zipper flaps. Save at Sears! W W 8 2/3 x 8 2/3 Tent ..... 22.99 No Money Down Sporting Goods. Perry St. Basement SALE! 6.TRANSISTOR RADIO 2188 ^ for fine reception. Gray only! Batteries, earphone extra: * Radio and TV Dept., Sears ftain Floor NO MONEY. DOWN ON SEARS EASY PAYMENT PLAN Shop Tomorrow Night ’til 9 Protect from rain. snow. Special construction SALE! Heavy Duty Bulk Oil ■CUSTOM AWNINGS OF REYNOLDS ALUMINUM FOR WINDOWS, PORCH OR PATIO Long-lasting investment in protection and property Improvement, and tbfcy require NO maintenance! DuPont enamel finish won’t chip, crack, peel or blister. NO' MONEY DOWN, 36 months to pay, SO CALL TODAY FOR , a FREE ESTIMATE ... see the Styles and -rotors. Awning and Shade Dept, Bears Main Floor * .♦ + ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ * in Your Own Container ♦ + + + CHARGE IT % Allstate with Double'‘Detergent cleans as it * lubricates vital parts • . . exceeds the American Petroleum Institute specifications. Designed for use at all speeds, for long, short ■ drives, and for all climates. Oive your car the best care . . . change your own oil regularly and save! ^ , ALLSTATE OIL FILTER REFILLS + + ♦ SALE! Allstate Mufflers FOR ’49- 54 FORDS Fits ’49 to ’53 Chevrolets. Built to . g same specifications as o r i g i n a 1 mufflers. Get yours today, and save at Sears! wSatisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS HEAVY DUTY MUFFLERS Chevrolets, ’58*’6l, installation extra .......8.49* Plymouths, ’49-’59, 6-cyL, installation extra 8.49* Fords, ’58-’59, installation extra ... .. .9.98* CERAMIC MUFFLERS. $12.49 Ford, 8-cyl. Chev. 6 and 8 Ply. 6-cyl. ’55-’59 cylinder—’54-’6(U ’49-’59 . ‘Except Convertibles Saginaw Street Phone. FE 5-4171 TIIE I'OXTIAC l*KKSS. WKDN'ESllAV. AUGUST 30, 19BI I water fountain for each 100 newl^y^ Q |>gj|| Moment I chicks and providing more if pos-U. \ ^ Prefer Cash on the Line te M|Give 'Em a Drink ,^ , of Route .• \ . u ‘major outage towns. j ,* chicks and providing mpre if poa-L jin Furniture Buying V. j ★ * -.i university park. Pa. (UPi)isiWe. ( Memphis, tupn -Mrs. men, NEW Y0RK mpn _ Maivv Store than 60 par saWtlmtj-Wafer is Important to the grow-j r------—17— * ! nol of. 1 ... (they* would insist on paying cash ling chick, according to Carl Dos-j About 80 per cent of nonfarm I s. T, , ... ■■ off A toscjbjhousetViya of tomorrow probably on the Jine ^ alti expressed! sin, extension poultry specialist at families in the U.S. own their containing struck some jw® »»♦ furniture on credit, their preference for modem-style Pennsylvania. State University, homes and the‘01110 is increas-j ■ *“ soap oars, according,to. a recent nationwide j furniture. {Doasin suggests using a one gallon ling. soap in many different shapes. They resemble monkeys, camels. Igolf balls, baseballs, fruits, fish, rodes and other flowers. “It’s good . clean fun.” she said. s , Sweden has about one motor She has hundreds of cakes ofjear for every 12 persons. . HOLIDAY WEEKEND SALE SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT . . . WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Direct Drive tChain Saw NEW 12-INCH DAVID BRADLEY Powerful 4-nb .industry rated saw with hard nosed guide bar, automatic clutch, positive chain oiler, single diaphragm carburetor. shop tomorrow nite ’til 91 Other saws from $109 to $199.88! Sears Low Price 99 No Money Down Lightweight, Lined Jackets FOR BOYS . OR GIRLS Just right for the first chilly mornings. Assorted plaids or bed ford cord in red, navy, green, gray or tan. Washable 100% cotton including flannelette lining. Side elastic for good fit. 3-8x. SPECIAL 56-in. Wide and Fully Washable WOOL-NYLON FLANNEL Soft, nice-to-wear blend of "85% wool, 15% nylon ip a full range of flattering fashion colors. Retains its shapes, and it drapes beautifully . . . perfect for the new blousy styles. Save 32c a yd. Synthetic Prints ..66c yd. Amel and cotton ... 66c yd. Yard Goods, Sears Main Floor REG. $2.98 CHARGE IT Lightweight, Wash ’n’ Wear Jackets* 3” Regularly $6.98 You Save $2.99! just say “CHARGE IT” Unlined cotton ripple-weave jacket with knit bottom, cuffs, neck . . . stylish raglin shoulders. In black, . tan and' oUve . . . sizes, small,. medium, large. Requires little care.- Oct yours today and save. Shop tomorrow ’til 91 Continental Style Men's Slacks In Sizes 30-38 Slim and trim continental style with plain no-pleat front, adjustable waistband. Made for leisure wear. Wash ’n’ wear . . 100% cotton. Choose from assorted fancy plaids. 8ave! Men's Sportswear, Main floor 111 Si